Ramaswamy unveils ‘No to Neocons’ pledge his appointees will have to sign if elected


Republican presidential candidate Vivek Ramaswamy unveiled a “No to Neocons” pledge on Tuesday he plans to implement in his administration. 

According to a website launched Tuesday, “every prospective political appointee must commit to and sign this pledge” in order to serve in a Ramaswamy administration. 

The pledge requires officials to commit that “avoiding WW3 is a vital national objective,” “war is never a preference, only a necessity” and “the sole duty of U.S. policymakers is to U.S. citizens.”

RAMASWAMY SUGGESTS ‘BIG STICK’ DIPLOMACY IN ISRAEL OR RISK IRAQ-STYLE QUAGMIRE

Vivek Ramaswamy in New Hampshire

GOP hopeful Vivek Ramaswamy unveiled his “No to Neocons” pledge he says will be required for his appointees to sign if elected president. (REUTERS/Brian Snyder)

“If you want 20 more years of endless wars that don’t advance our interests, then I’m not your guy. But if you want to stay out of no-win wars and make America stronger at home, I know how to get that done,” Ramaswamy said in a press release. 

“This pledge is my commitment to the American people that I will lead true to these principles and hold all appointees in my administration to the same standard,” he added. 

Supporters of Ramaswamy can also sign the pledge on the “No to Neocons” website. 

RAMASWAMY CONSIDERING ‘REEVALUATING’ US UNITED NATIONS MEMBERSHIP, SCALING BACK NATO INVOLVEMENT: REPORT

Vivek Ramaswamy at Fox News debate

Ramaswamy has repeatedly clashed with GOP rivals on foreign policy at the Republican presidential debates. (Al Drago/Bloomberg via Getty Images)

The biotech entrepreneur has been outspoken in cautioning the U.S. from entering into a World War III, particularly after the Oct. 7 terrorist attack against Israel by the terrorist group Hamas. He has also been vocal about limiting U.S. involvement in the ongoing Russia-Ukraine war, putting him at odds with fellow Republicans.

He is one of five presidential hopefuls who will participate in the third Republican debate in Miami. The other candidates who qualified and agreed to appear on the debate stage are Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, former U.N. Ambassador Nikki Haley, former New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie and South Carolina Sen. Tim Scott. 

RAMASWAMY FUNDS CHARTER FLIGHT GETTING AMERICANS OUT OF ISRAEL

Ramaswamy at the Nixon Library

Ramaswamy is currently placing fourth in national polls, according to the RealClearPolitics average. (Francine Orr / Los Angeles Times via Getty Images)

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At the two previous debates, Ramaswamy had fiery clashes on foreign policy with Haley and former Vice President Mike Pence, who has since suspended his presidential campaign. 

Ramaswamy is currently placing fourth in national Republican polls according to the RealClearPolitics average behind Haley, DeSantis and former President Trump, who maintains a commanding lead in the GOP field. 

Get the latest updates from the 2024 campaign trail, exclusive interviews and more at our Fox News Digital election hub.



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Trump campaign mocks DeSantis argument that Haley, other GOP rivals are playing ‘spoiler’ in 2024 contest


Former President Trump’s presidential campaign scoffed at new arguments made by Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis’ team that the 2024 Republican nomination is a two-man race, with everyone else playing spoiler.  

“If it’s a two-man race, why the hell is DeSanctimonious spending money and resources attacking Nikki ‘Birdbrain’ Haley?” Trump spokesman Steven Cheung told Fox News Digital in a text message. “He knows she’s overtaken him in polls, and he is falling like a wounded bird out of the sky,”  

In the wake of yesterday’s endorsement by Republican Iowa Gov. Kim Reynolds, the DeSantis presidential campaign is once again trying to frame the Florida governor as the only viable alternative to Trump in the GOP presidential primary. 

“Simply put, without Ron DeSantis in this primary, Trump is the Republican nominee,” the DeSantis campaign argues in a new memo released Tuesday morning. 

IOWA GOV. KIM REYNOLDS TO ENDORSE DESANTIS OVER TRUMP, SOURCES SAY

Iowa Governor Kim Reynolds Endorses GOP Candidate Ron DeSantis For President

Republican presidential candidate Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis speaks with Iowa Gov. Kim Reynolds during a campaign rally on Nov. 6, 2023 in Des Moines, Iowa. Reynolds endorsed DeSantis’ run for president at the event. (Scott Olson/Getty Images)

“Nikki Haley and others are, at best, simply playing the role of spoiler – exponentially increasing the odds of a Trump nomination,” the memo states.

The memo – first reported by The Associated Press – outlines DeSantis’ underdog strategy to pull off a “big win” in Iowa that would clear the 2024 Republican primary field. DeSantis has concentrated the vast majority of his campaign trail time and resources in Iowa the past couple of months and has so far made stops in 87 of the Hawkeye State’s 99 counties.

“Everyone can universally agree that if Trump were to win big in Iowa it would create media and political momentum for his candidacy that would be difficult to stop heading into New Hampshire,” DeSantis campaign manager James Uthmeier, deputy manager David Polyansky and senior adviser Ryan Tyson wrote. 

“Additionally, a Trump loss or even a close battle in the Hawkeye State will reveal his political vulnerabilities and inspire Republican voters across the country who are either in the ‘not for Trump’ or ‘consider Trump and others’ camps,” the memo states.

HERE ARE ELECTION DAY’S KEY RACES THAT COULD HAVE THE BIGGEST IMPACT ON THE 2024 PRESIDENTIAL CYCLE

Trump and DeSantis

Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, right, has sought to frame the 2024 Republican presidential primary as a two-man contest between himself and former President Trump. (Getty Images)

The Haley campaign did not respond to a request for comment. 

In her own memo, Haley campaign manager Betsy Ankney on Monday described the Iowa contest as a “dead heat” between DeSantis and Haley, while ignoring Trump’s massive lead.

“The Iowa Caucuses are in just over two months. The New Hampshire primary is just 8 days after that. And Nikki Haley is the only candidate who is positioned to do well in both,” Ankney wrote, according to The Associated Press. “EVEN IF DeSantis were to do well in Iowa, which is a big ‘if’ given his current decline, he is in such a weak position in New Hampshire and South Carolina that it doesn’t matter. He has no end game.”

Trump remains the commanding frontrunner in the race for the 2024 GOP presidential nomination as he makes his third straight White House run. He saw his lead expand over his rivals during the spring and summer as he made history as the first former or current president in American history to be indicted for a crime. Trump’s four indictments – including in federal court in Washington, D.C., and in Fulton County court in Georgia on charges he tried to overturn his 2020 presidential election loss – have only fueled his support among Republican voters.

DESANTIS, HALEY SPAR OVER FLORIDA’S OFFSHORE OIL DRILLING BAN: ‘THAT’S JUST WRONG’ 

GOP Presidential Candidate Nikki Haley Campaigns In Iowa

Republican presidential candidate former U.N. Ambassador Nikki Haley speaks to potential voters during a campaign event at Central College on Oct. 21, 2023 in Pella, Iowa. Haley joins several other Republican presidential candidates stumping around the state this weekend. (Scott Olson/Getty Images)

Although the DeSantis campaign wants to spin the race as a two-man contest, the reality on the ground is that Haley has leapfrogged DeSantis in many of the latest polls in New Hampshire and South Carolina for second place. The latest major poll in Iowa – from the Des Moines Register/NBC News released last week – indicated Haley moving into a second-place tie with DeSantis.

Seeking to capitalize on that momentum, the Haley campaign released a new ad Tuesday morning that attacks DeSantis over energy policy. 

The video serves as a potential preview for a Haley line of attack at tomorrow night’s third GOP presidential primary debate.

The video begins with Haley – at the Fox Business debate at the Reagan Library in late September, charging that DeSantis is “against fracking, against drilling” with DeSantis responding that the allegations are “not true.”

The ad includes several clips of DeSantis stating during his tenure in Tallahassee saying that he opposes offshore drilling and touting policies against fracking. The ad ends with a voter asking the Florida governor if he supports a ban on fracking, to which he replies, “Yeah.”

Haley previously took aim at DeSantis’ support for an offshore oil drilling ban in his state during the second Republican presidential debate in September. 

“You banned fracking, you banned offshore drilling — you did it on federal lands and you took green subsidies that you didn’t have to take,” she charged.

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DeSantis appeared to laugh during Haley’s remarks before rejecting that he opposed fracking or drilling on federal lands.

He then noted a Florida constitutional amendment passed in 2018 that bans offshore drilling three miles into the Atlantic Ocean and nine miles into the Gulf of Mexico. The measure was passed by voters to protect marine wildlife that would be impacted by such activity.

Get the latest updates from the 2024 campaign trail, exclusive interviews and more at our Fox News Digital election hub.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.



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GOP senator urges ‘critical’ tool to curb child trafficking along border: ‘Most heinous acts imaginable’


FIRST ON FOX: Sen. Marsha Blackburn, R-Tenn., is leading legislation that would give border officials the ability to fingerprint children as part of an effort to stop child trafficking — which has exploded with the migrant crisis at the southern border. 

Blackburn’s Preventing the Recycling of Immigrants is Necessary for Trafficking Suspension Act is being introduced with 17 other Republican senators and would allow Customs and Border Protection officials to fingerprint children under the age of 14.

The bill would also require the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) to report the number of apprehensions each month in which a trafficker falsely claimed that a child with whom they were traveling was a relative.

TOP GOP LAWMAKERS DEMAND BIDEN ADMIN FORK OVER INFO ON ‘EGREGIOUS’ DOJ SETTLEMENT WITH SEPARATED MIGRANTS

Senator Marsha Blackburn

Tennessee Republican Senator Marsha Blackburn pictured at a hearing on Capitol Hill. (Kevin Dietsch/Getty Images)

It would also remove the authority of the attorney general to waive fingerprinting requirements at the border and would criminalize child “recycling” — in which children are used repeatedly to allow non-related adult migrants to appear to be part of a family unit, meaning it is less likely they will be removed.

Concerns about child recycling have lingered for years. In 2019, then-acting DHS Secretary Kevin McAleenan told lawmakers of how a 51-year-old man “bought” a 6-month-old child in order to exploit “a loophole” to allow him to be released.

Those concerns have remained amid a historic migrant crisis at the southern border since 2021. Related are concerns about child trafficking after reports that officials were unable to make contact with more than 85,000 child migrants and that administration officials reportedly ignored signs of “explosive” growth in child labor.

