Sunday, May 5, 2024
More
    Home Blog

    Trump Campaign Tells Donors It Raised $76 Million in April

    0

    Donald J. Trump’s campaign advisers told donors during a presentation at a Republican National Committee retreat on Saturday that Mr. Trump’s campaign and the party were projected to raise $76.2 million in April, according to two people who attended the briefing.

    Mr. Trump’s three top advisers — Susie Wiles, Chris LaCivita and Tony Fabrizio — briefed donors, presented a slide show and took questions afterward, the attendees said. The attendees were not authorized to speak publicly about the event, which was a closed-door briefing and gathering for party donors.

    Mr. Trump’s advisers presented a bullish case for the candidate that included the possibility of expanding the electoral map to include the Democratic-leaning states of Minnesota and Virginia. They also noted that Mr. Trump has remained mostly ahead in polls even while being outspent by President Biden, just as the former president was outspent in the primary by his rivals.

    The Federal Election Commission will not receive fund-raising reports until later this month, meaning the numbers can’t be verified until then. In March, Mr. Trump and his allied groups reported raising $65.6 million — a significant amount, but still well below what President Biden and his affiliated outside groups have raised.

    The donor event comes at a highly unusual juncture in the 2024 campaign. Mr. Trump is both the Republican Party’s presumptive nominee and also spending four days a week in a Manhattan courtroom in a criminal trial related to falsified business records intended to conceal hush-money payments made to a porn star in the 2016 campaign.

    Mr. Trump was scheduled to speak to donors midday on Saturday. A spokesman for Mr. Trump did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

    The slide show presentation included three different electoral college maps, the attendees said. The first was dismissed as “the media’s version,” which included seven swing states: Nevada, Arizona, Georgia and North Carolina across the Southwest and the Sun Belt, plus Pennsylvania, Michigan and Wisconsin in the industrial north.

    A second slide described “the actual current reality” as only having three swing states: Pennsylvania, Michigan and Wisconsin.

    And a third slide described an “expanded reality” in which both Minnesota and Virginia would be in play for Mr. Trump — an ambitious view of states not widely seen as among the most competitive, but in which the Trump team insists the former president has gained ground.

    Campaign officials also outlined how Mr. Trump would be spending two upcoming Wednesdays — the lone days when his criminal trial is not scheduled to be in session — with fund-raising events in Ohio and Kentucky on May 15 and a trip to Texas on May 22.

    Mr. Trump’s advisers also described some of their strategy for the general election in the presentation, including reaching 2016 levels of support with white voters and expanding support among Black and Latino voters, particularly among urban men.

    The campaign strategists also outlined a plan to prevent the kinds of losses that occurred in 2022 that have been linked to the issue of abortion and the backlash from the Supreme Court’s overturning of federal abortion rights before the midterm elections.

    Mr. Trump has proudly claimed ownership of the end of Roe v. Wade as the president who appointed a conservative supermajority to the highest court in the country. But he has struggled to answer questions about it since, waffling in discussions with advisers about whether to back a national ban, before ultimately saying in a video he posted a few weeks ago that it’s up to states to decide how to handle the issue.

    Skydance, Paramount Exclusive Talks End; Sony, Apollo Deal On Table

    0

    UPDATED with latest on Paramount merger talks: A one-month exclusive negotiating window between Paramount Global and Skydance ended at midnight last night and has not been renewed. But the David Ellison company is still in the mix as a special committee of Paramount’s board meets today. The group is considering how to approach a very different all-cash offer from Sony and Apollo.

    Deadline hears that the committee may be lookin at a so-called “go shop” provision, which allows a public company to explore competing offers even it’s already has a firm purchase offer in hand. The duration of a go-shop period is usually one to two months. 

    Par’s controlling shareholder Shari Redstone has favored a deal with Skydance, backed by Larry Ellison and Gerry Cardinale’s RedBird Capital, although other investors have been been hating on it for over a month now since, even a sweetened offer. It would leave the company public. Sony and Apollo have lobbed a preliminary offer of about $26 billion but haven’t yet had access to the books.

    Agents, managers and others in Hollywood fear a Par-Sony hookup which — if it passes regulators — would reduce the number of big players for shopping projects and doing business.

    PREVIOUSLY: The clock is ticking down to midnight, the end of a month-long exclusive negotiating window between Paramount Global and Skydance Media. The David Ellison company has been circling Paramount for months and lobbed several offers to buy out Shari Redstone’s controlling stake, backed by Oracle co-founder Larry Ellison and Gerry Cardinale’s RedBird Capital.

    The Skydance team spent the past month taking a close look at the books. In the face of clamorous objections from other Paramount shareholders on the initial deal structure, it sweetened the pot for owners of the common stock. The revised offer is said to be Skydance’s best and last (although it still got a thumbs down from other investors).

