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Monday, November 4, 2024

Security fencing goes up around White House, Capitol, VP residence

 New security fencing went up around the White House, U.S. Capitol and Vice President Harris’s residence in Washington, D.C. as authorities prepare for Election Day in the event there may be political unrest in the coming days.

The Secret Service constructed eight-foot-high metal fences around the White House and Treasury Department complex and the adjacent parts of Lafayette Square, the Naval Observatory and Harris’s house in D.C., The Washington Post reported.

At the Capitol, previously used temporary bicycle-rack barriers stated “Police Line: Do not cross,” surrounding the perimeter.

The Secret Service also have plans for physical security measures outside of the West Palm Beach, Fla. convention center where former President Trump will host an event on Election Night, the outlet reported.

Harris will spend Election Night at her alma mater, Howard University, in D.C. The Washington, D.C. Police Department said in a post Sunday that there will be street closures, no parking zones and transit detours for the surrounding area.

Officials have said there are no current threats to Washington ahead of the election, but locals are bracing for upset supporters and the fencing and plywood are reminders of the 2020 presidential election and the Jan. 6 attack on the Capitol.

The Hill has reached out to the Secret Service and the U.S. Capitol Police did not comment when contacted.

https://thehill.com/homenews/campaign/4969264-security-fencing-goes-up-around-white-house-capitol-vp-residence/

'Warren, Schiff call for investigation into grocery prices'

 Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.) and Rep. Adam Schiff (D-Calif.) are calling on administration officials to investigate Albertsons and other major grocery chains for “predatory practices” they say may have violated federal laws.

Warren and Schiff wrote a letter to Federal Trade Commission Chair Lina Khan and Department of Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack asking them to investigate whether the grocers are overcharging customers.

The lawmakers noted that last month, California district attorneys reached a nearly $4 million settlement with Albertsons and its subsidiaries, Safeway and Vons, after it was found they “unlawfully charged customers prices higher than their lowest advertised or posted price” and overcharged people by placing inaccurate weights on labels for products.

For example, if a product was sold based on an item’s net weight, the grocer would overcharge customers by including the weight of the packaging in the cost, the Democrats said in a press release.

“Albertsons is one of the largest food retailers in the United States, boasting over 2,200 stores across the country. This settlement covers the 589 Albertsons stores in California, but all U.S. customers should be protected from predatory pricing,” the lawmakers wrote in their letter.

Warren and Schiff are urging Khan and Vilsack to investigate whether other Albertsons stores or other grocery chains across the country have participated in “similar wrongdoing” and hold the parties responsible.

Warren is one of the leading lawmakers tackling price gouging and inflated prices at grocery stores for Americans.

The lawmakers noted that Albertsons’s proposed $24.6 billion merger with Kroger threatens to drive up prices and “harm grocery store workers and consumers.”

The Hill has reached out to Albertsons, the Federal Trade Commission and the Department of Agriculture for comment.

https://thehill.com/business/4969965-warren-schiff-albertsons-grocery-prices/

GOP primed to back Trump if he contests election

 The Republican Party is now more primed to back former President Trump if he contests the results of the 2024 election than it was four years ago, when his efforts to overturn President Biden’s victory fell flat in courts and Congress.

Trump’s unwavering claims about the nation’s election system being “rigged” have steadily gained more acceptance among rank-and-file Republicans voters over the past four years, and his biggest Republican critics in Congress have either retired, will retire soon or have lost sway.

Additionally, Trump allies around the country have worked to gain more influence over state and local election boards, which will be in charge of tallying votes and certifying the results.

Republicans are feeling increasingly optimistic Trump will win the election, but they are girding for an intense battle if Vice President Harris is declared the winner.

“The strength of the cult of Trump amongst voters is strong so members are reflecting what their constituents want them to do,” said a Republican strategist and former Senate leadership aide.

“The other angle is there are a lot of concerns about how elections are being conducted and the power of social media and our partisan news,” the strategist said. “Republicans watch a lot of Twitter and Fox News, and they see voting irregularities,” they continued, pointing out a recent Detroit News report that a Chinese citizen attending the University of Michigan voted illegally by absentee ballot, and election officials weren’t able to retrieve it.

