Trump Outperforms 2016, 2020 Results in New Hampshire’s Dixville Notch for a 3-Vote Tie with Kamala Harris
The first six official votes were cast and counted at midnight in New Hampshire's famous Dixville Notch on Tuesday morning, resulting in a tie between former President Donald Trump and Vice President Kamala Harris.
The post Trump Outperforms 2016, 2020 Results in New Hampshire’s Dixville Notch for a 3-Vote Tie with Kamala Harris appeared first on Breitbart.
Susan Smith’s parole board gets 100+ letters opposing killer mom’s release: ‘She belongs in that lake with her boys’
The South Carolina Department of Probation, Parole and Pardon Services confirmed that it received more than 130 letters regarding Smith’s parole bid.
nypost.com
When Does Election Coverage Start? How To Watch 2024 Presidential Election Results
The race Kamala Harris and Donald Trump is looking like it's coming down to the wire, which means some intense TV coverage.
nypost.com
Troy Aikman stunned by Todd Bowles’ late-game calls that burned Buccaneers in crushing ‘MNF’ loss
Troy Aikman believes Todd Bowles did not put his team in the best position to win Monday night.
nypost.com
All of the states that could legalize weed on Election Day 2024
Four states will put the question of whether to legalize recreational marijuana or medical marijuana to voters on Tuesday.
nypost.com
Taylor Swift’s mom, Andrea, perfectly honors both her daughter and Travis Kelce with Chiefs game jacket
The 66-year-old sat in an Arrowhead Stadium suite with the pop star and Donna Kelce during Monday night's game as Travis' team beat the Buccaneers.
nypost.com
Why it’s so difficult to pick out the Rangers’ signature lines
The Blueshirts have had so few signature lines, so few combinations that endured for even a full season.
nypost.com
Boeing strike ends after workers agree to new contract
33,000 Boeing workers could be back on the job as soon as Wednesday after they voted to accept the planemaker's latest contract offer, ending a 7-week strike. The new deal includes a 38% wage increase over four years, but it does not include a reinstated pension, which had been a key sticking point for the union.
cbsnews.com
North Korea fires barrage of missiles into the sea before US election
Japanese Defense Minister Gen Nakatani said at least seven North Korean missiles flew as far as 250 miles with a maximum altitude of 60 miles.
nypost.com
Elon Musk and Joe Rogan call P’nut killing proof America is no longer the land of the free
Elon Musk urged Americans to mobilize following the killing of Internet sensation, P'nut the Squirrel, telling voters they should "Go out there and vote for P'nut" on Election Day.
nypost.com
Polls open, Election Day underway after Harris, Trump make final campaign pitches
Vice President Kamala Harris and former President Donald Trump have reached the end of their campaign trails and the polls have opened for Election Day across America. CBS News' Aaron Navarro, Libby Cathey and Fin Gómez have the latest on the candidates' last messages for voters and when we can expect to see results.
cbsnews.com
Why grade inflation is spreading from high school to college — and how it hurts learning
In Los Angeles and beyond, research has shown that grades are generally going up even though test scores and other measures of actual learning are not.
latimes.com
How much is the vice president paid?
Despite being second in line to the U.S. presidency, the vice president earns less than Supreme Court justices.
cbsnews.com
Donald Trump Jr praises Patrick Mahomes' mom for support: 'Let's go America'
Donald Trump Jr. reacted to Randi Mahomes, the mother of Kansas City Chiefs star quarterback Patrick Mahomes, wearing a MAGA hat to Monday night's game.
foxnews.com
22 toss-up House races to watch on election night
Fox News provides a breakdown of the 22 House races ranked as Toss Ups in the 2024 election.
foxnews.com
New Fever head coach talks taking over young team headlined by Caitlin Clark: 'Expectations are higher'
New Indiana Fever head coach Stephanie White was introduced in her role on Monday, when she discussed how "expectations are higher" with Caitlin Clark and company to lead.
foxnews.com
The Polls May Be Way Off. That Doesn’t Mean the Election Was Rigged.
