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Biden mocked after confusing pop music stars during turkey pardoning joke: ‘Impeachable offense’
Social media erupted Monday after President Biden botched a joke that appeared to be targeting young voters due to their unrivaled enthusiasm for the pop music stars referenced.
Biden, who was kicking off his 81st birthday during the annual White House turkey pardoning, appeared to confuse Taylor Swift and Beyonce, while also appearing to incorporate another popular singer into the mix.
“Now just to get here, Liberty and Bell had to beat some tough odds in the competition. They had to work hard, show patience, and be willing to travel over 1,000 miles,” Biden said, before attempting to compare the turkeys traveling to D.C. to getting a ticket to a concert — though it is unclear which hit tour he intended to reference. “You could say even harder than getting a ticket to the Renaissance tour or, or, or Britney’s tour, she’s down, it’s kinda warm in Brazil right now.”
“This is an impeachable offense,” NRCC Communications Director Jack Pandol wrote on X, formerly known as Twitter, joking about Biden’s blunder.
“What is Biden talking about?” the Republican National Committee’s research account posted alongside a clip of the remarks.
Biden appeared to either make a comparison to Beyonce’s “Renaissance World Tour” or Taylor Swift’s “Eras Tour” — as he initially said “Renaissance” but then suddenly began talking about the weather in Brazil where Swift’s latest show was held. The president also mentioned “Britney” in his attempted joke, which some Twitter users have translated as being Britney Spears.
“81-year-old Joe Biden, attempting to not appear ancient, mixes up Beyoncé, Taylor Swift and Britney Spears,” OutKick founder Clay Travis posted.
KAMALA HARRIS REACTS TO ROUGH BIDEN POLLS: ‘WE’RE GOING TO HAVE TO EARN OUR RE-ELECT’
“Grandpa Joe is trying to be hip and edgy again,” another user wrote.
“Words cannot describe the experience of seeing the leader of the free world ‘pardon’ a large bird,” another user wrote. “Biden tried to make a Taylor Swift joke (something involving how far the turkeys travelled to get to Washington), but badly mangled it, calling her “Britney.”
Other users highlighted the president turning 81.
“Joe Biden has no idea what he’s talking about. He attempts a joke about how difficult it is to get tickets to see Beyonce but calls her ‘Brittany.’ He then follows up that gaffe by confusing Beyonce (‘Brittany’) with Taylor Swift. He turned 81 today,” Citizen Free Press said.
Biden said Monday’s event was the “unofficial start of the holiday season” and was a time to “share joy and gratitude and a little bit of fun.”
“This is the 76th anniversary of this event. And I want you to know, I wasn’t there, the first one,” Biden said, taking a dig at his age. He went on to say that Americans will “gather with the people we love and the traditions that each of us have built up in our own families” this week.
Biden’s comment comes after a NBC News poll found former President Donald Trump was leading Biden in a hypothetical 2024 match-up.
Former Obama adviser David Axelrod warned earlier this month that Biden’s “age issue” was consistent in polling and said that it was the “one thing” the Biden team “can’t reverse.”
“The one number in the polling that was concerning, and in the CNN poll that followed after The New York Times poll, had to do with age, and that is one thing you can’t reverse no matter how effective Joe Biden is behind the scenes,” Axelrod said. “In front of the camera, what he’s projecting is causing people concerns, and that is worrisome.’
Go to Source: Latest Political News on Fox News
Trump’s Dire Words Raise New Fears About His Authoritarian Bent
Wisconsin Gov. Evers vetoes ‘completely unserious’ $2B tax cut
Gov. Tony Evers on Monday vetoed a $2 billion Republican tax cut bill, calling it “completely unserious.”
Evers’ veto was expected, as he opposed the GOP plan from the moment it was introduced as a substitute to the Democratic governor’s own workforce development package. Evers has previously vetoed a similar income tax cut passed by the Legislature.
