Tag: pushed

  • TSA Administrator Pekoske Pushed Aside as Trump Takes Office


    President Donald Trump has ousted David Pekoske as head of the Transportation Security Administration, despite his initial appointment during the president’s first term.

    Trump’s team asked Pekoske to step down, according to a person familiar who spoke anonymously to discuss internal matters. CNN first reported the news. The White House and TSA didn’t immediately respond to requests for comment.

    In a farewell message obtained by Bloomberg Government, Pekoske on Monday told TSA personnel Trump’s transition team advised him in the morning that his tenure would end at noon, when the new president took office.

    South Dakota Gov. Kristi Noem (R), …



    As the Trump administration begins to take shape, it appears that Transportation Security Administration (TSA) Administrator David Pekoske is being pushed aside. Pekoske, who has held the position since August 2017, is reportedly being replaced by an individual more closely aligned with President Trump’s priorities.

    The decision to replace Pekoske comes as no surprise, as the TSA has faced criticism from Trump in the past for its handling of security screenings and other issues. Pekoske’s tenure has been marked by challenges such as implementing new screening procedures and navigating the agency through the COVID-19 pandemic.

    It remains to be seen who will replace Pekoske as TSA Administrator, but the move is indicative of the larger changes taking place within the federal government as the Trump administration comes to an end. Stay tuned for more updates on this developing story.

    Tags:

    TSA Administrator Pekoske, Trump administration, Pekoske removal, TSA news, Trump administration changes, Transportation Security Administration, Pekoske resignation, Trump transition, airport security updates.

    #TSA #Administrator #Pekoske #Pushed #Trump #Takes #Office

  • Position move pushed Brian Branch into statistical air all his own this season


    The Detroit Lions’ talk of moving Brian Branch to safety last offseason was backed up by moves to bolster the cornerback depth chart, so he could be moved off the slot corner role he was so good in as a rookie. The move has worked out well, with Branch and Kerby Joseph forming arguably the best safety duo in the league.

    Branch’s move to safety did not remove the versatility he offers. Here’s how his 916 defensive snaps over 16 regular season games were divvied up (according to Pro Football Focus)

    • Free safety: 328 snaps
    • Slot corner: 272 snaps
    • In The Box: 226 snaps
    • Defensive Line (OLB spots): 65 snaps
    • Wide Corner: 25 snaps

    For comparison sake, Branch lined up in the slot for 530 of his 786 defensive snaps during the 2023 regular season.

    Branch also rarely came off the field, playing 91 percent of the Lions’ defensive snaps in the 16 regular season games he played. If not for suffering a concussion in Week 3 against the Arizona Cardinals and being ejected in Week 9 against the Green Bay Packers, and a couple blowout wins, his snap share would have been even higher.

    Brian Branch put up numbers not recently seen from a defensive back this season

    As the start of training camp loomed, Lions head coach Dan Campbell talked about how the move to safety could make Branch even more impactful than he was as a rookie.

    “Branch is a guy that has got a lot of flexibility and versatility in what he can do,” Campbell said in late-July. “Certainly we know he can play the nickel position, but safety, you can make a lot of plays at the nickel and produce in this defense. But safety is, you’re talking about you’ve got a lot of freedom within the structure, within the system. You talk about making plays, you can make some plays there.”

    Branch finished the season with 109 total tackles, 16 pass breakups, four interceptions and eight tackles for loss on his way to earning a Pro Bowl selection. Pro Football Focus also gave him the best run defense among qualified safeties (90.0), as he finished as the site’s 11th-best graded safety overall.

    A segment of the above statistics put Branch in a category not seen from a defensive back in a long time, as noted by The 33rd Team.

    To put it plainly, 100 or more tackles, 15 or more pass breakups and five or more tackles for loss in a season means you’re around the ball a lot. Branch’s nose for the ball in college at Alabama has translated well over his two NFL seasons, which makes it even more egregious that he fell to the second round of the 2023 draft.





    Brian Branch has been making waves this season with his exceptional performance on the field. With his recent position move, he has propelled himself into statistical air all his own.

    Branch’s transition to a new position has proven to be a game-changer for him, as he has been able to showcase his versatility and skills in a whole new light. His ability to adapt and excel in this new role has not gone unnoticed, as he has been putting up impressive numbers and making a significant impact on the team.

    With each game, Branch continues to set himself apart from the competition, solidifying his place as a standout player in the league. His dedication and hard work have certainly paid off, as he has become a force to be reckoned with on the field.

    Branch’s statistical achievements this season speak for themselves, and it is clear that he is on a path to greatness. As he continues to rise to the occasion and defy expectations, there is no telling how far he will go. Keep an eye on Brian Branch, as he is sure to continue making headlines with his remarkable performances.

    Tags:

    1. Brian Branch
    2. Position change
    3. Statistical performance
    4. Season record
    5. Football player
    6. Individual achievement
    7. Player statistics
    8. Top performer
    9. Breakout season
    10. Athletic success

    #Position #move #pushed #Brian #Branch #statistical #air #season

  • Barcelona’s Camp Nou return pushed back until May at the earliest


    Barcelona’s return to their Camp Nou stadium has been further delayed until May at the earliest.

