Walker Buehler shoved and Freddie Freeman hit another dong as the Dodgers beat the Yankees 4-2 to win Game 3 of the World Series. Los Angeles Times beat writer Jack Harris with columnists Dylan Hernndez and Bill Plaschke talk about the team being one game away from sweeping and winning the entire thing.
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As the 2024 presidential race speeds to Election Day, Democrat Kamala Harris and Republican Donald Trump are targeting those who tend to decide not to vote in elections, known as low-propensity voters.The term “low-propensity voter” refers to people who are eligible to vote but historically have chosen not to. Both campaigns are hoping to increase voter turnout by targeting low-propensity voters.Trump campaignTrump’s team has largely abandoned traditional efforts to broaden his message to target moderate voters, focusing instead on turning out low-propensity voters especially young men of all races with tough talk and events aimed at getting attention online.His aides insist that efforts to maximize turnout from Trump’s hardcore base do not mean he’s ignoring swing voters, even if he’s not tailoring a different message to reach them.”I just think that theres a misunderstanding on whats motivating those people,” Trump political director James Blair said. “I mean, the fact is the economys motivating those people. Those people overwhelmingly think that theyre worse off than they were four years ago … So then the question becomes: Whos better equipped to fix it?Blair said the campaign’s data shows that more of its low-propensity voters are casting ballots early than those who might be expected to support Harris.”The starting point is, were in a strong spot,” Blair said.Trump has also attended sporting events, including mixed-martial arts fights and football games, putting him in front of audiences who dont typically engage with traditional media outlets.Harris campaignHarris is targeting the narrow slice of undecided voters that remain, especially moderates, college-educated suburbanites, and women of all races and education. She is going after Republican women who may have supported rival Nikki Haley in this year’s GOP primary and are dissatisfied with Trump.”It’s all pieces of a very complex puzzle,” Harris senior campaign adviser David Plouffe said. “This would all be a simpler exercise if you can focus just on one voter cohort. You can’t. And you got to make sure you know youre doing well enough with all of them so that when you put all that together, it adds up to 50%.”Harris’ team believes that roughly 10% of voters in battleground states are still persuadable, either because they are truly undecided or because their support for Trump is soft.Harris recently launched new ads targeting men in battleground states as part of her campaign’s effort to energize male voters. The new ads aired during sporting events in Milwaukee, Philadelphia and Pittsburgh.A Harris campaign official said the ads are leveraging sports as a vehicle to galvanize low-propensity, disengaged male voters, including younger voters, among whom the disparity in support for Harris between men and women is particularly pronounced.The Associated Press and CNN contributed to this report.
When Guatemalan journalist Jos Rubn Zamora returned to his home last week after more than two years in prison without a conviction, he found it empty
Night Beat: Nebraska volleyball announces two schedule changes, a closer look at the paid sick leave ballot initiative, and more.
When Guatemalan journalist Jos Rubn Zamora returned to his home last week after more than two years in prison without a conviction, he found it empty
Conspiracy theorists claim the voting machine companys logo shows a red ballot turning blue. Thats false.