Mismatched polling numbers are not evidence of voter fraud or cheating.
time.com
The other top free agents the Yankees and Mets could consider during the Juan Soto sweepstakes
Here is a quick primer on the top free agents who should interest the Mets and/or the Yankees, perhaps dependent on where Soto signs.
nypost.com
Eagles legends LeSean McCoy, DeSean Jackson roast Cowboys amid season struggles: 'Big trash'
Philadelphia Eagles legends LeSean McCoy and DeSean Jackson kept it real when discussing their former rival, the Dallas Cowboys, who moved to 3-5 on the season.
foxnews.com
Sen. Sherrod Brown, Bernie Moreno face off for Senate in Ohio
Sen. Sherrod Brown is fighting for reelection in Ohio, facing a serious challenge from Republican Bernie Moreno as the GOP seeks to gain a Senate majority.
cbsnews.com
Sen. Deb Fischer, Dan Osborn face off in Nebraska Senate race
The Nebraska Senate race has grown unexpectedly competitive as independent candidate Dan Osborn challenges Republican incumbent Sen. Deb Fischer.
cbsnews.com
State officials say lawyers ready to compel county election officials to swiftly certify vote if needed
Officials in battleground states say attorneys are ready to intervene if any counties try to stop the certification of votes in the 2024 election.
foxnews.com
Midnight vote in Dixville Notch, New Hampshire, split 3-3 between Harris and Trump
Dixville Notch, a small town in New Hampshire known for casting their presidential ballots at midnight on Election Day, split their vote this year with three votes going for Kamala Harris and three votes going for Donald Trump. There are six registered voters in the unincorporated township -- four Republicans and two independents, who also make up the entirety of the area's population.
cbsnews.com
Trump slams Pelosi as 'evil, sick, crazy,' but stops short of profanity: 'It starts with a B'
Former President Donald Trump stopped just shy of calling former House Speaker Nancy Pelosi a profanity, saying that the word he had in mind, "starts with a B."
foxnews.com
Ruben Gallego, Kari Lake vie for Senate seat in Arizona
Rep. Ruben Gallego and Kari Lake are duking it out for the open Senate seat in Arizona after Sen. Kyrsten Sinema opted not to seek reelection.
cbsnews.com
Sen. Jon Tester, Tim Sheehy face off in key Montana Senate race
Sen. Jon Tester is fighting to hold onto his seat against Republican challenger Tim Sheehy in a race that could determine control of the Senate.
cbsnews.com
How much money do U.S. House members make?
Members of Congress haven't given themselves a raise since 2009, but House lawmakers still earn six figures.
cbsnews.com
The Sports Report: Laker Anthony Davis copes with painful foot injury
Lakers star Anthony Davis landed awkwardly on his injured left foot Monday, forcing him to acknowledge he's playing through significant pain.
latimes.com
Why are foods banned in other places still on US grocery shelves?