Republicans don’t have enough votes, without help from Democrats, to override the veto. Lawmakers are not scheduled to return in session until mid-January.
GOV. EVERS, SPEAKER VOS FIND RARE COMMON GROUND IN OPPOSITION TO WISCONSIN SCHOOL VOUCHER SUIT
Republicans gutted a $1 billion Evers proposal to invest in child care he called on the Legislature to pass in a special session in September.
Instead, the Legislature passed a measure that would have cut income taxes, created a child care tax credit, and increased income tax deductions for private school tuition. The vetoed bill also had provisions to recognize some out-of-state professional credentials in Wisconsin, and to prohibit state examining boards from requiring counselors, therapists and pharmacists to pass tests on state law and regulations.
Evers, in his veto message, said the Republican bill failed to “meaningfully and sensibly address the workforce challenges that have plagued Wisconsin for a decade.”
“It is clear today Republicans remain disinterested in passing real solutions to the most pressing challenges facing our state,” Evers wrote.
Republican Senate Majority Leader Devin LeMahieu said the bill that Evers vetoed “would have provided meaningful relief for Wisconsin families to address inflation and rising child care costs.”
The Evers proposal rejected by the Legislature would have spent $365 million on child care, $65 million on University of Wisconsin funding, $200 million on a new engineering building at UW-Madison and $243 million toward a 12-week family medical leave program for Wisconsin workers.
Republicans who control the Legislature remain in talks with university leaders about funding the engineering building.
WISCONSIN ASSEMBLY DELAYS VOTE ON LIKELY VETO-BOUND $2B INCOME TAX CUT
Earlier this month, more than 40 business leaders from across Wisconsin sent lawmakers a letter urging them to support the project, saying a new engineering building would allow the university to serve more students and employers. The Wisconsin Alumni Association is also funding an advertising campaign about the need for more engineers in the state.
Republican Assembly Speaker Robin Vos last week that “We would love to be able to find a way to get to yes” to approve the engineering building funding. But he said UW must control the number of positions it has added in recent years and address his concerns about diversity, equity and inclusion programming.
Vos has argued that DEI programs are a waste of public funding and that the university should be focused on other priorities.
Vos has blocked pay raises for UW employees over his objection to the university’s DEI efforts. Evers has filed a lawsuit arguing that the Legislature is unconstitutionally stopping the pay raises.
Go to Source: Latest Political News on Fox News
Argentina: President-Elect Javier Milei Promises ‘Spiritual’ Israel Trip, Will Move Embassy to Jerusalem
Go to Source: Breitbart News
Biden urged to go big on Social Security as a way to beat Trump
It’s a story Joe Biden loves to tell: Midway through his State of the Union address, as the president accused Republicans of trying to cut entitlements like Social Security, loud objections from the House chamber suddenly turned his speech into a negotiation.
Pausing to spar with GOP lawmakers, Biden extracted a promise to take entitlement cuts off the table in the upcoming debt ceiling showdown, securing a major victory before talks even began.
“I never thought my third State of the Union address would be negotiated on the floor of the United States Congress,” Biden mused afterward. “But it worked.”
That unscripted moment has taken on outsized political significance in the months since, held up as an example of Biden’s negotiating prowess and his commitment to the social safety net.
But among Democrats bracing for a tight 2024 contest, some now want him to go further.
Progressives have pitched Biden officials and Democratic leaders in recent months on endorsing a plan to expand Americans’ Social Security benefits, according to several people involved in the informal discussions.
The proposal, they argue, would be broadly popular with an electorate that ranks Social Security among the top issues they care deeply about, especially among seniors more likely to vote. And after Republicans swore off cuts — for the time being — it would allow Biden to stake out a new contrast with the GOP, one painting him as more supportive of the cherished social insurance program.
“The only weakness that Democrats have on their Social Security policies is not enough people know that it’s them,” said Alex Lawson, executive director of Social Security Works, one of the groups advocating for the idea. “The way to get Republicans even more on the back foot about their plans to cut Social Security is to draw that incredibly clear distinction that Democrats want to expand, Republicans want to cut.”
