Ahead of Standing Ovation at New Hampshire Democratic Convention, Sanders Camp Announces Endorsements From 53 State Dems

Sen. Bernie Sanders on Thursday rolled out a list of 53 endorsements from state and local party officials ahead of Saturday’s New Hampshire Democratic Party Convention in Manchester. 

Joe Caiazzo, Sanders’ campaign director for New Hampshire, told WMUR that the campaign was “honored” to have the support (pdf) of so many members of the party in New Hampshire.

“This latest round of endorsements shows we are not only retaining and engaging supporters from 2016, but building new support from a broad swath of leaders from around the state,” said Caiazzo.

Sanders received a hero’s welcome at the convention on Saturday. 

In his remarks, Sanders referred to President Donald Trump as “the most dangerous president in the history of our country” and pledged to defeat him in 2020—though, Sanders said, that’s just part of the campaign’s goal.

“It is not enough just to defeat Trump,” said Sanders. “We must finally create a government and economy that works for all of us, not just the one percent.”

The Democratic primary takes place on Feb. 11, 2020. 

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Progressives Decry Senate's Approval of Labor Secretary Eugene Scalia as 'Absolute Betrayal to the American Worker'

Senate Republicans are under fire from progressive advocacy groups, trade unions, and congressional Democrats for voting Thursday to confirm corporate attorney Eugene Scalia, President Donald Trump’s nominee to lead the U.S. Department of Labor.

“For too long, our political system has prioritized the interests of the wealthy at the expense of regular, hardworking Americans,” declared Morris Pearl, chair of the Patriotic Millionaires. “Scalia will undoubtedly be yet another stooge for rich and powerful interests at the very agency designed to curb that influence.”

“Senate Republicans’ decision to confirm him is an absolute betrayal to the American worker,” Pearl added.

The new labor secretary, who is the son of late U.S. Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia, was confirmed by a 53-44 vote along party lines in the Republican-controlled chamber. Presidential primary candidates Sens. Cory Booker (D-N.J.), Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.), and Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.) were not present for the vote, but both Sanders and Warren called out their Republican colleagues for approving Scalia, who has spent his career as a private attorney representing big corporations.

Sanders, a longtime advocate for workers, decried Trump’s nomination and the Senate’s confirmation vote as “obscene.”

Warren concurred, tweeting, “This is a disgrace.”

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Sen. Kamala Harris (D-Calif.), a 2020 White House hopeful who voted against Scalia’s confirmation, wrote on Twitter Thursday that “the last person we need in charge of protecting our labor force is someone with a record of putting corporate interests over working people.”

Trump nominated Scalia in July, just days after former Labor Secretary Alex Acosta announced his resignation following mass outrage over a sweetheart deal he struck with convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein. In the months since then, advocates for workers have raised concerns about Scalia’s record as both a partner in the Washington, D.C. office of the corporate law firm Gibson, Dunn & Crutcher as well as the Labor Department’s chief legal officer during President George W. Bush’s administration.

“Scalia becomes the seventh former lobbyist to hold a Cabinet-level post in the Trump administration,” according to The Associated Press. “Disclosure records show Scalia was registered in 2010 and 2011 to lobby for the U.S. Chamber of Commerce.”

As Patriotic Millionaires chair Pearl put it: “At every turn, Eugene Scalia has proven himself to be on the side of big corporations and Wall Street.”

“He has never advocated for the workers who struggle for basic rights or for the millions of Americans decimated by the 2008 financial crisis,” Pearl said. “But as secretary of labor, he will be charged with representing those same interests he’s spent nearly two decades ripping apart.”

AFL-CIO president Richard Trumka, whose union had implored the Senate to #RejectScalia, said in a statement Thursday that “it is insulting and dangerous that lifelong union-buster Eugene Scalia is the country’s top labor official. His track record is well documented, and it’s clear he has yet to find a worker protection he supports or a corporate loophole he opposes.”

“Making the Labor Department—whose mission is to defend the rights of workers and enforce the law—a satellite office of a corporate right-wing law firm flies in the face of working people’s clearly expressed desires,” Trumka added.

