Harris is leaning on big names like Obama, Beyoncé and Springsteen to close out her campaign

Harris is leaning on big names like Obama, Beyoncé and Springsteen to close out her campaign
Bruce Springsteen performs during a campaign event for Democratic presidential nominee US Vice President Kamala Harris. (Getty Images/AFP)
Updated 17 sec ago
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Harris is leaning on big names like Obama, Beyoncé and Springsteen to close out her campaign

Harris is leaning on big names like Obama, Beyoncé and Springsteen to close out her campaign

CLARKSTON, Georgia: Bruce Springsteen and Barack Obama lent their star power to Kamala Harris’ quest for the presidency on Thursday as the vice president enlists some of her most high-profile surrogates in the closing days of the campaign.
The use of Springsteen, an iconic performer whose career spans five decades, and Obama, still one of the biggest names in Democratic politics, highlights how Harris’ campaign is in an all-out sprint ahead of Election Day, leaning on some of the most noteworthy names in the party to both help her deliver her closing message and lambast her opponent, former President Donald Trump.
“I get why people are looking to shake things up, but what I cannot understand is why anybody would think that Donald Trump would shake things up in ways that are good for you,” Obama told the audience outside Atlanta.
Obama wasted no time attacking Trump, knocking him for “trying to sell you stuff,” as someone who only cares about “his ego, his money, his status,” and gives lengthy speeches that are “just word salad.”
“We do not need four years of a wannabe king, a wannabe dictator,” Obama said before touting Harris as someone “ready for the job.”
After arguing Trump is focused on himself, Obama said, “If you elect Kamala Harris ... she will be focused on you.”
Springsteen, too, focused on Trump.
After a performance of “The Promised Land,” a ballad off his 1978 album “Darkness on the Edge of Town,” Springsteen told the Georgia audience he was backing Harris because he wants “a president who reveres the constitution.”
“There is only one candidate in this election who holds those principles dear, Kamala Harris. She’s running to be the 47th president of the United States. Donald Trump is running to be an American tyrant,” Springsteen added before playing “Land of Hope and Dreams” and “Dancing in the Dark.”
Harris’ rally in Clarkston — an eastern Atlanta suburb — was at a high school football stadium where the audience reflected the suburb’s reputation as the “most diverse square mile in America.” The community has taken in waves of immigrants and refugees, and 40 percent of its population was foreign-born in 2020.
The DJ working the crowd before the event started called out not only to graduates of historically Black colleges and universities, but to West Indians. Among those in the snaking line to enter were people of Asian descent and women in hijabs.
Many attendees said they were trying to push their relatives and neighbors to the polls to vote for Harris, either through formal volunteer efforts or on their own. “I decided to go volunteer because I couldn’t keep my mouth shut,” said Beverly Payne, who lives in Cumming, a Republican suburban stronghold north of Atlanta.
Payne said she is still working on persuading her mother but has already swung one Georgia vote to Harris. “My 85-year-old father has gone Democratic for the first time in his life,” she said.
Actor Samuel L. Jackson, director Spike Lee and actor and filmmaker Tyler Perry also spoke at the start of the event.
“No matter what kind of shenanigans, skullduggery and subterfuge, the okie-doke, we’re not going back,” Lee proclaimed.
Harris’ run of events with celebrities will continue Friday when she travels to Texas for a Houston rally with Beyoncé, according to three people familiar with the matter. The singer is a Houston native, and her 2016 song “Freedom” has become Harris’ campaign anthem.
While the Friday rally is in a red state that even the most optimistic Democrat knows the vice president is unlikely to turn blue in November, the event Thursday in Georgia highlights that state’s prominent place in her possible path to defeating former President Donald Trump.
Democrats, led by then-former Vice President Joe Biden and Harris, won Georgia in 2020, becoming the first Democratic presidential campaign to win the Southern state since Bill Clinton in 1992. Harris’ campaign is hopeful she can keep the state blue in 2024.
Polls of likely voters in Georgia from NYT/Siena to Fox News to the Atlanta Journal-Constitution show a tight race between Trump and Harris.
Thursday’s event is the first in the campaign’s “When We Vote We Win” concert series that aims to encourage Harris supporters to vote before Election Day.
Harris is not the only member of the Democratic campaign to lean on star power in the final days. Gov. Tim Walz, her running mate, has events in North Carolina on Thursday alongside singer-songwriter James Taylor.
Democrats are known for leaning on high-profile surrogates in the final days of presidential races.
Springsteen has long been a supporter of Democratic presidential campaigns. The artist backed Obama in 2008 and 2012, even endorsing the would-be president in the contentious 2008 Democratic primary. He backed former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton in 2016, performing at a Philadelphia rally on the eve of Election Day, and endorsed Biden in 2020. The New Jersey artist endorsed Harris earlier this month, calling Trump the “most dangerous candidate for president in my lifetime.”
Beyoncé, too, backed Clinton in 2016, performing at an event in Cleveland alongside husband and rapper Jay Z just days before Election Day that year. And Taylor has become a staple at Democratic events and fundraisers.
But Clinton’s loss to Trump in 2016, despite the considerable star power behind her, serves as a warning for Democrats that energy provided by big-name artists like Springsteen and Beyoncé is often not enough to win an election.
Harris campaign advisers, though, see events like those in Georgia and Texas as major moments to mobilize voter enthusiasm and get out the vote before Election Day.
According to the Associated Press count, 2,025,645 people in Georgia have already voted early in-person, while an additional 134,336 mail-in ballots have been submitted in the 2024 general election.


