Michigan Muslim leaders cancel meeting with Biden campaign over Gaza
Muslim leaders in Dearborn, Michigan, canceled a planned meeting with Biden campaign manager Julie Chavez Rodriguez today after receiving pushback from their community over Biden’s support for Israel, three invitees confirmed to NBC News.
About a dozen Muslim and Arab elected officials and community leaders were to take part in the meeting, which was organized by Wayne County Deputy Executive Assad Turfe, who also made the decision to cancel the meeting. It was first reported by the Detroit News.
The officials who were invited, all Democrats, said there was no point in meeting with Biden campaign aides until the president calls for a cease-fire in Gaza.
“Community engagement is powerful when it is used to shape policies that save lives — these conversations must be had with policy-makers, not campaign staff. I will not entertain conversations about elections while we watch a live-streamed genocide backed by our government,” Dearborn Mayor Abdullah Hammoud said on X.
This is not the only meeting the campaign has scheduled with Muslim and Arab leaders in Michigan, a key swing state with a large Muslim population. Chavez Rodriguez is in Michigan for a series of meetings with representatives of various Democratic-leaning constituency groups, including the Arab and Palestinian-American, Hispanic, and Black communities, according to a source familiar with the Biden campaign’s thinking.
Senior campaign staffers have held similar meetings with an array of constituent groups in key battleground states beginning starting last fall, the source added.
Arab and Muslim Americans voted overwhelming for Biden in 2020, but many now say they cannot support the president again over his steadfast support for Israel during the war in Gaza.
Meanwhile, for the first time this year, Michigan will be one of Democrats’ early presidential nominating states. It will hold its primary on Feb. 27, so Biden campaign officials are looking to shore up support inside his party ahead of that contest. Even though he faces no real threat for the nomination, the snub from the local Muslim leaders speaks to the difficulty Biden will have in bringing those voters back into the fold.
The RNC risks putting its thumb on the scale for Trump
We remember, back in 2016, when Trump accused the Democratic National Committee of “rigging” the party's presidential primary in favor of Hillary Clinton and against Bernie Sanders.
“I have seen firsthand how the system is rigged against our citizens, just like it was rigged against Bernie Sanders. He never had a chance,” Trump said at his convention speech.
That past Trump rhetoric makes what’s happening just two contests into the 2024 Republican presidential race absolutely jaw dropping, because the Republican National Committee is putting its thumb on the scale in favor of Trump.
It all started when RNC Chair Ronna McDaniel said that it was time for the party to unite around Trump after his victory in the New Hampshire primary.
“I’m looking at the math and the path going forward, and I don’t see it for Nikki Haley,” McDaniel said Tuesday night. “We need to unite around our eventual nominee, which is going to be Donald Trump, and we need to make sure we beat Joe Biden.”
While Trump won both Iowa and New Hampshire and while Haley’s upcoming path in South Carolina and beyond remains difficult for her, here’s the current delegate count: Trump 32, Nikki Haley 17 — with 1,215 needed for the nomination.
Then came the news of a proposed RNC resolution, floated by longtime Trump ally David Bossie, calling the former president the party’s “presumptive” nominee.
Bossie later withdrew the resolution.
And late Thursday, Trump said he supported the resolution’s withdrawal, although he appreciated its intent.
“While I greatly appreciate the Republican National Committee (RNC) wanting to make me their PRESUMPTIVE NOMINEE, and while they have far more votes than necessary to do it, I feel, for the sake of PARTY UNITY, that they should NOT go forward with this plan, but that I should do it the “Old Fashioned” way, and finish the process off AT THE BALLOT BOX,” he said on his social-media platform.
In 2016, there were some legitimate complaints about the DNC’s nominating process — which included too few debates, plus those WikiLeaks emails showing DNC officials criticizing Sanders.
But these current actions — with the RNC chair already calling for the party to unite behind Trump and with a discussion (albeit tabled for now) about moving to rhetorically dispatch with the nominating contest — risk going well beyond what happened in 2016.
Rep. C.A. Dutch Ruppersberger won't seek re-election to Congress
Rep. C.A. Dutch Ruppersberger, D-Md., won't seek re-election to his seat after serving in the House for 21 years.
The 77-year-old congressman, who joins a list of dozens of retiring House Democrats, said in a statement that he wants to pass the torch to a younger generation of lawmakers.
“This was an incredibly difficult decision for me because, now more than ever, Congress needs thoughtful, end-game representatives like me — members who care more about constituents and our country and less about cable news hits," he said. "But it is time to pass the torch to a younger generation of leaders and I am looking forward to spending more time with my family."
Ruppersberger's district favors Democratic candidates. All of Maryland's congressional districts are represented by Democrats except one, which is held by GOP Rep. Andy Harris.
MoveOn plans to spend $32 million to boost Biden, congressional Democrats
The progressive group MoveOn plans to spend tens of millions of dollars this election cycle to boost turnout among young voters in key states for Democrats looking to keep the White House and win majorities in both chambers of Congress.
The $32 million investment, laid out initially to The New York Times and spelled out in a memo released Friday morning, is targeting 11 million people that the group calls "surge voters," which it defines as those who either "became active for the first time, or more active, after the 2016 election."