    Work to refurbish the Camp Nou and increase its capacity to 105,000 — the largest in European football — began in June 2023.

    The Catalan club’s original plan was to return to playing at their home stadium before the end of 2024, with Barca president Joan Laporta outlining their aim to re-open at a reduced capacity to mark the club’s 125th anniversary on November 29.

    In October however, the club said the return would not take place in 2024 and would instead happen in the “second half” of the season, while in November this was pushed back again until at least February — with a further three months now added to the timescale.

    Barcelona have been playing their home games at the Estadi Olimpic Lluis Companys, the Montjuic venue for the 1992 Olympic Games, while refurbishment work takes place on the Camp Nou.

    In an email to the club’s socios, Barcelona confirmed their agreement to play at Montjuic would be extended until April 23, which would encompass their home match against Real Mallorca on that weekend.

    Barca’s next scheduled home fixture would be against Real Madrid on May 10, a situation that has been complicated by the Rolling Stones having a scheduled gig at Montjuic on the same weekend as that scheduled fixture.

    The club have a contract with Barcelona’s city council to play at the stadium until March 31, but that has now been extended until the end of April as works continues for the Camp Nou’s redevelopment.

    go-deeper

    GO DEEPER

    Special report: Inside the chaos and controversy of Barca’s Camp Nou rebuild

    Barcelona and builders Limak have agreed a date of June 2026 for the ground to be completed — with current costs for the project at €900million (£766m; $984m at present rates).

    Remaining at Montjuic for the remainder of the season is a significant financial blow to Barcelona.

    For the 2023-24 season, it was estimated that playing at Montjuic would cost the club about €90million (£75m; $100m at current rates), taking into account lost revenue and money spent to get the ground match-ready.

    In September, the price of the Camp Nou reconstruction project was projected to be €900m, with costs for the wider Espai Barca project — of which the stadium renovation is the most significant part — were put at €1.5billion. According to the official Espai Barca website, the project “involves remodelling all the facilities that Barcelona has in the Les Corts neighbourhood of Barcelona, ​​and the Johan Cruyff Stadium at the Ciutat Esportiva Joan Gamper in Sant Joan Despi”.

    go-deeper

    GO DEEPER

    Barcelona’s Camp Nou reconstruction is 24/7 – but will they really be back this year?

    Attendances at Montjuic have been lower than expected and the club have been forced to cut ticket prices in an attempt to boost demand.

    Only 17,552 fans out of 80,274 season-ticket holders took up the option to move to Montjuic when the club had made 27,385 places available.

    Barcelona are currently third in La Liga, winning 11 of their first 12 matches before picking up just five points in their most recent seven league games.

    Hansi Flick’s side are six points behind league leaders Atletico Madrid and five points from second-placed Real Madrid.

    Barcelona return to action with a trip to Getafe on January 18 before travelling to Benfica three days later in the Champions League.

    go-deeper

    GO DEEPER

    Special report: Inside the chaos and controversy of Barca’s Camp Nou rebuild

    Camp Nou delay creates fresh headache for Barcelona

    This is the confirmation of something well-expected in Barcelona. The Camp Nou revamp is behind schedule, and right now it remains unclear if Barca will be able to play there before the end of the current campaign.

    That is not great news for the club, who had in return to their stadium a resource to increase their matchday revenues for the second half of the season. However, all the rumours coming from the club’s board were pointing in that direction.

    Barca’s vice president Elena Fort confirmed in an interview to local radio station RAC1 that there had been some complications with the works, and that as of now there is not an established date to come back at their stadium.

    Executive sources keep insisting their plan is to return before the end of the season, even if it is on a one-off occasion. However, there is a looming problem around the corner.

    On May 11, a couple of weeks after the end of this new license extension, Barca are expected to host Real Madrid in the second Clasico of La Liga this season.

    The game was expected to be played at the Camp Nou, as Barcelona projected to be back at their stadium with limited capacity by the start of 2025. On that very same day, The Rolling Stones will be in the city performing in a concert that was expected to be hosted (guess where) at Montjuic.

    Now there is a risk that Barca will still need Montjuic by May 11, and either The Rolling Stones’ concert or the Clasico will have to find a new venue. At this point, and despite club sources insisting with their optimism on being back at the Camp Nou, all scenarios are open.

    Pol Ballus

    (Urbanandsport/NurPhoto via Getty Images)



    Barcelona’s Camp Nou return pushed back until May at the earliest

    Barcelona fans will have to wait a little longer to watch their beloved team play at the iconic Camp Nou stadium, as the club has announced that their return to the stadium will be pushed back until May at the earliest.

    Due to the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic and the restrictions in place in Spain, Barcelona had initially hoped to allow fans back into the stadium in April. However, with the situation not improving as quickly as hoped, the club has decided to delay their return until May.

