Harris sidesteps when asked if Israel’s Netanyahu is a ‘close ally’
In her forthcoming interview with CBSâs 60 Minutes program, Kamala Harris did not quite say yes when ask asked if she would consider Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu âa real close allyâ.
âI think, with all due respect, the better question ism do we have an important alliance between the American people and the Israeli people, and the answer to that question is yes,â the vice-president replied in an excerpt from her forthcoming interview on the popular news program.
The US relationship with Israel has grown fraught over the past year, as Joe Bidenâs efforts to encourage a ceasefire in Gaza have failed and the conflict has expended into Lebanon. The issue is particularly perilous for Democrats, who are facing a backlash from some voters, including Arab and Muslim communities in battleground state Michigan, over Bidenâs support for Israelâs invasion of Gaza following the 7 October attack.
Harris avoided talking about Gaza in the 60 Minutes interview, instead noting that US military aid has helped protect the country from volleys of missiles shot by Iran. Hereâs the full clip:
Key events
Flirting with eugenics, Trump says: âWe got a lot of bad genes in our country right nowâ
In an interview earlier today with conservative broadcaster Hugh Hewitt, Donald Trump used terminology associated with eugenics to attack migrants.
The remark came as the former president discussed the alleged harm done by new arrivals to the United States, saying many were âmurderersâ.
âNow, a murderer, itâs in their genes,â Trump continued. âAnd we got a lot of bad genes in our country right now.â
It was language similar to the beliefs of eugenics, which emerged in the late 19th century and held that human ills could be combatted through selective breeding. The theory is today regarded as both inaccurate and racist.
Hereâs audio of Trumpâs remark:
White House warns supreme court has allowed Texas to deny women abortions in emergencies
At the ongoing White House press briefing, press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre said that the supreme court has effectively allowed Texas to deny women abortions even in emergencies, by refusing to take up a Biden administration lawsuit against the state today.
âToday we saw the supreme court decision and what it means that women in Texas could still be denied critical emergency medical care, because of the stateâs dangerous and extreme abortion bans,â Jean-Pierre said. âWe have seen and have heard the horrific stories of women being denied the care they need because of these laws.â
Jean-Pierre also noted that a Georgia court had allowed the stateâs abortion ban to go back into effect, and said:
All of these laws were made possible when the former president handicapped three Supreme Court justices to overturn Roe v Wade. They are creating chaos and confusion for women and doctors.
The administration has been clear that all patients, including women experiencing pregnancy loss and other pregnancy related emergency, must be able to access the emergency medical care they need, and that is required by federal law. The stories we hear of women being denied care they need in emergency situation [are] completely unacceptable.
Joanna Walters
The Georgia supreme courtâs reinstatement a little earlier of a six-week abortion ban in the state is provoking reaction.
The ban was struck down a week ago and now revived while the court considers more fully the stateâs appeal against the banâs striking.
The Center for Reproductive Rights posted on X that: âDespite this devastating setback, we are prepared to fight like hell when the case goes before the Georgia Supreme Court. This is NOT over, and we are NOT backing down.â
The American Civil Liberties Union of Georgia decried todayâs decision.
Andrew Young, executive director, said: âElected officials in our state continue their disrespect of women, treating our bodies as state-owned property. We will persist, using all lawful means to restore dignity, full citizenship and a right to privacy for Georgiaâs women.â
Joanna Walters
Here is some more detail on the new ruling by Georgiaâs supreme court reviving the stateâs six-week ban on abortions, a week after the ban was struck down.
The lawsuit challenging the ban was brought by Atlanta-based SisterSong Women of Color Reproductive Justice Collective.
Today, the Georgia Supreme Court sided with anti-abortion extremists. Every minute this harmful six-week abortion ban is in place, Georgians suffer,â SisterSongâs executive director, Monica Simpson, said in a statement, Reuters reports.
The office of Georgiaâs governor, Brian Kemp, a Republican, did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
The law bans almost all abortions after what it labels a âhuman heartbeatâ is detected, typically around six weeks. In fact, at six weeks a fetus has not yet developed a heart, but there may be rudimentary, pulse-like signals. This is before many women know they are pregnant.
The ban was passed in 2019 during Donald Trumpâs presidency but did not take effect until the end of Roe v Wade in 2022.
Hereâs Simpson speaking at an event last month.
Georgia supreme court reinstates abortion ban
Joanna Walters
Georgiaâs highest court on has today reinstated a ban on nearly all abortions in the state after about six weeks of pregnancy while it considers the US stateâs appeal of last weekâs ruling by a lower court judge blocking the law.
The order from the Supreme Court of Georgia allows the ban to take effect at 5pm ET today, Reuters reports.
A week ago, Fulton county superior judge Robert McBurney struck down the stateâs six-week abortion ban, ruling that the ban is unconstitutional and blocking it from being enforced.