Climate change worsened deadly Africa floods, scientists say

Climate change worsened deadly Africa floods, scientists say
Updated 6 sec ago
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Climate change worsened deadly Africa floods, scientists say

Climate change worsened deadly Africa floods, scientists say
  • A new analysis by the World Weather Attribution network of scientists found warming driven by the use of fossil fuels had exacerbated the flooding in Sudan
  • The researchers said there was a clear link between the extreme rainfall and a warming planet

ABUJA, Nigeria: Human-caused climate change worsened floods that have killed hundreds of people and displaced millions in Cameroon, Chad, Niger, Nigeria and Sudan this year, according to a study published on Wednesday.
The intense rainy season has unleashed a humanitarian crisis across large areas of the Sahel region bordering the Sahara desert.
A new analysis by the World Weather Attribution (WWA) network of scientists found warming driven by the use of fossil fuels had exacerbated the flooding in Sudan.
The researchers also said climate change would have made this year’s torrential rains around five to 20 percent more intense across the Niger and Lake Chad basins, citing a previous WWA study of similar floods in 2022.
“This is only going to keep getting worse if we keep burning fossil fuels,” said Clair Barnes from the Center for Environmental Policy at Imperial College London.
Speaking at a briefing ahead of the study’s publication, she said such downpours “could happen every year” if global temperatures increase to two degrees Celsius (35.6 Fahrenheit) above pre-industrial levels.
“It’s pretty serious,” she said.


Global warming is not just about rising temperatures — the extra heat trapped in the atmosphere and seas has knock-on effects and can result in more intense downpours and storms.
The researchers said there was a clear link between the extreme rainfall and a warming planet.
In the study, they focused on war-torn Sudan, where millions of displaced people have been uprooted by conflict and driven into flood-prone areas.
The scientists used modelling to compare weather patterns in our world and one without human-induced warming, and found that month-long spells of intense rainfall in parts of Sudan had become heavier and more likely due to climate change.
At the current 1.3 degrees Celsius of warming, they said similar periods of rainfall are expected to occur on average about once every three years, and have become about 10 percent heavier due to climate change.

A Sudanese man pulls his donkey across a flooded street in Tokar in the Read Sea State following recent heavy flooding in eastern Sudan, on October 3, 2024. (AFP)


“These results are incredibly concerning,” said Izidine Pinto, one of the study’s authors and a researcher at the Royal Netherlands Meteorological Institute.
He warned that “with every fraction of a degree of warming, the risk of extreme floods will keep increasing,” and called for the UN’s COP29 climate summit to “accelerate the transition away from fossil fuels” when it meets in Azerbaijan next month.
Joyce Kimutai, a researcher at Imperial’s Center for Environmental Policy, said the floods underscored the need for a loss and damage fund for nations devastated by climate change.
A key meeting ahead of COP29 earlier this month ended with countries making little progress over how to finance a deal for poorer nations.
“Africa has contributed a tiny amount of carbon emissions globally, but is being hit the hardest by extreme weather,” Kimutai said.
The role of climate change in the floods was compounded by other human-made problems, the researchers said, and they called for better maintenance of dams and investment in early warning systems.
 