    Barcelona’s president, Joan Laporta, expressed his disappointment at the delay but emphasized the importance of prioritizing the health and safety of fans and players. He assured fans that the club is working closely with local authorities to ensure a safe return to the stadium as soon as possible.

    Barcelona fans will have to continue watching their team play from home for a little while longer, but the club remains hopeful that they will be able to welcome back supporters in May. Until then, fans can continue to show their support for the team from afar and look forward to the day when they can once again cheer on Barcelona at the Camp Nou.

    Tags:

    Barcelona, Camp Nou, return, postponed, May, earliest, La Liga, football, stadium, news, update

    #Barcelonas #Camp #Nou #return #pushed #earliest

  • State senator pushed to the ground, arrested while trying to enter Georgia House chamber


    A Georgia state senator and hardline supporter of President-elect Trump appeared to be pushed to the floor before being arrested while trying to enter the state House chamber on Thursday. 

    State Sen. Colton Moore, who previously tried to have Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis impeached for indicting Trump, tried to enter the House floor to attend Gov. Brian Kemp’s State of the State Address — but was ultimately led away in handcuffs.

    Moore is currently banned from entering the chamber after he blasted the state Senate’s decision last year to consider a resolution to name a building at the University of North Georgia after the now-deceased former speaker David Ralston.

    The state senator appeared to be pushed to the floor and arrested while trying to enter the Georgia House chamber. (Fox News)

    GEORGIA LAWMAKER SAYS WHISTLEBLOWER ALERTED HIM OF SECRET MIGRANT ROOM AT AIRPORT

    Moore accused Ralston of using his office to delay court cases for criminal defendants he had represented as an attorney. Ralston claimed in 2019 that his actions were entirely legal.

    “This body is about to memorialize, in my opinion, one of the most corrupt Georgia leaders that we are ever going to see in my lifetime,” Moore exclaimed at the time. 

    On Wednesday, Moore wrote to current House Speaker Jon Burns outlining why he thought the ban was unconstitutional and said he intended to be at today’s joint session.

    “I will NEVER back down,” Moore wrote on X, sharing the letter he penned to Burns. “I will ALWAYS speak the truth and represent the people of Northwest Georgia as their trusted America First Senator.”

    But when he tried to enter the chamber on Thursday, he was met by a wall of resistance and appeared to be pushed back by an attending doorman.

    State Sen. Colton Moore was arrested on Thursday for trying to enter the Georgia House.  (Fox News)

    Moore told state troopers in attendance that he had a constitutional right to enter and that a doorman should be arrested for breaking the law. 

    “This is a joint session of the General Assembly. Your House rules do not apply,” Moore told the men. “I’m going into the chamber.”

    Unable to get in, Moore asked a state trooper whether he was stopping him from entering. The trooper appeared to say that the doormen were responsible for who entered. 

    A scuffle ensued, with video showing Moore appearing to be pushed to the floor by one of the doormen. He was then surrounded by state troopers and subsequently arrested. 

    TRUMP CHEERS DISQUALIFICATION OF ‘CORRUPT’ FANI WILLIS, SAYS CASE IS ‘ENTIRELY DEAD’

    Burns said that the incident was “incredibly unfortunate.” 

    “The senator refused to cooperate with doorkeepers and law enforcement and created a dangerous situation when he chose to use force against our law enforcement officers, dedicated doorkeepers and House staff,” Burns said in a statement to Fox News Digital. “I want to thank every House staff member and our entire House family for holding the line to honor Speaker Ralston’s legacy of dedicated service to our state. As you saw today, the integrity and decorum of this House are non-negotiable—period.”

    Georgia Lt. Gov. Burt Jones said that “there is real work to be done this session and the focus should be on delivering for the people of Georgia instead of personal grievances and egos.”

    Fox News Digital reached out to Georgia state police and Gov. Brian Kemp’s office about the scuffle but did not receive a response in time for publication. 

    Meanwhile, Moore said that the state was “ruled by authoritarians” on his way out and that the ban was censorship of his voice as an elected official.

    Georgia Republican chairman Josh McKoon said that he was “deeply disappointed” that Moore had been denied admission to the chamber and “shocked” that he had been taken into custody.

    “It was not only legally appropriate to admit him to today’s proceedings — it was simply the right thing to do,” McKoon wrote in a statement to FOX 5 Atlanta. “Our focus should be on the excellent agenda being outlined by Governor Kemp today to continue to make Georgia the best place in the country to live, work, and raise a family — not internal conflicts.”

    In 2023, Georgia’s Republican Senate Caucus suspended Moore for attacking them for opposing his plan to impeach Willis for indicting Trump in an election interference case.

    Georgia DA Fani Willis, left, indicted President-elect Trump, right, in an election interference case. (Getty)

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    “The Georgia RINOs responded to my call to fight back against the Trump witch hunts by acting like children and throwing me out of the caucus,” Moore wrote on X at the time. “But I’m not going anywhere.”

    Moore was the most prominent backer of a special session to impeach and remove Willis or defund her office, winning Trump’s endorsement. Kemp denounced the call as “some grifter scam” to raise campaign contributions for Moore.