Emily Martin, vice president for education and workplace justice at the National Women’s Law Center, expressed worries about Scalia’s oversight of the Labor Department’s interpretation and enforcement of anti-discrimination laws.

“Eugene Scalia is charged with protecting working people—yet in his career he has shown no interest in upholding, much less advancing, their rights,” said Martin. “For decades he has enabled employers to escape responsibility for protecting workers from discrimination—including sexual harassment, race discrimination, and disability discrimination. He has shown persistent hostility to the worker and consumer protections the Department of Labor is charged to uphold.”

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Day After Trump Denigrates Homeless, Sanders Unveils $2.5 Trillion #HousingForAll Plan to Address Crisis

In the wake of “abhorrent” comments made by President Donald Trump about homeless people, Democratic presidential candidate Sen. Bernie Sanders on Wednesday unveiled his $2.5 trillion “Housing for All” plan, which calls for building millions of affordable housing units and providing billions of dollars in rental assistance over a decade.

“In the richest country in the history of the world, every American must have a safe, decent, accessible, and affordable home as a fundamental right.”
—Bernie Sanders campaign”In the richest country in the history of the world, every American must have a safe, decent, accessible, and affordable home as a fundamental right,” the Sanders campaign declares in the plan, which will be paid for by a wealth tax on the top one-tenth of the one percent.

After teasing his housing plan at an event Saturday, the Independent senator from Vermont said in a statement Wednesday: “There is virtually no place in America where a full-time minimum wage worker can afford a decent two bedroom apartment. At a time when half of our people are living paycheck to paycheck, this is unacceptable.”

“For too long the federal government has ignored the extraordinary housing crisis in our country,” he added. “That will end when I am president.”

Billy Gendell, a Sanders campaign policy staffer, highlighted some of the plan’s proposals in a tweet:

One of the key proposals, the Sanders campaign explains, stems from a bill the senator put forth in the U.S. House nearly two decades ago:

Sanders proposes investing $1.48 trillion in the trust over 10 years “to build, rehabilitate, and preserve the 7.4 million quality, affordable and accessible housing units.” He further proposes spending $400 billion on building two million mixed-income social housing units, expanding a U.S. Department of Agriculture program by $500 million for new developments in rural areas, and boosting funds for the Indian Housing Block Grant Program to $3 billion.

During the first year of his presidency, Sanders would prioritize 25,000 National Affordable Housing Trust units to house people who are homeless. He would also double McKinney-Vento homelessness assistance grants to more than $26 billion over five years and provide $500 million for states and localities’ outreach programs.

In contrast, Trump was lambasted after he claimed during a rally in California Tuesday night that homeless people are ruining the “prestige” of major U.S. cities. Progressives, meanwhile, praised Sanders’ understanding of the crisis and his bold proposals to address it.

The plan claims that “most public housing is in desperate need of reconstruction and rehabilitation” and calls for a $70 million investment to improve accessibility and provide access to high-speed broadband in such units. Sanders also promises to “ensure that public housing has high-quality, shared community spaces.”

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Decrying the federal government’s failures to provide adequate housing assistance to low-income people, the campaign says that “today, 7.7 million families in America are forced to pay more than half of their limited incomes on rent because they are eligible for Section 8 rental assistance but do not receive it because of a lack of federal resources. As a result, many of these families are forced to choose between paying rent or buying the food, medicine, or prescription drugs they need.”

Sanders calls for fully funding Section 8 assistance at $410 billion over the next decade as well as strengthening the Fair Housing Act and implementing a Section 8 non-discrimination law.

The Housing for All plan also proposes various tenant protections—including a national cap on annual rent increases at no more than 3 percent or 1.5 times the Consumer Price Index, a “just-cause” requirement for evictions, and a guarantee of renters’ right to form tenants unions. Sanders further proposes creating an independent National Fair Housing Agency similar to the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau and an office within that agency for mobile home residents.