MoveOn's top targets are the presidential and Senate races in Pennsylvania, Wisconsin, Nevada, Arizona and Ohio; the presidential races in Georgia and Michigan; and more than two-dozen swing-district House seats.
Haley again questions Trump's mental fitness for office
Haley is questioning whether Trump is “confused again,” suggesting he conflated her with E. Jean Carroll in a video he posted on Truth Social overnight.
"Wait a second, did Trump just say the person suing him is 'running for office?'" Haley wrote in a post on X. "Is he confused again? I was not in a New York City courtroom yesterday, any more than I was in charge of security at the Capitol on January 6. I was in South Carolina meeting with voters. They’d like to see a debate between me and Trump."
It was unclear, however, who Trump was referring to when he said someone is "running for office." Trump recently confused Haley with former Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., at a campaign office, saying that Haley was in charge of security at the Capitol during the Jan. 6 insurrection.
Trump goes quiet on the airwaves as Haley and her allies target South Carolina
Trump's campaign has been quiet on the airwaves with less than one month until the South Carolina primary, where Haley and her allies have stepped up their ad spending.
Trump's campaign has not spent on ads in South Carolina since the first week of January, according to the ad tracking firm AdImpact. Haley and Americans for Prosperity Action, a super PAC tied to the Koch network that has backed her, have a combined $2.8 million in ads booked over the next two weeks. The South Carolina Republican primary is set for Feb. 24.
Haley's campaign launched two TV ads in the Palmetto State this week, one painting Trump as the candidate of "chaos," while casting Haley as part of a "new chapter" of leadership. The other TV ad touted Haley's work as South Carolina's governor.
Trump campaign spokeswoman Karoline Leavitt wrote in a text message on Friday that she had "nothing to share on ad spending," but noted that the millions spent on ads boosting Haley in Iowa and New Hampshire did not propel her to victories there.
Steve Bannon teases 'special announcement' with Montana Rep. Matt Rosendale next week
Former Trump adviser Steve Bannon teased a "special announcement" next week with Rep. Matt Rosendale, R-Mont., who has been weighing a run for Senate.
Rosendale appeared on Bannon's "War Room" podcast on Thursday, and detailed the pressure he has faced not to run for Senate in Montana, noting his vendors and donors were pressured not to support the congressman. He also noted he is touring the state with Florida GOP Rep. Matt Gaetz.
"We've got standing room only," Rosendale said. "Me and Matt Gaetz are going to go out there and deliver the truth to the people across the state in Montana."
Rosendale has for months been weighing a run against Democratic Sen. Jon Tester, after losing to Tester by nearly 4 percentage points in 2018. But top Republicans, including National Republican Senatorial Committee Chairman Steve Daines, have coalesced around former Navy SEAL Tim Sheehy in the race to take on Tester. Daines, also a Montana Republican, endorsed Sheehy back in June.
Sheehy and the NRSC dropped a new ad Thursday that ties Tester to the Biden administration, while a super PAC linked to Democrats is up with a new ad attacking Sheehy, according to AdImpact.
Tester is a top GOP target this year as one of two Democrats running for re-election in states Trump won in 2020. Trump carried Montana by 16 percentage points.
Trump storms out of courtroom during closing arguments Carroll’s defamation trial
Trump abruptly stormed out of court during closing arguments in the E. Jean Carroll damages trial Friday as her attorney was telling jurors the former president is a liar who thinks “the rules don’t apply to him.”
“The record will reflect that Mr. Trump just rose and walked out of the courtroom,” U.S. District Judge Lewis Kaplan said after his dramatic departure during lawyer Roberta Kaplan’s presentation.
Roberta Kaplan, who’s not related to the judge, had told the jury that Trump spent the “entire trial continuing to engage in defamation” against Carroll by calling her sexual abuse allegations against him a “con job.”
“Ms. Carroll did not make it up, the sexual assault happened and his denials were all complete lies,” the lawyer said.
Haley campaign says it raised $2.6 million in 48 hours after N.H primary
Haley's campaign said it raised $2.6 million in the 48 hours after polls closed in Tuesday's New Hampshire primary, $1.2 million of which came after Trump threatened to “permanently bar” anyone who contributed to the former U.N. ambassador from “the MAGA camp.”
"Trump’s scheme blew up in his face," Haley spokesperson AnnMarie Graham-Barnes said in a statement.
Haley has been ramping up her attacks on Trump as she digs into a month of campaigning in South Carolina before the state’s Feb. 24 primary.
DNC launches ad campaigns in South Carolina and Nevada targeting minority voters
The Democratic National Committee is launching an ad blitz in the coming primary states of South Carolina and Nevada by targeting communities of color, rural areas and potential younger adults as Biden makes his re-election pitch to voters.
The ad campaign, previewed first to NBC News, focuses on getting out the vote, rejecting “MAGA” Republicans and highlighting issues like voting rights and student loan forgiveness. The bulk of the new ads — on radio, in print and online, along with billboards and kiosks on college campuses — start Saturday.
The DNC is spending six figures in South Carolina and another six figures in Nevada.