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Kamala harris

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The Teamsters stated that they’re not making a presidential endorsement, leaving social media to call them “bigots” for not backing Kamala Harris.
On Wednesday (September 18), the International Brotherhood of Teamsters declared that they would not endorse the Democratic nominee, Vice President Kamala Harris, for president in the upcoming election. The decision not to endorse her or the Republican nominee, former President Donald Trump makes it the first time since 1988 that the union has not made an endorsement of a presidential candidate. The news was not well received on social media, with many calling out the group for not endorsing Harris because she’s a Black & South Asian woman. Former TMZ host Van Lathan drew attention to this in a post on X, formerly Twitter, writing: “So when Joe Biden ran in 2020 the Teamsters endorsed. Biden-Harris was then the most pro-union administration ever, yet support eroded when Harris was top of ticket. What changed, I wonder??”

“Unfortunately, neither major candidate was able to make serious commitments to our union to ensure the interests of working people are always put before Big Business,” Teamsters President Sean O’Brien said in a statement. The Teamsters would also release internal polling numbers taken when President Joe Biden withdrew from the race, showing that 60% favored Trump with 34% favoring Harris. 6% showed support for another candidate. 
The decision is surprising as Vice President Harris was the deciding vote for the passing of the 2021 American Rescue Plan which included a package saving the Teamsters’ pension package. Political science professor Chris Towler noted that disparity, writing in a post on X, formerly Twitter:  “And miss me with the whole “her policies” shit, just a few months ago the Biden-Harris policy agenda had Teamsters’ support.”

The Teamsters National Black Caucus blasted the move, with President James “Curb” Curbeam questioning O’Brien’s unwillingness to have “hard conversations” and the polling methodology. He then stated that the caucus would do its own organizing supporting Harris. “Any labor leader thinking that Donald Trump is the candidate of choice should turn their union card in,” Curbeam said to CNN. The West Coast Teamsters then announced its endorsement of Harris minutes later,followed by state Teamsters unions from Pennsylvania. Reactions online were swift, blasting O’Brien and other Teamsters backing Trump, noting O’Brien’s presence as a speaker at the Republican National Convention in August.
Check out more reactions to the Teamsters’ lack of endorsement below. 

1. Nancy Pelosi

4. Dr. Regina Michele

5. Miss Aja

6. BlackKnight10k

7. Big Teezy

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Source: JIM WATSON / Getty
Vice President Kamala Harris’ interview with the National Association of Black Journalists highlighted key points of her proposed presidential policy.
On Tuesday (Sept. 17), Vice President Kamala Harris sat down with a panel of members from the National Association of Black Journalists in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. The Democratic presidential nominee answered questions from Gerren Keith Gaynor of theGrio, Politico contributor Eugene Daniels, and NPR Fresh Air co-host Tonya Mosley at public radio station WHHY’s headquarters. The interview was held in front of a live audience, similar to the appearance by former President Donald Trump last month at the NABJ convention in Chicago, Illinois.

Harris got the opportunity to again address Trump’s repeating of false claims about Haitian immigrants in Springfield, Ohio, eating dogs and cats, which he did at their presidential debate in that city last week. “It’s a crying shame, what’s happening to those families, those children in that community,” she said, adding: “I know that people are deeply troubled by what is happening to that community in Springfield, Ohio, and it’s got to stop. And we’ve got to say that you cannot be entrusted with standing behind the seal of the president of the United States of America, engaging in that hateful rhetoric that, as usual, is designed to divide us as a country.”

Harris was also asked about her support for reparations for Black Americans, asking if she would take executive action to create a commission on the subject or leave the process to Congress. “I’m not discounting the importance of any executive action,” she said. “But ultimately Congress, because if you’re going to talk about it in any substantial way, there will be hearings, there will be a level of public education and dialogue.” Harris previously backed the Senate version of H.R. 40, a bill introduced by the late Representative John Conyers of Michigan to establish that federal commission.
The vice president also tackled questions on gun control and abortion and shared her thoughts about questions from some Black men about her trying to get their vote. “I think it’s very important to not operate from the assumption that Black men are in anybody’s pocket,” she said. “Black men are like any other voting group. You gotta earn their vote. So I’m working to earn the vote, not assuming I’m going to have it because I am Black.”

