According to the New York Post, Donald Harris, an emeritus professor at Stanford University and Kamala Harris' father, issued a stark warning regarding mass migration in the United States.
Mr. Harris warned that mass migration, which is happening on Harris' watch, is not good for the Black community.
The warning came about in a 1988 publication of his called "Black Economic Progress: An Agenda for the 1990s."
Just like other Democrats who once were against mass migration and open borders, Mr. Harris wrote with certainty in the book that he believes mass migration is extremely disruptive, especially to Black workers.
"Trends in international trade have moved against U.S. workers,” he wrote. “U.S. immigration laws have been modified in ways that increase the influx of low-skilled workers, who compete with native-born youths and low-skilled adult workers for low-skilled jobs.
Donald Harris which is Kamala Harris’ father says Mass Immigration will harm Black Americans directly. Mr. Harris is against his own daughter’s immigration policies pic.twitter.com/GjzmDPvHTS
— Sir Maejor 🇺🇸 (@SirMaejorATL) October 26, 2024
The book added, "This shift has been a particularly serious problem for blacks, who constitute a high proportion of the low-skilled adult workers."
His ideas on the issue directly contradict his daughter's policies, which have led to open borders, record illegal immigration, and undoubtedly a disruption for many communities, especially Black communities in major cities like Chicago.
The Post noted:
The book, published just two years after the 1986 immigrant amnesty law signed by then-President Ronald Reagan, is typical of far-left economic thinking on immigration.
The outlet explained why her father's thinking is totally opposite of her own, given how she and President Joe Biden have contributed to some of the worst mass and illegal migration in history.
The Post noted:
Vice President Harris has supported granting illegal aliens “pathways to citizenship” — and continues to make the idea a pillar of her 2024 presidential race.
The US Citizenship Act of 2021, which the Biden-Harris administration introduced on their first day in office, would have granted legal status to millions of illegal aliens currently living in the United States.
GOP political consultant Shermichael Singleton hit the nail on the head.
"The influx of illegal immigrants and thus low-skilled labor advocated by Harris/Walz, exacerbates inequalities by driving down wages and creating competition among those already marginalized, particularly black Americans," Singleton said.
The ballot name game is still an ongoing legal battle for former independent candidate Robert F. Kennedy Jr.
According to reports, RFK Jr. just asked the U.S. Supreme Court to remove his name from the ballot in Wisconsin, a battleground state that could significantly boost the chances of a win for either presidential candidate.
The battle waged to have his name removed has already seen many legal hurdles, including rulings from state courts.
However, in an emergency appeal to SCOTUS, Kennedy argued that by not removing his name from the ballot, it's a violation of his First Amendment rights.
While Kennedy has actually fought to keep his name on the ballot in some states, he definitely wants it off the Wisconsin ballot because votes for him there could take away votes from former President Donald Trump.
Soon after dropping out of the presidential race, Kennedy shocked the political world by aligning with Trump and his campaign.
"He wants everyone who will listen to him to vote for Trump,” Kennedy’s attorneys told the high court. "That is core political speech and it’s protected under the First Amendment."
The same situation is happening in the absolutely crucial battleground state of Michigan, and Kennedy said he'll fight at the highest levels to have his name removed there, too.
NEW: Robert F. Kennedy Jr. now files a petition at the Supreme Court to be removed from the presidential ballot in Michigan, accusing Sec. of State Jocelyn Benson of unlawfully reinstating him.#RFK also asked to be removed from Wisconsin's ballot this week. pic.twitter.com/HrlxZgJBvd
— Kaelan Deese (@KaelanDC) October 25, 2024
The report noted:
Kennedy filed his latest emergency appeal with Justice Amy Coney Barrett, who handles such requests rising from the Chicago-based 7th US Circuit Court of Appeals, which ruled against him.
It was only last month when Kennedy was rejected by the Supreme Court over an appeal to keep his name on the ballot in New York.
Kennedy and his lawyers have also asked to have his name removed from the ballots in Michigan -- a state that most political analysts say a candidate has to win in order to take the White House.
With only a little over a week left until people head to the polls in both states, it'll be interesting to see what the high court decides.
Only time will tell if they favor Kennedy's First Amendment arguement.
