“USA Today and the 200-plus local publications under its umbrella will not endorse a presidential candidate, the latest in a slew of non-endorsements among major national outlets that have left the media industry reeling,” Politico reports.
Taegan Goddard, Political Wire
Wed, 10/30/2024 - 3:46am
“USA Today and the 200-plus local publications under its umbrella will not endorse a presidential candidate, the latest in a slew of non-endorsements among major national outlets that have left the media industry reeling,” Politico reports.
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“Don’t you want a president who’s going to make America healthy again?” Robert F. Kennedy Jr. asked a roaring crowd, during Sunday’s triumphal rally in support of Trump at Madison Square Garden. When Kennedy, the country’s most famous anti-vaccine activist, suspended his campaign to endorse Donald Trump, it not only represented the death of his presidential aspirations, but the dawn of something new: the so-called “Make America Healthy Again” movement, a tidy bit of sloganeering designed to highlight where Trump and Kennedy’s agendas overlap.
More | Talk | Read It Later | ShareCynthia Hawkins and Bill Christopher both depict themselves as moderates whose vote preferences this year are being steered, at least in part, by worries over immigration. But it’s not driving their votes the same way. Instead, their shared concerns about the sheer number of new arrivals to the country in recent years, along with the resulting strains on local budgets and services, are cleaved by the incendiary rhetoric surrounding one of the most divisive issues at play in the November election. Immigration policy and border security have proven to be key issues, both for candidates and the electorate — and especially those on the conservative side of the political spectrum.
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