Lax regulations allow food products onto US grocery store shelves with ingredients that are banned in Europe. | Jeffrey Greenberg/Universal Images Group/Getty Images From the financial squeeze of inflation, to recall after recall, and actually getting out the door, going to the grocery store can sometimes feel like an insurmountable task. Adding to the stress is something else on the mind of Vox reader Sommer. When she’s shopping for food, she finds herself wondering: Why are there different ingredients, additives, and dyes in products like candy corn and ranch dressing? “How is America allowed to feed us certain products that are harmful and banned in other countries?” she asked us. “Don’t you all care about us?” That’s the subject of this week’s episode of Explain It to Me, Vox’s go-to hotline for all your questions. What some people may dismiss as a fixation of “granola moms” is actually a legitimate concern, says Melanie Benesh, the vice president of government affairs at the Environmental Working Group, an organization that scrutinizes agricultural practices. The impact many of these chemicals have is chronic: They accumulate over time, after a lot of tiny exposures. For example, the whitening agent titanium dioxide in soups and dairy products can build up in the body and even damage DNA. European countries take a much more precautionary approach to additives in their food, Benesh says. “If there are doubts about whether a chemical is safe or if there’s no data to back up safety, the EU is much more likely to put a restriction on that chemical or just not allow it into the food supply at all.” In the US, we’re more likely to see action at the state level. California banned four chemicals in 2023: brominated vegetable oil, Red Dye No. 3, propylparaben, and potassium bromate. This year, lawmakers in about a dozen states have introduced legislation banning those same chemicals and, in some states, additional chemicals as well. But federal oversight has been limited, constrained by priorities, authority, and by a lack of resources. There’s a new deputy commissioner of the FDA’s Human Foods Program, and there is some hope among advocates that could lead to changes in the administration’s approach. We reached out to the FDA, and a spokesperson said the agency needs more funding to expand its food oversight: “Prioritization and drive can only take us so far, and our current budget constraints will limit the number and speed of assessments.” Why do things operate differently in the US? And what does that mean for our food? We answer these questions in this week’s episode of Explain It to Me. Below is an excerpt of my conversation with Benesh, edited for length and clarity. You can listen to Explain It to Me on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or wherever you get podcasts. If you’d like to submit a question, send an email to askvox@vox.com or call 1-800-618-8545. How does approval for food ingredients work here in the US? We are also supposed to have a precautionary approach here. The legal standard is something called reasonable certainty of no harm. This includes acute harms, but also chronic harms. Like, “is this going to increase my risk of cancer if I eat it every day for the next 30 years?” When did these rules get put into place? How did they come to be? World War II was a period of rapid industrialization and the rise of convenience foods and frozen dinners. Lots of new substances were introduced into the food supply. The FDA realized that they didn’t really know much about these chemicals, and couldn’t assure Americans that they were safe. The FDA created what was meant to be a premarket approval process, meaning that the FDA looks at the chemical before it can ever be used in food, before consumers are ever exposed to it in their food. They created this system in 1958, but they did not include a “lookback provision” for foods already on the shelves. So we have a lot of chemicals that just haven’t been looked at and haven’t been given a meaningful review in decades. The other fundamental and, I think, frightening problem with our food chemical system in the US is that today most new chemicals coming onto the market aren’t being looked at by the FDA at all. Why is that? When Congress wrote the food chemical law, they included an exception for things that are generally recognized as safe, or GRAS. This was intended to be a narrow loophole, an exception for things that truly have general recognition of safety: things like spices or vinegar or flour or table salt. Rather than the FDA expending the time and the resources to do a full risk assessment of those chemicals before allowing them to be used in food, they could just say these are generally recognized as safe. What has happened over time is that loophole has really swallowed the entire process. [EWG] did an analysis in 2022, where we found that 99 percent of new food chemicals were exploiting this GRAS loophole. The FDA has created a voluntary notification process, so companies make this determination on their own whether the food qualifies for GRAS exemption, either through their own internal scientist or they can contract with an outside panel. It is up to them whether or not they want to tell the FDA that their chemical is GRAS. Why does America deal with this so differently? Why are other countries more precautionary and we’re not? One issue we have is that a lot of programs at the FDA, particularly drug programs, are funded by industry user fees. So they have to pay a fee if they’re trying to get a product approved by the FDA or registering it with the FDA. There’s no equivalent user fee for food chemicals. The FDA has a resource issue, and Congress has not appropriated the amount of funding that the FDA needs to do these chemical reviews. But I also think there has been a degree of inertia. I don’t think that there has been enough pressure on the FDA to take these food chemical reviews more seriously. A lot of leadership at the FDA — the former FDA commissioners, current FDA commissioners — have really come from more of a drug background than a food background. Sometimes the F in FDA is referred to as the “silent F.” Interestingly, the underlying law — the 1958 law — is a pretty good law. It’s not an issue of authority; I think it’s an issue of resources. But should that stop them from proactively identifying chemicals, taking a hard look at chemicals? No. And we have petitioned the FDA to look at particular chemicals, so that’s a good starting point. Do you think anything will change? There have been some changes in the last couple of years, I think, in response to a couple of pretty scathing exposés on the FDA food program. They did reorganize their food program, which took effect October 1. There is now an Office of Food Chemical Safety. The FDA recently had a public meeting about starting up a food chemical reassessment program where they would go back and look at food chemicals. There are things happening. I think there is a growing awareness within the agency that this is a problem. The new deputy commissioner for human foods is someone named Jim Jones, who was in charge of the pesticide review program and other chemical review program at the EPA for a long time. He understands chemical issues in a way that a lot of leadership at FDA historically has not. Bringing Jim Jones in is a really good step and very hopeful.