Sanders’ housing plan incorporates various existing pieces of legislation that the senator supports—calling for the passage of the Equality Act to include LGBTQ+ people in the Fair Housing Act as well as the Green New Deal to fully transition to sustainable energy nationwide by 2030. Sanders proposes decarbonizing all public housing through the Green New Deal and providing grants to low- and moderate-income families so they can weatherize and retrofit homes and invest in cheaper energy.

The housing plan is designed to help out not only people who are homeless and renters, but also first-time homebuyers. Sanders proposes investing $2 billion at the USDA and $6 billion at HUD to create an assistance program for first-time buyers and making pre-purchase housing counseling available to all potential buyers.

The plan also proposes “a 25 percent House Flipping tax on speculators who sell a non-owner-occupied property, if sold for more than it was purchased within five years of purchase” as well as “a 2 percent Empty Homes tax on the property value of vacant, owned homes to bring more units into the market and curb the use of housing as speculative investment.”

Sanders vowed in his statement Wednesday that if he secures the Democratic nomination for president and wins the 2020 election, “my administration will be looking out for working families and tenants, not the billionaires who control Wall Street.” In a campaign newsletter, Sanders staffer David Sirota explained a proposal designed to do just that:

The Housing for All plan, Sirota concluded, “will crack down on corporate landlords that are destroying too many communities throughout America.”

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In European First, Proposed Constitutional Amendment in Sweden Would Enshrine Rights of Nature

Heralded as the first of its kind in Europe, a proposed constitutional amendment in Sweden seeks to enshrine the rights of Nature to ensure that the creatures, fona, and features of the natural world are protected from exploitation and abuse by endowing them with legal status previously reserved only for humans and select animals.

“Economic growth has been the real goal, not a healthy environment. I’m tired of this era, where our arrogant worldview has driven us far beyond the planetary boundaries.”

The proposed amendment to Sweden’s Instrument of Government, the nation’s constitutional document, would secure the Rights of Nature to “existera, blomstra, regenerera och utvecklas“—which translates as “exist, flourish, regenerate, and evolve”—in order to provide the people and government of Sweden the ability to defend and enforce these rights on behalf of Nature.

Introduced by Swedish MP Rebecka Le Moine with the backing of a coalition of national and international groups—including Rights of Nature Sweden, Lodyn, and the Community Environmental Legal Defense Fund’s International Center for the Rights of Nature—the change to Swedish law mirrors that of others in the world but, if passed, would set a new precedent in Europe.

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“For twenty years, we have been working with the national environmental goals in Sweden. After all this time, we are barely reaching two of them,” Le Moine said in a statement on Tuesday.  

“The underlying value in our society is that we are the dominators of this world, and Nature is just a resource for us to use,” she continued. “Economic growth has been the real goal, not a healthy environment. I’m tired of this era, where our arrogant worldview has driven us far beyond the planetary boundaries. Now, when we’re in the beginning of an ecological and climate collapse, I hope we can re-think our relationship with Nature. And for me, it starts with admitting that Nature has rights.”

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On its website, the group Rights of Nature Sweden explained the process for having the amendment adopted this way:

As the group also noted, this approach to defending the natural world is hardly new, with legal rights of nature having already been “recognized in laws and court decisions in the United States, Ecuador, Bolivia, Brazil, India, New Zealand, and Colombia.”

Mari Margil, associate director of CELDF’s International Center for the Rights of Nature, championed the proposal and thanked Le Moine for her leadership.

“We need to quickly make a fundamental shift in our relationship with the natural world,” Margil said. “Advancing the Rights of Nature in Sweden’s constitution is an important step forward. We congratulate Parliamentarian Le Moine on taking this politically brave, and necessary, step.”

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Over 1 Million Chileans Take to the Streets to Demand Political Reforms, Change to Country's Neoliberal Economic System

Chilean President Sebastián Piñera on Saturday said he would reshuffle his cabinet after over 1 million Chileans poured into city streets across the country Friday to demand structural reforms to the country’s government and economic system.