Biden embraced Social Security expansion during the 2020 Democratic primary, proposing to boost benefits for the lowest-income retirees and shore up Social Security’s main trust fund by raising taxes on those making $400,000 or more a year. But faced with slim congressional majorities once he took office, Biden largely dropped the idea.
Three years later, progressive groups want him to revisit it, in part because the candidate he’s likely to face, Donald Trump, has publicly insisted he doesn’t want to cut entitlement programs (even though he previously backed such policies).
Polling presented this fall to top White House officials and other leading Democrats by the Progressive Change Campaign Committee and Data for Progress found just 41 percent trusted Biden more than Trump to safeguard Social Security benefits. More than 4 in 10 were also skeptical that Republican candidates who had called for cutting benefits or raising the retirement age would follow through on it if elected.
Biden officials have expressed openness to the case for benefit expansions, Lawson and others who talked with them said, though the campaign is still early in the process of building out a 2024 policy platform and remains noncommittal on the idea.
“Donald Trump, Nikki Haley, Ron DeSantis and the rest of the MAGA Republicans have repeatedly campaigned on gutting Social Security and Medicare and have the records to back it up,” campaign spokesperson Ammar Moussa said in a statement. “Joe Biden will not let that happen, and we’ll make certain the millions of Americans who have paid for Social Security their entire lives now that when they head to vote next November.”
There’s skepticism among some in the president’s orbit who say Biden’s message on protecting benefits versus Republicans seeking cuts is already well established. They question whether adding a brand new idea to the mix would confuse matters. The president is also already planning to run on a slew of concrete accomplishments that may mean more to voters than aspirational ideas like Social Security expansion.
And as Democrats are wont to do, some have gotten caught up in the underlying policy specifics. They warn the party would need to settle debates over which retirees would benefit, and ultimately how the entire thing would be paid for. In addition to Biden’s 2020 proposal, several lawmakers — including Sens. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.) and Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) and Rep. John Larson (D-Conn.) — had longstanding expansion plans of their own.
“They probably don’t want to open that can of worms,” said Dean Baker, a progressive economist who has long supported expanding Social Security.
The progressive groups pushing for Social Security expansion aren’t lobbying for a specific proposal. But they do have an answer for how to pay for the benefits: Taxing the wealthy.
“It just really puts all of the pieces in place, and you can’t muddy it up,” said Lawson. “Tax the wealthy more in order to increase Social Security benefits. Electorally, this is a Democratic wedge issue.”
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Go to Source: Politico
White House joins Threads social media platform
The White House on Monday started accounts on Threads, the social media platform launched by Meta as a rival to X.
The administration announced the creation of accounts for President Biden, first lady Jill Biden, Vice President Harris and second gentleman Doug Emhoff, as well as accounts for the White House and a Spanish version, La Casa Blanca.
The White House account posted “The wait is Joe-ver” on Monday afternoon, shortly after officially launching on the platform.
“We are committed to meeting people where they are,” a White House official said in a statement. “Since the beginning of the administration we’ve used traditional media, digital media, SMS programs, and other innovative ways to reach Americans as they communicate today.”
Meta, which also owns Facebook, launched Threads in July as a rival to X, formerly known as Twitter. Tens of millions of people joined Threads within days of its launch.
The official said Threads is “an additional way” to communicate with the public about the administration’s agenda. The launch on the new platform was in the works for “several weeks,” the official said.
But the timing comes as X has been under scrutiny because of inflammatory posts by owner Elon Musk. Musk, who bought the site last year and led its rebranding as X, last week promoted an antisemitic social media post.
After one user posted, “To the cowards hiding behind the anonymity of the internet and posting ‘Hitler was right’: You got something you want to say?” another user responded, “Okay. Jewish [communities] have been pushing the exact kind of dialectical hatred against whites that they claim to want people to stop using against them.”