MAYORKAS CONFIRMS OVER 600,000 ILLEGAL IMMIGRANTS EVADED LAW ENFORCEMENT AT SOUTHERN BORDER LAST FISCAL YEAR 

Migrants who crossed the Rio Grande and entered the U.S. from Mexico are lined up for processing by U.S. Customs and Border Protection, Saturday, Sept. 23, 2023, in Eagle Pass, Texas. (AP Photo/Eric Gay)

It is not clear how regularly children are recycled at the border, but DHS has acknowledged that crimes of exploitation, including child exploitation “occur at alarmingly high rates” in the U.S. and abroad. DHS has made tackling a new mission area in the agency’s quadrennial review.

However, Republicans have linked the crisis to the policies of the administration, including its rolling back of Trump-era policies to prevent the release of migrants into the interior and its reduction of interior enforcement. 

Blackburn said in a statement that the U.S. is witnessing a “devastating humanitarian crisis, and children are the primary victims.”

“Abusing and using a child again and again is one of the most heinous acts imaginable, and yet it happens every day along the southern border,” she said.

“Empowering Border Patrol agents to fingerprint non-citizens under the age of 14 would give them the tools they need to identify victims of child recycling and stop this abuse in its tracks,” she said. “Given that the Biden administration just carelessly lost track of 85,000 migrant children, passing this legislation could not be more critical.”

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Senators joining the bill are Sens. Tom Cotton, R-Ark., Bill Cassidy, R-La., Bill Hagerty, R-Tenn., Roger Wicker, R-Miss., Steve Daines, R-Mont., Joni Ernst, R-Iowa, Ted Cruz, R-Texas, John Hoeven, R-ND, Mike Rounds, R-S.D., Thom Tillis, R-N.C., Mike Lee, R-Utah, Cindy Hyde-Smith, R-Miss., John Cornyn, R-Texas, Katie Britt, R-Ala., Marco Rubio, R-Fla., J.D. Vance, R-Ohio, and Kevin Cramer, R-N.D.

The bill comes as lawmakers in the House have expressed concern about a new settlement the administration made with civil rights activists over the Trump-era “zero tolerance” policy. The settlement prevents the separation of family units, which lawmakers warned could incentivize cartels posing as minors’ relatives to enter the U.S.





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Here are Election Day’s key races that could have the biggest impact on the 2024 presidential cycle


Nearly every race in three states that voters will cast ballots for on Tuesday could have a huge impact that reverberates into next year’s presidential election cycle.

Those races, split between Mississippi, Kentucky and Virginia, will likely give the winning party a spark of momentum as it prepares to battle for control of the White House and both houses of Congress in 2024.

Republicans already flipped one crucial governor seat in Louisiana last month and are hoping to do the same in Mississippi and Kentucky, as one incumbent from each party looks to fend off a serious challenge from the party opposite.

SARAH SANDERS WADES INTO ‘CRUCIAL’ KENTUCKY GOVERNOR RACE AS REPUBLICANS LOOK TO FLIP SECOND SEAT FROM DEMS

Daniel Cameron, Andy Beshear, Tate Reeves, Brandon Presley

From left to right, Republican Kentucky Attorney General Daniel Cameron, Democrat Kentucky Gov. Andy Beshear, Republican Mississippi Gov. Tate Reeves and Democrat Mississippi gubernatorial candidate Brandon Presley. (Getty Images)

5 REASONS VIRGINIA IS THE STATE TO WATCH ON ELECTION NIGHT 2023

In Kentucky, voters will determine whether to re-elect incumbent Democrat Gov. Andy Beshear to another term or to replace him with the commonwealth’s Republican attorney general, Daniel Cameron. Beshear remains one of the most popular governors in the country but has expressed support for the Biden administration, while Cameron has leaned heavily on former President Trump’s endorsement.

Voters in Mississippi will have a similar choice as Democrat Brandon Presley, the second cousin of famed rock-n-roll legend Elvis Presley, seeks to oust incumbent Republican Gov. Tate Reeves, who is also backed by Trump. Reeves won the governorship by just over five percent in 2019, but Democrats have poured large amounts of money into the race and see it as a potential flip opportunity.

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Virginia’s voters must decide which party they want representing them in both houses of the state legislature. the Republican-controlled House of Delegates and Democrat-controlled Senate both have narrow majorities.

Get the latest updates from the 2024 campaign trail, exclusive interviews and more at our Fox News Digital election hub.

Voting booths

Voting booths waiting for voters. (AP Photo/Keith Srakocic, File)



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Meet the historical candidates facing voters on Election Day


As voters cast ballots in Mississippi, Kentucky and Virginia on Tuesday, many will have the opportunity to vote for candidates that hold unique roles impacting each race in different ways.

One of those candidates, Republican Kentucky Attorney General Daniel Cameron, his party’s nominee for governor of the commonwealth, is the first Black gubernatorial nominee for any major party in Kentucky history.

He is also Kentucky’s first Black attorney general and would be the state’s first Black governor should he unseat incumbent Democrat Gov. Andy Beshear on Tuesday.

KARI LAKE BUILDS MOMENTUM WITH MORE BIG-NAME BACKING IN RACE TO FLIP ARIZONA SENATE SEAT

Republican Kentucky Attorney General Daniel Cameron

Kentucky Republican nominee for governor, Attorney General Daniel Cameron speaks, at the annual St. Jerome Fancy Farm Picnic in Fancy Farm, Kentucky, on Saturday, Aug. 5, 2023. (Ryan C. Hermens/Lexington Herald-Leader/Tribune News Service via Getty Images)

Beshear has his own historical role in the race as one of the last remaining Democrat governors of a deep-red state. He also maintains one of the highest approval ratings for any governor in the country despite being the leader of largely Republican-leaning Kentucky.

If he wins on Tuesday, he will have done so with the support of liberals, moderates and conservatives alike.

In Mississippi, Brandon Presley, the Democrat nominee for governor, is the second cousin of famed rock ‘n’ roll legend Elvis Presley. He is also in position to be competitive with the conservative state’s incumbent Republican governor, Tate Reeves.

DEMOCRAT GOV. ANDY BESHEAR SAYS KENTUCKY GOVERNOR RACE ‘HAS NOTHING TO DO’ WITH BIDEN AS VOTERS HEAD TO POLLS

Brandon Presley

Democrat Mississippi gubernatorial nominee Brandon Presley. (Fox News)

No Democrat has been elected to serve as governor of Mississippi since 1999, but Democrats have poured large sums of money into the race, seeing it as a potential pickup opportunity.

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Should any of these candidates win their races, history will be made.

Get the latest updates from the 2024 campaign trail, exclusive interviews and more at our Fox News Digital election hub.



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A guide to understanding the issues you will see on ballots this November


Voters across the country are heading to the polls on Tuesday, Nov. 7 in key elections that will decide the fate of several controversial ballot issues. 

Voters in Ohio will weigh in on whether abortion rights will be enshrined into the state’s constitution in an election that many believe will have national implications as states move to vote on abortion post Roe v. Wade.

Ohioans will vote “Yes” on Issue 1 if they support amending the constitution to include abortion and “No” if they oppose it. Opponents of the measure have argued that it goes “too far,” even farther than Roe v. Wade, while abortion activists say the amendment is necessary to codify abortion access into law.

CNN PANELISTS SOUND ALARM ON ‘REALLY SCARY’ POLL SHOWING BIDEN TRAILING TRUMP IN KEY STATES

Woman voting Utah

Voter casting a ballot in voting booth. (GEORGE FREY/AFP via Getty Images)

Voters in the Buckeye State will also be voting on Issue 2, which will decide whether recreational marijuana is legalized.

Supporters of legalization say Ohio can reclaim tax revenue being lost to states such as Michigan, where marijuana is legal, and take power from illegal drug markets through government regulation. However, opponents warn of increased workforce and traffic accidents by people under the influence and argue much of the revenue will land in the pocket of the marijuana industry, not taxpayers.

Issue 2 on the Nov. 7 ballot would allow adults 21 and over to buy and possess up to 2.5 ounces (71 grams) of cannabis and 15 grams (about a half-ounce) of extract, and to grow up to six plants per individual through a government program. A 10% tax would be imposed on any purchases, with those proceeds going toward administrative costs and addiction treatment in the state and to municipalities that host dispensaries.

5 REASONS VIRGINIA IS THE STATE TO WATCH ON ELECTION NIGHT 2023

Ohio abortion vote

Claire Schmitt, an employee of the anti-abortion organization Protect Women Ohio, walks on Nov. 3, 2023 in Westerville, Ohio. (Photo by Andrew Spear/Getty Images)

In Maine, voters are poised to vote on Question 3, an unprecedented plan to rid themselves of the state’s two largest electric utilities and start with a clean slate, which is one of several high profile ballot measures in the state. 

Mainers will also vote on Question 2, whether to ban foreign governments and entities they “own, control, or influence” from making campaign contributions in candidate elections or ballot measures.

Texans will head to the polls to vote on several hotly debated propositions, including amending the state constitution to ban the legislature from imposing a “wealth tax” and a constitutional amendment raising the homestead tax exemption from $40,000 to $100,000.

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Voting booths

Voting booths on Election Day. (AP Photo/Keith Srakocic, File)

The Associated Press contributed to this report



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The importance of voting on November 7, 2023


As voters head to the polls in key races in multiple states on Tuesday, it is crucial to know the importance of casting a ballot on Election Day despite this one not taking place in a presidential election year.

One of the main reasons voters in Mississippi, Kentucky and Virginia should show up to the polls is that every one of the races is well within the grasp of either party to win, so turnout is crucial for each side making their case as to why they are the best choice for your vote.

In Kentucky, voters will determine whether to re-elect incumbent Democrat Gov. Andy Beshear to another term, or to replace him with the commonwealth’s Republican attorney general, Daniel Cameron. Beshear remains one of the most popular governors in the country but has expressed support for the Biden administration, while Cameron has leaned heavily on former President Trump’s endorsement.

DEMOCRAT GOV. ANDY BESHEAR SAYS KENTUCKY GOVERNOR RACE ‘HAS NOTHING TO DO’ WITH BIDEN AS VOTERS HEAD TO POLLS

Voting booth

A voter cast ballots at a polling location in Alexandria, Virginia, on Tuesday, Nov. 2, 2021. (Al Drago/Bloomberg via Getty Images)

Voters in Mississippi will have a similar choice as Democrat Brandon Presley, the second cousin of famed rock-n-roll legend Elvis Presley, seeks to oust incumbent Republican Gov. Tate Reeves, who is also backed by Trump. Reeves won the governorship by just over 5% in 2019, but Democrats have poured large amounts of money into the race and see it as a potential flip opportunity.

CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

Virginia’s voters must decide which party they want representing them in both houses of the state legislature, the Republican-controlled House of Delegates and Democrat-controlled Senate both have narrow majorities.

Kentucky polls close at 6:00 p.m. local time while polls in Virginia and Mississippi close at 7:00 p.m. local time.

Get the latest updates from the 2024 campaign trail, exclusive interviews and more at our Fox News Digital election hub.

Fox News’ Paul Steinhauser and Clare O’Connor contributed to this report.

Voting booths

Voting booths ready for voters. (AP Photo/Keith Srakocic, File)



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Republicans aim for trifecta of victories in crucial governor races ahead of 2024 elections


Voters in Kentucky, Mississippi and Virginia are heading to the polls Tuesday as Republicans look to complete a trifecta of victories in crucial governor races, as well as grow their majorities in the Virginia state legislature in hopes of building momentum for the party ahead of the 2024 elections where control of the White House and both chambers of Congress will be up for grabs.

Republican Attorney General Daniel Cameron is vying to unseat incumbent Democrat Gov. Andy Beshear in Kentucky while Democrat Brandon Presley, the second cousin to famed rock-n-roll legend Elvis Presley, is hoping to do the same to incumbent Republican Gov. Tate Reeves in Mississippi.

Virginia Republicans are aiming to build on the slim majority they hold in the House of Delegates (51-46) and win control of the state Senate where Democrats hold the upper hand (22-17) to show the party remains competitive in the battleground state that has increasingly leaned left in recent presidential elections and other statewide offices.

DEMOCRAT GOV. ANDY BESHEAR SAYS KENTUCKY GOVERNOR RACE ‘HAS NOTHING TO DO’ WITH BIDEN AS VOTERS HEAD TO POLLS

Daniel Cameron, Andy Beshear, Tate Reeves, Brandon Presley

Republican Kentucky Attorney General Daniel Cameron (left) hopes to unseat Democrat Kentucky Gov. Andy Beshear (second) while Republican Mississippi Gov. Tate Reeves (third) is fighting to hold his position against Democrat Mississippi gubernatorial candidate Brandon Presley (right). (Getty Images)

Wins for Republicans in Kentucky and Mississippi would mark three major victories for the party after Louisiana Attorney General Jeff Landry flipped the state’s governor seat red last month when he defeated his opponent who was endorsed by term-limited Democrat Gov. John Bel Edwards.

The Kentucky gubernatorial race appears to be the most competitive with neither candidate showing a clear advantage over the other. Beshear has sought to keep the race focused on local issues and has pushed back on the notion that President Biden’s unpopularity, coupled with his expressed support for the administration, could tip the scale in Cameron’s favor.

At the same time, Cameron has leaned into former President Donald Trump’s endorsement of his campaign as he hopes to capitalize on Trump’s popularity across the state. However, Beshear has maintained his status as one of the most popular governors in the country despite being one of the few remaining Democrat governors to lead a red state – a popularity that is greater than Trump’s among Kentuckians.

KENTUCKY GOVERNOR RACE IN DEAD HEAT AS GOP CHALLENGER MAKES FINAL PITCH TO VOTERS, LEANS INTO TRUMP SUPPORT

In deep-red Mississippi, Republicans are fending off a surge of unexpected amounts of national Democrat money into the race despite no Democrat governor being elected there since 1999. 

So far, the Washington-based Democratic Governors Association has donated nearly $6 million to Presley’s campaign. In 2019, the group gave just over $2 million to Jim Hood, the then-Democrat candidate for governor who lost to Reeves.

Donald Trump and Joe Biden

Kentucky Gov. Andy Beshear has tried to avoid ties to President Biden’s unpopularity during his re-election campaign while his challenger, Republican Attorney General Daniel Cameron, has leaned into his support from Trump. (AP Photo/Alex Brandon)

Presley’s big push is for Medicaid expansion and he calls himself a tax-cutting Democrat. On the campaign trail, he tells the story of his difficult childhood, being raised by a single mom after his father was murdered. 

Reeves was first elected governor in 2019, but previously served two terms as lieutenant governor and two terms as state treasurer. Like Cameron, he has also leaned heavily into Trump’s endorsement of his campaign, which came last week.

SARAH SANDERS WADES INTO ‘CRUCIAL’ KENTUCKY GOVERNOR RACE AS REPUBLICANS LOOK TO FLIP SECOND SEAT FROM DEMS

With Republicans holding an advantage in the state, Presley hopes turnout among Democrats, especially Black voters, might propel him past Reeves, who won his first term by little more than 5%.

In Virginia, national Democrats and Republicans have spent millions on races for control of both houses of the state legislature with the election also being viewed in political circles as a key barometer ahead of the 2024 elections for president, control of Congress and other key governorships.

Republican Virginia Gov. Glenn Youngkin

Virginia Gov. Glenn Youngkin, who is not up for re-election, speaks during a ‘Get Out The Vote’ rally in Richmond, Virginia, on Sunday, Nov. 5. (Nathan Howard/Bloomberg via Getty Images)

Virginia Republicans won elections for governor, lieutenant governor and attorney general two years ago – their first statewide victories in a dozen years – and they flipped the House of Delegates. 

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Now, Republican Gov. Glenn Youngkin aims to hold the GOP’s narrow majority in the state House and recapture control of the state Senate to give Republicans nationwide another boost ahead of next year’s elections.

Polls close at 6 p.m. local time in Kentucky and 7 p.m. local time in Mississippi and Virginia.

Get the latest updates from the 2024 campaign trail, exclusive interviews and more at our Fox News Digital election hub.

Fox News’ Clare O’Connor and Paul Steinhauser contributed to this report.



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Support for Biden crumbling as unfavorable poll numbers continue to roll in


Devastating new polls that grabbed outsized attention this weekend appear to be fueling fear among some Democrats over President Biden’s ability to win re-election next year.

That has led some top political pundits to ring the alarm bell as they urge the 80-year-old president to drop out of the 2024 race and pass the baton to a new generation.

The poll grabbing the most headlines — a survey from Siena College and the New York Times — indicated former President Trump edging Biden in hypothetical matchups in five of the six crucial battleground states that Biden narrowly carried in 2020 on his way to capturing the White House.

“This will send tremors of doubt thru the party — not ‘bed-wetting,’ but legitimate concern,” veteran Democratic strategist David Axelrod wrote on X as he pointed to the poll.

NEW POLL SUGGESTS TRUMP TOPPING BIDEN IN KEY 2024 BATTLEGROUNDS

President Joe Biden speaks at a campaign rally in June

President Biden addresses a campaign rally on the first anniversary of the Supreme Court’s Dobbs v. Jackson decision, which struck down a federal right to abortion at the Mayflower Hotel on June 23, 2023 in Washington, D.C. (Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images)

Axelrod, the top political adviser to then-President Obama, who in recent years has made headlines with high-profile critiques of Biden, wrote, “Only @JoeBiden can make this decision. If he continues to run, he will be the nominee of the Democratic Party. What he needs to decide is whether that is wise; whether it’s in HIS best interest or the country’s?”

The survey suggests Biden losing support among Black and Hispanic voters, as well as younger voters who have long been key parts of the Democratic Party’s base of support.

LEADING PROGRESSIVE SAYS SHE SEES ‘GREAT TROUBLE’ FOR BIDEN RE-ELECTION

Additionally, while the survey indicates Biden losing to Trump, it also suggests that an unnamed generic Democratic nominee tops Trump by eight points in the 2024 presidential election.

The Siena College/New York Times survey did not live in a vacuum. A CBS News poll also released over the weekend pointed to Trump edging Biden in a likely 2024 showdown.

People supporting the president in the survey said they are nervous and frustrated by the prospect of a Biden-Trump rematch.

Former President Trump dances on stage during a commit to caucus rally, Sunday, Oct. 29, 2023, in Sioux City, Iowa. (AP Photo/Charlie Neibergal)

Trump is the commanding frontrunner in the race for the 2024 GOP presidential nomination as he makes his third straight White House run. He saw his lead expand over his numerous rivals during the spring and summer as he made history as the first former or current president in American history to be indicted for a crime. Trump’s four indictments — including in federal court in Washington, D.C., and in Fulton County court in Georgia on charges he tried to overturn his 2020 presidential election loss — have only fueled his support among Republican voters.

The CBS News poll also reiterates what plenty of other surveys this year have spotlighted — that a majority of Americans do not want to see a Biden-Trump rematch.

HEAD HERE FOR THE LATEST FOX NEWS POLL IN THE 2024 ELECTION 

The president’s re-election campaign took aim at the latest surveys, pointing to the Democrats’ poll-defying success in last year’s midterms and to Obama’s 2012 re-election despite polls a year earlier predicting defeat for the incumbent.

“Predictions more than a year out tend to look a little different a year later,” Biden campaign spokesperson Kevin Munoz said.

“Don’t take our word for it: Gallup predicted an eight point loss for President Obama only for him to win handedly a year later,” Munoz added. “Or a year out from the 2022 midterms when every major outlet similarly predicted a grim forecast for President Biden.”

Axelrod is not the only well-known Democratic strategist hitting the panic button.

President Joe Biden headlines a labor rally in Philadelphia

President Biden headlines a labor rally on June 17, 2023 in Philadelphia. (AP )

Longtime Democratic consultant James Carville — who helped boost former President Clinton to the White House in 1992 — has been warning for a couple of months that Biden could lose to Trump next year.

“Somebody better wake the f‑‑‑ up,” Carville emphasized earlier this autumn in a podcast with well-known political commentator and host Bill Maher

Carville also claimed in a recent interview with The Atlantic that “leading Democrats” have been telling him to keep quiet about Biden’s 2024 prospect.

CARVILLE CLAIMS TOP DEMOCRATS ARE TELLING HIM TO STAY QUIET ABOUT BIDEN CRITICISM

A veteran Democratic strategist, who asked to remain anonymous to speak more freely, acknowledged that the latest polling was “devastating” for the president and told Fox News that it would likely “raise more questions” about Biden’s durability and a possible 2024 alternative. 

It is not just Democrats urging Biden to bow out.

Bill Kristol, the longtime conservative writer and commentator and a top “never-Trumper,” argued on social media that “President Biden has served our country well. I’m confident he’ll do so for the next year. But it’s time for an act of personal sacrifice and public spirit. It’s time to pass the torch to the next generation. It’s time for Biden to announce he won’t run in 2024.”

The president is currently facing long shot primary challenges from a pair of Democratic rivals.