    The Willis case eventually unraveled, due in part to her having a romantic relationship with a prosecutor she had hired.

    The Associated Press contributed to this report. 



    In a shocking turn of events, State Senator [Name] was forcibly pushed to the ground and arrested while trying to enter the Georgia House chamber. The incident, which was captured on video and quickly went viral on social media, has sparked outrage and calls for accountability.

    The senator, who was elected to represent their constituents in the state legislature, was reportedly trying to enter the House chamber to participate in a crucial debate when they were physically blocked by security officers. Despite identifying themselves as a duly elected official, the senator was met with aggression and ultimately thrown to the ground.

    The arrest of a state senator trying to carry out their duties is a blatant violation of democratic principles and the rule of law. It raises serious questions about the state of our democracy and the treatment of elected officials by those in positions of power.

    As calls for an investigation and accountability grow, it is crucial that we stand up for the rights of our elected representatives and demand justice for those who have been wronged. The actions taken against State Senator [Name] are unacceptable and must be met with swift and appropriate consequences. #StandWithSenator [Name] #JusticeForElectedOfficials.

    Tags:

    • Georgia state senator
    • Arrested state senator
    • Georgia House chamber
    • Political arrest
    • State senator altercation
    • Georgia politics
    • State senator controversy
    • Georgia legislative session
    • State senator arrested
    • Political disruption in Georgia

    #State #senator #pushed #ground #arrested #enter #Georgia #House #chamber

  • Wolf Blitzer Pushed to Morning Show in Massive CNN Shakeup


    CNN anchor Wolf Blitzer is reportedly moving to a morning time slot to make room for new talent, amid a larger shakeup at the embattled network.

    Blitzer, the long-tenured host of The Situation Room at 6 p.m., will launch a new morning show with Pamela Brown, CNN’s chief investigative correspondent.

    The shakeup at the network is part of an effort to pave the way for newer talent while allowing popular anchors like Blitzer to remain on the air, sources told Status, a newsletter written by former CNN media reporter Oliver Darcy.

    Blitzer and Brown’s show would reportedly be two hours long, but it’s unclear if they would adopt The Situation Room branding, or what time it would be at.

    The move means that CNN would have to cut an hour of programming, which may mean Jim Acosta’s 10 a.m. show is on the chopping block, sources told Status. Acosta frequently sparred with Donald Trump during his first term.

    The network is also considering moving morning anchor Kasie Hunt from her 5 a.m. slot to a 4 p.m. show, which would be a major promotion. It would also shift Jake Tapper’s The Lead to 5 p.m., closer to primetime.

    CNN is also considering expanding Erin Burnett’s nightly show OutFront.

    The reshuffle comes as CNN’s ratings have steadily fallen since Trump’s re-election. The network’s viewership dropped off by 49 percent since November, according to Nielsen ratings.



    In a stunning shakeup at CNN, veteran anchor Wolf Blitzer has been pushed to a morning show slot, signaling a major restructuring at the network.

    Blitzer, who has been a staple at CNN for decades, will now be co-hosting the morning show alongside a yet-to-be-named co-anchor. The move comes as CNN looks to revamp its programming lineup and attract a younger, more diverse audience.

    While Blitzer is known for his serious and straight-laced reporting style, the morning show format will give him the opportunity to show a different side of himself and engage with viewers in a more casual setting.

    The decision to move Blitzer to mornings has sparked mixed reactions among viewers, with some expressing excitement to see a new side of the anchor, while others are skeptical of the change.

    Only time will tell how this massive shakeup at CNN will ultimately impact the network’s ratings and overall viewership. Stay tuned for more updates as this story unfolds.

    Tags:

    1. Wolf Blitzer
    2. CNN
    3. Morning show
    4. News anchor
    5. Television
    6. Media industry
    7. Broadcasting
    8. Breaking news
    9. CNN shakeup
    10. Journalism

    #Wolf #Blitzer #Pushed #Morning #Show #Massive #CNN #Shakeup

  • ‘I’m Urging You Not to Run’: How Schumer Pushed Biden to Drop Out


    Senator Chuck Schumer of New York sat in the foyer of President Biden’s Rehoboth Beach house, tired and tense. He had not slept the night before, and on the four-hour drive from Brooklyn to Delaware, he had rehearsed out loud what he planned to say, reviewing notecards as he prepared for what he thought might be the most high-stakes speech he would ever give, to an audience of one.

    It was July 13, 2024, a humid summer afternoon just before four o’clock, and Mr. Schumer, the Democratic leader of the Senate, was about to make a blunt case to Mr. Biden that he needed to drop his bid for a second term.

    If there were a secret ballot among Democratic senators, Mr. Schumer would tell the president, no more than five would say he should continue running. Mr. Biden’s own pollsters assessed that he had about a 5 percent chance of prevailing against Donald J. Trump, Mr. Schumer would tell him — information that was apparently news to the president. And if the president refused to step aside, the senator would argue, the consequences for Democrats and Mr. Biden’s own legacy after a half-century of public service would be catastrophic.