Four years ago, Trump’s claims that Biden and his allies “stole” the election struck many Republicans in Washington as outlandish, though most of them extended the 45th president the courtesy of letting him pursue his claims in court, where they failed.

This November, the political landscape is dramatically changed.

John Ullyot, a Republican strategist and former Senate aide and Trump administration official, said GOP lawmakers and voters have become much more focused on “election integrity” since Trump left office.

“Election integrity is a top-of-mind issue for Republicans after the 2020 election and that is even more so going into 2024, because they’ve seen this before and they want to make sure we have a free and fair election,” he said.

Ullyot said the Republican National Committee has deployed an army of poll watchers around the country to assist in contesting any results Trump’s team views as suspicious.

“The steps being taken on the ground directed out of the RNC are critical — they’re way bigger than they were back in 2016 or 2020,” he said. “These are the poll watchers and lawyers who are mobilized on the ground from the Republican National Committee.

“The Republican Party as a whole is focused on maintaining election integrity unlike they’ve ever done before, because they’ve seen what happens what happened four years ago, and they want to make sure there are no questions about the integrity of voting this time around,” he said.

“That’s critical not only for the presidential race, but senators realize it’s critical for winning control of the Senate. … The Senate is 100 percent aligned with the rest of the party, even more so when it comes to ensuring a fair vote in the swing states,” he added.

An Associated Press/NORC poll conducted in late July and early August found Republicans are likely to trust Trump’s claims about the election results more than they trust the conclusions of state and local officials.

The survey found that about two-thirds of Republicans would trust Trump’s campaign to provide accurate information about the election results, while about half said they would trust the officially certified results.

Nine in 10 Democrats, by comparison, said they would trust the certified election results.

Furthermore, only 31 percent of Republicans say Biden was elected legitimately, a substantial drop from the 39 percent of Republicans who said so in 2021, according to a Washington Post/University of Maryland survey published in January.

A Pew Research poll published last week found that only 57 percent of Trump supporters believe the election will be run well, and only 30 percent of Trump supporters feel confident that ineligible voters will be prevented from voting.

When Trump claimed the presidential election was stolen in 2020, many Republican lawmakers in Washington viewed the idea as suspect, especially in the Senate, where the GOP leadership worked hard to defeat the effort to block the certification of Biden’s victory.

Senate Republican Whip John Thune (S.D.) famously declared in December 2020 that efforts to block the certification of Biden’s victory would “go down like a shot dog” in the Senate.

GOP aides say Thune, who is running to become the next Senate GOP leader and needs the votes of Trump allies, won’t be nearly as outspoken this time in opposing efforts to contest the election, should they arise.

“It’s hard to see that type of triggered response,” said a Senate GOP aide who recalled Thune’s declaration earned Trump’s wrath and later prompted Trump to call for him to face a primary challenger in 2022.

But the aide noted that when Thune said that in 2020, it “seemed perfectly reasonable” at the time, as the vast majority of Senate Republicans didn’t take Trump’s claims of a stolen election seriously in December of that year and the following January.

Trump-backed proposals to reject slates of electoral votes from Pennsylvania and Arizona in 2021 failed resoundingly in the Senate by a vote of 92-7 and 93-6, respectively. They had more support in the House, where 138 Republicans voted to object to certify Pennsylvania’s electors, and 121 of them voted to object to Arizona’s electors.

But the Republican conferences in both chambers have since become more conservative and more closely allied with Trump — and one of Trump’s biggest private critics among Senate Republicans, Sen. Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.), is stepping down from his leadership post at the end of the year.

A second Senate Republican aide said Trump’s unsubstantiated claim of widespread election fraud “has been normalized” among Republican lawmakers on the Hill. But the aide pointed out that Congress passed the Electoral Count Act at the end of 2022, which raised the threshold for lodging an objection to a state’s electoral slate, now requiring at least one-fifth support of both the Senate and the House to advance it.