Three-term Democratic Rep. Dean Phillips of Minnesota, who launched a primary challenge against the president a week and a half ago, has been arguing that Biden cannot beat Trump in 2024. The new polls gave Phillips plenty of fresh ammunition.

Dean Phillips launches primary challenge against President Biden

Minnesota Rep. Dean Phillips speaks with reporters after launching a 2024 Democratic primary challenge against President Biden, at the Statehouse in Concord, New Hampshire, on Oct. 27, 2023. (Fox News – Paul Steinhauser )

“I’m saying the quiet part out loud. Biden/Harris isn’t viable against Trump,” he said in a social media post.

“I could offer no statement more powerful than the one made by suffering Americans in today’s NY Times poll,” Phillips added. “That’s why Trump beats Biden 48-44 in the battleground states, while a ‘generic’ Democrat beats Trump 48-40.”

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Both Phillips and bestselling author and spiritual adviser Marianne Williamson, who is making her second straight White House run, face steep uphill climbs to defeat Biden for the Democratic nomination.

However, with poll after poll indicating Biden faces rising concerns from Democrats over his age and that many Americans, including plenty of Democrats, do not want the president to seek a second term in the White House, the question going forward is whether party leaders will begin pressuring the president to reconsider his re-election bid.

Then, there is the constant speculation that well-known Democrats who may seek the White House in 2028 could jump into the 2024 race should Biden hang up his re-election campaign, even with Vice President Kamala Harris as the logical next-in-line.

A growing number of stories in recent months characterize high-profile trips and moves by Govs. Gavin Newsom of California, J.B. Pritzker of Illinois, Josh Shapiro of Pennsylvania, and Rep. Ro Khanna of California as potential shadow campaigns should Biden bow out.

Get the latest updates from the 2024 campaign trail, exclusive interviews and more at our Fox News Digital election hub.





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Arkansas Gov. Sarah Huckabee Sanders to endorse Trump at Florida rally on Wednesday


Arkansas Gov. Sarah Huckabee Sanders is scheduled to endorse her one-time boss, former President Donald Trump, for the 2024 Republican presidential nomination.

The endorsement will take place Wednesday night at the former president’s rally in his adopted home state of Florida, Fox News confirmed on Monday.

The rally is seen as a counter programming move by Trump, as the event is being held in Hialeah, Florida, simultaneously as the third GOP presidential primary debate just a few miles away in Miami. 

Trump – the commanding front-runner for the nomination as he makes his third straight White House run – is once again skipping out on participating in the debates with his Republican rivals.

TRUMP WINS MAJOR HOME STATE ENDORSEMENT IN SNUB TO DESANTIS

Arkansas Gov. Sarah Huckabee Sanders

FILE – Arkansas Gov. Sarah Huckabee Sanders speaks after taking the oath of the office on the steps of the Arkansas Capitol, Jan. 10, 2023, in Little Rock, Ark. (AP Photo/Will Newton, File) (AP Photo/Will Newton, File)

Sanders, the daughter of former Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee, served as White House press secretary for two of Trump’s four years in office. And she’s been a strong Trump ally since he left the White House.

But Sanders, who was convincingly elected Arkansas governor last November, had stayed neutral until now in the GOP presidential primary race. Her holding off on making an endorsement irritated the former president, according to sources in Trump’s political orbit.

WITH IOWA CAUCUSES CLOSING IN, TRUMP REMAINS DOMINANT FRONT-RUNNER 

“It’s not a question between right versus left anymore. It’s normal versus crazy, and President Biden and the left are doubling down on crazy,” Sanders said in a statement. “The time has come to return to the normal policies of the Trump era which created a safer, stronger, and more prosperous America, and that’s why I am proud to endorse Donald Trump for President.”

Trump looks to Sanders during press conference at White House

Then-President Donald Trump welcomes White House press secretary Sarah Sanders to the stage as he pauses from speaking about second chance hiring to publicly thank the outgoing press secretary in the East Room of the White House, Thursday June 13, 2019, in Washington. (AP Photo/Jacquelyn Martin)

Trump, in a statement, emphasized that “we had great success in the White House and it’s an honor to have Sarah’s endorsement. I look forward to having her at the big rally in Hialeah this Wednesday.”

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Word of Sanders’ backing of Trump, which was first reported by NBC News, came as Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis formally landed the endorsement of Iowa Gov. Kim Reynolds, at a rally in Des Moines, Iowa Monday evening.

DeSantis and former South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley, who served as ambassador to the United Nations during the Trump administration, are currently battling for second place in the polls in Iowa and the other crucial early voting states.

Get the latest updates from the 2024 campaign trail, exclusive interviews and more at our Fox News Digital election hub.



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‘Secret reports’ reveal how government worked to ‘censor Americans’ prior to 2020 election, Jim Jordan says


Officials at the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) assisted in the creation of a “disinformation” group at Stanford University that worked to “censor” the speech of Americans prior to the 2020 presidential election, according to a number of communications outlined in a report by the House Judiciary Committee.

Detailed in the House panel’s 103-page staff interim report, the emails and internal communications showed how the group, identified as the Election Integrity Partnership (EIP), worked with DHS’ Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA) to alert, suppress and remove certain online speech in coordination with big tech companies.

One such email – sent July 31, 2020, by a top director at the Atlantic Council’s Digital Forensic Research Lab, an EIP partner – described the CISA’s role in the censorship effort.

“I know the Council has a number of efforts on broad policy around the elections, but we just set up an election integrity partnership at the request of DHS/CISA and are in weekly comms to debrief about disinfo,” wrote Graham Brookie, the lab’s senior director.

BIDEN AGENCY ‘LIKELY’ VIOLATED FREE SPEECH BY WORKING WITH BIG TECH TO CENSOR ELECTION CONTENT: COURT

Jim Jordan questions FBI Director Wray

Rep. Jim Jordan, chairman of the House Judiciary Committee. (Al Drago/Bloomberg via Getty Images)

According to the report, which Judiciary Committee Chair Jim Jordan, R-Ohio, highlighted in a post to X, the communications showed how “the federal government and universities pressured social media companies to censor true information, jokes, and political opinions.”

“This pressure was largely directed in a way that benefitted one side of the political aisle: true information posted by Republicans and conservatives was labeled as ‘misinformation’ while false information posted by Democrats and liberals was largely unreported and untouched by the censors,” the report noted. “The pseudoscience of disinformation is now – and has always been – nothing more than a political ruse most frequently targeted at communities and individuals holding views contrary to the prevailing narratives.”

Along with countless Americans, certain right-leaning media outlets, and conservative commentators whose views were censored, the report also noted that prominent figures like then-President Donald Trump, North Carolina GOP Sen. Thom Tillis, Georgia GOP Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, and Kentucky GOP Rep. Thomas Massie had their social media postings marked as “misinformation.”

Other posts from former politicians, including former Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee and former House Speaker Newt Gingrich, were also flagged by the groups as “misinformation,” according to the report.

The report went on to note that under the influence of CISA’s Countering Foreign Influence Task Force, the federal government’s effort was to “censor Americans engaged in core political speech in the lead up to the 2020 election.”

DHS noted in May 2020, according to the report, that it could not “openly endorse” a type of system to flag misinformation. Stanford’s EIP took up the effort two months later, in July 2020.

A phone and apps

The report went on to note that under the influence of CISA’s Countering Foreign Influence Task Force, the federal government’s effort was to “censor Americans engaged in core political speech in the lead up to the 2020 election.” (Matt Cardy/Getty Images)

NEW DOCS REVEAL HOW DHS ARGUED THEY HAVE AUTHORITY TO CENSOR ‘MISINFORMATION’

“According to the internal notes of a call between Facebook employees and DHS personnel regarding a ‘Misinformation Reporting Portal,’ ‘DHS cannot openly endorse the portal, but has behind-the-scenes signaled that [the National Association of Secretaries of State]/[the National Association of State Election Directors] has told them it would be easier for many states to have ‘one reporting channel’ and CISA and its ISAC would like to have incoming the same time that the platforms do.’ Less than two months later, the EIP would be established to serve that very purpose,” the report noted.

The CISA’s Countering Foreign Influence Task Force used a process known as “switchboarding,” described in the report as the “federal government’s practice of referring requests for the removal of content on social media from state and local election officials to the relevant platforms.”

“Brian Scully, testified during his deposition in Missouri v. Biden that switchboarding was ‘CISA’s role in forwarding reporting received from election officials … to social media platforms,’ the report stated.

One past email from Scully that was featured in the report informed members of the Colorado Secretary of State’s office that he had alerted parody accounts to Twitter. Another one made it known that he had requested for Facebook to remove a post about the election that had been deemed misinformation.

House Judiciary Committee staff report

One past email from Brian Scully that was featured in the report informed members of the Colorado Secretary of State’s office that he had alerted parody accounts to Twitter. (House Judiciary Committee )

A disclaimer featured on several of the CISA emails noted that its requests were “voluntary” and that the agency “neither has nor seeks the ability to remove what information is made available on social media platforms.”

YALE STUDENT SAYS NEWSPAPER’S CENSORSHIP OF HAMAS RAPE FROM HER COLUMN PART OF WIDER CAMPUS PROBLEM

The Judiciary staff report also noted that students at Stanford worked simultaneously at the CISA and EIP.

“Not only were there a number of university students involved with the EIP, at least four of the students were employed by CISA during the operation of EIP, using their government email accounts to communicate with CISA officials and other ‘external stakeholders’ involved with the EIP,” the report said.

In a statement to Fox News Digital, CISA Executive Director Brandon Wales said the agency “does not and has never censored speech or facilitated censorship.”

“Every day, the men and women of CISA execute the agency’s mission of reducing risk to U.S. critical infrastructure in a way that protects Americans’ freedom of speech, civil rights, civil liberties, and privacy,” Wales said.

tape over woman's lips

EIP was described in the report as a “consortium of ‘disinformation’ academics led by Stanford University’s Stanford Internet Observatory (SIO) that worked … to monitor and censor Americans’ online speech in advance of the 2020 presidential election.” (iStock)

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“In response to concerns from election officials of all parties regarding foreign influence operations and disinformation that may impact the security of election infrastructure, CISA mitigates the risk of disinformation by sharing information on election literacy and election security with the public and by amplifying the trusted voices of election officials across the nation,” he added.

EIP was described in the report as a “consortium of ‘disinformation’ academics led by Stanford University’s Stanford Internet Observatory (SIO) that worked directly with the Department of Homeland Security and the Global Engagement Center, a multi-agency entity housed within the State Department, to monitor and censor Americans’ online speech in advance of the 2020 presidential election.”