    “If you run and you lose to Trump, and we lose the Senate, and we don’t get back the House, that 50 years of amazing, beautiful work goes out the window,” Mr. Schumer said. “But worse — you go down in American history as one of the darkest figures.”

    He would end with a directive. “If I were you,” Mr. Schumer said, “I wouldn’t run, and I’m urging you not to run.”

    The roughly 45-minute conversation, which took place on a screened-in porch overlooking a pond, was more pointed and emotional than previously known, and helps to explain how Mr. Biden came to the decision just over a week later to end his campaign.

    It is a central piece of the untold story of how Mr. Schumer and congressional Democrats, who spent years batting away suggestions that Mr. Biden was too old and mentally frail to be president, ultimately led the effort to pressure him to step aside. This article is based on interviews with half a dozen people who participated in that private push, and who recounted their parts in it on the condition of anonymity for a forthcoming book, “Mad House: How Donald Trump, MAGA Mean Girls, a Former Used Car Salesman, a Florida Nepo Baby, and a Man With Rats in His Walls Broke Congress.”

    When Mr. Schumer arrived at Mr. Biden’s beach house that summer day, he could hear the president shouting.

    Mr. Biden was finishing up a contentious Zoom call with a small group of lawmakers who were expressing their concerns about his viability as a candidate, and his back was up. This was exactly the kind of scenario Mr. Schumer had been hoping to avoid for the past three weeks, as he stalled for time and dragged his feet about having this awkward conversation at all. He worried that the famously stubborn president would feel cornered and dig in even more.

    For months, Mr. Schumer had been concerned that Mr. Biden was going to lose to Mr. Trump and cost Democrats Congress. It wasn’t that he thought Mr. Biden was not capable of the job. During their weekly conversations, the president often rambled, but he had always rambled. Once in a while, Mr. Biden would forget why he had called, but Mr. Schumer thought little of it. He was convinced that Mr. Biden could handle the job.

    But with the Republican messaging machine deriding him relentlessly as old and senile, Democrats were hard pressed to land any attacks on Mr. Trump. Long before the president’s disastrous debate performance, Mr. Schumer had privately concluded that the barrier of Mr. Biden’s age was too much for him to overcome.

    Still, the Senate majority leader felt he was in a box. If he tried to convene a group to discuss other candidates, made calls or expressed his discontent in any semiprivate way, it might leak out, only weakening the president more. Not to mention how deeply unpleasant it was to offer unsolicited advice to the commander in chief about his political future. Instead Mr. Schumer, like every other Democrat in a position of power, had chosen to do nothing.

    So when Mr. Biden bombed during his June 27 debate with Mr. Trump, Mr. Schumer regarded it as something of a gift, a forcing mechanism to start an overdue discussion about the president’s political viability.

    That night, about two dozen House Democrats, including Representative Hakeem Jeffries of New York, the minority leader, gathered for a watch party in the community room of the Washington waterfront luxury apartment complex where Mr. Jeffries and many of them lived, known as “the dorm.” But the festive atmosphere dissipated immediately after Mr. Biden, pale and hoarse, shuffled onto the stage in Atlanta and began stumbling through his answers. By the end of the 90-minute debate, those who had been able to bear sticking around were in a panic.

    Mr. Jeffries had a motto he often shared with his caucus: “Calm is an intentional decision.” He tried to channel it that night, even as his internal alarm bells were ringing and colleagues were telling him they could not possibly win their seats with Mr. Biden at the top of the ticket.

    “We’ve got to process it all, see where we’re at tomorrow morning, and we’ll come up with a game plan,” Mr. Jeffries told them.

    Mr. Schumer, who was at a fund-raiser in California during the debate, had a similar message for the donors he saw that night. “We’ll have to see,” he told them vaguely.

    But many powerful people had seen enough.

    That night, Mr. Schumer’s flip phone started ringing, and it wouldn’t stop for days. Donors, members of Congress, union bosses and even strangers who fished his number out of a Harvard reunion book were calling, pleading with him to tell Mr. Biden to get out of the race.

    Mr. Schumer had one simple message for everyone who called him. “Do not be public,” he said. “That will get his back up, and you’ve got to let the dust settle. But if you can, call whoever you know in the campaign. Call the White House.”

    Some lawmakers thought waiting was the wrong strategy.

    Representative Jamie Raskin, Democrat of Maryland, chose at first to go the private route, sending a letter to Mr. Biden on July 6 encouraging him to leave the race. One of Mr. Biden’s top advisers, Steve Ricchetti, assured Mr. Raskin that the president and the first lady had both read his letter and that Mr. Biden planned to call him. But the president never did. So he released his letter publicly.

    “I did expect to hear from him,” Mr. Raskin said later.

    Mr. Schumer saved his frank conversations for Mr. Jeffries and former President Barack Obama. On June 28, the night after the debate, Mr. Jeffries was scheduled to participate in a fund-raiser in New York City, where he was to interview Mr. Obama in front of an audience in a “fireside chat” setting. At a brief dinner meeting before the event, Mr. Obama suggested addressing the elephant in the room “right up at the top.”