The bill, spearhead by Senate Rules Committee Chair Amy Klobuchar (D-Minn.) and Sen. Susan Collins (R-Maine), also identifies each state’s governor as responsible for submitting certificates identifying its electors and requires Congress to defer to slates of electors submitted by a state executive pursuant to the judgments of state and federal courts.

The Senate Republican Conference has changed substantially since December 2020, as several of McConnell’s closest allies — traditional Reagan-Bush Republicans who were not big fans of Trump — retired. These departed old-school Republicans include former Sens. Lamar Alexander (Tenn.), Roy Blunt (Mo.), Richard Burr (N.C.), Rob Portman (Ohio), Pat Roberts (Kan.) and Pat Toomey (Pa.).

They have been replaced with MAGA-allied Republicans such as Sen. Bill Hagerty (Tenn.) and Sen. Eric Schmitt (Mo.), whose names are being floated as potential Trump Cabinet picks; Sen. JD Vance (Ohio), Trump’s running mate, and Sens. Ted Budd (N.C.) and Roger Marshall (Kan.).  

“JD Vance would look to Josh Hawley and [Republican Texas Sen.] Ted Cruz and others who have led the charge in the past. It will be the same individuals who were willing to stand up and object during the last election who will be the ones in the Senate that will support the House efforts to object to electors,” said a second Republican strategist, who mapped out a likely scenario if Trump again contests the election results.

Trump says the only way he could lose would be if the election was “corrupt”; he has already accused Democrats of “cheating” in Pennsylvania.

The GOP strategist said Democrats are also hinting at filing their own challenges if Harris loses, predicting chaos after Election Day if the contest is narrowly decided either way.

“It’s interesting that we’re already going down the same road” as 2020, the strategist said. “Both parties really need to step back from these efforts to overturn elections and look at the Electoral College as a proceeding where they have the power to disenfranchise whole slates of electors. … It’s not good.”

Several Republican operatives pointed out that Democrats contested President George W. Bush’s victories in 2000 and 2004 and said that is empowering more Republicans to support such a challenge this time around, especially if Trump pushes it.

Of the seven Senate Republicans who voted to convict Trump for inciting insurrection on Jan. 6, 2021, only three will return to Congress next year: Collins and Sens. Lisa Murkowski (Alaska) and Bill Cassidy (La.). Sen. Mitt Romney (R-Utah), one of Trump’s fiercest Senate GOP critics, is retiring at the end of this year.

In the House, only two of the 10 Republicans who voted to impeach Trump in 2021 are running for reelection: Reps. Dan Newhouse (Wash.) and David Valadao (Calif.).

Trump recently renewed his call for supporters to oust Newhouse, who is running against fellow Republican Jerrod Sessler, even though Newhouse has strong scores from the National Rifle Association and is solidly anti-abortion. They were the top two vote-getters in the Washington district’s all-party primary.

Trump endorsed Stressler and cited Newhouse’s impeachment vote in calling him out as a “RINO.”

Trump allies also have more influence over local election boards.

Reuters reported last month that nearly half of the election boards of the five largest counties in each of the seven battleground states have members who have expressed sympathy for Trump’s claims that the election is highly susceptible to fraud.

An 88-page report by the Center for Media and Democracy, a progressive nonprofit watchdog group, found evidence that state election officials in Arizona, Georgia, Michigan, Nevada, New Mexico, North Carolina, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin have previously denied the legitimacy of the 2020 election or have spread false claims about voter fraud.

https://thehill.com/homenews/campaign/4966762-republicans-trump-election-challenge/

'Harris Claims She'll End Gaza War In Final Election Pitch To Arab Americans'

 Campaigning this weekend in the swing state of Michigan, Kamala Harris made a final desperate pitch to Arab-Americans, issuing a vague promise that if she becomes president her administration will end the war in Gaza.

Michigan is of course home to huge communities of Arabs as well as Muslim Americans. There are also many Arab Christians in the state - but all are united in their condemnation of the Biden-Harris White House's blank check support to Israel and the IDF's killing of tens of thousands of Palestinian civilians during operations against Hamas.