The move by Piñera came as the protest movement mobilized people in the captial Santiago and beyond. 

“We’re asking for justice, honesty, ethical government,” protester Francisco Anguitar told AFP Friday. 

Piñera made the announcement late Saturday morning. 

The timeline and plan for the replacement of ministers remains unclear. On Saturday, Reuters reported that a document obtained by the news agency “suggested Piñera was considering replacing the heads of at least nine ministries, including the ministries of interior, defense, economy, transportation and environment.”

Chilean senator Felipe Kast on Twitter credited the Friday protests with prompting Piñera’s decision.

“A peaceful day that will leave its mark on our history,” said Kast. “Chile is not the same as it was yesterday.”

The protests kicked off on October 15 after high school students occupied subway stations in Santiago to protest fare hikes. The movement exploded from there as demonstrations quickly became about the country’s neoliberal economic system and Piñera’s government. 

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Piñera, in response to the protests, authorized a brutal crackdown on protesters by military and police forces. Video from the protests shared on social media showed police and soldiers attacking unarmed demonstrators. 

Support for the protest movement poured in from across the world.

“The people of Chile have all my love and support,” tweeted writer Naomi Klein. “Their courage is awe-inspiring.”

Journalist Ben Norton called the protests a “massive rejection of neoliberalism” and linked to photos from the protests.

The demonstrators “represent the dream of a new Chile,” tweeted Santiago Governor Karla Rubilar.

“Our country requires more dialogue and peaceful marches!” said Rubilar.

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This Story on Cellphone Tracking 'Is the Most Important Article You Should Read Today. Period.'

The New York Times‘ on Thursday sparked calls for congressional action by publishing the first article in its “One Nation, Tracked” series, an investigation into smartphone tracking based on a data set with over 50 billion location pings from the devices of more than 12 million people in the United States.

The data, from 2016 and 2017, “was provided to Times Opinion by sources who asked to remain anonymous because they were not authorized to share it and could face severe penalties for doing so,” explained reporters Stuart A. Thompson and Charlie Warzel. “The sources of the information said they had grown alarmed about how it might be abused and urgently wanted to inform the public and lawmakers.”

Readers and fellow journalists quickly turned to social media to draw attention to the reporting. Laura Rosenberger, director of the Alliance for Securing Democracy, tweeted: “This is the most important article you should read today. Period.”

Aaron Zitner of the Wall Street Journal concurred, writing on Twitter: “This is surely the most consequential piece of journalism published today, and its presentation is the highest form of storytelling. Think of what an authoritarian state is already doing with this technology.”

The new report—the first of seven pieces set to be published this week by the Times Opinion Section’s “Privacy Project”—features visualizations of the data from Central Park, Grand Central Terminal, and the New York Stock Exchange in New York City; Beverly Hills; downtown San Francisco; Mar-a-Lago, President Donald Trump’s resort in Florida; the White House; and the Pentagon.

“The data reviewed by Times Opinion didn’t come from a telecom or giant tech company, nor did it come from a governmental surveillance operation. It originated from a location data company, one of dozens quietly collecting precise movements using software slipped onto mobile phone apps,” explained Thompson and Warzel.

The reporters added that “you’ve probably never heard of most of the companies—and yet to anyone who has access to this data, your life is an open book. They can see the places you go every moment of the day, whom you meet with or spend the night with, where you pray, whether you visit a methadone clinic, a psychiatrist’s office or a massage parlor.”

But Thompson and Warzel weren’t just “shaken” by what they found when delving into what data location companies can see—they also highlighted that this behavior is only governed by the companies’ internal policies and the moral compasses of employees. As the article detailed: “Today, it’s perfectly legal to collect and sell all this information. In the United States, as in most of the world, no federal law limits what has become a vast and lucrative trade in human tracking.”

The reporters described the data collected from smartphones as “a diary of your every movement.”

To demonstrate how easy it is to figure out who someone is based on their smartphone data, Thompson and Warzel included some examples.