McBurney ruled that the stateâs abortion laws must revert to what they were before the six-week ban â known as the Life Act â was passed in 2019. The ban was blocked as long as Roe v Wade was the law of the land, but went into effect after the US supreme court overturned Roe in 2022.
So for one week, abortions became legal in Georgia again up until about 22 weeks of pregnancy.
The day so far
Kamala Harris is on a media blitz, with appearances planned on everything from The View to Howard Stern in the days to come. We will see her later tonight on 60 Minutes, one of the most watched news programs in the country, but based on what we have seen so far, the vice-president doesnât seem interested in breaking new ground. In excerpts released by CBS, she sidestepped a question about how she would cajole Congress into approving higher taxes on the rich, and demurred when asked if she regarded Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu as a âclose allyâ. Meanwhile, the supreme court began a new term with cases dealing with transgender rights and the Biden administrationâs effort to curb ghost guns on its docket. It also declined to weigh in on a wrongful death lawsuit involving an Alabama clinic at the center of the controversy over IVF care, and a Biden administration challenge to Texasâs abortion ban and how it affects carrying out the procedure in an emergency.
Hereâs what else has happened today:
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Donald Trumpâs policies would add more to the national debt than Kamala Harrisâs, an analysis by a nonpartisan budget watchdog found.
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Biden, Harris and Trump are all marking todayâs one-year anniversary of the 7 October attack in Israel.
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Florida is bracing as Hurricane Milton, which has just been upgraded to a category 5 storm, churns towards it west coast, even as it continues to recover from Hurricane Helene.
Supreme court to weigh transgender rights, ghost gun rule in new term
The supreme court began a new term today, where the conservative-dominated body could issue major rulings on transgender rights, rules to curb the spread of ghost guns, and a high-profile death penalty case.
The court will hear cases in the months to come, and likely issue rulings next year. There is also the chance the justices could be drawn into disputes over the November elections.
From the Associated Press, here are some of the cases they will be considering, starting with ghost guns:
The justices will hear a case Tuesday on regulations for ghost guns, privately made weapons that are hard for police to track because they donât have serial numbers.
The number of the firearms found at crime scenes has soared in recent years, from fewer than 4,000 in 2018 to nearly 20,000 recovered by law enforcement in 2021, according to Justice Department data.
The numbers have been declining in multiple cities since the Biden administration began requiring background checks and age verification for ghost gun kits that can be bought online.
But manufacturers and gun rights groups argue that the administration overstepped and the rule should be overturned.
The rights of transgender minors:
Perhaps the courtâs most closely watched case so far this year is a fight over transgender rights.
The case over state bans on gender-affirming care comes as Republican-led states enact a variety of restrictions, including school sports participation, bathroom usage and drag shows.
The administration and Democratic-led states have extended protections for transgender people, though the Supreme Court has separately prohibited the administration from enforcing a new federal regulation that seeks to protect transgender students.
The justices will weigh a Tennessee law that restricts puberty blockers and hormone therapy for transgender minors. The case does not yet have a hearing date but will likely be argued in December.
And the case of death row inmate Richard Glossip:
In the decades since Richard Glossip was sentenced to die over a 1997 murder-for-hire scheme, the case has become a rare one where prosecutors are conceding mistakes.
Oklahomaâs Republican attorney general has joined with Glossip in seeking to overturn his murder conviction and death sentence.
Despite those doubts, an Oklahoma appeals court has upheld Glossipâs conviction, and the stateâs pardon and parole board deadlocked in a vote to grant him clemency.
Donald Trumpâs running mate JD Vance will host a town hall in Greensboro, North Carolina on Thursday, his campaign announced.
The Ohio senator and vice-presidential aspirant appears set to continue his criticisms of the Biden administrationâs response to Hurricane Helene, which has caused widespread damage to the western part of the swing state.
âKamala Harris has completely failed the people of North Carolina. Not only has she released historic inflation and a flood of convicted illegal immigrants onto them, but she completely left North Carolinians behind in the wake of devastation post-Hurricane Helene. Harrisâ failures have placed a huge burden on taxpayers, and it shows how little she cares about the well-being of Tar Heel State families,â the campaign said as it announced the event.
Florida braces as category 5 Hurricane Milton nears
Days after weathering Hurricane Helene, Florida is now in the path of Hurricane Milton, which has just been upgraded to a category 5 storm. The hurricane has the potential to become the latest crisis on Joe Bidenâs plate just weeks before the 5 November election.
Hereâs the latest on the approaching storm, from the Guardianâs Anna Betts:
North Carolinaâs Republican senator Thom Tillis is not happy about the Harris campaign using his words to criticize Donald Trump.