Taylor Swift‘s endorsement of vice president Kamala Harris for president on Sept. 10 was “the start of the journey” for millions of apolitical Swifties and celebrity-news fanatics, according to Lucille Wenegieme, HeadCount’s executive director. “They might click a link, but they’re not immediately going to Google, ‘Where’s all my voting information?’” she says. “Somebody else might talk about it, and it comes up in their feed somewhere else, and maybe they see a show in October. It’s multiple touch-points that tend to move folks across the finish line.”
Wenegieme, a former scientist who worked in the fashion industry before joining get-out-the-vote group HeadCount as a communications executive in 2019, has spent months observing how young music fans consider getting involved in election campaigns. An attention-getting megastar announcement might coax them into action, but so might a smaller artist at a neighborhood club.

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“Having somebody who’s relatable for you, who plays at the local spot you go to, and you can essentially have a beer with, talking from the stage about how you can go out and vote, is extremely powerful,” she says. “I don’t want to discount what folks with not as large a reach as Taylor Swift can do.”

By phone from New York, where she has worked at HeadCount for the past year, Wenegieme discussed what it’s like, as someone who mobilizes volunteer teams at concerts and festivals, to be a peripheral part of the music business.

What does your background as a scientist working on Nitrogen-fixing bacteria have to do with getting out the vote? 

It just brings me a different perspective. It’s more about not being scared to ask the stupid question. [And] to have the steep learning curve in a new industry.

What are you learning about the music business in this job?

One of the things I admired about HeadCount when I first learned about it a few years ago: You’re starting with the music fan. It’s probably the nicest way to get into the music industry. It feels like a cheat code, to have a nice, fun thing to be able to do, and not have to be in the thick of it with some of our partners, supporting artists in the industry.

What is the most efficient way to engage fans and encourage them to vote?

There’s no easy ticket. The most famous musicians have learned you can throw million-dollar [fund-raising] concerts and not do as much as you think you might — but it is contributing to that overall culture of participation. We do the in-person stuff. That’s our bread and butter. We’ve done it for 20 years. We are having those peer-to-peer conversations with people, and talking to them about why it’s important to have their voice heard. We’re totally nonpartisan and that brings a lot of trust for us.

Where do the geography-centered concert business and major political campaigns, which center on swing states, intersect?

We have different goals than the campaigns do. The campaigns are focused on reaching the smallest margins that they can to get the outcome that they want. We are about getting as many people as possible, anywhere, anytime, not just for the presidential election, not just in a midterm [election]. We have 60,000 volunteers in 38 states and D.C. A lot of times that is extremely regionally focused. These are people who are constantly going to shows in their areas, they know the venues, they know the artists coming through their market. That’s the connection. “These are the people in my town that I see shows with” — that’s what’s important, not the people who live in a specific zip code because it’s been poll-tested in a specific way.

How do you most effectively engage a new voter and coax them to register to vote?

Our team leaders are trained on the latest with voter-registration laws across the country. With music festivals, you might have somebody who traveled across state lines to get to that place. We want to make sure we can support them wherever they live. We’re not asking them to give up money on-site, we’re just asking them to do something. We keep it really functional.

In the week after President Biden dropped out of the presidential race in late July, and Vice President Harris took over his candidacy, voter registration increased 69%, according to HeadCount’s data; registration increased 54% among 18-to-24-year-olds after July 21. What was going on there? 

There was the assassination attempt, there was a vice-president nominee chosen on the Republican ticket, as well as the switch on the Democratic side — a level of unexpectedness that pierced the news cycle, so there were more young people hearing about it. And the candidate switch, for a lot of young people, was validation for something they had been telling us. They wanted to see different choices in general. Again, we don’t tell folks how to vote, but we listen a lot.

What advice would you give both campaigns about how to use music most effectively to get young people to vote for your side? 