“We spotted a senior official at the Department of Defense walking through the Women’s March, beginning on the National Mall and moving past the Smithsonian National Museum of American History that afternoon,” they reported. “His wife was also on the mall that day, something we discovered after tracking him to his home in Virginia. Her phone was also beaming out location data, along with the phones of several neighbors.”

“The official’s data trail also led to a high school, homes of friends, a visit to Joint Base Andrews, workdays spent in the Pentagon and a ceremony at Joint Base Myer-Henderson Hall with President Barack Obama in 2017 (nearly a dozen more phones were tracked there, too),” the piece continued. The reporters even spoke with some of the individuals they were able to identify, such as Ben Broili, a manager for the drone delivery service Amazon Prime Air, and Mary Millben, a Virginia-based singer who has performed for three presidents.

“To know that you have a list of places I have been, and my phone is connected to that, that’s scary,” Millben told the Times. “What’s the business of a company benefiting off of knowing where I am? That seems a little dangerous to me.”

The ACLU responded to the Times report with a call to action directed at Congress, tweeting: “This investigation exposes the disastrous implications of living in a society where companies are allowed to turn our cell phones into always-on tracking devices with zero legal limitations or oversight. Action from lawmakers is already years overdue.”

“We need strong laws that prevent apps from collecting unnecessary but sensitive location data and feeding it into surveillance databases,” the group added. “Laws should also provide transparency into how companies are using and selling data, and allow individuals to sue privacy-violating companies.”

There have been some sweeping digital privacy proposals introduced in Congress recently, but in the absence of any established nationwide rules, “states are starting to respond with their own laws,” the Times reported. “The California Consumer Protection Act goes into effect next year and adds new protections for residents there, like allowing them to ask companies to delete their data or prevent its sale. But aside from a few new requirements, the law could leave the industry largely unencumbered.”

Although the Times article was widely lauded for contributing to national awareness about issues and debates related to personal data in the digital era, it also was met with some criticism from privacy rights experts and advocates.

In a lengthy Twitter thread, Lindsey Barrett, a staff attorney and teaching fellow at Georgetown University Law Center’s Institute for Public Representation, called the report “revealing and important” while also criticizing it for framing “surreptitious and functionally unavoidable surveillance as an individual failing rather than the intentional project of corporations and their enablers.”

“Framing is everything,” Barrett added. “Relying on the premise of ‘people choose to be tracked so our project has to be talking them out of it, not arguing that the surveillers need more accountability’ gives tech lobbyists who make those self-serving arguments credibility they don’t deserve.”

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Adidas introduces sustainable vegan Clean Classics sneakers

German sportswear retailer, Adidas, has launched a new vegan and 100 percent sustainable pair of sneakers, the Clean Classics.

The Clean Classics collection includes the Superstar, Stan Smith, Continental 80 and Supercourt styles, all of which are remade for 2020 with Adidas’ new pledge of commitment to ending plastic waste, according to a press release.

The design comes from the iconic white leather sports shoe, however, there is stylistic text on the shoe stating: this shoe alone will not save the planet. Pops of colour can be seen on the laces and the speckled effect on the sole which is caused by the composite nature.

The focus of these sneakers is on Primegreen, in which the production requires high-performance materials where 50 percent of the materials are recycled content. In the upper part of the shoe there is 70 percent recycled materials, as well as reclaimed and renewable rubber for the soles.

Adidas’ sustainable initiatives

Including Primegreen, the sustainable initiatives in this shoe are as follows: bloom foam which is made through algae harvesting technology that helps keep our lakes clean; natural cork sockliner which is a natural and renewable material; OrthoLite hybrid sockliner compound made from 15 percent recycled OrthoLite, 6 percent Bio-oil and 5 percent recycled rubber.

There is recycled polyester used to reduce the company’s use of new materials; natural rubber created from 90 percent natural fibres and 10 percent recycled rubber; pattern efficiency for the design of the shoe to create less waste; paper laces and upcycling old box material to create the Clean Classics packaging.

The Clean Classics collection is available across Adidas Originals stores and online.