    The timing was tight to clinch a deal in a month but there had been talk of a possible extension. It’s not clear if that’s happening now, maybe unlikely, because Paramount now has another offer on the table from a team of Sony Pictures Entertainment and private equity giant Apollo. After waiting a bit, the partners formally asked to discuss a cash deal potentially worth $26 billion. They still need to do their own due diligence.

    Paramount had set up a special board committee to explore offers. It can receive and acknowledge another offer during an exclusive window, but it cannot engage with the other party. So Skydance would need to cool its heels for a bit while Paramount examined the other offer. The question is will it wait, or bail?

    Meanwhile, the leadership of Paramount Global changed abruptly earlier this week. Chief executive Bob Bakish left and was replaced by three top division heads in a new office of CEO. The company also declined to take questions on its quarterly earnings call, a rare occurrence and the latest twist in an unpredictable ride at Paramount this year.

    A deal with Sony would mean taking Paramount private in a merger of two big studios, not a popular prospect in Hollywood since it means one less place to shop projects. It would also likely split the company up since Sony of Japan can’t own U.S. broadcast assets. Skydance would keep it public, with a cash infusion and a restructuring.

    ChromeOS gets better multitasking and Wi-Fi traffic prioritization

    The latest version of ChromeOS (M124) is out with a couple of nice upgrades, including faster split screen setup and a new web traffic prioritization feature. The update brings other updates with it as well, like a settings UI refresh and updated gesture controls.

    Judging from screenshots published by 9to5Google, the new “Faster Split Screen Setup” feature will be familiar to Windows users. After you snap an app to one side of the screen, previews of other apps pop up on the other side — pick one, and it pins there for you. Before this update, you had to navigate to the other app and repeat the side-by-side pinning process, so this should remove a little of that friction.

    Setting up split screen in ChromeOS M124.
    Image: 9to5Google

    9to5Google writes that options for this feature can be found under Settings > System preferences > Windows and desks.

    Google has also added Wi-Fi Quality of Service (QoS) to ChromeOS. The idea, much like the QoS feature of routers, is that your Chromebook will prioritize things like video calls and online games when your Wi-Fi network is congested. If it works well, that could mean higher-quality video calls, less buffering while streaming, and smoother online gaming.

    In the category of “things nobody asked for,” ChromeOS now supports carrier locking — so wireless companies can sell you a Chromebook that you can only use with their service. In theory, when you pay off the laptop or the contract ends, your carrier will unlock it, which I’m sure will always go off without a hitch.

    Lastly, this update brings a redesigned ChromeOS settings app that’s slathered in Google’s Material You design and structured more like smartphone settings menus, according to Chrome Unboxed. The outlet reports that there’s also a new 2-finger trackpad gesture for swiping away notifications and that ChromeOS now supports turning on the ability to digitally pan, tilt, and zoom even on Chromebook webcams that don’t support Super-Res Zoom.

    Like most of its updates, Google doesn’t roll out ChromeOS versions all at once, but says version M124 will hit compatible Chromebooks “over the coming days.” To check for the update, either look for the “Update available” notification or go to Settings > About ChromeOS > Check for updates.

    How to Watch Madonna’s Last Celebration Tour Show in Rio Online

    Madonna is showing her appreciation for fans with a free concert on Saturday, May 4, at the Copacabana Beach in Rio de Janeiro — the final stop of her Celebration Tour.

    Billed as “the biggest dance floor in the world,” the epic performance in Rio will include special guest Bob the Drag Queen (a.k.a. Caldwell Tidicue). According to a statement on the singer’s website, the extravaganza “will be free of charge as a thank you to her fans for celebrating more than four decades of her music over the course of the epic global run of the tour.”

    At a Glance: How to Watch Madonna’s Celebration Tour in Rio Online

    • When Saturday, May 4 at 5:45 p.m. PT/8:45 p.m. ET (9:45 p.m. local Brazil time)
    • Channel TV Globo (Brazil)
    • Stream online DirecTV, Sling (add-on required)
    • More ways to watch online Globoplay (available at Appstore for Android on Amazon, Apple App Store)

    Madonna’s free Celebration concert in Rio will only be broadcast locally in Brazil, including on the Brazilian streaming video-on-demand service Globoplay. Fans outside Brazil can livestream the big event online on a cable streaming service that carries TV Globo or through a Virtual Private Network (VPN).

    Below, keep reading for more details on how to watch Madonna’s Celebration show in Rio online in the U.S., including for free.

    How to Watch Madonna’s Celebration Concert in Rio: Date, Time, Channel

    Madonna’s final Celebration Tour stop will take place at Copacabana Beach in Rio de Janeiro on Saturday, May 4. It will air on the Brazilian channel TV Globo at 9:45 p.m. local time in Rio.