Don’t think about music as a thing you can use. Think about musicians, and the music community, as a community to partner with, in the same way you might think of ethnic communities of people to partner with. That’s what we do.

Taylor Swift‘s endorsement of Kamala Harris is clearly rattling Donald Trump.
The former president lashed out at the pop superstar on his Truth Social account Sunday (Sept. 15) following her recent endorsement of the vice president in the 2024 U.S. presidential election. “I HATE TAYLOR SWIFT!” Trump wrote in all caps.

The 78-year-old businessman-turned-politician’s post follows Swift’s message in support of the Harris-Walz campaign follow last week’s first televised debate between Trump and Harris on ABC News. The “Anti-Hero” singer’s lengthy note to her 238 million Instagram followers didn’t directly attack the ex-POTUS but focused rather on encouraging her fans to research the issues and register to vote.

“I will be casting my vote for Kamala Harris and Tim Walz in the 2024 Presidential Election,” Swift wrote alongside a photo with her cat Benjamin Button. “I’m voting for @kamalaharris because she fights for the rights and causes I believe need a warrior to champion them.”

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The pop star’s endorsement of Harris-Walz also called out Trump posting fake AI images that had falsely suggested she supported the MAGA leader.

“It really conjured up my fears around AI, and the dangers of spreading misinformation,” she said about the doctored images Trump put up on his Truth Social feed. “It brought me to the conclusion that I need to be very transparent about my actual plans for this election as a voter. The simplest way to combat misinformation is with the truth.”

Swift signed her Instagram post as “Childless Cat Lady,” a zinger aimed at Trump’s VP candidate JD Vance, who once used that description to demean Democratic leaders without children.

Following Trump’s disdainful Truth Social post on Sunday, Swifties came out of the woodwork on social media to show support for the superstar, including one of her biggest fans, Flavor Flav (aka “King Swiftie”). “I LOVE TAYLOR SWIFT,!!” the Public Enemy story wrote on X (formerly Twitter).

Other Swifties took the opportunity to share memes and GIFs teasing the Republican presidential nominee about his post, including a clip of Swift raising a wine glass on The Graham Norton Show in 2022. “Taylor Swift seeing Trump’s post like ‘my work here is done,’” the post’s caption on X reads. Another fan shared a scene from the Mean Girls remake, writing, “Trump posting ‘I hate Taylor swift’ after his internal polling numbers dropped.”

Indeed, Swift’s endorsement post of the Democratic candidates brought around 400,000 people to the Vote.gov registration website in the following days. The singer could also continue efforts to get out the vote to hundreds of thousands of fans during her upcoming U.S. leg of The Eras Tour, which launches again on Oct.18 with three back-to-back shows at Hard Rock Stadium in Miami. From there she’ll visit New Orleans’ Caesars Superdome (Oct. 25-27) and Indianapolis’ Lucas Oil Stadium (Nov. 1-3). Swift’s worldwide Eras Tour in on track to becoming the highest-grossing global tour in history, with approximately 10 million tickets sold.

Taylor Swift caused a major stir on Sept. 10 when she publicly endorsed Kamala Harris for President in a candid Instagram post after the first presidential debate.

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“I’m voting for @kamalaharris because she fights for the rights and causes I believe need a warrior to champion them. I think she is a steady-handed, gifted leader, and I believe we can accomplish so much more in this country if we are led by calm and not chaos,” Swift wrote on Instagram, alongside a photo of her and her cat, Benjamin Button.

In a jab to OP vice-presidential candidate JD Vance, the “Cruel Summer” singer signed off with, “With love and hope, Taylor Swift, Childless Cat Lady.”

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The post exploded, racking up 1 million “likes” in just 13 minutes, with Swift’s celebrity friends and fans jumping in to show support.

Among the first to engage was Charli XCX, a known Harris supporter, who famously tweeted earlier this year, “Kamala IS brat,” sparking one of Harris’ viral campaign moments. Speaking of the moment, the Brit previously said she’s “happy to help to prevent democracy from failing forever.”