While most of the mainstream media has worked overtime to not cover the bombshell story involving second gentleman Doug Emhoff allegedly slapping an ex-girlfriend, the reported victim just broke her silence.
According to the Daily Caller, the Daily Mail nailed the exclusive interview with the woman, who wanted to be called "Jane," and she confirmed the disgusting allegations.
"Jane" confirmed to the outlet that Emhoff, in 2012 at a party, "slapped her so hard she spun around."
Those allegations were made by three friends of the alleged victim, and according to the victim, the reports from her friends are accurate.
The alleged victim explained that Emhoff has "fabricated" his persona presumably to not appear as the monster that he is behind closed doors.
"What’s frightening for a woman that’s been on the other end of it, is watching this completely fabricated persona being portrayed," the alleged victim said.
Doug Emhoff's ex-girlfriend speaks out telling how Kamala's husband forcefully slapped her for flirting with another man https://t.co/hATb8qcMx4 pic.twitter.com/h5jLEwseXe
— Daily Mail Online (@MailOnline) October 24, 2024
The Daily Mail revealed the story about the events that led to the alleged slapping incident.
The outlet noted:
Jane told the outlet she and Emhoff, whom she started dating in March 2012, took a “fairytale” trip to the amfAR gala dinner south of France on May 24, 2009. A long taxi line outside the Hotel du Cap around 3 a.m. prompted Jane to try to pay a valet $100 to let her and Emhoff skip the line — but she alleged a drunken Emhoff reacted violently when he incorrectly assumed she was flirting with another man.
The alleged victim told the outlet the full story, which is shocking, to say the least.
"As I’m talking to him, Doug got out of the line, comes up, turns me around by my right shoulder. I’m completely caught off guard. I’m not bracing,.I’m in four inch heels, wearing a full-length gown, and it’s between 2-3 a.m.," Jane recounted.
She added, "He slaps me so hard I spin around, and I’m in utter shock,” she alleged. “There had been no fight, no argument. It had been a completely fantastic event. I am so furious. The only thing I could think to do was slap him back. I slapped him on one side, and on the other cheek with the other hand."
"In that moment, his mask had dropped and I saw his dark side," she continued.
The reported ex-girlfriend said she only stayed silent on the matter for such a long time because she was scared to go public with it.
Kamala Harris can no longer hide her extremism, telling a CNN town hall Wednesday that the Senate filibuster should be thrown away to unblock her radical agenda.
The proposal was one of the few semi-coherent responses Harris gave as she spent much of the event rambling - one might even say filibustering.
The filibuster is a political tactic, sometimes known as "talking a bill to death," in which lawmakers delay or block a vote with prolonged debate.
While not part of the Constitution, the filibuster is often seen as a key element of the U.S. Senate, which was meant to be the more deliberative body of Congress.
In recent years, Democrats have pushed to end the Senate filibuster for the very reason its defenders say that it exists - to block injudicious or oppressive schemes from getting rammed through with a bare majority.
Harris brought up the filibuster Wednesday night when asked how she would deliver on one of her main campaign promises.
Host Anderson Cooper asked Harris how she would codify Roe v. Wade without the 60 votes needed to end debate.
Harris' response was to point to the filibuster, before quickly pivoting to her stump speech about Trump and abortion. Removing the filibuster would allow legislation to pass the Senate with just 51 votes.
"I think we need to take a look at the filibuster, to be honest with you,” Harris replied.
“But the reality of it is this: Let’s talk about how we got here. When Donald Trump was president, he hand-selected three members of the United States Supreme Court with the intention that they would undermine the protections of Roe v. Wade and they did as intended,” she said.
With or without the filibuster, Democrats are facing an uphill battle to holding onto their narrow Senate majority. Democratic Senate candidates in key states have been distancing themselves from Harris and even tying themselves to Trump ahead of Election Day.
As her campaign stalls in the home stretch, Harris' tone has grown noticeably darker. She flatly responded, "yes, I do," when Cooper asked if she believe Trump is a "fascist."
While she targets the filibuster, Harris did quite a bit of filibustering herself during Wednesday's town hall.