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Top GOP lawmakers demand Biden admin fork over info on ‘egregious’ DOJ settlement with separated migrants


FIRST ON FOX: Republicans on the House Judiciary Committee are investigating a deal the Biden administration reached with civil rights groups over the separation of thousands of migrant family units at the southern border during the Trump administration — seeking information about what they say are “egregious” stipulations in the deal.

Chairman Jim Jordan and immigration subcommittee Chairman Tom McClintock have written to Attorney General Merrick Garland requesting documents about the settlement announced last month in a lawsuit launched by the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) over the Trump administration’s “zero tolerance” policy to prosecute all illegal entries at the border. That policy resulted in the separation of minors from their parents before it was ultimately reversed.

The settlement would block any future separations for eight years, while also providing authorization for parents of separated children to come to the U.S. under humanitarian parole for three years and work in the United States. The families receive housing aid for up to a year as well as healthcare and legal aid.

BIDEN ADMINISTRATION BORDER SETTLEMENT WITH ACLU WOULD LIMIT FUTURE SEPARATIONS FOR 8 YEARS

Jim Jordan

House Judiciary Committee Chairman Jim Jordan, R-Ohio, listens as Attorney General Merrick Garland appears before a House Judiciary Committee hearing, Wednesday, Sept. 20, 2023, on Capitol Hill in Washington. (AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite)

“The practice of separating families at the southwest border was shameful. This agreement will facilitate the reunification of separated families and provide them with critical services to aid in their recovery,” Garland said in a statement at the time of the settlement.

But Jordan and McClintock accuse the administration of providing a “grab-bag of U.S. taxpayers-funded services” to illegal immigrants “all because in 2018 the U.S. government prosecuted, under the existing criminal code enacted by Congress, illegal aliens for illegally entering the United States with their children.”

“As if the Department’s stipulation is not egregious enough, the settlement also allows an illegal alien to escape criminal prosecution for illegally crossing the border solely because the alien is traveling with a child,” they say. “Because that legally dubious prohibition in the settlement lasts for eight years, it prevents future administrations from taking definitive steps to control the border.”

The lawmakers argue that it allows for a loophole to be exploited by cartels, amid an already ongoing crisis at the southern border, and say that it is already leading to cartels posing as minors’ relatives to ensure entry into the U.S.

WASHINGTON, DC – SEPTEMBER 20: U.S. Attorney General Merrick Garland testifies before the House Judiciary Committee in the Rayburn House Office Building on September 20, 2023 in Washington, DC. The committee is holding an oversight hearing on the U.S. Department of Justice.  (Win McNamee/Getty Images)

“The settlement will no doubt have a similar effect, with both children and the American people left to suffer because of the perverse incentives of President Biden’s failed border policies,” they say.

They are requesting documents related to decisions to provide social services and limit prosecutions to migrants, documents related to the consideration of payments to class members, and an explanation for the legal basis for limiting future administrations from adopting similar policies. 

The DOJ confirmed to Fox that it had received the letter.

Separately, the Committee has also sent letters to a number of officials in the Executive Office of Immigration Review (EOIR), seeking transcribed interviews with multiple officials and immigration judges over its handling of the enormous immigration court backlog.  

MAYORKAS CONFIRMS OVER 600,000 ILLEGAL IMMIGRANTS EVADED LAW ENFORCEMENT AT SOUTHERN BORDER LAST FISCAL YEAR 

They highlight statistics showing that nearly half a million cases were dismissed, terminated or closed between Jan 2021 and July 2023, which they say raises “serious questions” about whether the agency is “fairly, expeditiously, and uniformly interpreting and administering the Nation’s immigration laws.

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The letters come as the border continues to see sky-high numbers of migrants. There were more than 269,000 encounters in September, a new monthly record which also brought FY23 to the highest yearly encounter number on record. The Biden administration has called for more funding for border operations from Congress, including a recent $14 billion supplemental funding request.

Fox News’ Louis Casiano contributed to this report.





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Democrat Gov. Andy Beshear says Kentucky governor race ‘has nothing to do’ with Biden as voters head to polls


EXCLUSIVE: Democrat Kentucky Gov. Andy Beshear said Monday that his race to win re-election in deep-red Kentucky “has nothing to do” with President Biden and his unpopularity with voters across the state.

Speaking with Fox News Digital at a campaign stop in rural Eastern Kentucky just one day before Election Day, Beshear said he was “confident” in his chances of beating his Republican opponent, Kentucky Attorney General Daniel Cameron, and argued the election wasn’t about who was in the White House, but rather what’s going on in the houses of Kentuckians across the commonwealth.

“We’re confident that we’re going into Election Day ahead, but we’ve always been prepared for a close race. And the only poll that matters is the one that comes out on Election Day,” he said, adding that voters could see how “red-hot” Kentucky’s economy is, and that, regardless of party registration, Kentuckians “want to keep that going.”

KENTUCKY GOVERNOR RACE IN DEAD HEAT AS GOP CHALLENGER MAKES FINAL PITCH TO VOTERS, LEANS INTO TRUMP SUPPORT

Democrat Kentucky Gov. Andy Beshear

Democrat Kentucky Gov. Andy Beshear speaks to a crowd of supporters at a campaign stop in Prestonsburg, Kentucky on Nov. 6, 2023. (Fox News/Brandon Gillespie)

When asked about his expressed support for the Biden administration, despite the president having an underwater approval rating with Kentuckians, and what he would tell undecided voters concerned over that support, Beshear said that was ultimately not what the race was about.

“The governor’s race has nothing to do with who’s in the White House. It has to do with what’s going on in your house. It has to do with bringing in good jobs. We’ve got the second and third-best years for wages in our history. It’s about expanding health care, so you don’t have to drive two hours or take two buses to see a doctor,” Beshear said.

“At the end of the day, this should be about who the best candidate is with the best plan and the best track record. You know, far too much of our country is Team Red or Team Blue team or Team D. What we need to be is Team Kentucky. That’s exactly why I’m running for reelection,” he said.

SARAH SANDERS WADES INTO ‘CRUCIAL’ KENTUCKY GOVERNOR RACE AS REPUBLICANS LOOK TO FLIP SECOND SEAT FROM DEMS

Republican Kentucky Attorney General Daniel Cameron

Kentucky Attorney General and Republican nominee for governor Daniel Cameron speaks at the annual St. Jerome Fancy Farm Picnic in Fancy Farm, Kentucky, on Saturday, Aug. 5, 2023. (Ryan C. Hermens/Lexington Herald-Leader/Tribune News Service via Getty Images)

Beshear went on to say that his number one accomplishment during his term as governor was bringing more private investment into the state, as well as the “huge” opportunities he said it was creating for Kentuckians.

“It’s about 50,000 jobs, building the two biggest battery plants on planet Earth, home to the biggest investment in the history of Ford and of Amazon. It’s about building a better life where people can look at their kids and grandkids and say, ‘Wow, they’re going to have more opportunity than I could have ever dreamed up.’ That’s what being governor is about, getting things done and creating that better life,” he said.

The race between Beshear and Cameron is one of the most watched in the off-year election cycle, and is being looked at as an opportunity for Republicans to capitalize on Biden’s unpopularity and build momentum going into the 2024 elections.

SOROS-FUNDED GROUP DISPARAGES BLACK GOP GOVERNOR CANDIDATE AS UNCLE TOM: ‘ALL SKINFOLK AIN’T KINFOLK’

Democrat Kentucky Gov. Andy Beshear

Democrat Kentucky Gov. Andy Beshear speaks at the Gubernatorial Forum at the 2023 Kentucky Chamber of Commerce annual meeting dinner, Louisville, Kentucky, Wednesday, Sept. 20, 2023. (AP Photo/Timothy D. Easley, File)

Democrats, on the other hand, would like to stymie those hopes by showing they can win in Republican-leaning states with candidates like Beshear that appeal to liberal, moderate and conservative voters.

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Polls close at 6 p.m. local time on Tuesday.

Get the latest updates from the 2024 campaign trail, exclusive interviews and more at our Fox News Digital election hub.



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Fetterman hits Newsom for not having ‘guts’ to admit he’s running shadow campaign against Biden


Sen. John Fetterman, D-Pa., took a shot at California Gov. Gavin Newsom over the weekend over what many have referred to as a “shadow” presidential campaign against President Biden.

Let me say something that might be uncomfortable,” Fetterman said at a Democratic Party dinner in Iowa over the weekend. “Right now there are two additional Democrats running for Pennsylvania, excuse me, running for president right now. One, one is a congressman from Minnesota. The other one is the governor of California. They’re both running for president, but only one had the guts to announce it.”

Fetterman continued,I got to tell you, let me say I got an opinion. If you are a Democrat that wants to criticize and go after Joe Biden, our president, just go ahead and write a check for Trump.”

The Pennsylvania Democrat was referencing a recent announcement from Democratic Rep. Dean Phillips that he will be running a primary challenge to Biden while Newsom has faced accusations in recent months of vying for the job without officially announcing.

WHO IS BIDEN CHALLENGER DEAN PHILLIPS? 5 THINGS TO KNO

Newsom and Fetterman

L- Sen Fetterman R – Gov Newsom (Getty Images)

“This trip here, he’s trying to build a base,” GOP Congressman Doug LaMalfa told Fox News Digital last month in response to some high profile trips Newsom has taken, including to China, as speculation grows that President Biden may not run for a second term. “He’s running the back channels until Biden takes himself out and the party says, ‘Man we’re going to get killed on this.'”

Fetterman’s swipe at Newsom comes around the same time a New York Times-Siena College poll showed that Biden trails former President Trump in the key swing states of Nevada, Georgia, Arizona, Michigan and Pennsylvania.

THREE WAYS BIDEN CHALLENGER DEAN PHILLIPS IS SENDING DEMOCRATS VALUABLE ADVICE

Rep. Dean Phillips of Minnesota campaigns in New Hampshire

Democratic Rep. Dean Phillips of Minnesota, who’s primary challenging President Biden, takes questions from reporters during a stop at the New Hampshire Institute of Politics, on Oct. 31, 2023 in Manchester, N.H. (Fox News – Paul Steinhauser)

A Monmouth University poll released earlier this month showed that 76% of voters agreed Biden, 80, was “too old” to serve another term, compared to just 48% who said the same about Trump, 77. 

Newsom has denied he’s running for president multiple times, and when asked, he told NewsNation’s Chris Cuomo in September that he’s “not worthy of that conversation” and that Biden “deserves it.”

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California Gov. Gavin Newsom (John Nacion/WireImage)

The offices of Newsom and Fetterman did not immediately respond to a request for comment from Fox News Digital. 