Photo credit: Adidas

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Poll: Trump statistically tied with Biden, Sanders, O'Rourke in Texas

President TrumpDonald John TrumpSenate advances public lands bill in late-night vote Warren, Democrats urge Trump to back down from veto threat over changing Confederate-named bases Esper orders ‘After Action Review’ of National Guard’s role in protests MORE’s support in Texas is at a statistical tie with several potential 2020 challengers, including one who has already announced a bid, according to a poll released Thursday.

In the Quinnipiac University survey of Texas voters, Trump gets the support of 47 percent respondents in hypothetical match-ups with former Vice President Joe BidenJoe BidenHillicon Valley: Biden calls on Facebook to change political speech rules | Dems demand hearings after Georgia election chaos | Microsoft stops selling facial recognition tech to police Trump finalizing executive order calling on police to use ‘force with compassion’ The Hill’s Campaign Report: Biden campaign goes on offensive against Facebook MORE, Sen. Bernie SandersBernie SandersThe Hill’s 12:30 Report: Milley apologizes for church photo-op Harris grapples with defund the police movement amid veep talk Biden courts younger voters — who have been a weakness MORE (I-Vt.), and former Rep. Beto O’RourkeBeto O’RourkeBiden will help close out Texas Democrats’ virtual convention: report O’Rourke on Texas reopening: ‘Dangerous, dumb and weak’ Parties gear up for battle over Texas state House MORE (D-Texas), who received 46 percent, 45 percent, and 46 percent support, respectively, from voters in the poll.

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Each of those hypothetical contests fall within the poll’s margin of error, 3.4 percentage points. In addition, Trump sits within single digits of other announced 2020 Democratic challengers in the poll, including former Housing and Urban Development Secretary Julián Castro and Sens. Kamala HarrisKamala Devi HarrisRand Paul introduces bill to end no-knock warrants The Hill’s Campaign Report: Biden campaign goes on offensive against Facebook McEnany says Juneteenth is a very ‘meaningful’ day to Trump MORE (Calif.) and Elizabeth WarrenElizabeth WarrenWarren, Democrats urge Trump to back down from veto threat over changing Confederate-named bases OVERNIGHT DEFENSE: Joint Chiefs chairman says he regrets participating in Trump photo-op | GOP senators back Joint Chiefs chairman who voiced regret over Trump photo-op | Senate panel approves 0B defense policy bill Trump on collision course with Congress over bases with Confederate names MORE (Mass.)

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Harris, Castro and Warren each won the support of 41 percent of poll respondents in potential match-ups against the president in the poll, though against Castro, a San Antonio native and former mayor, Trump won only 46 percent of the hypothetical vote, compared to 48 percent against the two senators.

Biden and O’Rourke are the only Democrats with favorability ratings above water in the poll, with Texas voters who were surveyed approving of Biden by a margin of 48 percent to 38 percent and O’Rourke by a margin of 44 percent to 40 percent.

The rest either had largely negative favorability ratings among a majority of Texas voters, or had little name recognition.

“Former Vice President Joe Biden has the highest favorability of any of the contenders and has a better net favorability than President Trump,” said Peter Brown, the Quinnipiac poll’s assistant director. “Former U.S. Rep. Beto O’Rourke also does relatively well on favorability and in a matchup with Trump, but that may well be due to O’Rourke being a home-state favorite.

“But former Housing Secretary Julian Castro, who is also a former San Antonio mayor, does not do as well as O’Rourke,” Brown added.

Quinnipiac’s poll surveyed 1,222 Texas voters between Feb. 20-25.

Wisconsin GOP ties Dems Milwaukee convention pick to socialism

Republicans in Wisconsin on Monday pointed to rising “socialistic tendencies” in the Democratic party as the reason for the Democratic National Committee’s (DNC) pick of Milwaukee as the site of its 2020 national convention.