    Stream Madonna’s Celebration Show in Rio: How to Watch in the U.S.

    If you want to watch Madonna’s Rio concert outside of Brazil, you can tune into TV Globo at 5:45 p.m. PT/8:45 p.m. ET in the U.S. You can stream TV Globo on any live TV streaming service that carries the Brazilian channel, including DirecTV and Sling.

    Already have a Globoplay account? There’s a way to access your service from outside of Brazil.

    Get more details on how to watch TV Globo and other Brazilian channels in the U.S. below.

    DirecTV

    Editor’s Pick

    You can watch Madonna’s concert in Rio on DirecTV when you add Brazilian programming (including the TV Globo channel) to a satellite or internet-based plan. New subscribers can stream for free with DirecTV’s five-day trial.

    For satellite subscribers, you can add international programming to a Basic or Preferred Choice base package ($27.99 to $59.99 per month plus tax). The BrazilianDirect add-on is an extra $29.99 per month and includes TV Globo, or you can get the standalone TV Globo channel add-on for $19.99 per month.

    For DirecTV subscribers connecting via internet, add Brazilian programming for just $30 per month on top of your existing cable TV streaming package. Learn more here.

    And for a limited time, eligible subscribers can save up to $240; learn more here.

    Sling

    Packages on sale from $22.50 per month

    Watch Madonna’s Celebration concert in Rio on TV Globo with Sling, which offers a free three-day trial when you add select Brazilian TV Pack plans (reg. $13.99 and up per month) to your streaming package.

    New subscribers save half off their first month of Sling, so you can stream Madonna’s show in Brazil starting at only $20 for the Orange plan (reg. $40 per month) that includes CNN, HGTV, ID, A&E, ESPN, Disney Channel and other networks. Other packages include the Blue tier ($22.50 for the first month, reg. $45 monthly) and the combined Orange & Blue package (reg. $60 monthly) that includes exclusive news and entertainment channels such as ABC, NBC, Fox, E!, FS1, FX and others.

    For those who already have Brazil’s Globoplay streaming video-on-demand service, you can use a virtual private network (VPN) to access your account in the U.S. Plans start at $12.95 per month or $8.32 monthly with annual billing; learn more here.

    Bayley Claims She’s Fully Embracing the WWE Superstar Lifestyle

    0

    Bayley’s journey in WWE has been marked by her evolution from a promising newcomer to a multi-time women’s champion. Since her main roster debut in 2016, she has become one of the promotion’s top talents, captivating audiences with her performances and in-ring charisma. As she prepares to defend the WWE Women’s Championship at Backlash, Bayley recently discussed her life as a WWE superstar.

    In a recent interview with Bodyslam.net, Bayley delved into her journey within WWE. When asked about her development since joining the main roster, she emphasized the importance of embracing the WWE superstar lifestyle as a way of life rather than just a job.

    Bayley also acknowledged the challenges of balancing her dream with the demands of the industry but explained that she has accepted this lifestyle as integral part of her identity. She added that by intertwining her personal growth with her character development, she strives to make her performances as real as possible and connect with the audience.

    “I would like to say that I’ve progressed a lot. As a person, I’ve taken all of my life lessons and applied it here, and just really accepted the WWE superstar life as a lifestyle. It is a lifestyle, it’s hard to look at it as like, this is what I do for my job. Even though this is my dream, at some point, you’re just like, I gotta go to work, gotta go to work, which can make it stressful. Throughout my years, I’ve realized it’s much easier to take it as a lifestyle. I think my character has really grown with me behind the scenes, you know? I try to intertwine them to make it feel as real as possible. Hopefully that translates to the audience. But I think that we’re in a good spot right now.”

    As she gears up for her title defense against Tiffany Stratton and Naomi at Backlash, Bayley aims to prove her in-ring skills once again. With her unwavering commitment to the sport and her embrace of the WWE superstar lifestyle, Bayley is surely destined for greatness.

    Are you excited to watch Bayley’s title defense at WWE Backlash? Let us know in the comments!

    Cavaliers must rely on experience after losing Game 6 despite Donovan Mitchell’s 50 points

    0

    ORLANDO, Fla. — Donovan Mitchell had scored 50 points in a playoff game and lost before he did it Friday — in central Florida no less.

    Four years ago, about 20 miles west of downtown Orlando on I-4, in the middle of a mostly deserted, allegedly magical kingdom, Mitchell opened the 2020 playoffs in the Disney bubble with an astounding 57 points for the Utah Jazz. They lost by 10 to the Denver Nuggets that day, and then won the next three games of the series — the last a 51-pointer for Mitchell.

    The third time was Friday night, against the Orlando Magic. He landed squarely on 50 points in a 103-96 loss to Orlando in Game 6 of this first-round series that, like the last series in which Mitchell scored at least 50 in a game, is going to a Game 7.