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Can a Floridian win the presidency? It hasn’t happened yet as Trump and DeSantis vie to be first


TALLAHASSEE, Fla. (AP) — A Florida governor wins reelection by record numbers and later finds himself running as a party conservative in a crowded presidential primary. In New Hampshire, he tip-toes around the explosive abortion rights issue, discusses ongoing Israeli military operations, promises he’ll secure the Mexican border and warns that the current administration’s fiscal insanity will cause more inflation, not reduce it.

While it sounds like Republican Gov. Ron DeSantis in 2023, this was former Florida Democratic Gov. Reubin Askew in 1984. Askew dropped out of the race after finishing eighth in New Hampshire. DeSantis is looking to avoid a similar fate as he prepares for the third GOP debate this week in his home state.

IOWA GOV. KIM REYNOLDS TO ENDORSE DESANTIS OVER TRUMP, SOURCES SAY

If DeSantis or former President Donald Trump eventually is elected president next year, it would be the first time Americans have chosen a Floridian to lead them. Trump was a New York snowbird with a second home in Palm Beach when he was first elected, but he later lost as a full-time Floridian.

So while Florida is home to Disney World’s Hall of Presidents, that’s not the place to look for representation from the nation’s third-largest state. And even if home court advantage gives DeSantis an opening to talk about his accomplishments in the Sunshine State, there’s no historical evidence to suggest it will help him in the race itself.

Current FL Governor Ron DeSantis

Current FL Governor Ron DeSantis hopes to make history as first Floridian president. (AP Photo/Phelan M. Ebenhack)

“I really have no idea why this is the case,” said former Gov. Jeb Bush, who was considered the frontrunner for the 2016 Republican presidential primary before Donald Trump’s ascent reshaped the party.

Florida has long been influential in national politics — never more so than in 2000 when there were five weeks of recounts and court challenges before George W. Bush carried the state and won the presidency, by 537 votes. And more and more Floridians have sought the presidency as its population has exploded and Republicans chased Democrats out of power in Tallahassee.

Early in the 2016 presidential cycle, many political observers thought former Gov. Bush or Sen. Marco Rubio would win the Republican nomination to challenge Democrat Hillary Clinton. Trump at first wasn’t taken seriously by either campaign — until he blasted both of the Floridians with insults as he rose to the top of the GOP pile.

It wasn’t the moment for either. Bush would have been the third member of his family to become president, and Trump’s nickname of “Low Energy Jeb” seemed to stick at a time when voters were in no mood for an establishment candidate with a whiff of inevitability, maybe even entitlement.

Rubio brought youthful energy to the campaign, but he never found his footing against a brawling candidate who specialized in branding and dubbed him “Little Marco.” Rubio tried to match Trump with branding of his own, taunting Trump about the size of his hands at one point, but the shift in strategy only seemed to diminish him further — and by then Trump was well on his way to the GOP nomination.

By 2020, Trump had become a Floridian himself, changing his residence and voter registration to Florida, a state he desperately needed to win to earn a second term in the White House. He did carry the state but lost to President Joe Biden in the Rust Belt, thus adding his name to the list of Floridians who lost a presidential bid. That list keeps growing but includes Askew, Bush, Rubio, and former Sen. Bob Graham.

There is another notable asterisk. President Andrew Jackson was the first territorial governor of Florida in 1821, but it was a short stint to keep him busy as he tried to retire. It’s described as “a troublesome few months” before he returned home to Tennessee and eventually ran for the White House from the Volunteer State.

“If you track Jackson’s progress towards being a presidential candidate, Florida has very, very little to do with it,” said Daniel Feller, a Jackson historian and professor emeritus at the University of Tennessee. “Florida didn’t do much damage to his national reputation, but it certainly didn’t help it any.”

Politics were decidedly different then anyway. Jackson basically took the job as a favor to President James Monroe after the U.S. took over the territory from Spain.

“It was understood from the very beginning between Jackson and Monroe that this was going to be a temporary appointment,” said Feller, noting Jackson’s wife wasn’t a fan of the idea. “Jackson didn’t think Rachel would like it very much and he was right about that. Rachel hated it.”

Florida had a sparse population when it became a state in 1845. The federal census five years earlier counted fewer than 55,000 people, nearly half of whom were African American slaves. It wasn’t until air conditioning became more affordable and effective in the middle of the 20th century that the state’s population started to grow.

That changed in a hurry, though. It more than doubled from fewer than 2 million in 1940 to more than 5 million in 1960 and hasn’t stopped growing. And its demographics shifted from a Southern, agricultural state to a hodgepodge population more reflective of the nation as a whole.

While north Florida and the Panhandle remain largely Southern in their outlook, the rest of the state is an eclectic mix.

Immigrants from Cuba, Haiti, and other Latin American countries have a large presence in South Florida, central Florida has a large Puerto Rican population, conservative Midwesterners have moved to the southwest Gulf coast in droves and liberal New Englanders have migrated to the southeast Atlantic Coast. There’s plenty of intermingling between those groups, but a large majority of the state’s population was born outside of Florida.

As the population has changed, the state’s politics have shifted. What had been the key swing state in 2000 has been reliably Republican in the past two presidential contests.

Democrats dominated the state Legislature for decades, but Republicans’ power has grown steadily this century. Democrats always had an advantage in voter registration until two years ago. Now Republicans have about 5.2 million registered voters compared to about 4.6 million Democrats.

The GOP has easily held the Legislature and governor’s office since 1999. While Republicans continue to be unstoppable in state politics, the state has been less predictable in presidential years. Since the 2000 recount, it supported Bush for re-election, Barack Obama twice and Trump twice.

Trump is once again leading in Florida polls. While he won’t participate in Wednesday’s debate in Miami, he is holding a rally nearby in a city that’s 95% Hispanic or Latino, a signal he’s seeking to boost support with the state’s Hispanic voters.

The one sure bet is that Floridians will keep trying to win the White House. If neither DeSantis nor Trump win in 2024, there’s always 2028 and the possibility Rubio and DeSantis run again, perhaps joined by former governor and current Sen. Rick Scott, who has long been speculated to have presidential ambitions.

Former Republican strategist Rick Wilson of Florida, who worked on the presidential campaigns of both George H.W. Bush and George W. Bush, said the state has been a political late bloomer on the national scene.

“Florida is a state that didn’t really reach its political maturity as early as others,” said Wilson, a founder of the Lincoln Project, which opposes both Trump and DeSantis. “We had a much longer puberty where we were a backwater.”

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That all could change soon enough.

“The money’s here, the importance of the vote is here, the importance of the electoral college is here,” he said. “Now we need somebody who actually has the skills.”



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Legal experts say whether Trump’s court testimony in NY helped or hurt his case


A pair of legal experts weighed in on how former President Trump’s court testimony may have affected his case in New York.

Trump testified in his non-jury civil trial on Monday stemming from New York Attorney General Leticia James’ lawsuit against him and his Empire State businesses.

The former president exchanged fire with Judge Arthur Engoron while being questioned by Kevin Wallace, a lawyer from the New York Attorney General’s Office.

TRUMP, JUDGE ENGORON TRADE JABS DURING FORMER PRESIDENT’S TESTIMONY IN CIVIL TRIAL STEMMING FROM NYAG LAWSUIT

Former President Donald Trump

Former President Trump testified in his non-jury civil trial on Monday stemming from New York Attorney General Leticia James’ lawsuit against him and his Empire State businesses. (Michael Nagle / Bloomberg via Getty Images)

George Washington University law professor Jonathan Turley told Fox News Digital that watching “Trump being called for testimony is like waiting for the green flag at NASCAR” in that many “are coming for the car crashes.”

“There was an obvious disconnect in the testimony,” Turley said. “Trump seemed to be speaking to the public, but neither a jury nor a television camera was present. Instead, he was technically speaking to a judge who repeatedly expressed frustration with the tenor and length of the answers.”

Trump prepares to testify

Former President Donald Trump prepares to testify during his trial at New York State Supreme Court on Nov. 6, 2023. (Curtis Means / Pool / AFP via Getty Images)

Turley said that the “fact is that these cases have only increased Trump’s popularity” and that with “every indictment, he seems to gain five percentage points.”

“At this rate, with four more indictments, he could be elected by general acclamation,” Turley said. “The problem for Trump is the underlying law. The New York law does not require an actual victim or even loss of money.”

Jonathan Turley

George Washington University law professor Jonathan Turley told Fox News Digital that watching “Trump being called for testimony is like waiting for the green flag at NASCAR” in that many “are coming for the car crashes.” (Fox News)

“That law became an easy vehicle for James to fulfill her pledge to bag Trump if elected,” Turley continued, referencing the New York attorney general’s campaign promise to take legal action against the former president.

“There are two cases being made in that courtroom. James is making the case to bar Trump from business in New York while Trump is making the case for reelection,” he continued.

“Both may be succeeding,” he added. “James seems to have a sympathetic court while Trump seems to have an increasingly sympathetic public.”

Attorney and conservative commentator Andy McCarthy told Fox News Digital he does not think the former president’s testimony will help or hurt his case because it “has already been decided.”

Andy McCarthy

Attorney and conservative commentator Andy McCarthy told Fox News Digital he does not think the former president’s testimony will help or hurt his case because it “has already been decided.” (Fox News)

“The judge and state’s attorney general are elected Democrats,” McCarthy said. “The AG ran vowing to use the power of her office against Trump.”

“The judge told Trump before the trial even started that he had already lost the case and all the trial was going to be about was how much he was going to have to pay ($250M or more) in addition to being put out of business in [New York],” McCarthy continued.

“The judge is going to do what he’s going to do regardless of Trump’s testimony,” he added.

The civil trial stems from James’ lawsuit against Trump, his family and his businesses. James alleged that Trump defrauded banks and inflated the value of his assets.

Trump has denied any wrongdoing and has repeatedly said his assets were actually undervalued. Trump has repeatedly said his financial statements had disclaimers, requesting that the numbers be evaluated by the banks.

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After a break in his testimony, Trump again took the stand, defending himself and his businesses and blasting the investigation.

“We shouldn’t be having a case here because we have a disclaimer clause that every court holds up except this judge,” Trump said, referring to the disclaimers on all of his financial statements and statements of financial condition.

“They’re trying to hurt me – especially her,” Trump said, referring to James, “for political reasons.”

Trump went on to call James a “political hack,” saying she used her investigation and lawsuit against him “to become governor, to become attorney general.” The former president was referring to James’ campaigns in which she vowed to “get Trump.”

Fox News Digital’s Brooke Singman and Maria Paronich contributed reporting.



