Texas Weekly Online

Trump and Harris tell supporters to ignore the polls, but for very different reasons

Trump and Harris tell supporters to ignore the polls, but for very different reasons

SAVANNAH, Ga. – Vice President Kamala Harris and former President Donald Trump are both telling their supporters not to pay too much attention to the latest polls – but for very different reasons. As the 2024 edition of the race for the White House enters the final stretch, Harris is preaching caution amid a surge in fundraising and polling numbers since replacing President Biden atop the Democrats’ national ticket six weeks ago. Trump, meanwhile, has seen his momentum blunted, but also has a history of outperforming underwhelming poll numbers, including during his 2016 campaign. “This is going to be a tight race until the very end,” Harris told supporters this week at a packed arena in this historic coastal city in Georgia, one of seven crucial battleground states that will likely determine the outcome of the presidential election. Harris spoke on Thursday after the release of a series of polls – including new surveys from Fox News – that indicated a margin-of-error race in the key swing states and a trio of national polls showing Harris with a very slight edge. NEW FOX NEWS POLL NUMBERS IN 4 KEY BATTLEGROUND STATES But the vice president told the crowd at Savannah’s Enmarket Arena: “Let’s not pay too much attention to the polls because we are running as the underdog.” “We have some hard work ahead of us. But we like hard work. Hard work is good work,” Harris said to cheers. “And with your help, we are going to win this November.” KAMALA HARRIS DEFENDS POLICY REVERSALS AS SHE SITS FOR HER FIRST INTERVIEW SINCE REPLACING BIDEN ATOP DEMOCRATS’ 2024 TICKET Trump, running to win back his old job in the White House, has repeatedly dismissed the polling bump for Harris and touted his standing. “She’s not having success. I’m having success,” Trump told Martha MacCallum in an interview last week on the Fox News Channel. “I’m doing great with the Hispanic voters. I’m doing great with Black men. I’m doing great with women. We’re doing very well in the polls.” For much of this year, polls suggested a close contest between Trump and Biden as the pair engaged in a rematch of their 2020 showdown. Trump opened up a small but significant lead in the weeks after Biden’s disastrous late-June debate performance in Atlanta. But since Biden ended his re-election bid in a blockbuster July 21 announcement, Harris has benefited from a swell of media attention that’s helped boost the prospects of the Democratic Party ticket. Harris’ rally in Savannah came at the end of a two-day swing through parts of southeastern Georgia with her running mate, Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz. And she arrived at the arena about two hours after sitting for her first network interview since becoming the Democrats’ standard-bearer. Georgia had long been a reliably red state in presidential politics until Biden narrowly edged Trump in 2020 to become the first Democrat in nearly three decades to capture the state. In runoff elections there two months later, Democrats flipped both of the state’s GOP-held Senate seats. But fast-forward to this summer, as Biden was facing a rising chorus of calls from within his own party to end his 2024 bid, and Trump had begun to build a lead in Georgia. THIS STATE MAY DECIDE THE 2024 SHOWDOWN BETWEEN HARRIS AND TRUMP Harris’ trip this week, however, sends a signal that Democrats feel the state is once again in play. “Georgia, for the past two election cycles, voters in this very state … have delivered,” Harris told the crowd. “You did that, and so now we are asking you to do it again. Let’s do it again.” Georgia’s popular two-term Republican governor agrees that his state is very competitive. “Certainly this is a battleground state,” Gov. Brian Kemp said during a Fox News Digital interview on Tuesday. “I’ve been saying for a long time that the road to the White House is going to run through Georgia. And there’s no path for former President Trump to win, or any Republican … to get to 270 without Georgia.” But Kemp, who on Thursday headlined a fundraiser in Atlanta for Trump, added that Georgia “should be one that we win if we have all the mechanics that we need. And I’m working hard to help provide those in a lot of ways and turn the Republican vote out and make sure that we win this state in November.” Labor Day marks the start of the unofficial final sprint in the presidential election. One week later, on Sept. 10, the first – and possibly the only – presidential debate between Harris and Trump is scheduled to take place in Philadelphia. And while Election Day remains more than two months away, some voters will start casting ballots in the coming weeks. In swing state North Carolina, mail-in voting begins on Sept. 6. Early voting begins on Sept. 16 in Pennsylvania and Sept. 26 in Michigan, two other crucial electoral battlegrounds. Get the latest updates from the 2024 campaign trail, exclusive interviews and more at our Fox News Digital election hub.