    All of which is to say, in a bit of a silver lining for the Cavs, at least Mitchell has been in this spot before.

    “I think it’s the best two words in sports,” Mitchell said, referring to the Game 7 that awaits his Cleveland Cavaliers and Orlando at 1 p.m. Eastern Time Sunday. “No matter what round it is, first, second, third and finals, all the stuff you’ve done for six games really goes out the window. It’s all about desperation, will.”

    “Game 7” are two great words for the teams that force them. It means they extended the life of their season by at least another two days; the efforts and strategy and hard work lodged in Game 6 were enough to earn them one more game, at minimum.

    That’s the Magic right now. Orlando survived not only Mitchell’s 50-piece, but a whopping 66 paint points by Cleveland. The Magic trailed by five heading into the fourth quarter and then dared someone other than Mitchell to beat them. No one took the bet. Mitchell scored all 18 of the Cavs’ points in the final frame. The Magic outscored him by 12.

    The Cavs are the team that has to run it back following a closeout game in which their best player was awesome, and it wasn’t enough. Theirs was a locker room full of players walking with limps, appendages wrapped in ice, blankly staring at phones.

    In that moment, it’s hard for that team, the one in the corner currently occupied by the Cavs, to conjure too much excitement for what lies ahead. Sunday of course will be different, or it should be.

    There is so much riding on the outcome of Game 7 for the Cavs — way beyond a crack at No. 1 seed Boston. Jobs are on the line. Players’ futures in Cleveland might well be determined. The reputation of the organization is also on the line. On the last day of the regular season, the Cavs hand-picked Orlando as an opponent by tanking in the fourth quarter of a game they were winning by double-digits when it looked like a win might change their first-round opponent.

    But if the Cavs dwell on the stakes, or gaze inward at the opportunity missed Friday, to say nothing of the past embarrassments in road losses in this series, they would saddle themselves with extra weight they can’t afford to carry.

    Hope weighs less. Lighter is better.

    Mitchell lost the only Game 7 he ever played in, to the Nuggets in the bubble. He was so drained and devastated by the loss in the finale to Denver that Jamal Murray, his adversary in the series, picked him up off the court and hugged him. Looking back on the memory, though, Mitchell said that Game 7 experience was “fun as s—,” even though he lost.

    Max Strus has played in Game 7s in each of the last two Eastern Conference finals with the Miami Heat. The Heat narrowly lost in 2022 and trounced the Celtics in Game 7 last year to reach the finals.

    Marcus Morris, now apparently Cleveland’s starting power forward so long as Jarrett Allen remains out, has four Game 7s to his name. Tristan Thompson, who is also back in the rotation with Allen sidelined, has been on three teams in a Game 7 and won them all. The one in 2016 was pretty good, if memory serves.

    Mitchell walked by Georges Niang in the locker room Friday night and commented, “You hit one,” meaning a 3-pointer. Niang also returned to the rotation in Game 6 after his first DNP in Game 5 of the entire season. He is now 2-of-15 from 3 in the series. Niang also has Game 7 experience, having been on the wrong end twice, once with Mitchell in Utah and then last year in the conference semifinals with Philadelphia.

    Experience is on the Cavs’ side. So is the home court. Mitchell, now tied with Allen Iverson for the third-most 50-point playoff games in history (trailing only Michael Jordan with eight and Wilt Chamberlain with four), has scored 78 points in the last two games. Darius Garland has re-emerged with 44 points over the same stretch. Strus has six 3s in his last two games. That may not sound like much, but in a series where neither team can make much of anything, Strus is trending upward-ish on the most important shot in the sport. The road team has yet to win in this series.

    “Protect home,” Garland said, multiple times, as though he was trying to speak the idea into existence.

    Allen, dealing with a rib injury, is questionable at best for Sunday. Evan Mobley played easily his worst game of the series in Game 6, and turned his ankle in the first half. Mitchell, once again, tweaked his left knee. And Caris LeVert played only seven minutes in Game 6. His left knee was wrapped in ice afterwards. He scored … checks notes … one point.

    Those are truths, not excuses. At this time of year, there are none of those. Any injury short of a debilitating one can’t have an impact on Game 7, just like Mitchell’s 50 points from Game 6 won’t be added to the scoreboard Sunday.

    Everyone starts over. One game to see who moves on. Who is up for it?

    “If it’s not 50, maybe it’s 60 (points),” Mitchell said. “Maybe it’s 30, 10 and 10. Whatever the game calls for, it’s my job to figure it out and go for it.

    “How do we find ways to continually be relentless? I have no doubt that will show up. I have no doubt Cleveland will show up.”

    (Top photo: Gary Bassing / NBAE via Getty Images)

    Physicists Say They May Have Found a Powerful Glitch in the Universe

    0

    “Once you reach a cosmic scale, terms and conditions apply.”