Trump and his running mate JD Vance have tried to turn Hurricane Heleneâs devastation of North Carolina and other parts of the southeast into a campaign issue, by accusing the Biden administration, and Kamala Harris by extension, of ignoring the plight of those affected.
Yesterday, the Harris campaign used Tillisâs comments about the storm in a tweet:
To which Tillis responded today:
Tillis has broken with the GOP on issues like gun control and LGBTQ+ rights, leading his state party to censure him last year:
Harris sidesteps when asked if Israel’s Netanyahu is a ‘close ally’
In her forthcoming interview with CBSâs 60 Minutes program, Kamala Harris did not quite say yes when ask asked if she would consider Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu âa real close allyâ.
âI think, with all due respect, the better question ism do we have an important alliance between the American people and the Israeli people, and the answer to that question is yes,â the vice-president replied in an excerpt from her forthcoming interview on the popular news program.
The US relationship with Israel has grown fraught over the past year, as Joe Bidenâs efforts to encourage a ceasefire in Gaza have failed and the conflict has expended into Lebanon. The issue is particularly perilous for Democrats, who are facing a backlash from some voters, including Arab and Muslim communities in battleground state Michigan, over Bidenâs support for Israelâs invasion of Gaza following the 7 October attack.
Harris avoided talking about Gaza in the 60 Minutes interview, instead noting that US military aid has helped protect the country from volleys of missiles shot by Iran. Hereâs the full clip:
National debt would grow more under Trump than Harris – budget watchdog
Donald Trumpâs policies would send the national debt higher than those proposed by Kamala Harris, a nonpartisan budgetary watchdog has found.
Both candidates have pitched themselves to voters are responsible stewards of the nationâs economy and the governmentâs spending, while simultaneously proposing expensive new policies. Harris has focused on efforts to fight poverty, making housing more affordable and improve health care, while Trump has floated lowering taxes and spending more on border security and the military.
An analysis from the Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget finds that Trumpâs policies would send the federal debt climbing by as much as $15.2t through 2035, and as little $1.4t. Over the same period, Harrisâs policies could send it up by as much as $8.1t, or nothing at all:
The project comes as the US deals with a yawning budget deficit and a high debt-to-GDP ratio, which have been fueled by long-term expenditures such as paying for Social Security and Medicare, and short-term emergency responses, such as the stimulus measures approved to offset the impact of Covid-19.
Kamala Harrisâs media blitz has not gone unnoticed by the Trump campaign.
Donald Trump and his allies have lately tried to make Hurricane Heleneâs devastation of a swath of the southeastern United States â including battleground states North Carolina and Georgia â into a political issue. This morning, his campaign juxtaposed Harrisâs comments in her interview with podcast Call Her Daddy with images of the damage:
The supreme court today also rejected an attempt by an Alabama fertility clinic to avoid a wrongful death lawsuit that was at the center of a state high court ruling earlier this year that led to IVF access being briefly curtailed in the state, Reuters reports.
Hereâs more:
The U.S. Supreme Court turned away on Monday a bid by an Alabama fertility clinic to avoid a wrongful death claim in a civil lawsuit over the destruction of a coupleâs frozen embryo in a case that has caused concern over the legal landscape for in vitro fertilization.
The justices denied an appeal by the Mobile-based Center for Reproductive Medicine of a ruling by Alabamaâs top court allowing the suit by Felicia Burdick-Aysenne and Scott Aysenne to proceed after deciding that frozen embryos are considered children under state law. The clinic has called the ruling a violation of its constitutional right to due process.
The couple sued the Center for Reproductive Medicine and the hospital housing the clinic in 2021 for wrongful death and negligence after a patient at the hospital gained unauthorized access to the cryogenic embryo storage area and removed several embryos, dropping them on the floor, including the coupleâs one remaining embryo.
The Republican-controlled Alabama Supreme Court in February ruled in the case that under an Alabama law called the Wrongful Death of a Minor Act, âunborn children are âchildren,ââ even outside the womb, allowing the lawsuit seeking monetary damages from the clinic to move forward.
The decision prompted IVF providers in Alabama to suspend treatments, while many health advocates and Democratic officials across the United States held up the decision as offered further evidence that reproductive rights are under assault in the aftermath of the U.S. Supreme Courtâs 2022 decision rolling back abortion rights.
IVF, which helps couples experiencing infertility issues, is a procedure in which eggs are removed from a womanâs ovary and combined with sperm in a laboratory dish to form embryos. The embryos can be frozen for future implantation.
Supreme court maintains ban on emergency abortions that violate Texas law
The supreme court has upheld a ruling that will prevent abortions from being performed in some emergency circumstances in the state, the Associated Press reports.
Texas is the most populous state in the country with an abortion ban, and the Biden administration had sued to ensure abortions are available for women suffering medical emergencies, citing a separate supreme court ruling from earlier this year in a case involving Idahoâs abortion ban.