Musk replied to that post: “You have said the actual truth.”
The White House condemned Musk’s post as “unacceptable” but has not said whether they’ve considered leaving the platform.
Go to Source: Administration News | The Hill
Sununu teams up with Haley, DeSantis, Christie as he decides on 2024 presidential endorsement
HOOKSETT, N.H. – Republican Gov. Chris Sununu’s the busiest politician on the presidential campaign trail in the crucial primary state of New Hampshire this week, and he’s not even running for the White House.
Sununu teamed up on Monday afternoon with former ambassador to the United Nations and former South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley at a town hall in Hooksett.
On Monday evening, he’ll join former New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie, who’s making his second bid for the GOP presidential nomination, at a town hall in Nashua.
And on Tuesday, he’ll team up with Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis for a campaign event in Manchester, New Hampshire’s largest city.
GAME ON IN IOWA AS DESANTIS AND HALEY BATTLE FOR SECOND PLACE BEHIND TRUMP
Sununu said he’ll endorse one of those three candidates when he decides on whom he’ll back in the 2024 Republican presidential race sometime after Thanksgiving.
“I’m not endorsing anyone yet,” the governor told reporters after the conclusion of the Haley event. “Nikki’s done a great job. She’s been really pounding the pavement… Her message seems to resonate.”
Sununu told Fox News Digital that his endorsement would be much more than just a one-day announcement.
“If I get behind a candidate, I’m going to get behind a candidate,” he emphasized.
And he later added that he’d put muscle behind his endorsement, “110%.”
“That’s the fun part. Are you kidding? I’m not going to do an endorsement and sit on my hands. When I do an endorsement, it’s going to be a six-, seven-, eight-, nine-week push, whatever it is, to really make sure folks know where we are. I tend to not leave anything on the table,” he emphasized.
And Sununu, who’s won election and re-election to four two-year terms as New Hampshire governor, said he’d help whichever candidate he backed “put together a ground game. I think we know how to do it pretty well here.”
HALEY, DESANTIS, RAMASWAMY, SHARE PERSONAL, EMOTIONAL STORIES
But he’s also tempered expectations that his endorsement might move the needle in the Granite State, telling Fox News last month that “I’m never a big believer that endorsements matter as much as the press think they do.”
Asked if he could see himself serving in a potential Haley, DeSantis or Christie Cabinet, Sununu told Fox News on Monday that “I don’t need anything out of Washington. I just want a great candidate and great president and I think there’s a huge opportunity for that. No, nothing for me. I’m ready to go get a real job.”
The governor, who flirted with a White House run of his own before announcing in early June that he wouldn’t launch a 2024 campaign, has been a vocal GOP critic of former President Donald Trump, who remains the commanding frontrunner for the Republican nomination as he seeks to win back his old job.
“He’s got a floor, but he’s also got a ceiling,” Sununu said as he pointed to Trump’s large lead in the latest New Hampshire polls. “And when you look at the fact that well over 50% of the Republican core-based voter wants somebody else, the fact that in New Hampshire you can have independents that come out – I believe in record numbers – most of which won’t vote for yesterday’s news in terms of Donald Trump.”
And the governor emphasized that “these candidates have a lot of opportunity to make up a lot of ground quickly.”
New Hampshire’s secretary of state announced last week that the date of the primary will be Jan. 23, eight days after the Iowa caucuses, which lead off the GOP presidential nominating calendar.
Granite State voters are known for traditionally being late deciders when it comes to their state’s treasured first-in-the-nation presidential primary.
As for when New Hampshire voters will decide whom they’ll back for president, the governor said, “They always make them after Thanksgiving, and I think this year even later than normal.”
“I think a lot of folks are just going to wait and see where this thing goes in late December and early January and make up their minds,” Sununu added.
Go to Source: Latest Political News on Fox News
Jill Biden welcomes Christmas tree to the White House
First lady Jill Biden welcomed the White House Christmas tree Monday while surrounded by military children.