The Committee on Judicial Conduct is recommending disciplinary action against Catherine Connors, an associate justice of the Maine Supreme Judicial Court.The committee, which supervises the judiciary in Maine, says that Connors violated the Code of Judicial Conduct by not recusing herself from two foreclosure cases.”Justice Connors’ failure to be sensitive to the appearance of impropriety and recuse herself in the face of it, not only violates the Judicial Code of Conduct but it undermines public confidence in the judiciary,” John McArdle, counsel to the Committee on Judicial Conduct, wrote in the committee’s final report sent to the Supreme Judicial Court.According to the report, Connors worked as an attorney representing banks and banking interests, including foreclosure matters in Maine, before being confirmed to the Maine Supreme Judicial Court.While serving on the Maine Supreme Judicial Court, Connors participated in two foreclosure cases, Finch v. U.S. Bank and J.P. Morgan Chase Acquisition Group v. Camille J. Moulton.Connors had written to the Judicial Ethics Advisory Committee asking if she should recuse herself from the cases, and at the time, the ethics committee determined she did not need to.However, the Committee on Judicial Conduct detailed in its final report that Connors was required to consider whether her impartiality might be questioned from the perspective of a reasonable person, and “nowhere in the decision of the Ethics Committee is the term or concept of the appearance of a conflict addressed.”Connors did continue to sit on both cases and in the Finch decision, she voted for the bank’s position.”The Finch decision overturned the Pushard and Deschaine decisions, which was a victory for the banks and a loss for the homeowners,” McArdle said in the report. “Notably, the Pushard decision that was overturned was the same case that Justice Connors had lost on appeal when she was an attorney.” “Home ownership and foreclosure actions are serious matters and of concern to Mainers,” he continued. “Justice Connors’ lack of sensitivity to the appearance of impropriety should have been, but apparently was not, self-evident. A member of the public informed of the surrounding facts and circumstances of Justice Connors’ representation of banking interests would reasonably question her impartiality before and during the time that she chose to participate in the Finch and Moulton appeals. Thus, Justice Connors violated Canon 2, Rule 2.11 (A) and the public outcry concerning her participation in the appeals is proof that a reasonable person not only could, but would, question her impartiality under the circumstances.”Thomas Cox is the attorney who filed a complaint against Connors and wrote to the committee alleging she violated the Code of Judicial Conduct.”The Committee was thorough and careful in its review of the facts that I presented in my complaint and is clear in its conclusion, that a violation occurred,” Cox said in a statement to Maine’s Total Coverage. “I am thankful to the Committee for its careful and thoughtful work on what I am sure was a difficult and uncomfortable issue.”Connors was unable to comment on the pending case as it’s being considered by the Maine Supreme Judicial Court.
A large-scale illegal fireworks show woke up many Long Beach residents late Sunday night and sent them searching for answers about what was going on.
People are coming forward to KMBC 9 Investigates, saying they are out tens of thousands of dollars for new buildings on their property that are not getting built by a company named Amazing Structures 24/7.Tim Buchhorn paid more than $15,000 as a deposit for a new pole barn at his home in Kansas City, Kansas.He wanted to start woodworking projects in the outbuilding and use it for storage.But he now wants answers from the company that has his money.I was just in shock like, Can this be real? Buchhorn told KMBC 9 Investigates.Earlier this month, the military veteran expected his signed contract with Amazing Structures and his deposit of more than $15,000 to bring him materials and a construction crew to start the job.But no one showed up.No call, no show, he said. I called him up straight to voicemail.Amazing Structures 24/7 was registered to Jay Bowlin on July 4, 2024, according to the Oklahoma secretary of states website.Another business named Amazing Moves 24/7 was also registered to Bowlin on April 24, 2017.KMBC 9 Investigates called a number registered to Amazing Structures, but it went straight to voicemail.Chase McBride, from Hartsburg, Missouri, is also asking for answers from Amazing Structures.He paid more than $21,000 as a deposit on a barn and created a Facebook page to organize people in Kansas, Missouri and across the Midwest who are now out tens of thousands of dollars.He is keeping a spreadsheet of more than 30 people who have concerns about their money and projects with Amazing Structures.I know that we’re probably not all going to get our money back, McBride said. So, we really need to get the attention of the attorney general in Oklahoma. And we need to get all the attorneys general in each state thats been affected to work together.Buchhorn, meanwhile, wont have a pole barn any time soon.Hes hoping for justice, though, much sooner.I would like to see other people come forward, he said. It’s a lot of money for us and for a lot of people.If you have concerns about Amazing Structures and your experience with the company, email investigates@kmbc.com.
10/11 First at Four
After the Paddys Pub gang makes their appearance on ABC, the Abbott cast will return the favor
Conspiracy theorists claim the voting machine companys logo shows a red ballot turning blue. Thats false.