To be a Palestinian child, trying to survive Israeli jail

To be a Palestinian child, trying to survive Israeli jail

For 10 long months, 16-year-old Hussein* lived in the same clothes he was wearing when he was detained on October 3. His trousers were still bloodstained when he was released. On October 3, he was shot in the right thigh by Israeli forces in a watchtower near the occupied West Bank city of Hebron. Hussein fell to the ground and saw two Israeli soldiers walking towards him. They beat him, kicking him in the head until he lost consciousness. He woke up three days later in a hospital, only to realise he had undergone surgery and was about to be taken to Ofer Prison. That was only days before Israel unleashed its continuing assault on Gaza and the last time he received any medical attention in detention. Can’t walk Hussein is one of hundreds of children Israel has detained over the years, a number that has multiplied dramatically since Israel began its assault on Gaza on October 7 and intensified its daily raids and mass arrest campaigns in the West Bank. He used to love going to the gym, challenging himself to lift more. He also loved playing football with his friends. Now, he limps, needs crutches to walk, and spends most of his day lying on a mattress. He will require joint implant surgery once he is done growing at the age of 18. “I’m really struggling … I can’t walk properly or catch up with any of my friends any more,” Hussein told Al Jazeera. Medical negligence is just one of the many forms of abuse, torture, humiliation and mistreatment  Palestinian prisoners face in Israeli detention facilities, according to several rights groups. Along with UN agencies, they have shed light on the systematic abuse being committed. More than 700 arrests of children have been documented by the Palestinian Prisoner’s Society since October 7. Currently, 250 of them remain in Israeli detention. “This number, especially compared to previous periods, is very high,” said Amani Sarahneh, spokesperson for the Palestinian Prisoner’s Society. Sarahneh added that children are abused and tortured the same way adult Palestinian prisoners are. “A Palestinian child will likely experience every abuse tactic you can think of,” she said, adding that Israeli forces have used them on Palestinian children for many years. Palestinian detainees are beaten, exposed to the cold for prolonged periods, and deprived of food, sleep, water and medical attention, a report by the UN Human Rights Office last month revealed. Children today live “in a constant state of hunger inside Israeli jails”, Sarhaneh said. ‘Just enough to keep us alive’ When Wassim left detention, he had vitamin, iron and calcium deficiencies. “The prison was … unlivable,” he said. “I would ask for medical treatment every single day, but … no doctors showed up, they didn’t even exist [in the prison],” Wassim said. The frequency and intensity of arrests after October 7 are ‘unprecedented’, Palestinian Prisoner’s Society says [File: Mussa Qawasma/Reuters] Food rations were also largely inadequate: Hussein said that he and the nine other prisoners in his cell would receive food in “a tiny plastic cup”. “It was just enough to keep us alive,” he said. “Most days, it was white rice … sometimes, it was undercooked. We’d eat, be full for five minutes, and then continue the rest of the day as if we were fasting. “We’d be begging for water, and end up drinking contaminated water from the bathroom. We had to … we had no choice,” he recalled. Israeli prison authorities shut down the canteen where prisoners could buy food and basic supplies and removed electrical devices including hotplates and kettles. Hussein’s father Omar* said he was worried sick about his son, especially after October 7. “After the war on Gaza, when we heard how bad things had gotten for Palestinians in Israeli jails, we were devastated,” Omar told Al Jazeera. “We cried … day and night,” he recalled. Omar had hoped Hussein would be released in November when Israel and Hamas reached a temporary ceasefire agreement that included the exchange of dozens of Palestinian prisoners with some of the captives held in Gaza. But despite his injury, Hussein was not released. “They deprived him of his childhood, and the rest of his life,” Omar said. According to Omar, a much quieter Hussein is now struggling to reintegrate back into his community. In crowds, he will often retreat into a corner and often wakes up with nightmares. ‘I just want to work and build a home’ In the town of al-Mughayyir, near Ramallah, another Palestinian boy was freed on August 8. Ahmed Abu Naim, now 18, has been in and out of Israeli detention facilities since he was 15 years old, held at times under administrative detention – being held for renewable six-month periods under the pretext of secret evidence. There has been an “unprecedented and terrifying spike” in the number of child administrative detainees, according to Palestinian Prisoner’s Society’s Serhaneh, who said at least 40 children are held under the widely criticised practice. When asked to compare being in detention before and after October 7, Abu Naim said, “The last time I was arrested, it was different; it was much worse than the other times.” The first time he was arrested, it was for two days. The second time, he was held for just more than a year. The third time, he spent six months in detention. He said his most recent experience was “1,000 times harder”. Ahmed Abu Naim has been in and out of Israeli detention facilities since he was 15 [Al Jazeera] “They didn’t treat us any different because we were minors,” Abu Naim, who recalled being severely beaten “so many times”, said. “We were even sprayed with gas sometimes,” he said. Wearing a baseball cap, he was trying to speak boldly, eager to appear both older and stronger. Abu Naim has been recovering from scabies, a skin disease that spread in the Megiddo prison, where he was held. “Hygiene standards were abysmal. We were not