She admired the tree while it was lying in a horse-drawn wagon and chatted with the more than a dozen kids lined up in front of it. She took a photograph with the children and the tree, wearing a festive green jacket and dress.
“It’s the Most Wonderful Time of the Year” was playing during the photographs, and the children’s parents joined them, as well.
“Early Merry Christmas, happy Thanksgiving,” Biden said to the reporters at the ceremony, adding how nice it was for the military families and children to join her at the White House.
“The tree is magnificent,” she said. “Some of the kids said they had never seen a tree so big. So I hope you’ll all come back during the holidays with your families and join us. And come see the tree when it’s decorated.”
The tree is from Cline Church Nursery in North Carolina. It’s an 18-foot Fraser fir tree, and it will stand in the Blue Room of the White House, according to the News & Observer. The tree is the 15th White House Christmas tree from North Carolina, and a farm in the state also will provide the 2024 tree, the News & Observer reported.
The tree’s arrival marks the official start of the holiday season at the White House. Earlier Monday, President Biden pardoned the National Thanksgiving Turkey.
Monday also marks the president’s 81st birthday, and the couple is set to leave the White House on Tuesday to spend Thanksgiving in Nantucket, Mass.
Go to Source: Administration News | The Hill
Democrats urge Biden to revamp campaign’s economic message
Democrats think it’s time for President Biden to recalibrate his economic message if he wants it to resonate with voters going into the 2024 election.
Biden hasn’t been able to break through to voters his top message — that the economy is better off now than it was when he took office. He’s been touting Bidenomics along the campaign trail, tying his name to his economic agenda in an attempt to take credit for a healing financial market.
But with inflation still high, interest rates on goods stubbornly through the roof and the housing market hobbling, Biden’s handling of the economy takes hit after hit in polls. Voters say they felt better off financially under his predecessor — whom he will likely meet again in the 2024 general election — leaving Democrats to suggest it’s time for the Biden campaign to change its game on the matter.
“I think the campaign has time to tweak its messaging. Maybe not abandon it because I think there’s an awful lot of good to talk about. But in terms of the messaging itself, how that’s said, how it’s done, I think they need some tweaking and that’s what the polling is there to do—constructive criticism, so to speak,” said former Rep. Joe Crowley (D-N.Y.).
One of those surveys, an Economist/YouGov poll from October, found only 39 percent of voters approve of Biden’s handling of jobs and the economy. At the same time, Reuters/Ipsos polling puts the economy as the most important issue concerning Americans for more than a hundred weeks running.
In a New York Times-Siena College opinion poll released earlier this month, voters in six battleground states said they trusted Trump over Biden on the economy, 59 percent to 37 percent. Those six states are going to be imperative to a Biden win come next November.
Such figures are prompting some to urge that the president’s reelection bid should take hints from the numbers and readjust its messaging as a result.
For example, only 24 percent of likely voters said “the economy is getting better” for people like them, according to new research from the progressive groups Progressive Change Campaign Committee (PCCC) and Data for Progress. But when presented with a wordier statement that “our economy is beginning to turn the corner after a few tough years,” including a name-drop of former President Trump and Biden in contrast, the responses rose to 43 percent saying the economy is getting better.
“We cannot, just through sheer repetition, convince voters of something that is not their lived reality when it comes to economics,” said Adam Green, co-founder of the PCCC.
Democratic messaging, including that coming from Biden, should be “acknowledging pain and pivoting to a contrast,” Green said, and it should focus on “beginning progress, not pretend that we’re already there.”
Doug Heye, a GOP strategist, said the Biden team has the tough task of chipping away at voters’ impressions that goods are just more expensive now than when Biden took office.
“They’ve got some good news that they can talk about, but everything that every American does that involves spending money, they’re spending more of it than they were when Joe Biden became president. And that’s now ingrained into their daily lives. And it’s very hard to chip away at that,” he said.