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Sen. Ron JohnsonRonald (Ron) Harold JohnsonHillicon Valley: Biden calls on Facebook to change political speech rules | Dems demand hearings after Georgia election chaos | Microsoft stops selling facial recognition tech to police Republicans release newly declassified intelligence document on FBI source Steele Democrats demand Republican leaders examine election challenges after Georgia voting chaos MORE (R-Wis.) cheered the economic boost the convention will provide his home state, and said that the event will give voters a “first-hand look” at “Democrats’ extreme policies that would reverse the economic progress made under the Trump administration.”

“Understanding the risk of Democrat socialistic tendencies should provide motivation to re-elect Republicans up and down the ballot in November 2020,” Johnson tweeted.

 

The state Republican Party offered a similar message, calling it an appropriate decision for the DNC to pick Milwaukee to represent the party’s “race to the radical left” since the city has “elected three socialist mayors.”

“In the last few years, @TheDemocrats have developed a burgeoning love affair with socialism, highlighted by their adoration of the Green New Deal and single-payer health care,” the party tweeted.

“With the 2020 Democrat presidential primary field currently stumbling over each other in a race to the radical left, it makes sense that their party would choose to hold its convention in the only American city that has elected three socialist mayors,” the party continued. 

 

Milwaukee is the largest city in America to have elected a Socialist mayor and has done so three times. Its last Socialist mayor was Frank Zeidler, who left office in 1960.

Republicans have attempted to portray progressive Democrats as in favor of socialist policies as the party’s left wing pushes policies like the Green New Deal, “Medicare for all” and increased tax rates on wealthier Americans.

Many Democrats in the 2020 presidential field have attempted to tamp down any connections to socialism, with Sens. Elizabeth WarrenElizabeth WarrenWarren, Democrats urge Trump to back down from veto threat over changing Confederate-named bases OVERNIGHT DEFENSE: Joint Chiefs chairman says he regrets participating in Trump photo-op | GOP senators back Joint Chiefs chairman who voiced regret over Trump photo-op | Senate panel approves 0B defense policy bill Trump on collision course with Congress over bases with Confederate names MORE (Mass.), Kamala HarrisKamala Devi HarrisRand Paul introduces bill to end no-knock warrants The Hill’s Campaign Report: Biden campaign goes on offensive against Facebook McEnany says Juneteenth is a very ‘meaningful’ day to Trump MORE (Calif.) and Amy KlobucharAmy KlobucharHillicon Valley: Biden calls on Facebook to change political speech rules | Dems demand hearings after Georgia election chaos | Microsoft stops selling facial recognition tech to police Democrats demand Republican leaders examine election challenges after Georgia voting chaos Harris grapples with defund the police movement amid veep talk MORE (Minn.) all rejecting the label in recent weeks, along with former Colorado Gov. John Hickenlooper.

Wisconsin will likely be a key battleground state for any Democratic nominee.

President TrumpDonald John TrumpSenate advances public lands bill in late-night vote Warren, Democrats urge Trump to back down from veto threat over changing Confederate-named bases Esper orders ‘After Action Review’ of National Guard’s role in protests MORE narrowly won the state over Hillary ClintonHillary Diane Rodham ClintonWhite House accuses Biden of pushing ‘conspiracy theories’ with Trump election claim Biden courts younger voters — who have been a weakness Trayvon Martin’s mother Sybrina Fulton qualifies to run for county commissioner in Florida MORE in the 2016 election, the first Republican win there since 1984.

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Biden leads CNN poll, but Harris, Sanders on the rise

Former Vice President Joe BidenJoe BidenHillicon Valley: Biden calls on Facebook to change political speech rules | Dems demand hearings after Georgia election chaos | Microsoft stops selling facial recognition tech to police Trump finalizing executive order calling on police to use ‘force with compassion’ The Hill’s Campaign Report: Biden campaign goes on offensive against Facebook MORE is leading a new CNN poll of Democrats and Democratic-leaning independents that also shows increasing support for Sen. Kamala HarrisKamala Devi HarrisRand Paul introduces bill to end no-knock warrants The Hill’s Campaign Report: Biden campaign goes on offensive against Facebook McEnany says Juneteenth is a very ‘meaningful’ day to Trump MORE (D-Calif.).