Defending champion Novak Djokovic knocked out of US Open

Defending champion Novak Djokovic knocked out of US Open

Alexei Popyrin stuns the world No 2, who will end the season without a Grand Slam title for the first time since 2017. Defending champion Novak Djokovic suffered a major upset at the US Open, losing to Alexei Popyrin, who ended the Serbian’s bid for a record-breaking 25th Grand Slam title. Australian Popyrin defeated Djokovic 6-4, 6-4, 2-6, 6-4 in the third round at Flushing Meadows on Friday. “I spent a lot of energy winning the gold, and I did arrive to New York just not feeling fresh mentally and physically,” Djokovic told reporters. He won the gold medal in the men’s singles at the Paris Olympics earlier this month. Popyrin, who lost to Djokovic at both the Australian Open and Wimbledon this year, raised his arms in triumph as he reached the round of 16 of a major for the first time. “Third time lucky I guess,” Popyrin said in an on-court interview. Djokovic, 37, was uncharacteristically sloppy, with 14 double faults – a record for him in a Grand Slam match – while his 25-year-old opponent smacked 50 winners. The world No 2 had five break point chances in the opener but failed to convert any of them, while Popyrin broke serve on his first opportunity for a 5-4 lead and won the first set. Popyrin broke again in the second when Djokovic’s volley landed wide for a 3-2 advantage and took control of the match with a perfectly executed serve and volley to take the second set. Alexei Popyrin will next try to reach his first Grand Slam quarterfinal by getting past Frances Tiafoe [Julia Nikhinson/AP Photo] Djokovic showed some life in the third, but the comeback was shortlived as Popyrin crushed a ferocious forehand winner for a break of serve and 3-2 lead in the fourth. “I have played some of the worst tennis I have ever played, honestly,” Djokovic said. “Serving – by far – the worst ever.” His defeat followed the shocking exit of the 2022 champion, Carlos Alcaraz. Alcaraz entered the US Open as the tournament favourite having won the French Open and Wimbledon, but was eliminated by 74th-ranked Botic van de Zandschulp 6-1, 7-5, 6-4 on Thursday. It’s only the third time in the Open era that two of the top three men’s seeds at the US Open crash out before the fourth round, the other such instances in 1973 and 2000. “It was just an awful match for me,” Djokovic said. “I wasn’t playing even close to my best. It’s not good to be in that kind of state where you feel OK physically, and of course you’re motivated because it’s a Grand Slam, but you just are not able to find your game. “That’s it. The game is falling apart, and I guess you have to accept that tournaments like this happen.” Djokovic was attempting to become the first player in tennis history with 25 Grand Slam singles titles. Instead, after knee surgery in June, he finishes a year without claiming at least one major championship for the first time since 2017. Djokovic has reached the US Open final 10 times, and won in 2011, 2015, 2018 and 2023. Popyrin will now try to reach his first Grand Slam quarterfinal by getting past Frances Tiafoe, who advanced on Friday with a 4-6, 7-5, 6-7 (5), 6-4, 6-3 win over Ben Shelton in a matchup between two Americans. “If he serves well, plays well, he can beat anybody,” Djokovic said about Popyrin. “Look, Alcaraz is out. I’m out. Some big upsets. The draw is opening up.” Adblock test (Why?)