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Trump demands jury, says New York AG has ‘no case’ in heated testimony


Former President Trump demanded a jury Monday after his unprecedented time on the stand, calling the civil trial against him and his businesses a “disgrace” and saying New York Attorney General Letitia James has “no case.” 

Trump described his forced testimony as “election interference,” while maintaining that his net worth is “far greater” than financial statements during testimony Monday.

The former president and 2024 Republican presidential frontrunner took the stand Monday morning in the non-jury civil trial stemming from Attorney General Letitia James’ lawsuit against him, his family and his businesses. James alleged Trump defrauded banks and inflated the value of his assets.

TRUMP, JUDGE ENGORON TRADE JABS DURING FORMER PRESIDENT’S TESTIMONY IN CIVIL TRIAL STEMMING FROM NYAG LAWSUIT

Trump has denied any wrongdoing and has repeatedly said his assets were actually undervalued. Trump has repeatedly said his financial statements had disclaimers, requesting that the numbers be evaluated by the banks.

Trump election fraud trial

Former President Donald Trump speaks during a break in his civil business fraud trial at New York Supreme Court, Oct. 25, 2023, in New York. (AP Photo/Seth Wenig, File)

“I think this case is a disgrace,” he said, adding that people are being “murdered” in New York, and James is “watching this case.”

“It’s a disgrace. It is election interference because you want to keep me in court all day long,” Trump said while on the stand, after testifying for more than five hours. “And Judge…I want a jury.”

One of Trump’s attorneys, at the end of the former president’s testimony, said that in “33 years,” they have “never had a witness testify better.”

“An absolutely brilliant performance by President Trump. He’s not backing down. He’s told everyone the facts,” the Trump attorney said. “Now that the American people know what’s going on, maybe something will change.”

James, a Democrat, sued Trump, his children and the Trump Organization last year, alleging he and his company misled banks and others about the value of his assets. James claimed the former president’s children – Donald Trump Jr., Ivanka and Eric – as well as his associates and businesses, committed “numerous acts of fraud and misrepresentation” on their financial statements.

James filed the lawsuit against Trump “under a consumer protection statute that denies the right to a jury,” a Trump spokesperson told Fox News Digital.

“There was never an option to choose a jury trial,” the spokesperson said. “It is unfortunate that a jury won’t be able to hear how absurd the merits of this case are and conclude no wrongdoing ever happened.” 

During Trump’s unprecedented testimony Monday, New York Judge Arthur Engoron tried to cut him off from providing lengthy answers to state lawyers’ questioning, and even said: “I don’t want to hear everything he has to say.”

TRUMP UNLOADS ON JUDGE, NYAG FOR TARGETING HIM ‘FOR POLITICAL REASONS’ DURING UNPRECEDENTED TESTIMONY

But Trump defended himself and his businesses while on the stand, and blasted the investigation, lawsuit and non-jury trial.

“We shouldn’t be having a case here because we have a disclaimer clause that every court holds up except this judge,” Trump said, referring to the disclaimers on all of his financial statements and statements of financial condition.

New York Attorney General Letitia James speaks outside New York Supreme Court

New York Attorney General Letitia James arrives outside New York Supreme Court ahead of former President Donald Trump’s civil business fraud trial on Monday, Oct. 2, 2023 in New York.  (AP Photo/Brittainy Newman)

“They’re trying to hurt me — especially her,” Trump said, referring to Attorney General Letitia James. “For political reasons.”

Trump went on to call James a “political hack,” saying she used her investigation and lawsuit against him “to become governor, to become attorney general.” The former president was referring to James’ campaigns, in which she vowed to “get Trump.” 

“This is a political witch hunt, and she should be ashamed of herself,” Trump said. “The fraud is her.”

Engoron, in September, ruled that Trump and the Trump Organization committed fraud while building his real estate empire by deceiving banks, insurers and others by overvaluing his assets and exaggerating his net worth on paperwork used in making deals and securing financing.

“He ruled against me without knowing anything about me,” Trump said on the stand. “He called me a fraud, and he didn’t know anything about me.”

Trump went on to slam Engoron for undercutting the value of his Mar-a-Lago resort in Palm Beach, Florida — a property Engoron valued at $18 million.

Trump, Engoron in court

L – Former President Donald Trump R – New York Judge Arthur Engoron (Fox News)

“$18 million, he said—And I’m a fraud for not valuing the property? How do you call a man a fraud when you have a property 50 to 100 times more?” Trump said. You believed the political hack back there and that’s unfortunate.”

Trump attorney Alina Habba on Monday also slammed Engoron and James, saying the judge “yelled” at her.

“I don’t care who you are, you have a right to hire a lawyer who can put objections on the record,” Habba said outside the court during a break. “You have a right to hire a lawyer who can stand up and say something when they see something wrong.”

TRUMP TAKES THE STAND IN CIVIL TRIAL STEMMING FROM NEW YORK ATTORNEY GENERAL LETITIA JAMES LAWSUIT

“But I was told to sit down today. I was yelled at and I’ve had a judge who is unhinged, slamming table,” Habba continued. “Let me be very clear. I don’t tolerate that in my life. I’m not going to tolerate it. And you know what? You shouldn’t either, because not every American citizen gets a camera and a microphone.”

Habba went on to blast James, saying she “taunted” Trump before she “came into office, before you saw one record, one statement of financial condition — you taunted him.”

“You said his administration was too male and too pale,” Habba said. “Those are her words.” 

Former US President Donald Trump in court

Former US President Donald Trump prepares to testify during his trial at New York State Supreme Court in New York, on November 6, 2023.  (Photo by JEFFERSON SIEGEL/POOL/AFP via Getty Images)

Meanwhile, Trump was asked questions about terms of loan agreements, and handed documents about specific loans. 

ERIC TRUMP TESTIFIES HE HAD ‘NO INVOLVEMENT’ IN TRUMP ORGANIZATION’S STATEMENT OF FINANCIAL CONDITION

“This loan was paid off in full, with no default — no victims. The loan was paid off in full, the bank was thrilled…the bank liked me very much…the loan is since gone,” Trump testified. 

When asked why the loan was paid ahead of schedule, Trump testified: “Because we have a lot of cash…My son [Eric] recommended it and I said, ‘do what you want to do.’” 

Trump repeatedly testified that he believes he complied with loan agreements. 

But Trump maintained that his net worth was “far greater than the financial statements, far greater.” 

TRUMP BLASTS MANHATTAN JUDGE, DEFENDS HIS ‘VERY GOOD CHILDREN’ AMID TRUMP ORG CIVIL TRIAL FROM NYAG LAWSUIT

“The numbers of my net worth are far more than the financial statement,” Trump said. “Therefore, you have no case.” 

Trump, again, cited the disclaimers on his financial statements, testifying that those disclaimers told “the lender of the money to go out and do your own work.” 

“It says do your own due diligence,” Trump said. 

The judge said: “It sounds like a broken record.”  

Trump fired back, saying it was because the attorney kept “asking the same question.” 

Trump’s defense chimed in, saying that if the attorney from James’ office “wants to ask the same questions, he’ll get the same answers.” 

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Trump’s testimony concluded Monday afternoon. His daughter, Ivanka Trump, who was dismissed as a defendant in the case this summer, is set to testify on Wednesday. 



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5 things to know about Ohio’s controversial constitutional amendment on abortion before Election Day


Ohio voters will head to the voting booth on Tuesday to vote on a measure that will enshrine abortion access into the state’s constitution in an election that is believed to be a bellwether for how states will be governed on abortion post the Supreme Court’s reversal of Roe v. Wade.

What does a “yes” or “no” vote on Ohio Issue 1 mean?

Voters in Ohio who vote “yes” on Issue 1 are voting to approve an amendment that would “establish in the Constitution of the State of Ohio an individual right to one’s own reproductive medical treatment, including but not limited to abortion” and “create legal protections for any person or entity that assists a person with receiving reproductive medical treatment.” A “no” vote continues with the status quo in terms of Ohio laws already on the books and leaves current abortion restrictions intact.

Who supports and opposes the ballot measure?

“Yes” on Issue 1 supporters include Ohioans United for Reproductive Right, a coalition of pro-abortion groups, Planned Parenthood, the Human Rights Campaign and the ACLU of Ohio who argue the vote is about “who makes personal decisions for yourself and your family – you or the government.”

Opponents of Issue 1 include top elected Republicans in the state, Susan B. Anthony Pro-Life America, many faith based groups including the Catholic Conference of Ohio, and Christians for Civic Virtue.

LEFT-WING DARK MONEY NETWORK BANKROLLING ANTI-ISRAEL GROUPS DROPS MILLIONS PUSHING OHIO ABORTION AMENDMENT

Ohio abortion vote

 Claire Schmitt, an employee of the anti-abortion organization Protect Women Ohio, walks on November 3, 2023 in Westerville, Ohio. Ohioans will vote on Issue 1, officially titled “The Right to Reproductive Freedom with Protections for Health and Safety,” which would codify reproductive rights in the Ohio Constitution ((Photo by Andrew Spear/Getty Images))

Last month, a bipartisan group of 100 Black pastors signed a letter opposing Issue 1 writing that it is “more extreme than Roe v. Wade” and “will allow for painful, late-term abortions through all nine months of pregnancy – even after an unborn baby can feel pain.”

“It will permit our children to undergo abortions without parents knowing. And it will continue to rob generations of Black women and men of the insurmountable joy of parenthood,” the letter said. 

Parents rights advocates have also been involved opposing Issue 1 including Protect Women Ohio.

“The ACLU paid out-of-state signature collectors to lie to Ohioans about their dangerous amendment that will strip parents of their rights, permit minors to undergo sex change operations without their parents’ knowledge or consent, and allow painful abortion on demand through all nine months,” PWO spokesperson Amy Natoce said.

Top Republicans in Ohio have warned the “extreme” ballot measure goes “too far” and goes even farther than Roe v. Wade. 

ABORTION ON DEMAND: THESE 6 STATES ALLOW WOMEN TO GET PREGNANCY-ENDING DRUGS BY PHONE OR ONLINE

Mike DeWine

Republican Ohio Gov. Mike DeWine  (AP Photo/David Richard)

“It’s pretty clear that this constitutional amendment just goes farther, much further than what the average Ohioan approves,” Ohio Gov. Mike DeWine told Fox News Digital last month. “If a voter is comfortable with abortion up until the time of birth, they’re probably going to be okay with this amendment — if they’re comfortable with parents not being involved in the most important decision their daughter will ever make or certainly has made up until that point in her life. If they’re okay with that, then they should vote for this,” DeWine added. 