    Einstein 2.0

    Researchers have discovered what they’re calling a “cosmic glitch” in gravity, which could potentially help explain the universe’s strange behavior on a cosmic scale.

    As detailed in a new paper published in the Journal of Cosmology and Astroparticle Physics, the team from the University of Waterloo and the University of British Columbia in Canada posit that Albert Einstein’s theory of general relativity may not be sufficient to explain the accelerating expansion of the universe.

    Einstein’s “model of gravity has been essential for everything from theorizing the Big Bang to photographing black holes,” said lead author and Waterloo mathematical physics graduate Robin Wen in a statement about the research. “But when we try to understand gravity on a cosmic scale, at the scale of galaxy clusters and beyond, we encounter apparent inconsistencies with the predictions of general relativity.”

    “It’s almost as if gravity itself stops perfectly matching Einstein’s theory,” he added. “We are calling this inconsistency a ‘cosmic glitch’: gravity becomes around one percent weaker when dealing with distances in the billions of light years.”

    Glitchuationship

    In response, the team came up with a new model of such a “glitch” that modifies Einstein’s theory to resolve these inconsistencies.

    “Think of it as being like a footnote to Einstein’s theory,” Wen said in the statement. “Once you reach a cosmic scale, terms and conditions apply.”

    It’s one possible solution for a problem that astronomers and physicists have been racking their brains over for decades.

    “Almost a century ago, astronomers discovered that our universe is expanding,” explained coauthor and University of Waterloo astrophysics professor Niayesh Afshordi. “The farther away galaxies are, the faster they are moving, to the point that they seem to be moving at nearly the speed of light, the maximum allowed by Einstein’s theory.”

    “Our finding suggests that, on those very scales, Einstein’s theory may also be insufficient,” he added.

    According to Afshordi, their suggested patch for a “cosmic glitch” is only the beginning.

    “This new model might just be the first clue in a cosmic puzzle we are starting to solve across space and time,” he said.

    More on the expansion of the universe: Physicists Suggest Universe Is Full of Material Moving Faster Than Light

    Your body needs three forms of movement every week

    0

    Sign up for CNN’s Fitness, But Better newsletter series. Our seven-part guide will help you ease into a healthy routine, backed by experts.



    CNN
     — 

    Walking has earned a reputation as a great form of exercise that’s easy and accessible for many people, and scores of studies show the popular activity has numerous health benefits, too.

    Getting at least 2,300 steps per day reduces your risk of dying from cardiovascular disease, according to one study published in a 2023 edition of the European Journal of Preventive Cardiology.

    In addition, weight-bearing exercises such as walking help prevent osteoporosis, according to another study published in the journal Nature Scientific Reports.

    Yet some experts in the health and fitness fields assert that while walking is certainly good for your health and fitness, it’s not really high-quality exercise. One such expert is Melissa Boyd, a certified personal trainer and coach with Tempo, an online personal training platform. Boyd is based in San Francisco.

    “Our lives have gotten so busy — we commute, sit all day, then are exhausted at night — that getting a short walk in makes you feel like you’ve done this big, exponential thing,” Boyd said. “But walking is really a baseline movement your body requires to function well, to help with things like circulation and digestion, and to decompress.”

    To help her clients better understand why a daily walk won’t result in a beach body — something many of them believe, thanks to various social media influencers — she discusses with them the three types of movement that are beneficial for overall health and fitness.

    First is the movement your body is owed or requires every day, such as walking, stretching and bending. Second is athletic movement, which you can do a few times a week to improve your fitness or to train for a sport. Third is social movement that you do for fun or to connect with others, such as dancing or playing volleyball.

    “It’s important to think of movement in these different categories because not moving throughout the day has become normalized,” Boyd said. “Our lives are so sedentary, many of us are trying to dig ourselves out of a movement deficit. But exercise is different from physical movement.”

    Walking is great, but it’s just one, unidirectional form of movement, and our bodies need more to be functionally fit, said Dr. Carl Cirino, a sports medicine surgeon at HSS Orthopedics with Stamford Health in Connecticut.

    People use the muscles and tendons in their bodies to assist with all the bending, twisting and rotating they do in their daily lives, Cirino said, so they need to work and stretch them in many different directions. Yoga and Pilates are two activities that are very effective and healthy in this regard, he said.

    “Stretching is also incredibly easy, and something you can do when you wake up and before you go to bed,” Cirino said.

    Having loose, pliable muscles also means you will have more balance and stability, which helps prevent falls and injuries in all physical activities, he said. It’s also good to get your heart rate up several times a week for cardiovascular health.

    Ideally, you should create a plan that incorporates daily “owed” movements, such as walking and stretching, with some cardiovascular work, strength training and social activity sprinkled throughout the week, the two said. That can seem overwhelming for many, however.