Hereâs how the court weighed in on Texasâs law, from the AP:
The Supreme Court on Monday let stand a decision barring emergency abortions that violate the law in Texas, which has one of the countryâs strictest abortion bans.
Without detailing their reasoning, the justices kept in place a lower court order that said hospitals cannot be required to provide pregnancy terminations that would violate Texas law.
The Biden administration had asked the justices to throw out the lower court order, arguing that hospitals have to perform abortions in emergency situations under federal law. The administration pointed to the Supreme Courtâs action in a similar case from Idaho earlier this year in which the justices narrowly allowed emergency abortions to resume while a lawsuit continues.
The administration also cited a Texas Supreme Court ruling that said doctors do not have to wait until a womanâs life is in immediate danger to provide an abortion legally. The administration said it brings Texas in line with federal law and means the lower court ruling is not necessary.
Texas asked the justices to leave the order in place, saying the state Supreme Court ruling meant Texas law, unlike Idahoâs, does have an exception for the health of a pregnant patient and thereâs no conflict between federal and state law.
Doctors have said the law remains dangerously vague after a medical board refused to specify exactly which conditions qualify for the exception.
There has been a spike in complaints that pregnant women in medical distress have been turned away from emergency rooms in Texas and elsewhere as hospitals grapple with whether standard care could violate strict laws against abortion.
Kamala Harrisâs running mate, Tim Walz, is also doing his own media blitz.
Her campaign says Walz will be on Jimmy Kimmel Live tonight, and also do an interview with a major US podcast, though they did not say which one. An interview the Minnesota governor gave to 60 Minutes will also air this evening.
He will campaign in Reno, Nevada and Arizona, on Tuesday and Wednesday, respectively, where will do interviews with local media and Hispanic outlets.
Harris plans interviews with Howard Stern, Stephen Colbert and The View
Kamala Harrisâs media blitz will take her to New York City tomorrow, where the vice-president will appear on three high-profile programs with an eye towards boosting her candidacy ahead of the 5 November election.
Harris plans to talk with Howard Stern, a one-time shock jock who has remade himself as an in-depth interviewer, her campaign said. Also on her itinerary is an appearance on The Late Show with Stephen Colbert, whose host has long delighted in pointing out the absurdities of US politics, particularly on the right.
Harris will finally appear on The View, much as Joe Biden did two weeks ago, and put her policies before the talkshowâs daytime viewership.
Harris questioned on how she’ll get tax rise for the rich through Congress
Kamala Harris may be doing more media interviews in the final weeks before the 5 November election, but that doesnât necessarily mean she is saying all that much.
CBS this morning released a portion of her interview on their high-profile broadcast news staple, 60 Minutes. It shows Harris telling correspondent Bill Whitaker that she supports higher taxes on the wealthy (as does Joe Biden and most Democrats in Congress), but sidestepping a question on how sheâll get such a plan through Congress. From CBS:
VICE-PRESIDENT KAMALA HARRIS: Well, one of the things is Iâm gonna make sure that the richest among us who can afford it pay their fair share in taxes. It is not right that teachers and nurses and firefighters are paying a higher tax rate than billionaires and the biggest corporations.
VICE-PRESIDENT KAMALA HARRIS: And I plan on making that fair.
BILL WHITAKER: But weâre dealing with the real world here.
VICE-PRESIDENT KAMALA HARRIS: But the real world includesâ
BILL WHITAKER: How are you gonna get this through Congress?
VICE-PRESIDENT KAMALA HARRIS: You know, when you talk quietly with a lot of folks in Congress, they know exactly what Iâm talking about âcause their constituents know exactly what Iâm talking about. Their constituents are those firefighters and teachers and nurses.
Whitaker is getting at a real issue of concern for Democrats. While they may be able to claw back the majority in the House of Representatives from the GOP in November, their ability to maintain control of the Senate hinges on the re-election of two senators from red states, a tough task that they may not be able to pull off. Should they fail but Harris take the White House, she would be the first president since 1989 to be inaugurated without her party in control of Congress, and in this era of heightened partisanship, that may prove fatal for her prospects of passing any significant legislation in the first two years of her term.
Perhaps Harris will elaborate on what she would do in this situation when the full 60 Minutes interview airs tonight at 8pm.
House speaker Mike Johnson raised eyebrows yesterday when in an interview on ABC News he described being asked what the result of the last presidential election was as a âgotcha gameâ.
ABCâs George Stephanopoulos asked Johnson if he could say âunequivocally that Joe Biden won the 2020 election and Trump lostâ.
Johnson would only reply âthis is the game that is always played by mainstream media with mainstream Republicans. Itâs a gotcha game. Weâre not going to talk about what happened in 2020. Iâm not going to engage in it. Weâre not talking about that. Iâm not going to play the game.â