Other notable figures quickly followed suit. Selena Gomez liked the post on Instagram, as did Jennifer Aniston, Lady Gaga, Andy Cohen, Mandy Moore, Jack Antonoff, DJ Zedd and Australian singer Gretta Ray.

Bette Midler, however, kept it simple, tweeting, “#TAYLORSWIFT endorses #KamalaHarris4President!!”

In what was among the more unsettling reactions, Elon Musk jumped into the conversation with a bizarre tweet: “Fine Taylor… you win… I will give you a child and guard your cats with my life.”

Fine Taylor … you win … I will give you a child and guard your cats with my life— Elon Musk (@elonmusk) September 11, 2024

Meanwhile, MSNBC’s Lawrence O’Donnell offered high praise for Swift’s move, calling it “the most important celebrity endorsement I’ve ever seen,” adding, “For someone who’s never been impressed by celebrity endorsements, this is perfect and powerful.”

While the multi-award-winning artist’s post has generated widespread support, not all reactions were enthusiastic. When asked about the endorsement, former President Donald Trump simply responded, “I have no idea.”

During the Sept. 10 debate against Kamala Harris, Donald Trump stunned viewers with the baseless claim that Haitian migrants in Springfield, Ohio, were “eating the dogs and cats” of local residents, referencing a viral Facebook post that circulated in the area.

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“In Springfield, they’re eating the dogs,” Trump said. “The people that came in, they’re eating the cats. They’re eating the pets of people that live there. And this is what’s happening in our country and it’s a shame.”

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Debate moderator David Muir swiftly debunked the claim, saying that the city manager of Springfield, Ohio, said there were “no credible reports of specific claims of pets being harmed, injured or abused by individuals within the immigrant community.”

Trump replied, “People on television say my dog was taken and used as food.” Muir reiterated, “Again the Springfield city manager says there’s no evidence of that.”

Understandably, the wild allegation quickly became the most talked-about moment of the night.

Flavor Flav wasted no time jumping into the conversation, quipping on X: “Pet Shop Boys better stay inside and lock the doors. You too, Snoop Dogg. And Pitbull.”

Other celebrities reacted with disbelief. Bette Midler called out the claim directly, tweeting, “Now he’s spreading that lie about eating cats,” while noting debate moderator David Muir had disproven Trump’s statement.

Pet Shop Boys better stay inside and lock the doors. You too Snoop Dogg. And Pitbull.— FLAVOR FLAV (@FlavorFlav) September 11, 2024

“People don’t leave my rallies.” Hahahahahaha. Now he’s spreading that lie about eating cats. Muir says NO PETS have been harmed.— bettemidler (@BetteMidler) September 11, 2024

Trump’s vice-presidential running mate J.D. Vance, who shared the viral post on his X (formerly Twitter) account on Sept. 9, later doubled down on the pet-eating story in the post-debate spin room.

“We just heard a 911 call from a citizen in Springfield earlier today that some of the immigrants were capturing geese at the local pond, slaughtering them and killing them,” Vance told reporters. When pressed about the claim that migrants were eating pets, he responded, “I don’t know what are the full spate of animals being consumed there, but I know the geese are certainly among them.”

In a statement, Springfield police further clarified, “There have been no credible reports or specific claims of pets being harmed, injured, or abused by individuals within the immigrant community.”

Reuters also fact-checked the claim, confirming there was no evidence to support widespread incidents of pet theft or harm by Haitian migrants.

The outlandish claim about pet-eating dominated social media, with many left shocked by the absurdity of the situation. Check out some of the best reactions below.

taylor swift heard people were eating cats & she stood tf up— bella (@a90strend) September 11, 2024

Wow, cats have had a hell of an election season huh?— Jasmine Wright (@JasJWright) September 11, 2024

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Kamala Harris’ presence & performance during her CNN interview were received well by social media, who also pointed out the flaws of the questioning.
On Thursday (August 29), Democratic presidential nominee Kamala Harris sat down for a primetime interview with Dana Bash of CNN and the reactions afterward were full of praise for her presence and deft answers from online observers. Her vice presidential nominee, Minnesota Governor Tim Walz, was also present for the conversation which took place in Savannah, Georgia while the two were in the city before a campaign rally. Bash’s first question was about what Vice President Harris would do once elected. She wasted no time in stating that her highest priority should she be elected to office would be to “support and strengthen the middle class” with several policies including stifling corporate price gouging and increasing the child tax credit along with access to affordable housing.