    Breaking down all these different movements into exercise snacks is one way to sneak in the movement your body needs, Boyd said.

    “Maybe get a walking pad and do some of your meetings while walking slowly on the pad,” she said. “Maybe every time you go to the bathroom, you do 20 squats, or every time you get water, you do 10 push-ups against a wall. If you attach these exercise snacks to something else you’re already doing, you can make it more of a habit. I’ve seen huge success with this.”

    Boyd also encourages her clients to find some form of movement they enjoy that doesn’t seem like a workout, such as playing kickball or pickleball. That way, you’re having fun and being social while getting fitter.

    Cirino agrees. “We see kids here in sports medicine whose parents want them to play baseball, but they don’t want to do it,” he said. “It’s the same with exercise. You need to find something that’s interesting and easy — maybe an activity your friends are doing — and use that as the basis to build good habits.”

    Start slowly and build from there

    Rethinking exercise as regular movements your body needs for functionality, fitness and social connection also can be a means of giving yourself permission to carve out time for working out, Boyd said.

    It’s also helpful to keep in mind that creating an exercise plan doesn’t require an immediate, massive change in your lifestyle. In fact, it’s better to start slowly with new, little chunks of movement.

    “What I usually see is that people love the way this starts to make them feel,” Boyd said. “Then the stronger they become, the more they want to move even more. Movement inspires movement.”

    Melanie Radzicki McManus is a freelance writer who specializes in hiking, travel and fitness.

    Young Democrats face Gaza blowback as they try to mobilize students for Biden

    0



    CNN
     — 

    President Joe Biden’s support for the Israeli military offensive in Gaza mixed with student anger over police crackdowns on anti-war campus protests are complicating the work of Democratic youth groups trying to engage classmates and other Generation Z voters ahead of this year’s election.

    “If I’m talking about electric vehicles and climate change, and then (a student) asks me, ‘What about all the emissions caused by the bombing of Gaza?’ I’m like, well, you know, can’t help you there,” said Hasan Pyarali, the president of the College Democrats chapter at Wake Forest University in North Carolina and the national group’s Muslim caucus chair.

    “Same thing with abortion access. And as an organizer, going in with those set of facts is so difficult that a lot of the times I’m like, ‘Yeah, you’re right,’” he said.

    In his most pointed remarks to date, Biden on Thursday condemned what he referred to as “disorder” in the demonstrations, emphasizing reports of antisemitic intimidation on campuses. He said he supported “the right to protest, but not the right to cause chaos.” Asked if the protests had led him to change his thinking on the conflict, the president answered, “No.”

    Israel’s monthslong bombardment of Gaza, launched in response to Hamas’ deadly cross-border attacks on October 7, has killed more than 34,600 people, according to the enclave’s health ministry, and the threat of starvation looms.

    The dire situation on the ground in Gaza, which many young Americans are routinely exposed to in real-time through social media apps like TikTok, Instagram and Facebook, has emerged as a significant concern for many Democratic organizations, liberal outside groups and other Biden allies worried about youth voter turnout in the 2024 election.

    Those anxieties came into view again last week when the traditionally modest College Democrats of America sounded the alarm, saying in a statement, “The White House has taken the mistaken route of a bear hug strategy for (Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin) Netanyahu and a cold shoulder strategy for its own base and all Americans who want to see an end to this war.”

    “It should be made abundantly clear that calling for the freedom of Palestinians is not Antisemitic,” the group wrote, “and neither is opposing the genocidal acts of the far-right radical extremist Israeli government.”

    The decision by leaders of the CDA – which for many years operated under the wing of the Democratic National Committee – to take such a bold stand and potentially endanger its standing with senior party leaders drew immediate attention across ideological lines. But the College Democrats insist their worries are also rooted in what they see as the Biden campaign’s unwillingness to grasp the scope of how difficult it is becoming to engage young voters.

    Polling of young voters on the Israel-Hamas War, specifically about its effect on Biden’s campaign, presents a mixed picture.

    A Harvard/Institute of Politics poll conducted in March showed that young Americans supported a permanent ceasefire in Gaza (51% versus 10% who were opposed). An Economist/YouGov poll from April found that 32% of adults younger than 30 sympathized with Palestinians (compared with 13% who sympathized with Israelis). Only 18% of young voters approved of Biden’s handling of the Israel-Hamas war, according to the Harvard/IOP poll.

    However, the Harvard survey also found that only 38% of young Americans were closely following news about the war. Asked which national issue concerned them the most, only 8% said foreign policy.

    Nicho Fernandez, a 21-year-old at Georgetown University in Washington, DC, admitted he hasn’t been paying close attention to the conflict in Gaza.

    “It’s a very complex situation, and personally, because of everything that I have, with internships, schoolwork, I haven’t been able to give a very close look to it,” Fernandez said.