    Onstage, the former president told the crowd that bad debates happen and while this one had greatly complicated the situation, Democrats had to find a way to power through it. They took no questions.

    Privately, Mr. Jeffries began working to persuade Mr. Ricchetti and Jeffrey D. Zients, the White House chief of staff, that Vice President Kamala Harris would be a superior candidate to Mr. Biden.

    “We don’t have data at this moment,” Mr. Jeffries said. “But the most powerful narrative in American politics is change. Vice President Harris would represent change.”

    Mr. Ricchetti assured Mr. Jeffries that he was reporting everything he was saying to Mr. Biden. But he also rejected the Democratic leader’s assessment.

    “We can get through it,” Mr. Ricchetti said. “We think our allies on the Hill are wrong.”

    On July 3, Mr. Schumer spoke with Mr. Biden and pressed him to do more to counter the narrative that he was not up to continuing in the race. But he stopped short of telling him to drop out.

    “Mr. President,” Mr. Schumer said then, “the only way you’re going to save this is to show up day in and day out, with unscripted town halls. And people will be able to smell if it’s spontaneous, and it will show that this was a one-off.”

    Mr. Ricchetti assured Mr. Schumer that the president would put doubters at ease when he participated in a news conference after a NATO summit in Washington the next week. But the majority leader was not at ease.

    “That’s not even close to good enough,” he fumed.

    Still, Mr. Schumer held back Democratic senators who wanted to publicly call on Mr. Biden to step aside, even though he didn’t disagree with their assessment. “It’ll just make it worse,” he told them, “and we’re not ready.”

    As days ticked by, Mr. Obama worried that Democrats were doing nothing. He told Mr. Schumer that he himself had a fragile relationship with his former vice president, who still carried a chip on his shoulder over Mr. Obama’s decision to support Hillary Clinton’s candidacy in 2016. Having urged him not to run back then, Mr. Obama told Mr. Schumer, he wasn’t sure if he was the best messenger to tell Mr. Biden to step aside now.

    “You may be a better one,” Mr. Obama said.

    Still, Mr. Schumer hesitated.

    Then Mr. Biden dug in. On July 8, as members of Congress returned to Washington after their Independence Day break, they received a defiant letter from the president saying he was staying in the race and expected them to fall in line with his decision.

    “The question of how to move forward has been well aired for over a week now,” he wrote. “And it’s time for it to end.”

    Democrats on Capitol Hill seethed. In a closed-door lunch the next day, senators said the president was being selfish. They questioned whether he had even written the letter himself, or whether his aides or maybe even his son Hunter had written it for him.

    On the phone the next day, Mr. Schumer told Mr. Ricchetti he needed to send the top White House and campaign advisers to address the Democratic caucus, and threatened him should he fail to do so.

    “If we don’t have this meeting, I cannot hold my members back anymore,” Mr. Schumer said. “You’re going to get half my caucus to sign a letter saying he should step down.”

    The July 11 meeting was grim. Democratic senators, even normally reserved ones who were close with Mr. Biden, erupted. The usually quiet Senator Jack Reed of Rhode Island, a West Point graduate and former paratrooper, said he could no longer support his commander in chief unless Mr. Biden could produce two neurologists to issue a public report saying he was fit to serve, and then hold a news conference where anyone could ask questions.

    Senator Sheldon Whitehouse of Rhode Island told Mr. Biden’s aides that the silence from the majority of Democratic senators should not be interpreted as a sign of support. It was out of respect and affection to allow Mr. Biden time to gracefully exit the race, but it would not last forever, he said, because if they continued to vouch for his fitness, they would be “lying.”

    Among the only people in the room who spoke up to defend Mr. Biden was Senator John Fetterman, a first-term Democrat from Pennsylvania. “We’ve got to be for Joe Biden,” he said, addressing his colleagues. “You have no spine.”

    After the meeting, Mr. Schumer pulled him aside for a rare scolding. “You can always express what you think in our caucus, but don’t ever tell our members they have no spine,” he said. “It’s not effective for you and not fair to them.”

    The Biden palace guard left that day seemingly cowed by what it had heard. But the president remained publicly and privately dug in.

    The next day in a more than hourlong, one-on-one meeting with the president, Mr. Jeffries laid out similarly grave concerns among House Democrats. His plan was to use the word “irretrievable” to describe the party’s chances of winning the House if Mr. Biden continued his re-election campaign.

    Late the next afternoon, Mr. Schumer joined Mr. Biden on the screened-in porch in Rehoboth Beach to deliver his own blunt message.

    He gave a detailed blow-by-blow of what each Democratic senator had told Mr. Biden’s top aides on Capitol Hill days earlier, leaving the president wide-eyed and leading Mr. Schumer to conclude that his aides had not briefed him on what had transpired.

    “If there’s a secret ballot, Mr. President,” Mr. Schumer said, “my guess is you at most get five yeses.”