A mere day out from the election, Harris on Sunday tried to turn disgruntled progressives and Democrats in her favor, many who have vowed to register a protest 'uncommitted' vote, by saying she'll "end" the death and destruction in Gaza at an event at Michigan State University.

Source: WLNS/Duncan Phenix

But nowhere in her comments did she outline how she hopes to end the Gaza war:

"This year has been difficult, given the scale of death and destruction in Gaza and given the civilian casualties and displacement in Lebanon, it is devastating. And as president, I will do everything in my power to end the war in Gaza, to bring home the hostages, end the suffering in Gaza, ensure Israel is secure, and ensure the Palestinian people can realize their right to dignity, freedom, security and self-determination," Harris said to applause during a rally in East Lansing city of Michigan, home to 200,000 Arab Americans.

Progressives have over the course of the last year slammed the Democratic administration for paying lip service to peace, all while ramping up deliveries of heavy arms and bombs, and committing further billions to Israel.

But even now, as the campaign is at the finish line, pundits are pointing out the hypocrisy and contradictory messaging. She's been accused of saying one thing in front of Jewish voters, and another in front of Arab-American voters.

The New York Post explains:

Vice President Kamala Harris reportedly tailored her messaging to appeal to Jewish and Arab American voters in battleground states who can sway the election with contradictory ads that emphasize her position on Israel and Gaza.

The Harris campaign released multiple ads underscoring her commitment to Israel targeting undecided Jewish voters in Pennsylvania – while ads in Michigan aimed at the Arab American population express her solidarity with civilians in Gaza, CNN reported. 

Facebook ads in the Keystone State feature a video of Harris’ Democratic National Committee speech, where she explains her support for Israel during the ongoing war in the Middle East – omitting two sections that also highlight the “human suffering” in Gaza. 

"And let me be clear — I will always stand up for Israel’s right to defend itself," Harris says in the ad.

This is not going to fly in Michigan, and so her weekend attempts to present a solution to the Gaza crisis fell flat with many, and is unlikely to sway large swathes of voters.

A lot of the Arab vote looks to go to Jill Stein...

The Trump campaign has meanwhile been heavily reaching out to the Arab-American population this year, and has even opened a campaign headquarters in Hamtramck, Michigan in order to be a more visible presence among this demographic.

https://www.zerohedge.com/political/harris-claims-shell-end-gaza-war-final-election-pitch-arab-americans

Zelensky Calls For 'Preemptive' Long-Range Strikes On North Korean Troops

 Once again Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky has taken his requests and demands of Western backers a big step further while lambasting lack of action and adequate support.

In a weekend Telegram post he warned that North Korean troops are already mustering just inside Russia within striking distance from Ukraine, and that long-range missiles are needed from the West to directly attack their encampments.

Getty Images

"Now we see every site where Russia is accumulating these soldiers from North Korea on its territory – all their camps," The Ukrainian leader began. He urged that Ukraine needs the capability to attack "preemptively". 

"We could strike preemptively if we had this opportunity – to strike at a sufficiently long range. And it depends on the partners," Zelensky continued.

That's when he lashed out against his own allies who have provided Ukraine's military billions up to this point. "But instead of such necessary long-range attacks, America is watching, Britain is watching, Germany is watching," he stressed. "Everyone is just waiting for the North Korean military to start attacking Ukrainians as well."

The Russian and North Korean governments have still not overtly or definitively confirmed the deployment, but have have strongly hinted at it, pointing to the defense pact inked between Presidents Putin and Kim Jong Un in Pyongyang this past summer.

But things might not be going so well with attempts to integrate Russian and North Korean soldiers on the ground. While the story is unverified, Newsweek mentions the following:

A Russian soldier has spoken of how North Korean troops deployed to fight against Ukraine endangered their own unit by shooting in the wrong direction.

The claims in a clip posted on social media comes as Kyiv said that the first North Korean soldiers stationed in Russia's Kursk region had come under fire. Concern grows internationally at the addition of a third party into the conflict.