    A majority of young adults (63%) in the Economist/YouGov poll said they haven’t attended any sort of political protest, rally or demonstration.

    “This is a different youth electorate than we saw in 2020 and 2022, and young voters are motivated by different things,” John Della Volpe, the Harvard Institute of Politics polling director, said when the results were released. “Economic issues are top of mind, housing is a major concern – and the gap between young men’s and young women’s political preferences is pronounced.”

    Biden allies frequently point to these constantly evolving dynamics as evidence that the domestic political stakes of the war in Gaza are being overblown by critics. Santiago Mayer, the founder and executive director of the Gen Z group Voters of Tomorrow, said that anger over the recent campus crackdowns has been directed more at college administrators and local officials than at Biden, and that observers shouldn’t draw a straight line between student unrest and how young people will vote.

    “I really don’t think that the protests themselves are an electoral conversation. I think there’s obviously an electoral component of it, but it is not something that we’re talking about right now,” Mayer told CNN. “It’s very important to remember that these young people, no matter how angry they might be at Joe Biden, will never vote for Trump.”

    But College Democrats national president Carolyn Salvador Avila, a 19-year-old student at the University of Nevada-Las Vegas, warned that while policy issues like the cost of living, climate change and abortion rights are, indeed, the most important to young voters, Biden’s Israel policy threatened to undermine his personal standing.

    “Even if it’s not the top at the list, it’s still something that’s keeping people who would otherwise fully support this party from being 100% sure that they’re going to cast their vote for Biden,” Salvador Avila said. “There are so many people on our campuses that are not as receptive anymore to our conversations about all the fantastic things that the president has accomplished because of this issue.”

    Those divisions exist now at almost every level of institutional Democratic politics, from local party chapters to Congress, and even within the College Democrats themselves.

    Allyson Bell, a graduate student at Meredith College in North Carolina and chair of the national College Democrats’ Jewish caucus, said she was taken aback by the group’s statement – in part because she, along with Pyarali, the Muslim caucus chair, had worked together on earlier drafts that, Bell said, contained more prominent denunciations of antisemitism on American campuses.

    Those versions were eventually voted down by the group’s executive council, she said, which ended up voting, 8-2, in favor of a statement that was more fiercely critical of Israel, Biden and police raids of protest encampments.

    Bell said she was not consulted on the final draft, an “alienating” occurrence that led her to believe that the College Democrats’ leadership did not want to highlight “the experience that Jewish students are having right now across college campuses.”

    “I support peaceful protests, even if those protests don’t necessarily align with my own beliefs,” Bell said. “But I think it was important to also include the instances of harassment that we have seen.”

    The Biden campaign and the Democratic National Committee declined to address the specific policy points voiced by these groups, pointing to the president’s most recent comments and his work to facilitate a ceasefire in the region. Seth Schuster, a spokesman for the Biden campaign, touted its investment in engaging young voters.

    “We have launched a more robust youth outreach campaign led by a dedicated youth vote team earlier than ever before that will feature campus organizers across every battleground state and has already included seven figure advertising across social media,” Schuster said in a statement. “Our operation is bolstered by 15 endorsing youth vote groups who are leveraging their networks and resources to mobilize young voters to reelect the president and vice president.”

    Among those groups is the College Democrats of America, which says it remains committed to backing Biden’s reelection and helping drive young voters to the polls. Still, top CDA officials expressed frustration over what they described as a cold shoulder from the Biden team.

    “It’s been really hard for our organization to get in contact with the White House and with the Biden administration,” said Aidan DiMarco, the group’s director of membership. “This isn’t new. This didn’t happen when we released this statement. It’s been an issue for a long time now.”

    That frustration, DiMarco insisted, is not personal, but a simple matter of campaign strategy.

    “If the Biden campaign wants to win in November, they’re going to have to start building a stronger connection with our organization,” he said, “because we’re doing the groundwork.”

    In Wisconsin, a critical swing state that could be decided, again, by the finest of margins, 20-year-old Evelyn Schmidt, chair of the University of Wisconsin-Whitewater College Democrats, said her group has sought to “hold two truths in our head” when it comes to Gaza and the election.

    “We care about this and want to be on the right side of history,” Schmidt said. “But then, also, making (clear) people know that the best situation in terms of the presidency and setting up that conversation is having Joe Biden reelected.”

    Democratic operatives working outside the White House with youth and local party organizations also said that their work has been complicated by the Israel-Hamas conflict, though they were less inclined to criticize Biden’s policies. That is in part, as one longtime Democratic strategist said, because the intractability of the issue makes it difficult to discuss in a campaign setting.