The danger of ‘pro-EU’ Euroscepticism in the Western Balkans

The danger of ‘pro-EU’ Euroscepticism in the Western Balkans

Over the past few years, attitudes towards accession to the European Union in Western Balkan candidate states have been increasingly negative. In countries like Serbia, the desire to join the union has slumped to 40 percent from 57 percent in 2014; in North Macedonia – to 68 percent from 84 percent in 2012. While frustration over the slow pace of the process and various challenges along the way may be one of the main drivers of this trend, there is another, largely overlooked one: parts of the civil society in these countries, which largely identifies as pro-EU, have started to espouse what really are anti-EU stances. Indeed, there has been an inexplicable alignment of views between proponents of democracy and European values and their ideological opponents – those who support the authoritarian tendencies of Serbia’s Aleksandar Vučić, North Macedonia’s Hristijan Mickovski and Albania’s Edi Rama. This has taken place gradually and through the promotion of seemingly neutral ideas, such as regional projects of EU-like integration, the need for stability and respect for national sovereignty, and criticism of anti-democratic forces within the EU. Over the past decade, various ideas about how to approach regional integration have circulated among civil society actors in the Western Balkans. While there is nothing wrong with proposing and endorsing such initiatives, some of them have been pushed as a priority over EU accession. Some have argued that regional integration needs to take place first to “prepare” Western Balkan membership candidates to join the Union. The problem with this argument is that regional integration becomes a justification for indefinitely delaying serious action on EU accession. A case in point is the “Open Balkan” initiative launched in 2019 and championed by Vučić and Rama. Its declared aim was the economic integration of Serbia, Albania and North Macedonia, through increased trade, mobility of citizens, improved access to labour markets, and others. Despite the hefty goals of “Open Balkans” and inspirational declarations made by the leaders involved, little progress has been made on its implementation. While some civil society actors have criticised the initiative, others have continued to push the regional integration mantra, failing to see the danger it poses to delaying indefinitely EU accession and promoting Eurosceptism among the general population. Another idea that has crept into civil society in the Western Balkans is that the EU accession has led to internal divisions and instability and has infringed on the national sovereignty of candidate countries. This idea has been especially popular in North Macedonia where the negotiating framework for accession has been perceived to hurt the national interest due to special conditions imposed by Bulgaria, regarding the Bulgarian minority in the country. This has led some public supporters of EU membership to call for “pausing” the accession process until national cohesion and stability are regained. Like regional integration, promoting the idea that candidate countries need to “fix themselves” first implies that EU accession will be postponed indefinitely and may not be pursued at all. Finally, there has been the assertion that EU accession is driven by or empowers anti-democratic forces. This may appear confusing to some, so let me illustrate. At a 2023 event held in Skopje which I attended, a think tank researcher presented a study which emphasised that autocrats like Hungary’s Viktor Orbán want Western Balkan countries to join the EU. The takeaway from this presentation was that since bogeyman Orbán wants us in – irrespective of the fact that someone like Germany’s Olaf Scholz wants us in too – we should be careful about pursuing EU membership. Others have argued in papers and at conferences I have attended that aspects of the EU enlargement process itself encourages autocratic and anti-democratic tendencies. The implication is that accession should be delayed indefinitely supposedly in the name of democracy: “not to reward autocrats like Vučić”. There has also been vocal criticism of the EU: that it is “undemocratic” and “unprincipled” in its treatment of candidates. My most recent media monitoring study of the region of Western Balkans shows that this discourse coincides almost perfectly with the pro-Kremlin narratives on the question of EU enlargement in the region. This Euroscepticism creeping through the civil society in the Western Balkans may be wrapped up in “pro-democracy” rhetoric but it is essentially the same as the one espoused by leaders with autocratic tendencies in Serbia, North Macedonia and Albania. The EU is not a perfect organisation and there are legitimate concerns and reasons for criticism of its track record. However, by espousing Eurosceptic rhetoric, calling for a “pause” in accession efforts, and spreading mistrust within the general public towards the EU, self-declared EU-philes are helping forces that would like to see the Western Balkan enlargement sabotaged. We must be realistic about the current geopolitical environment. The idea of absolute sovereignty – which excludes geopolitical alignment with the major regional powers – is a political unicorn. The idea of nonalignment collapsed with the dissolution of Yugoslavia, and its resurrection in the present circumstances is unlikely. Countries like North Macedonia, Montenegro, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Serbia and Albania face a geopolitical choice. The EU may have its problems, but with its structures and organisation, it offers geopolitical stability – something that alignment with Russia and China does not. This has become even clearer after the full-scale Russian invasion of Ukraine. Going down the Eurosceptic path at this time is dangerous. Pulling out of the accession process would set a precedent that would be destabilising to the regional and continental geopolitical equilibrium. No wonder Turkey is still at least formally an EU candidate country. Civil society actors would do well to consider the dangers of spreading “alternatives” to EU accession and undermining the public’s belief that this is the right path. The views expressed in this article are the author’s own and do not necessarily reflect Al Jazeera’s editorial stance. Adblock test (Why?)