Joshua Doss, an analyst at the Democrat-aligned public opinion research firm HIT Strategies, said his team has found similar importance in striking a contrast between Democrats and Republicans when trying to get economic messaging across.
“There needs to be contrast more so to extremist Republicans … or the fact that the Republican Party doesn’t have a plan at all,” Doss said.
He also noted that, as Biden’s team works to get the word out about his record, voters still aren’t connecting the president to some of his initiatives, like lowering the cost of prescription drugs. But whenever survey respondents or focus groups are given more information, Doss said, the work is popular — a positive indicator for Biden as his campaign looks to reach more people in 2024.
The White House has been working to show off the president’s policies that aim to lower prices for Americans, which largely stem from the Inflation Reduction Act and the bipartisan infrastructure law. And, they say, they will keep up spreading the word of Bidenomics.
“We’re working every day to show the American people what President Biden and Congressional Democrats have delivered by lowering prescription drug prices, creating manufacturing jobs, and rebuilding our roads and bridges,” said Michael Kikukawa, assistant White House press secretary.
“That’s Bidenomics, and recent elections have shown that Americans prefer it to trickle-down MAGAnomics. We will continue reaching out to the portion of Americans who are not yet aware of those incredibly popular accomplishments,” he said.
But some Democrats argue there’s more to do — and that that’s where the issue lies — getting the messaging on the economy out there to voters.
“I would not use the word recalibrate. That implies that it is a simple messaging problem. I think they just need to put more work into telling people everything Biden has done for them. And that takes time, in this segmented media environment. They know this and are working on it,” said Ivan Zapien, a former Democratic National Committee official.
The 2024 presidential race is gearing up to be a possible 2020 rematch as Trump has long held front-runner status over the crowded GOP field. With the current and former presidents both in the ring, observers say a contrast between the two is key for Biden’s campaign in the general election.
“For the issues of the economy, jobs, cost — it is time to go full tilt, unsparingly drawing a constant, constant, minute-by-minute contrast with Donald Trump and his abysmal record,” said Democratic strategist Jon Reinish. “Otherwise, we voters feeling uneasy about the economy … we’ll get lost.”
In addition to a strong Trump contrast, the Biden team needs to get on Americans’ level as they feel the strain of the economic landscape, said William Howell, a politics professor at the University of Chicago Harris School of Public Policy.
“I think Biden has, in terms of his messaging, got to talk in very specific concrete ways that are not about the big label you attach to the economy as a whole, but the specific and tangible ways in which particular initiatives improve the lives of particular communities,” Howell said.
Doss, the analyst, also raised concerns about the term “Bidenomics,” which “just inherently puts Biden at the very center” of the economy, and could leave Americans feeling a lack of agency in the president’s policies. “We have to make the working person the hero of the narrative,” Doss said.
Reinish suggested Democratic voters “are not ready for a catchphrase” and that “a pause on Bidenomics, which does seem like it’s happening, is probably smart.”
But Democratic strategist Hank Sheinkopf said “there’s no other choice” but to tie Biden to the economy, even with the Bidenomics tag.
“He’s got to somehow convince people that he has brought us from the darkness into the light, and if he fails to do that, he won’t be reelected,” Sheinkopf said.
To sum up what Bidenomics means to voters, Biden has touted that low unemployment is a clear indicator that the economy is doing well and that his work to boost manufacturing in the U.S. will keep the economy strong long term.
Biden has also touted the notion that Trump is one of only two presidents in U.S. history who left office with fewer jobs than when he came into office.
Heye, the GOP strategist, added that Republicans have similar problems in deciding how to handle this economy, but they are focused now on tapping into voters’ anger on the economy.
“If it’s hard for the Biden administration to say what it is or could do, it’s also hard for Republicans to put forth concrete proposals,” Heye said. “But clearly there’s a voter anger there that they’re trying to tap into and I think successfully tapped into.”
Go to Source: Administration News | The Hill