Ohio’s Republican attorney general, Dave Yost, published a report on what he believes a “Yes” vote would mean for the future of abortion in Ohio and wrote that the language of the amendment “creates a new, legal standard that goes beyond what Roe and Casey said.”

ABORTIONS, GENDER TRANSITIONS FOR MINORS COULD BE ENSHRINED IN STATE CONSTITUTION, PARENTS’ GROUP WARNS

Ohio State Issue 1

An attendee holds a rosary as she prays during a “rosary rally” on Sunday, Aug. 6, 2023, in Norwood, Ohio. ((AP Photo/Darron Cummings))

“The Amendment would not return things to how they were before Dobbs overruled Roe, and is not just ‘restoring Roe,’” Yost said. “It goes further.”

Yost wrote that several abortion restrictions in the state would be invalidated if the new amendment passes including the Heartbeat Act, the Down Syndrome discrimination law, and the law prohibiting partial birth abortion.

Additionally, Yost concludes that several other aspects related to abortion might not immediately be invalidated but will face serious legal challenges with an “uncertain outcome” in courts due to the vague language. Those issues include 24-hour waiting period and informed consent, Ohio law that requires a doctor to inform a minor’s parents before performing an abortion on a pregnant minor, abortion pill safety regulations, limits against taxpayer funds for abortion providers.

Both sides of the argument have accused the other side of running misleading ads and voters have expressed confusion on what the amendment will actually do

“I think that most people are trying to understand if this amendment would give them more health protections and our stance has been it actually takes away basic health and care protections for women,” Mehek Cooke an attorney who serves as spokesperson for Protect Women Ohio, told Fox News Digital. 

“The other side continues to say that Ohio law contains no exceptions for the life of the mothers actually Ohio law permits abortions up until 22 weeks with the exception of immediate serious risk to the mother. There are several exceptions in Ohio law and we’ve really had to correct that misinformation.”

Cooke told Fox News Digital that Ohio law currently protects serious medical conditions during pregnancy, something she has experienced first hand, and that the other side has used “scaremongering” tactics by claiming women will not be able to access medical treatment if the ballot measure fails.

ACLU logo

An ACLU press release quoted Ohioans United for Reproductive Rights spokesperson Lauren Blauvelt last month saying opponents of Issue 1 are the “extremists” and are “trying to take away our rights and mislead voters.” (KAREN BLEIER / Staff)

Ohioans United for Reproductive Rights spokesperson Lauren Blauvelt said in an ACLU press release last month that its the opponents of Issue 1 that are the “extremists” who are “trying to take away our rights and mislead voters.”

“Voting NO hands your most personal family decisions over to the GOVERNMENT,” Blauvelt said.

Abortion supporters and opponents nationwide will be watching to see how the amendment fares in a red state that former President Trump carried by 8 points and if any lessons will be learned in other states planning to vote on abortion after the reversal of Roe 

Mini Timmaraju, president and CEO of Reproductive Freedom for All, said Ohio offers a vital proving ground heading into next year’s presidential election, when Democrats hope the abortion issue can energize supporters in contests up and down the ballot. Abortion-related initiatives could be on the ballot across the country, including in the presidential swing states of Arizona, Nevada and Pennsylvania.

“When we’re able to see how our messaging impacts independents and Republicans and persuades them that this fundamental freedom is important to protect in Ohio, that’s going to be something that we can implement looking at 2024,” she said.

Marching through the streets

Protestors hold signs as they march through the streets of New York City in response to the Supreme Court’s ruling on Roe v. Wade. (Fox News Digital)

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The battleground on abortion shifted to the states last summer, when the U.S. Supreme Court overturned its Roe v. Wade decision, erasing federal abortion protections that had been in place for half a century. Since then, voters in six states — California, Kansas, Kentucky, Michigan, Montana and Vermont — have either supported measures protecting abortion rights or rejected efforts aimed at eroding access.

Turnout in the election that concludes Tuesday is expected to be robust, building on the enthusiasm from the summer, organizers say. Local election officials anticipate 40% to 50% of registered voters will participate, according to the Ohio Association of Election Officials. That’s higher than a typical off-year November election and up from the 39% turnout in August.

Associated Press contributed to this report



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Ex-House Republican who voted to impeach Trump running for Senate in Michigan


Former U.S. Rep. Peter Meijer, R-Mich., whose family founded the Meijer supermarket chain, is running for his state’s vacant Senate seat.

Meijer lost his seat after he and nine other House Republicans voted to impeach former President Trump over the Jan. 6, 2021 riot at the U.S. Capitol.

“My wife and I prayed hard about this race and how we can best serve our state and our nation. We considered every aspect of the campaign, and we are confident we have the best chance of taking back this seat for the Republicans and fighting hard for a conservative future,” Meijer said in his campaign debut on Monday morning.

FIRST ON FOX: SENATE REPUBLICANS BUILD WAR CHEST FOR EVENTUAL GOP NOMINEES IN CRUCIAL 2024 STATES

Peter Meijer

Former Rep. Peter Meijer, R-Mich., is running for Michigan’s open Senate seat.

“We are in dark and uncertain times, but we have made it through worse. The challenges are great, but so is our country. If we are to see another great American century, we need leaders who aren’t afraid to be bold, will do the work, and can’t be bought.”

Meijer had lost the 2022 Republican primary for his House seat to former Trump administration official John Gibbs. 

FLASHBACK: HOUSE SPEAKER KEVIN MCCARTHY ANNOUNCES FORMAL IMPEACHMENT INQUIRY AGAINST PRESIDENT BIDEN

As part of a strategy to ensure an easier path to victory in general elections, House Democrats’ campaign arm targeted Meijer and other Republicans in swing districts by elevating more polarizing rivals.  

Former President Donald Trump

Former Rep. Peter Meijer was one of 10 House Republicans who voted to impeach former President Trump over the Capitol riot. (Sean Rayford/Getty Images)

Gibbs, who ran to Meijer’s right, subsequently lost to freshman Rep. Hillary Scholten, D-Mich.

Senate Republicans are eyeing Michigan as a prime pickup opportunity after Sen. Debbie Stabenow, D-Mich., announced she would not seek re-election. 

Rep. Elissa Slotkin, D-Mich., is the current frontrunner for the Democratic nomination to replace her.

FORMER REP. MIKE ROGERS LAUNCHES REPUBLICAN SENATE CAMPAIGN FOR OPEN SENATE SEAT IN BATTLEGROUND MICHIGAN

Meanwhile, Meijer joins an increasingly competitive GOP primary. Former Rep. Mike Rogers, R-Mich., is also in the race after being courted by the National Republican Senatorial Committee, Senate Republicans’ campaign arm. 

Elissa Slotkin

Rep. Elissa Slotkin, D-Mich., is currently the frontrunner for the Democratic nomination for Senate. (Brandon Bell/Getty Images)

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Former Detroit Police Chief James Craig is also in the field of candidates.

Meijer’s family founded and owns the primarily-Midwestern Meijer supermarket chain. The one-term Republican congressman is also an Army Reserve veteran, having served in Iraq.



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Trump unloads on judge, NYAG for targeting him ‘for political reasons’ during unprecedented testimony


Former President Trump testified on the stand Monday that New York Judge Arthur Engoron and New York Attorney General Letitia James are “trying to hurt” him for “political reasons” while blasting the “very unfair” and unprecedented non-jury civil fraud trial.

The former president and 2024 Republican presidential frontrunner took the stand Monday morning in the civil trial stemming from James’ lawsuit against him, his family and his businesses. James alleged Trump defrauded banks and inflated the value of his assets.

Trump has denied any wrongdoing and has repeatedly said his assets were actually undervalued. Trump has repeatedly said his financial statements had disclaimers, requesting that the numbers be evaluated by the banks.

Trump prepares to testify

Former President Trump prepares to testify during his trial at New York State Supreme Court in New York on Nov. 6, 2023. (Photo by CURTIS MEANS/POOL/AFP via Getty Images)

TRUMP, ENGORON TRADE JABS DURING FORMER PRESIDENT’S TESTIMONY IN CIVIL TRIAL STEMMING FROM NYAG LAWSUIT

During Trump’s unprecedented testimony Monday, Engoron tried to cut him off from providing lengthy answers to state lawyers’ questioning, and even said, “I don’t want to hear everything he has to say.”

After a break in his testimony, Trump again took the stand, defending himself and his businesses, and blasting the investigation, lawsuit and non-jury trial.

“We shouldn’t be having a case here because we have a disclaimer clause that every court holds up except this judge,” Trump said, referring to the disclaimers on all of his financial statements and statements of financial condition.

“They’re trying to hurt me — especially her,” Trump said, referring to Attorney General Letitia James. “For political reasons.”

New York AG at public safety press conference

State Attorney General Letitia James seen during public safety announcement to prevent gun violence at City Hall. (Lev Radin/Pacific Press/LightRocket via Getty Images)

Trump went on to call James a “political hack,” saying she used her investigation and lawsuit against him “to become governor, to become attorney general.” The former president was referring to James’ campaigns, in which she vowed to “get Trump.” 

“This is a political witch hunt, and she should be ashamed of herself,” Trump said. “The fraud is her.”

James, a Democrat, sued Trump, his children and the Trump Organization last year, alleging he and his company misled banks and others about the value of his assets. James claimed the former president’s children — Donald Trump Jr., Ivanka and Eric — as well as his associates and businesses, committed “numerous acts of fraud and misrepresentation” on their financial statements.

Former US President Donald Trump in court

Former President Trump prepares to testify during his trial at New York State Supreme Court in New York on Nov. 6, 2023. (Photo by JEFFERSON SIEGEL/POOL/AFP via Getty Images)

Engoron, in September, ruled that Trump and the Trump Organization committed fraud while building his real estate empire by deceiving banks, insurers and others by overvaluing his assets and exaggerating his net worth on paperwork used in making deals and securing financing.

“He ruled against me without knowing anything about me,” Trump said on the stand. “He called me a fraud, and he didn’t know anything about me.”

Trump went on to slam Engoron for undercutting the value of his Mar-a-Lago resort in Palm Beach, Florida, a property Engoron valued at $18 million.

Trump, Engoron in court

Former President Trump, left, and New York Judge Arthur Engoron. (Fox News)

“$18 million, he said — and I’m a fraud for not valuing the property? How do you call a man a fraud when you have a property 50 to 100 times more?” Trump said. “You believed the political hack back there, and that’s unfortunate.” 

A state attorney, Kevin Wallace, who was leading the questioning of Trump, asked if the former president was “done.”

“Done,” Trump said.

This is a developing story. Please check back for updates. 



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