Trump opposes Florida’s Amendment 4, which offers unfettered abortion access: ‘It’s radical’

Trump opposes Florida’s Amendment 4, which offers unfettered abortion access: ‘It’s radical’

Former President Trump called Florida’s proposed amendment to allow for unfettered abortion access across all nine months as “radical” in an exclusive interview with Fox News on Friday. Amendment 4, up for vote in the Sunshine State, would end Florida’s 6-week abortion ban by enshrining abortion in the state’s constitution. “No law shall prohibit, penalize, delay, or restrict abortion before viability or when necessary to protect the patient’s health, as determined by the patient’s healthcare provider,” reads the ballot initiative. PRO-LIFERS BLAST TRUMP ‘BETRAYAL’ WITH SHIFTING ABORTION STANCE, ANSWER ON FLORIDA AMENDMENT 4 “You need more time than six weeks. I’ve disagreed with that right from the early primaries. When I heard about it, I disagreed with it. At the same time, the Democrats are radical because the nine months is just a ridiculous situation,” said Trump. “That way you can do an abortion in the ninth month. And, you know, some of the states, like Minnesota and other states have it where you can actually execute the baby after birth and all of that stuff is unacceptable. So I’ll be voting no for that reason,” the former president asserted. Governor Ron DeSantis signed into law in 2023 the Heartbeat Protection Act, which makes abortion after six weeks illegal in Florida. “…Doing an abortion in the ninth month is unacceptable to anybody. And I think that, we’re going to have to do something about that. There’s some there’s something in between, but the six is too short. It’s just too short a period. And the nine months is unacceptable,” Trump said today before a campaign rally in Pennsylvania. JD VANCE VOWS TRUMP WOULD NOT IMPOSE FEDERAL ABORTION BAN, VETO IT IF IT COMES ACROSS HIS DESK Trump previously caused confusion over where he stood on the proposed amendment, as his pro-life stance on the campaign trail has not been absolute. “I will say this: You have to win elections,” Trump shared in a Fox News town hall earlier this year. “Otherwise, you’re going to be back where you were, and you can’t let that ever happen again. You’ve got to win elections.” The former president also takes credit for the overturning of Roe v. Wade in June 2022. “Today’s decision, which is the biggest WIN for LIFE in a generation, along with other decisions that have been announced recently, were only made possible because I delivered everything as promised, including nominating and getting three highly respected and strong Constitutionalists confirmed to the United States Supreme Court,” said Trump in 2022. Trump once called himself “the most pro-life president” in American history at the Faith & Freedom Coalition Gala in 2023. Amendment 4 is sponsored by a group in Florida called “Floridians Protecting Freedom” based in Sarasota. According to the Florida Department of Elections, the amendment has more than the 8% of statewide registered voter-required signatures to make the ballot at 997,035. CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP  The Trump campaign did not immediately respond to Fox News Digital’s request for comment.