    “The problem is there’s not much conversation that can be had. It is even hard for young people to talk to other young people about how to do this,” the Democratic strategist said. “When I work with state parties and talk to people with the College Democrats, people with youth councils of the party, they ask, ‘How do I answer these questions for other young people?’ And that is a really hard challenge. There is so much emotion behind the issue.”

    Schmidt said her group’s message to young voters angry over Biden’s handling of the war is simple, delivered as straightforwardly as she and her colleagues can.

    “We say, ‘It’s not the ideal situation if that is your top issue,’” Schmidt told CNN. “But in Wisconsin, I think a lot of voters, their top issue is reproductive freedom, gun reform, and climate change.”

    Still, she added, delivering that message, day in and out, has put an added onus on young organizers.

    “It is frustrating because it does kind of put the weight on the individual organizers who are talking to people, to process with voters about how they should feel,” Schmidt said. “That weight of this issue is felt by organizers having to have those conversations.”

    Berkshire shareholders descend as Buffett hosts 60th Omaha meeting

    0

    By Jonathan Stempel and Koh Gui Qing

    OMAHA, Nebraska (Reuters) -Warren Buffett will take center stage at Berkshire Hathaway’s annual meeting on Saturday as shareholders, some having traveled long distances, arrived to see the famed investor as well as his expected successor.

    The meeting is the 60th for Buffett, 93, since he took over Berkshire in 1965. He has largely stopped appearing publicly to discuss the company. He told investors in November that he felt good but knew he was “playing in extra innings.”

    Ahead of the meeting, Berkshire reported first-quarter earnings that showed that its cash pile swelled to $189 billion as of March 31 while the size of its stake in Apple fell. Buffett has long touted the iPhone maker’s leadership and market dominance. Some investors have expressed concern that Apple had become too large a part of Berkshire’s investment portfolio.

    In downtown Omaha, hundreds of shareholders waited in line overnight to get in early. When the doors opened, some shareholders ran in to get good seats and the auditorium quickly filled up.

    “I was here since 2:30 a.m.,” said Serena Lam, 32, an investment portfolio manager who flew in with 40 others from Hong Kong and was standing first in line at one of the entrances. “I want to see Warren Buffett. I want to get his perspective about Japanese stocks. I flew over 25 hours for this.”

    At a downtown arena, Buffett and Vice Chairman Greg Abel, 61, will answer about five hours of questions. Vice Chairman Ajit Jain, 72, will also join. Abel was designated Buffett’s successor as chief executive in 2021.

    Bill Gunther, 72, a retired state forester from Newfane, Vermont, brought a lawn chair to sit in while on line.

    “I feel very bullish about Berkshire. They’re so diversified and have a good company culture. That’s the one thing that I loved.”

    Investors are focused on how the conglomerate will evolve as it faces challenges including how best to grow without overpaying for acquisitions, whether to pay a dividend and how to deploy cash on hand that stood at $189 billion as of the end of March.

    The shareholder meeting is the first since Charlie Munger, Buffett’s longtime friend, business partner and foil, died in November at age 99.

    Munger was known for laconic and acerbic comebacks to Buffett’s often lengthy appraisals about Berkshire, the economy, Wall Street and life.

    “It’s going to be hard for Warren to not have Charlie there,” said Paul Lountzis, president of Lountzis Asset Management, attending his 32nd Berkshire meeting.

    SUCCESSION TOP OF MIND Berkshire is a $862 billion conglomerate with dozens of businesses including BNSF railroad, Geico car insurance, Dairy Queen and Fruit of the Loom. It also owns well over $300 billion of stocks, close to half of which is Apple.

    Berkshire’s stock is up 23% over the last year, lagging the Standard & Poor’s 500’s 25% gain. Over the last decade, it has risen 218% versus the S&P’s 172% gain.

    Buffett is expected to face a wide array of questions on Saturday from major investments such as Apple and Occidental Petroleum to how elevated interest rates have affected the company. “I want to see Warren’s energy,” said Steven Check, president of Check Capital Management, attending his 27th meeting. “It’s good that Greg and Ajit will be out front.” Berkshire will also release first-quarter results and shareholders will vote on six proposals about climate, diversity and China. Buffett opposes all six. The weekend features opportunities for shareholders to buy goodies such as Berkshire T-shirts and Squishmallows toys at exhibits featuring Berkshire-owned companies.

    Ruth Gearhart, 72, from Omaha, filled her bags with See’s Candies plus tongs and spatulas from Pampered Chef. A 15-year shareholder, Gearhart said she was mainly concerned with what Buffett might say regarding his succession. “I trust him,” she said. “He’s a brilliant man and he has a lot of brilliant people. He will get us through this. I’d hate to see him go, but I think they prepared for it well.”

    (Reporting by Gui Qing Koh and Jonathan Stempel; editing by Ira Iosebashvili, Megan Davies, Cynthia Osterman, Jason Neely and Diane Craft)