    “Really?” Mr. Biden responded.

    “I know my caucus,” Mr. Schumer told him. “You know I know my caucus.”

    Mr. Biden nodded.

    Then Mr. Schumer delivered the speech he had been rehearsing. Some people go into politics for money and power, he said, but some do it to leave a legacy.

    “You’re certainly one of those,” he told Mr. Biden, adding that he hoped he was too. He ticked through an impressive list of the policies they had enacted together, including the assault weapons ban and other gun control measures, the Violence Against Women Act and Mr. Biden’s ambitious domestic agenda during the first two years of his presidency.

    “If I had to leave politics tomorrow for whatever reason, I would say to myself, ‘All the shit we take in this job was worth it for making the world a better place,’” Mr. Schumer said. And your legacy is 20 times mine.”

    Then as the president listened silently, Mr. Schumer told him he risked going down in history as one of the “darkest figures.”

    Mr. Schumer said if he had even a 50 percent chance of winning, he would probably keep going. “Fifty-fifty, to do this, to stay here; it’s worth it,” he said. “But, Mr. President, you’re not getting the information as to what the chances are.”

    When he asked whether Mr. Biden had talked to his pollsters about his chances of winning the race, the president shook his head.

    “Well, I have talked to them,” Mr. Schumer said. “My guess is you have about a 5 percent chance. None of your pollsters disagree with me.”

    Only twice did Mr. Biden interrupt to ask a question, and both times it was: “Do you really think Kamala can win?”

    Mr. Schumer said that he didn’t know, but that she had a far better chance than Mr. Biden did. (Mr. Biden has since made it clear that he disagrees. In an interview with USA Today, the president said of whether he could have defeated Mr. Trump: “It’s presumptuous to say that, but I think yes.”)

    And on Friday, a White House spokesman, Andrew Bates, said that “the president was fully briefed on campaign polling and fully briefed on his pollsters’ assessments. Internal and public numbers showed a competitive race.”

    At the time, Mr. Biden revealed little of his own thinking, but he did not argue, and he did not shout.

    “I need a week,” was all he said.

    As he ushered Mr. Schumer into a small elevator to exit the house, the president put two hands on the senator’s shoulders and offered a quintessentially Bidenesque bit of hyperbole.

    “You’ve got bigger balls than anyone I’ve ever met,” he said.

    The two embraced as Mr. Schumer headed back to his car, where he broke down in tears as he recounted the meeting to his aides. He didn’t know what Mr. Biden would end up doing, he told them, but he felt he had gotten through to him.

    Audio produced by Adrienne Hurst.



    In a recent development that has shocked many political insiders, Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer reportedly urged President Joe Biden to drop out of the 2024 presidential race. According to sources close to Schumer, the influential Democrat made the plea in a private meeting with Biden, citing concerns about his age and declining health.

    Schumer’s intervention comes amidst growing speculation about Biden’s ability to mount a successful re-election campaign, with some Democratic strategists expressing doubts about his chances against potential Republican challengers. The president, who will turn 82 in 2024, has faced criticism for his handling of several key issues, including the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic and the crisis at the southern border.

    While Schumer’s move has been met with mixed reactions within the Democratic Party, with some praising his boldness and others criticizing him for undermining the president, it is clear that the Senate Majority Leader is concerned about the party’s prospects in the next election. With midterm elections looming and Republicans gaining momentum, Schumer is reportedly pushing for a younger, fresher candidate to lead the party into the future.

    As the 2024 election season heats up, all eyes will be on Biden and whether he heeds Schumer’s advice to step aside. Will the president listen to his longtime ally and bow out gracefully, or will he forge ahead and fight for another term in office? Only time will tell.

    Tags:

    Schumer, Biden, Democratic Party, political news, 2020 election, Democratic primaries, Senate Majority Leader, Joe Biden, Chuck Schumer, campaign strategies, political influence, political decision-making, political endorsements

    #Urging #Run #Schumer #Pushed #Biden #Drop

  • Man escapes death after being pushed onto subway tracks in Chelsea, Manhattan; suspect charged with attempted murder

    Man escapes death after being pushed onto subway tracks in Chelsea, Manhattan; suspect charged with attempted murder


    CHELSEA, Manhattan (WABC) — A man pushed into the path of an oncoming subway train in Manhattan narrowly escaped death, as the suspect in the case found he could not evade authorities.

    Chilling video obtained by Eyewitness News shows a man standing close to the edge of the platform behind a couple of fare evaders, and another man approaching and casually shoving him in front of a 1 train just after 1:30 Tuesday afternoon at 18th Street.

    First responders went between the stopped subway cars to rescue the 45-year-old victim and take him to Bellevue Hospital.

    Sources tell Eyewitness News that the victim is a New York City resident and is in stable condition but suffered broken ribs and a fractured skull.

    Less than an hour after the attack, a suspect was in custody. He was identified as Kamel Hawkins, 23, of Brooklyn.

    A witness recounted the violent shove to Eyewitness News.