Biden, who has yet to enter the Democratic presidential race, is out in front with 28 percent of those polled. In second place is Sen. Bernie SandersBernie SandersThe Hill’s 12:30 Report: Milley apologizes for church photo-op Harris grapples with defund the police movement amid veep talk Biden courts younger voters — who have been a weakness MORE (I-Vt.), who is backed by 20 percent of voters.

But support for Harris in the poll has jumped to 12 percent, an 8-point increase since the most recent edition of the poll was released in December.

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Following Harris is former Rep. Beto O’Rourke (D-Texas) at 11 percent. O’Rourke launched his presidential campaign last week.

No other candidate received double-digit support in the poll. Sen. Elizabeth WarrenElizabeth WarrenWarren, Democrats urge Trump to back down from veto threat over changing Confederate-named bases OVERNIGHT DEFENSE: Joint Chiefs chairman says he regrets participating in Trump photo-op | GOP senators back Joint Chiefs chairman who voiced regret over Trump photo-op | Senate panel approves 0B defense policy bill Trump on collision course with Congress over bases with Confederate names MORE (D-Mass.) is in fifth with 6 percent of support, according to the poll.

Biden’s support dropped from 30 percent to 28 percent, while Sanders’s support rose from 14 percent to 20 percent. 

O’Rourke also saw a two-point climb from the last poll, while Warren went up from 3 percent to 6 percent.

Former Secretary of State John KerryJohn Forbes KerryThe Memo: Trump’s troubles deepen as voters see country on wrong path The continuous whipsawing of climate change policy Budowsky: United Democrats and Biden’s New Deal MORE (D), who has yet to enter the race, gets 4 percent, while Sen. Cory BookerCory Anthony BookerRand Paul introduces bill to end no-knock warrants Black lawmakers unveil bill to remove Confederate statues from Capitol Harris grapples with defund the police movement amid veep talk MORE (D-N.J.), who is in the race, has 3 percent.

A more centrist candidate, Sen. Amy KlobucharAmy KlobucharHillicon Valley: Biden calls on Facebook to change political speech rules | Dems demand hearings after Georgia election chaos | Microsoft stops selling facial recognition tech to police Democrats demand Republican leaders examine election challenges after Georgia voting chaos Harris grapples with defund the police movement amid veep talk MORE of Minnesota (D), also gets 3 percent.

No other candidate in the race has more than 1 percent. That group includes Sen. Kirsten GillibrandKirsten GillibrandWarren, Democrats urge Trump to back down from veto threat over changing Confederate-named bases Warren, Pressley introduce bill to make it a crime for police officers to deny medical care to people in custody Senate Dems press DOJ over coronavirus safety precautions in juvenile detention centers MORE (D-N.Y.), Rep. Tulsi GabbardTulsi GabbardGabbard drops defamation lawsuit against Clinton It’s as if a Trump operative infiltrated the Democratic primary process 125 lawmakers urge Trump administration to support National Guard troops amid pandemic MORE (D-Hawaii) and former Colorado Gov. John Hickenlooper (D).

Those results are based based on interviews with 456 Democrats and Democratic-leaning independents between March 14 and March 17. The margin of error is 5.7 percentage points.

The CNN poll also found that 40 percent of respondents are “extremely enthusiastic” about voting for president in 2020. The enthusiasm is higher among Republicans, with 57 percent of self-identified Republicans responding that they are “extremely enthusiastic,” compared to 46 percent of Democrats and 26 percent of independents.

The full CNN poll was based on interviews with 1,003 adults between March 14 and March 17. The full sample has a margin of error of 3.8 percentage points. 

The majority of Republicans also said they think the GOP should nominate President TrumpDonald John TrumpSenate advances public lands bill in late-night vote Warren, Democrats urge Trump to back down from veto threat over changing Confederate-named bases Esper orders ‘After Action Review’ of National Guard’s role in protests MORE in 2020, with 76 percent saying Trump should be the nominee and 19 percent saying a different candidate should be nominated.

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