Trump vows to fire special counsel Jack Smith ‘in two seconds’ when he wins presidential race

Trump vows to fire special counsel Jack Smith ‘in two seconds’ when he wins presidential race
Updated 34 min 30 sec ago
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Trump vows to fire special counsel Jack Smith ‘in two seconds’ when he wins presidential race

Trump vows to fire special counsel Jack Smith ‘in two seconds’ when he wins presidential race
  • Trump is accused by Smith of conspiring to overturn the results of the 2020 election won by Democrat Joe Biden
  • Harris campaign says Trump's comments are right in line with the warnings made by Trump’s former Chief of Staff John Kelly)that "he wants to rule as a dictator with unchecked power

WASHINGTON: Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump said Thursday that he would immediately fire Jack Smith, the special counsel who brought two federal cases against him, if he wins the November election.
Trump, who is awaiting sentencing on separate charges relating to hush money payments, is accused by Smith of conspiring to overturn the results of the 2020 election won by Democrat Joe Biden.
Trump’s remarks targeting the special counsel prompted the campaign of his White House rival Kamala Harris to accuse the former president of thinking he was “above the law.”
Trump’s lawyers filed a motion meanwhile which sought the dismissal of the election subversion case on the grounds that Smith was unlawfully appointed — an argument that they successfully used in another case against the former president brought by the special counsel.
Trump was charged in Florida with mishandling classified documents after leaving the White House, but the case was tossed out by District Judge Aileen Cannon, a Trump appointee.
The legitimacy of special counsels has been validated in numerous other cases and Cannon’s extraordinary ruling has been appealed by Smith.
Trump praised Cannon as a “brave, brilliant judge” during an interview on Thursday with conservative podcast host Hugh Hewitt.
Trump, who has threatened to prosecute his perceived political enemies if reelected, was asked by Hewitt whether he would pardon himself or dismiss Smith on his first day back in the White House.
“It’s so easy. I would fire him within two seconds,” Trump said.
Smith was appointed special counsel by Biden’s attorney general, Merrick Garland.
A US president does not have the authority to dismiss a special counsel, but if reelected Trump could appoint a new attorney general who could do so.
A Trump-appointed attorney general could also have any federal cases against him thrown out.

Ammar Moussa, a Harris campaign spokesman, said Trump’s comments “are right in line with the warnings made by Trump’s former Chief of Staff (John Kelly) that he wants to rule as a dictator with unchecked power.”
“A second Trump term, where a more unstable and unhinged Trump has essentially no guardrails and is surrounded by loyalists who will enable his worst instincts, is guaranteed to be more dangerous,” Moussa added.
Trump, 78, had been scheduled to go on trial for the election subversion charges in March, but the case was frozen while his lawyers argued that an ex-president should be immune from criminal prosecution.
The Supreme Court ruled in July that a former president has broad immunity from prosecution for official acts conducted while in office, but can be pursued for unofficial acts.
Trump is accused of conspiracy to defraud the United States and conspiracy to obstruct an official proceeding — the session of Congress that was to certify Biden’s 2020 election victory — when it was violently attacked by Trump supporters on January 6, 2021.
The former president is also accused of seeking to disenfranchise US voters with his false claims that he won the 2020 election.
In May, Trump was convicted in New York of 34 counts of falsifying business records to cover up hush money payments made to porn star Stormy Daniels.
He also faces racketeering charges in Georgia related to efforts to overturn the 2020 election.
 


Chad denies supplying weapons to Sudan’s paramilitary forces

Chad denies supplying weapons to Sudan’s paramilitary forces
Updated 25 October 2024
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Chad denies supplying weapons to Sudan’s paramilitary forces

Chad denies supplying weapons to Sudan’s paramilitary forces

LIBREVILLE: Chad on Thursday denied “amplifying the war in Sudan,” which has killed tens of thousands, by arming the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces, warring against the Sudanese army for over a year.

A bloody conflict has raged since April 2023 between the Sudanese army under the country’s de facto ruler Abdel Fattah Al-Burhan and the RSF led by his former deputy Mohamed Hamdan Dagalo.

Chad’s government was accused of aiding the RSF by Sudan’s Darfur Governor Minni Minnawi, who heads a faction allied with the Khartoum government.

On Wednesday, Minnawi told radio station RFI he had traveled to Paris to “ask France to halt the role of the Chadian government in the transit through its territory of non-humanitarian aid — military equipment — to RSF-controlled areas in Sudan.”

Chad, which has taken in some 680,000 refugees from Sudan — more than any other country — rejected the claims on Thursday.

“Chad has no interest in amplifying the war in Sudan by supplying weapons,” said foreign minister and government spokesman Abderaman Koulamallah, pointing out that Chad was “one of the rare countries upon which this war has had major repercussions.”

“We do not support any of the factions that are fighting on Sudanese territory — we are in favor of peace,” Koulamallah told RFI.

The conflict in Sudan has left tens of thousands dead and some 26 million people facing severe food insecurity, with famine declared in the Zamzam displacement camp in Sudan’s western Darfur region.