Like she has done in previous interviews, Harris responded to many questions with garbled, evasive answers. When Cooper asked her to name one mistake she made in the past, she responded with this:
'"I mean, you know if you‘ve ever parented a child you know, you make lots of mistakes to, um, in my role as vice president, I mean, I‘ve probably worked very hard at making sure that I am well versed on issues."
Cooper: Is there [a mistake] you can point to in your life that you have learned from?
Harris: I mean, you know if you‘ve ever parented a child you know, you make lots of mistakes to, um, in my role as vice president, I mean, I‘ve probably worked very hard at making sure that I… pic.twitter.com/Pv9cY0FS04
— Matt Whitlock (@mattdizwhitlock) October 24, 2024
Her performance received mixed reviews even from liberals like CNN's Dana Bash, who warned that Harris failed to "close the deal" with undecided voters.
Tulsi Gabbard is officially joining the Republican party, crediting Donald Trump with reshaping the GOP into a "big tent" that supports peace and freedom.
Gabbard, a former Democrat and veteran who is known for her criticism of "warmongers" and the Deep State, stunned Trump with the news at a MAGA rally in Greensboro, North Carolina on Tuesday.
“It is because of my love for our country and specifically because of the leadership that President Trump has brought to transform the Republican Party and bring it back to the party of the people and the party of peace, that I’m proud to stand here with you today, President Trump, and announce that I’m joining the Republican Party," she said.
Gabbard praised Trump for making the GOP the party of "common sense" and "the people," as she criticized the Democrats' embrace of war, lawfare, and open borders.
“You know, I was a Democrat for over 20 years. Today’s Democrat Party is completely unrecognizable, which points to the clear choice that we have in this Election Day,” Gabbard said.
A former congresswoman from Hawaii, Gabbard endorsed Bernie Sanders in 2016 before backing Joe Biden four years later. More recently, she has become a staunch critic of the Democratic party and its drift toward authoritarianism.
"When you look at the party of Kamala Harris, for example, she is anti-freedom. She is pro-censorship, she is pro-open borders and she is pro-war without even pretending to care about peace," Gabbard said.
Trump has ushered in a political realignment that has seen disaffected Democrats like Gabbard and Robert F. Kennedy Jr. flee the party for Trump's populist movement, as Republicans of yesteryear, like Dick Cheney, rally behind Democrat Kamala Harris.
Gabbard contrasted Trump with "warmongers" like Dick Cheney and his daughter, former Wyoming congresswoman Liz Cheney, who has been appearing with Harris on the campaign trail.
“President Trump has pledged to end wars, not start them. And this is why, in the eyes of the Kamala Harris-Dick Cheney Democrat Party, they will do everything possible to try to destroy him,” Gabbard added.
“This man has the courage to take them on and root out the deep rot of corruption and the swamp in Washington.”
Trump called Gabbard's transformation an "honor" and a "great surprise."
Gabbard was credited with ending Harris' first presidential campaign in 2019, when Gabbard, then a presidential candidate, confronted Harris on the debate stage about her record as a prosecutor.
Melania Trump is ending years of rumors about her marriage - making it clear to critics that she supports her husband despite speculation of divorce.
The Former First Lady has long been the target of vicious rumors concerning a rift with her husband, with whom she shares one child, Barron.
Much speculation has centered on Melania's absence from the campaign trail this year, especially as Trump faced prosecution in multiple legal cases. But Melania has made it clear in her new book, and a series of interviews, that she supports her husband completely.
Melania surprised critics of her husband recently by describing him as "caring" and a "family man"
She also condemned "lawfare" against her husband in a recent Fox News interview, while blaming the "toxic" rhetoric of the left for provoking the two attempts on her husband's life.
"I think, you know, when they call him, he's a threat to democracy, let's ask ourselves who is really a threat to democracy," she told Fox News' The Five.
"They are ongoing with lawfare against the former president, as well as, you know, trying to get him off of the voting ballots and trying to silence him," she told Fox News' The Five.
Despite the constant rumors of tension in her marriage, Melania has made it clear she shares her husband's distrust of the media and federal government - which is understandable after all the suffering the family has been through at the hands of the "Fake News" and the Deep State.
“I have a great team in my [Secret Service] detail around me and my husband as well. I think there are some holes — something is going on at the top level,” Melania told Fox News' Sunday Morning Futures.