vox.com
This Is a Test
This is an election about elections.One of the two leading candidates in the race, Donald Trump, has not only demonstrated a long-running skepticism of rule of law; he is also the only president in American history to attempt to remain in office after losing an election. This election is a test: Can the American public resoundingly reject a man who has not merely been a chaotic extremist but has also attacked the American system of republican government itself?Less than four years ago, this question would have seemed preposterous—not because Trump’s antidemocratic impulses were any secret, but because they seemed to have ended his career. Trump summoned supporters to Washington, D.C., on January 6, 2021, the day that Congress was set to certify the election’s results. Then he instigated an assault on the Capitol, during which insurrectionists waged hand-to-hand combat against law-enforcement officers and sacked the seat of American democracy. They hunted for Speaker Nancy Pelosi and talked of hanging Vice President Mike Pence. Trump sat by for hours, watching the chaos on television and refusing to intervene.As the nation learned in the days and weeks after, the violence was only the climax of a long-running effort to steal the election. Even though Trump’s advisers understood that he had lost the election, he attempted a paperwork coup, pressuring state election officials to “find” votes and conjuring fake slates of electors to submit to Congress.[David A. Graham: Trump isn’t merely unhinged]By January 7, it seemed like it was all over for Trump. Even Senator Mitch McConnell, one of the canniest operators in American politics, thought so. “I feel exhilarated by the fact that this fellow finally, totally discredited himself,” he told a reporter. Polls backed that up: Americans were intensely repulsed by the riot, and they blamed Trump. He was banished from social-media platforms and, it appeared, public life.I warned on January 7 that the horror of the previous day would be whitewashed, but I had no idea how successful the effort would be. The road to impunity began with McConnell and his House counterpart, Kevin McCarthy, who had also fiercely criticized Trump. McCarthy traveled to Mar-a-Lago to make amends. McConnell, hoping that voters would do the work of banishing Trump without him having to take any personal risks, flinched from an impeachment conviction that could have barred Trump from running. For other Republicans, espousing election denial became a litmus test.President Joe Biden’s new attorney general, Merrick Garland, was determined not to appear too political, and the Justice Department was painfully slow to bring charges against Trump in connection with his election subversion; to this day, he has not been tried, and if he wins the election, he probably never will be.[David A. Graham: The paperwork coup]Trump exploited all of these failures to plot his comeback. Richard Nixon was forced to resign for offenses that paled in comparison with Trump’s. Even so, as Elizabeth Drew wrote in The Atlantic, Nixon devised a secret yearslong plan to restore himself to semi-respectability. Trump, by contrast, has shown no remorse, has not gone away, and stands a good chance of becoming president once again. He’s done so while embracing January 6. What he once insisted was a false flag by leftist agitators he now celebrates as patriotic and justified.So now the matter is before voters, every other safeguard having failed. Trump has abandoned none of his election denial. He has refused to acknowledge that Biden is the rightful president, despite Biden having won a resounding victory. Trump has discredited Americans’ faith in their own democracy, with consequences that will last for generations. He’s spent the past few weeks seeding doubt about another American election, even though he might win it.Democracy is a tough idea to get one’s arms around. It’s abstract, and until recently, it felt so deeply embedded in life in this country that, despite its failures, it could be treated as a given. When voters decide whom to support, they understandably sometimes focus on the more urgent questions directly in front of them—matters such as their standard of living, their rights, and their social structures. But the essence of the American system is not which path we take on these issues, but the procedures by which we decide. That fundamental idea is being put to the test today.