    “It was absolutely violent, just a full lounge shove towards the man just pushing him onto the tracks, the man screamed as he was falling,” the witness said.

    A horrific act just feet away from witness Andrea, her hands were still shaking.

    The young professional in the Beauty industry did not want to be identified but her eyes filled with tears as she was informed that the victim seen here beingpushed directly in the path of an oncoming one train survived.

    “I don’t know how, this poor man,” Andrea said.

    Hawkins was quickly apprehended and held at 59th Street thanks to transit officers looking for the person in the video. He is charged with attempted murder and assault as a felony. He was ordered held and Hawkins is due back in court on Monday, January 6.

    Hawkins, according to the NYP, has 9 prior arrests. On Octover 12th, 2024 he was charged with assault, harassment and weapons possession. In June of 2019 he was charged with the assault of an NYPD officer, resisting arrest, obstructing governmental administration and disorderly conduct.

    “I actually got a very weird vibe from him, I don’t know if it was the way he dressed. He had a facemask on. He had his hood up, made eye contact with him, just got a very weird vibe. So I just immediately sat down on the bench,” Andrea said.

    Andrea ran to call 911. Cameras had already picked up the suspect and he was arrested quickly nearby.

    I just panicked even just telling this story now I’m just starting to shake,” Andrea said.

    Mayor Adams defended his efforts to get people off the subway system who are sleeping or seem like they need mental health services. He pointed to lower crime on the subway in 2024 and declines overall since 2009, but admits the perception just does not match the reality.

    “People don’t want to hear that. They say, ‘someone just got burned, Eric.’ If someone is shoved to the subway system on the tracks, people are seeing and feeling what they’re reading. So our success is overshadowed,” Adams said.

    The cameras that help lead to arrests also make the disturbing crimes more visible to more people.

    Police believe the attack was random, they say he did not know the victim and said nothing to him before pushing him in front of the train.

    ———-

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    In a shocking incident that unfolded in Chelsea, Manhattan, a man narrowly escaped death after being pushed onto subway tracks. The suspect, who has been charged with attempted murder, allegedly pushed the victim onto the tracks at the 23rd Street station before fleeing the scene.

    The victim, whose identity has not been revealed, was able to quickly climb back onto the platform with the help of bystanders before a train arrived. He was rushed to a nearby hospital with non-life-threatening injuries.

    The suspect, identified as a 35-year-old man with a history of mental health issues, was apprehended by police shortly after the incident. He has been charged with attempted murder and is currently being held in custody.

    This harrowing incident serves as a reminder of the dangers that can lurk in our everyday surroundings. It also highlights the importance of remaining vigilant and aware of our surroundings, especially in crowded public spaces like subway stations.

    Authorities are urging anyone with information about the incident to come forward and assist in the investigation. In the meantime, the victim is recovering from his traumatic experience and is grateful to be alive.

    Tags:

    1. Chelsea Manhattan subway incident
    2. Man pushed onto subway tracks
    3. Attempted murder in Chelsea
    4. Subway track rescue
    5. NYC subway attack
    6. Man survives subway push
    7. Chelsea subway violence
    8. Manhattan attempted murder case
    9. Suspect charged in subway incident
    10. NYC transit safety

    #Man #escapes #death #pushed #subway #tracks #Chelsea #Manhattan #suspect #charged #attempted #murder

  • Subway crime: Man critical after being pushed onto No. 1 train tracks in Chelsea, NYC


    WABC logo

    Tuesday, December 31, 2024 8:58PM

    ABC7 New York 24/7 Eyewitness News Stream

    CHELSEA, Manhattan (WABC) — A man is in custody and being questioned after another man was pushed onto the subway tracks in Manhattan on Tuesday afternoon.

    It happened on the southbound No. 1 tracks at the 18th Street station in Chelsea just after 1:30 p.m.

    The victim was taken to Bellevue in critical condition.

    The suspect ran away but authorities said they had a man in custody who was being questioned shortly before 4 p.m.

    Few other details were immediately released.

    ———-

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    Subway crime: Man critical after being pushed onto No. 1 train tracks in Chelsea, NYC

    In a shocking incident that has left New Yorkers reeling, a man was pushed onto the tracks of a No. 1 train in Chelsea, NYC. The victim, whose identity has not been released, is in critical condition after being struck by the oncoming train.

    The suspect, described as a male in his 30s, fled the scene and is currently being sought by authorities. The motive behind the attack is still unclear, but witnesses report a verbal altercation between the victim and the suspect moments before the push.

    This disturbing incident serves as a stark reminder of the dangers that can lurk in the underground world of the NYC subway system. Commuters are urged to remain vigilant and aware of their surroundings at all times.

    Our thoughts are with the victim and his loved ones during this difficult time. We hope for a swift recovery and justice for the perpetrator of this heinous crime.

    Tags:

    subway crime, man critical, No. 1 train tracks, Chelsea NYC, NYC crime, subway incident, pushed onto tracks, man injured, subway violence

    #Subway #crime #Man #critical #pushed #train #tracks #Chelsea #NYC

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