Harris in response to first Q from Dana Bash: Sadly in the last decade we have had in the former president someone who has really been pushing an agenda & environment that’s about diminishing the character & strength of who we are as Americans. People are ready to turn the page pic.twitter.com/joNm229Jap
— Aaron Rupar (@atrupar) August 30, 2024

Bash would then query the vice president on a series of topics including her position on the war in Gaza, to which Harris echoed her comments from the Democratic National Convention, stating that “Far too many innocent Palestinians have been killed,” while reiterating her belief that Israel has a right to defend itself and a return of the hostages right taken by Hamas: “We have to get a deal done.” The conversation soon turned to the attacks by Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump on Harris’ racial identity including a remark that she “happened to turn Black” within the past few years. “Same old, tired playbook,” she replied. “Next question, please.”

Harris on Trump’s racist attacks: “Same old, tired playbook. Next question, please.” pic.twitter.com/WMyXzVRoI3
— Aaron Rupar (@atrupar) August 30, 2024

Harris would also defend the Biden Administration’s record of the last three and a half years, highlighting the economic growth and the benefits of the infrastructure bill that was passed nationwide. “I’ll say that that’s good work,” she stated. “There’s more to do, but that’s good work.” She’d also go on to speak about her reaction to when President Joe Biden endorsed her to be the Democratic nominee.

This was a highlight of the CNN interview — when Biden told Kamala he’d endorse her, she was worried about his well-being more than her candidacy. She will be a gracious Madam President. pic.twitter.com/4prnzePAht
— 🪷 Madam Auntie VP Kamala Harris for PRESIDENT! (@flywithkamala) August 30, 2024
The reactions to the interview online praised the Vice President for her poise in handling the first major interview of her presidential campaign. New York Times opinion writer Michelle Cottle noted that in a reaction article, writing: “Amusingly, Bash looked more flustered than Harris did for most of the interview.” Others online noted how Harris clearly illustrated her potential policies as a future president.
Check out more online reactions to the interview below.

1. Matt McDermott

2. Ketih Boykin

3. Trumps Taxes

4. Tre Easton

5. Portia J.

6. JJ Bittenbindr

7. Michaelangelo Signorile

8. Danielle Moodie

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Source: NurPhoto / Getty / Harris Campaign
The ridiculously orange man, Donald Trump, is being accused of being very yellow when it comes to debating someone with better debate skills than him.

The Harris Campaign is not above taking a page out of Donald Trump’s book regarding trolling. In a video shared on the campaign’s official account on X, formerly Twitter, they mocked the orange menace for giving the impression that he would back out of the upcoming presidential debate on ABC.

Team Harris shared a video of Trump talking about the debate, with chicken noises playing in the background, after suggesting he would not participate in the ABC debate, which he feels is “biased.”
The forthcoming debate, scheduled for September 10, will be the first verbal showdown between Trump and Harris since President Biden gracefully bowed out and endorsed VP Harris ahead of the Democratic National Convention.
You Scared Donald Trump?
Going back to his tired playbook on Sunday, Trump called ABC “fake news” and asked, “Why would I do the Debate against Kamala Harris on that network?”
During a campaign stop in Northern Virginia on Monday, he continued his bellyaching, “I think ABC really should be shut out. I’d much rather do it on NBC,” he said.
“I’d much rather do it on CBS. Frankly, I think CBS is very unfair, but the best of the group. And certainly, I’d do it on Fox.”
The Harris campaign responded by taking a video of Trump speaking with Fox News, complaining about ABC and claiming he doesn’t need to debate Kamala Harris because he is leading the polls, and adding the chicken sound effect to it with the caption “You scared @realdonaldtrump? *chicken emoji*”

Since taking over the Democratic Presidential ticket, the Harris/Walz campaign has been cooking Trump via social media and has effectively used the tool to raise money and stoke up excitement.
You can add her trolling of Team Trump to that list of effective ways to get the disgraced former president to react BIGLY.