“It’s hard to say that you trust, right? Who [do] you really trust? You want to, but it’s always a question mark."
While supportive of Donald, Melania has also made it clear that she has her own views, and her husband respects that. Despite President Trump's role in overturning Roe v. Wade, his wife recently revealed that she strongly believes in the right to abortion.
"He lets me be who I am, and he lets me believe what I believe," she told Sunday Morning Futures. "He lets me be my own person. And he does respect that, and I respect that as I let him be his own person. He has different beliefs and he will do what he believes.”
The Democratic candidate in Arizona's Senate race, Ruben Gallego, is being forced to confront a "stain" on his family: his father's conviction for drug trafficking.
In a race dominated by concerns about the border, Gallego's Republican rival, Kari Lake, has highlighted Gallego's unsavory family history to tie him to Mexico's drug cartels.
“He will never confront the cartels; he is controlled by them. He has close family members who are drug traffickers," Lake said recently.
Gallego's Mexican immigrant father, Jose Marinelarena, was busted in 1995 with half a million dollars worth of cocaine and marijuana. He pled guilty to possession of 5 grams of cocaine with an estimated value of $943.65 and 80,000 grams of marijuana with an estimated value of $480,800.00.
“Jose let them into the kitchen area of the apartment, went to the kitchen cabinet and removed five large zip lock freezer bags; each containing approx: six other plastic bags of baseball size filled with a white rock substance,” a criminal complaint at the time said.
Gallego has never hidden his father's criminal past, but he has downplayed the role his father played in his life, even changing his last name from Marinelarena to Gallego, his mother's maiden name. The change led to a lawsuit in 2014 from his opponent in his run for Congress.
In his 2021 memoir, Ruben Gallego said he "didn’t want to be associated with my father, even symbolically.”
According to contemporary court records, Gallego's father was still married and employed as a union carpenter when he was busted for drugs, Just The News reported. His father's lawyer cited his role as a provider to push for a lower bail.
In his book, however, Gallego claimed his father was already divorced and his "business had gone bust."
"I found out later that he and one of his cousins had begun dabbling in the drug trade...Eventually my father was busted and found guilty of felony possession with intent to sell cocaine and marijuana,” he wrote.
Despite his apparent mischaracterization of his early life, Gallego blasted Lake as a "loser" last week for bringing up his father's crimes. Gallego accused Lake of dredging up a "stain" on his family to engage in a malicious attack.
"It’s a stain that our family has had to carry. This is why my mom, my sisters and myself have worked our entire life to really live the American Dream and to serve and honor this country despite what he has done," Gallego said.
Vice President Kamala Harris is desperate to win Michigan, a crucial battleground state that could carve a quick path to victory for her or former President Donald Trump next month.
According to Newsweek, Harris recently made her sixth trip to Michigan, where she faces growing opposition by the state's Muslim-American voter population.
But it wasn't her rally that made news and blew up across social media, it was what one person asked her during the rally that raised eyebrows.
Someone in the crowd, during her rally in Grand Rapids' Riverside Park, proposed to the already-married vice president, sparking a response that went viral.
A video of the moment that went viral across social media shows the moment one of the rallygoers, which sounded like a male voice, asked Harris, "Will you marry me?"
The vice president replied, "I'm married happily! But there's tons of single women here or men, whatever you prefer!"
WILL YOU MARRY ME ?#HarrisForPotus2024 😍 pic.twitter.com/0e90eB0Xlz
— Mia (@TheGoatfox) October 19, 2024
The vice president laughed at the question as she explained that she's already married. The clip took off across social media and garnered over 1 million views on TikTok alone.
Newsweek noted:
The interaction has since spread across social media. An X (formerly Twitter) user, notcapnamerica, shared the clip, which has garnered over 1.1 million views. The video was also shared by the X account Republicans Against Trump, garnering over 33,000 views.
Both Harris and Trump have made a significant presence in Michigan over the past several months, as most election experts have pointed out that Michigan is one of the few states that could all but guarantee a seat in the Oval Office.
Newsweek explained why Michigan is one of the handful of states that will likely determine the winner on Nov. 5.
Seven battleground states, including Michigan, will play a key role in determining the result of the presidential race. This is because the election is decided in the Electoral College, which awards each state a certain number of electoral votes based on population.