Some reports say that Russian commanders really don't known what to do with the North Korean units, and there will remain obvious problems of communication and differences of military culture as well.

As for what's in it for North Korea, the same report details the following based on regional reports:

Pyongyang will get money, food, and space technology from Russia in return for their contribution to Putin's war effort, The Korea Herald newspaper reported on Sunday. It cited Wi Sung-lac, a South Korean lawmaker it said had been briefed by the country's National Intelligence Service (NIS).

North Korean soldiers will also get $2,000 per month salary, making a price tag of around $240 million a year if 10,000 soldiers are deployed, he said.

As for this latest escalation of Zelensky's rhetoric complaining about the Western alliance, the West has indeed still been resisting Ukraine's demands to greenlight long-range missile strikes deep into Russian territory. Putin has warned that this would cross all 'red lines' and unleash major war.

Any such escalation could also impact the Korean peninsula if North Korean troops are in the midst of direct conflict in Eastern Europe as well. All of this suggests the slow, increasing internationalization of the war.

https://www.zerohedge.com/geopolitical/zelensky-calls-preemptive-long-range-strikes-north-korean-troops

In CYA, NBC Airs Trump Message After Harris Saturday Night Live Appearance

 by Zachary Stieber via The Epoch Times (emphasis ours),

NBC aired a message from former President Donald Trump one day after Vice President Kamala Harris appeared on Saturday Night Live (SNL).

Republican presidential nominee former President Donald Trump greets supporters during a campaign event in Rocky Mount, N.C., on Oct. 30, 2024. Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images

Trump spoke for about one minute during the message, which was prerecorded and broadcast during a NASCAR race on Nov. 3. It was aired again during an NFL game.

Trump, after greeting fans of sports, noted that the presidential election is slated for Nov. 5.

We’re two days away from the most important election in the history of our country. We’ve got to save our country, and it needs saving. It’s in very bad shape,” Trump said.

“We’re going to end up in a depression based on what’s been happening,” he added later.

We have to straighten out our country, we have to close our borders, we have to lower our taxes, we have to get rid of inflation. I'll fix it."

NBC declined to provide a comment on the development.

Harris appeared live during Saturday’s SNL. She participated in a skit that portrayed her speaking to another version of herself ahead of the election.

“It is nice to see you, Kamala, and I’m just here to remind you, you got this. You can do something your opponent cannot do. You can open doors,“ Harris told Maya Rudolph, who was playing the vice president and had said she wished she could talk to someone ”who’s been in my shoes; a black, South Asian woman running for president, preferably from the Bay Area.”

Federal Communications Commission (FCC) Commissioner Brandon Carr wrote in a Nov.3 post on social media platform X that the Democratic presidential nominee’s appearance may have violated an FCC rule against licensed broadcasters using public airwaves to influence an election in favor of a candidate unless the other candidate is offered equal time by the same broadcasters.

The rule in question “generally means providing comparable time and placement to opposing candidates,” according to an FCC fact sheet.

The regulator gives an example of a qualified candidate appearing on a station. In that scenario, the station “will be required to entertain requests for Equal Opportunities by opposing legally qualified candidates for the same office,” the FCC states. “However, the station is not required to seek out opposing legally qualified candidates and offer them Equal Opportunities.”

The FCC grants licenses to some broadcasters. The agency can revoke licenses, although its chairwoman said in October that revocation would not happen “for political reasons.”

Over the weekend, NBC lodged a notice with the FCC that said Harris appeared on its network for one minute and 30 seconds. The broadcaster said the appearance came “without charge.”

https://www.zerohedge.com/political/nbc-airs-trump-message-after-harris-saturday-night-live-appearance

Option Care cut to Hold by 3 sell siders

 

TodayDowngradeGoldmanBuy → Neutral$27
Oct-31-24DowngradeJefferiesBuy → Hold$38 → $26
Oct-30-24DowngradeBofA SecuritiesBuy → Neutral$43 → $29



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