Carole King is perhaps one of the most famous Taylor Swift fans in the world, and the iconic singer-songwriter joined the kickoff call for the Swifties for Kamala coalition on Tuesday night (Aug. 27).

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“I am a Swiftie, and Taylor and I are actually friends. We have had conversations backstage and I see her as sort of my musical and songwriting granddaughter. We have a lovely relationship, and I’m so proud of her,” King told the thousands of listeners who tuned into the livestream, noting that her favorite song of Swift’s is “Shake It Off” from 1989.

“I’m excited about Kamala, because so many people are excited about Kamala, and I have met her. I admire her and the stars lined up, and Joe Biden did a really gracious, hard thing to do, and I’m so proud of him,” King continued. “But this is about you. I know you have your ways of communicating and social networking and organizing.”

King then encouraged Swifties to become in-person volunteers, and take part in door knocking and phone calling to rally voters. “I’ve been a political activist years. I’ve been a caller, I’ve been a door knocker, even as a famous person,” she explained, before giving the livestream tips on how to be a good door knocker. “I’m telling you all this because if any of you are thinking of volunteering to be door knockers or phone callers, but you’re a little nervous about what you might say, please believe me, you will be working with an organizer who will give you steps,” she said. “Don’t be afraid, because there is nothing to lose and everything to gain. […] There is too much at stake.”

To conclude, King shared that because Swift helped induct her into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame in 2021 by performing the legend’s classic, “Will You Love Me Tomorrow,” she will return the favor. She then delivered a “surprise song” for the Swifties for Kamala by briefly singing the chorus of “Shake It Off.” “Cause the players gonna play, play, play, play, play/ And the haters gonna hate, hate, hate, hate, hate/ Baby, I’m just gonna shake, shake, shake, shake, shake/ I shake it off, I shake it off,” she mused.

Swift has yet to endorse anyone in the 2024 presidential race between Trump and Harris. She is not affiliated with the group — which describes themselves as a “coalition of Swifties ready to mobilize Taylor Swift fans to help get Democratic candidates elected up and down the ballot” — but Swifties for Kamala have noted that the “I Can Do It With the Broken Heart” singer is “always welcome to show up to our party.”

Elsewhere in the Swifties for Kamala kickoff event, Sen. Elizabeth Warren spoke to the group, noting that her two favorite Taylor Swift songs are “Karma” and “All Too Well (Taylor’s Version) (10 Minute Version).” “What I love best about Swifties, you are resilient and you know how to take on bullies,” the politician explained. “You know how to be your most authentic, most joyful selves. You come together hand-to-hand, friendship bracelets on your wrists and you overcome pretty much anything that life throws at you. The Kamala Harris campaign is standing up for what’s right in the face of bullies like Donald Trump.”

She continued, “With Kamala Harris, it’s all very different. Under a Kamala Harris presidency, our future is bright. Kamala will sign abortion protections into law. She’ll take on big corporations that are screwing you over. I’m looking at you Ticketmaster on this one, and she will help level the playing field for all people. So here’s the deal. We’ve got 70 days until the election, and I’m just going to be blunt, it is going to be a tough fight ahead. We have a lot to do, and dang, there are only 24 hours in a day, or 144 ‘All Too Well (10 Minute Version)’s. But here’s the thing, just like you’ve done every time before, we will push this boulder up the hill, and we will win in November. So with that, I am looking forward to the era of the first woman president. So please get in the fight, knock on doors, make phone calls, and let’s elect Kamala Harris the next President of the United States. Swifties, you can get this done.”

Watch the full Swifties for Kamala kickoff call below.

Representation matters, and Chrissy Teigen got to see that firsthand when her eight-year-old daughter, Luna, met Vice President and Democratic presidential nominee Kamala Harris at the White House this summer. Explore Explore See latest videos, charts and news See latest videos, charts and news “I’m still glowing from this moment when my Luna (in her adorable […]