Harris faces significant pushback from both progressive groups and Muslim-American groups in Michigan over her administration's stance on the Israel-Hamas war.
Some believe that Trump is likely to win Michigan because of that alone.
Only time will tell if Harris is able to pull it off.
It's easy to see that Vice President Kamala Harris and her campaign are struggling in the final stretch before next month's election.
The Harris campaign is calling in every favor it can presumably muster, including tapping former President Barack Obama and first lady Michelle Obama, to say good things about her in the states where it matters most.
According to The Hill, the Obamas, who were reportedly initially not going to stump for Harris, will join her next week in several battleground states as she attempts to sell American voters on becoming the next president.
The Obamas are still easily the most popular Democrats alive, and the Harris campaign is undoubtedly hoping for a boost with their involvement.
The Obamas will join Harris in two states next week, including Michigan and Georgia.
Former President Obama will team up with Harris in Georgia on one day, and the former first lady will meet up with Harris in Michigan, where Harris is facing a strong possibility of losing due to Muslim-American voter organizations pushing voters to vote against her.
The Hill noted:
The campaign considers the events with Harris and the Obamas as a way to harness voter enthusiasm and boost get-out-the-vote efforts in the final two weeks of the campaign, the official said. Michigan early voting starts Oct. 26, and early voting has already started in Georgia.
Michelle Obama's appearance in Michigan with Harris will mark her first time hitting the campaign trail for the vice president.
Barack Obama has already worked the trail for Harris, making appearances in Pennsylvania, Arizona and Nevada. He will also reportedly travel to Michigan and Wisconsin in the near future.
Harris previously called in former President Bill Clinton to campaign for her in an effort to appeal to southern rural voters.
The efforts by the Obamas to help Harris are aimed at boosting enthusiasm for early voting, which tends to favor Democratic candidates.
While early voting numbers will likely not match those from 2020, there's still enough to make a considerable difference in battleground states, which could come down to razor-thin margins.
Fox News noted:
The Harris campaign aims to use these campaign events to boost voter enthusiasm among the vice president's supporters in order to get out the vote ahead of Election Day on Nov. 5, as well as to boost volunteer engagement to help voter turnout.
Only time will tell if the Obamas make any difference for Harris.
Barack Obama is facing backlash over his stern message to black men who are considering a vote for Donald Trump - with some calling Obama's comments condescending as Kamala Harris scrambles to lock down support from the black community.
At his first campaign stop for Harris last week, Obama lectured "the brothers" over their reluctance to support Harris and suggested sexism was to blame.
Obama's comments were a response to mounting fears that Democrats are losing support with men, particularly black and Hispanic men.
A Howard University poll found Harris has support from 84% of black likely voters, but only 59% of black men.
Despite Obama's popularity in the black community, not everyone is convinced that a lecture is what will motivate ambivalent black men to show up for Harris.
Obama's message has been criticized by some as condescending and even racist. Some liberals have complained that Obama is wrongly blaming a demographic that has been loyal to Democrats over the years.
Others suggest that loyalty has not been paid back. Ken Wainwright, a Georgia labor organizer and former Atlanta City Council candidate, said Democrats have taken black voters for granted.
“These are people who should have been easy for Harris,” Wainwright told the Atlanta Journal-Constitution. “And now Obama is mad. Where you been, homie?”
The Harris campaign showed signs of desperation last week by announcing an agenda targeted to black men.
The "Opportunity Agenda For Black Men" faced immediate backlash, with many accusing Harris of promising handouts based on race. Others said Harris' promises to black men, such as legalizing marijuana, were rooted in toxic assumptions.
“Marijuana? That’s just disrespectful,” Wainwright said. “We’re fathers. We live in these communities. We want to get kids off that stuff.”
The campaign has clarified that Harris' agenda for black men is actually race neutral, as Harris pledges to be a president for "all Americans."
A campaign rep told the Wall Street Journal that while Harris is "clear-eyed about how Black men have long been denied the tools that would allow them to grow their wealth, get a good-paying job and support their loved ones," she is "championing solutions that will benefit all Americans and address these specific barriers to economic opportunity."
Between the scolding and wild oscillations in messaging, Harris is not finishing her campaign on a confident note.