theatlantic.com
Taylor Swift loses it as DeAndre Hopkins has unique celebration for first Chiefs touchdown
DeAndre Hopkins’ second-quarter touchdown was Taylor Swift-approved.
nypost.com
2 killed, 4 wounded by Mexico's National Guard near U.S. border
Colombia's foreign ministry said that all of the victims were migrants who had been "caught in the crossfire."
cbsnews.com
Taylor Swift and Jason Kelce share sweet moment at Chiefs game after he defended her, Travis in ‘heated’ interaction
The retired Philadelphia Eagles player apologized on Monday night for smashing a college student's phone in a viral moment over the weekend.
nypost.com
People in Guam vote in another presidential race, hoping their voices will be heard
Even though Guam doesn't have a say in the presidential election, its citizens still come out and vote for the country they love.
npr.org
Elderly man forced to sleep on hospital floor in agony for 12 hours while waiting for stretcher
A great-grandad-of-two suffering from pneumonia resorted to sleeping on a hospital floor on top of his dressing gown during a 12-hour wait for a trolley.
nypost.com
Philadelphia DA warns anyone planning election interference: ‘F around and find out’
“Anybody who thinks it’s time to insult, to deride, to mistreat, to threaten people, F around and find out,” the DA said.
nypost.com
Iran-backed Iraqi militia attacks Haifa, Israel with drones
An Iran-backed Iraqi militia launched a drone attack against Haifa, a port city in northern Israel, early Tuesday, according to Iranian state media.
foxnews.com
Control of the White House and Congress rest on voters' decisions
NPR's Michel Martin talks to Democratic Rep. Suzan DelBene of Washington state, chair of the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee, about issues voters will consider Election Day.
npr.org
Mark Cuban admits his 'View' comments were a 'mistake' he 'apologized for'
The Daily Mail asked billionaire Mark Cuban about the ongoing backlash he’s received for claiming former President Trump is never around intelligent women.
foxnews.com
Election Day forecast: Heavy rain, record heat and snow could impact voters across US
As millions of Americans head to the polls, thunderstorms are forecast from the Great Lakes to the Gulf Coast, with the potential to cause inconveniences to voters.
abcnews.go.com
Elon Musk convinced Kamala Harris will ‘freaking shut down’ X if elected president
“There’s no way that the Kamala Harris puppet regime would allow X to exist,” the billionaire said during a lengthy sit-down on “The Joe Rogan Experience” podcast on Monday.
nypost.com
Democracy Is Unfortunately Not Essential to Economic Growth
The latest Nobel Prize in economics reinforces a comforting story that isn’t true.
theatlantic.com
Americans Who Want Out
Some liberals insist that they’re not joking this time: They are very scared, and very ready to leave the country if Donald Trump is reelected.
theatlantic.com
Mike Tindall reveals what he calls his mother-in-law, Princess Anne, at home
The former rugby player, who is married to Anne's daughter, Zara Tindall, opened up about life as a royal during an appearance on Good Morning Britain.
nypost.com
Kenyan man convicted of plotting 9/11-style attack on U.S.
A Kenyan man was convicted Monday of plotting a 9/11-style attack on a U.S. building on behalf of the terrorist organization al-Shabab,
cbsnews.com
How soccer helped shape Alexi Lalas' provocative political views
Alexi Lalas, once a bruising center back, looks at politics the same way he looks at soccer, as a contact sport in which you fight to the end, then shake hands.
latimes.com
Inside Morgan Moses’ role as crucial Jets anchor while managing painful injury
Credit Douglas for righting his wrong.
nypost.com
I’m a pediatrician — 5 products I detest including these pricey but ineffective medicines
A pediatric emergency medicine doctor says five common products aren't good for kids, and some can lead to new health issues like rashes.
nypost.com
Election security updates: Officials brace for Election Day under cloud of threats
Follow the latest election-related security issues and legal challenges.
abcnews.go.com