IMF official calls on international community to bring end to Lebanon conflict

IMF official calls on international community to bring end to Lebanon conflict
Updated 25 October 2024
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IMF official calls on international community to bring end to Lebanon conflict

IMF official calls on international community to bring end to Lebanon conflict
  • A recent United Nations Development report estimated that Lebanon’s GDP would be 9.2 percent smaller as a “direct consequence” of the conflict

WASHINGTON: The international community should work to end the conflict in the Middle East and address the “huge” humanitarian crisis that has engulfed countries in the region, the head of the IMF’s Middle East and Central Asia department said Thursday.
Jihad Azour spoke to AFP in Washington, where the annual meetings of the International Monetary Fund and the World Bank are currently taking place.
In updated economic estimates, the Fund slightly downgraded its outlook for economic growth in the Middle East and North Africa to 2.1 percent this year, while maintaining its 4.0 percent growth outlook for 2025.
However, these estimates do not take into account the economic impact of the recent escalation of conflict in southern Lebanon, where Israel has invaded to fight Hezbollah.
Azour, a former Lebanese finance minister, noted that the most severely affected places, including Lebanon and the Palestinian territories, were facing a “huge humanitarian problem” which has devastated their economies.
“You have massive loss in output, you have a massive destruction in infrastructure, and you have a huge set of needs for additional spending, for shelter, for health and so on,” he said.
“We expect that growth will be negative in those cases, and we expect that the recovery would take longer to materialize,” he added.
The IMF has suspended its forecasts for the Lebanese economy, citing an “unusually high degree of uncertainty.” But a recent United Nations Development report estimated that the country’s GDP would be 9.2 percent smaller as a “direct consequence” of the conflict.
“You have massive destruction of infrastructure in a large region, which is the south, and mass destruction of livelihood, because this is an agricultural region that was severely affected,” Azour said, adding that almost 20 percent of Lebanon’s population had been displaced.
“We encourage the international community, we encourage the friends of Lebanon, to provide grants,” he continued, calling on the international community “to put its utmost effort in order to solve the problem, in order to reduce the suffering of people.”

For countries indirectly affected by the conflict, like Jordan and Egypt, the impact of Israel’s ongoing military campaigns in Gaza and Lebanon has been felt differently.
While Egypt has been hit hard by a 70 percent fall in revenues from ships traversing the Suez Canal, Jordan’s economy has suffered from a steep decline in tourism, Azour said.
The IMF recently expanded an existing loan program with Egypt from $3 billion to $5 billion, in return for painful and wide-ranging economic reforms, including a shift to a more flexible exchange rate and an emphasis on tackling inflation and high debt levels.
Azour said that while the Fund was currently focused on helping countries in the region address immediate concerns, it also had a role to play in bringing the region together to help with post-conflict reconstruction.
“We think that there is a regional play here, whereby countries could trade and exchange more and can grow better together,” he said.
 


$100 mn settlement reached with owner of ship that destroyed US bridge

$100 mn settlement reached with owner of ship that destroyed US bridge
Updated 25 October 2024
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$100 mn settlement reached with owner of ship that destroyed US bridge

$100 mn settlement reached with owner of ship that destroyed US bridge

WASHINGTON: The US Justice Department said Thursday that it has reached a $100 million settlement with the Singaporean owner and operator of a cargo ship that destroyed a Baltimore bridge.
The 1,000-foot (300-meter) M/V Dali collided with the Francis Scott Key Bridge in the early morning of March 26, killing six road workers and blocking the busy shipping channel.
Grace Ocean Private Ltd. and Synergy Marine Private Ltd. have agreed to pay $101.1 million to settle a civil suit aimed at recovering costs incurred in responding to the disaster and for removing tons of bridge debris from the channel leading to the port of Baltimore, the Justice Department said.
“Nearly seven months after one of the worst transportation disasters in recent memory, which claimed six lives and caused untold damage, we have reached an important milestone with today’s settlement,” Benjamin Mizer, a senior Justice Department official, said in a statement.
“This resolution ensures that the costs of the federal government’s cleanup efforts in the Fort McHenry Channel are borne by Grace Ocean and Synergy and not the American taxpayer,” Mizer said.
The Justice Department said the settlement does not include any damages for eventual rebuilding of the Francis Scott Key Bridge. That is the subject of a separate claim from the state of Maryland.
The families of the six road workers who lost their lives are also pursuing legal claims of their own.
The Fort McHenry channel leading to the port of Baltimore, a key hub for the auto industry, reopened to commercial navigation on June 10.