инструменты
Изменить страну:

The nightmare facing Democrats, even if Harris wins

Democratic presidential nominee Vice President Kamala Harris speaks to the media before boarding Air Force Two after assessing the Hurricane Helene recovery response in North Carolina on October 5, 2024, in Charlotte, North Carolina. | Mario Tama/Getty Images

Over the course of its last few terms, the Supreme Court has effectively placed itself in charge of the executive branch. 

It’s given itself an extra-constitutional veto power over virtually any policy decision made by a federal agency. Even when it ultimately rules in favor of President Joe Biden’s policies, it often sits on those cases for months, allowing a lower court order to suspend Biden’s programs for as much as a year. 

Meanwhile, the Court has done extraordinary favors for America’s only recent Republican president. Just look at the Republican justices’ decision to immunize former President Donald Trump from prosecution for criminal actions he committed while in office.

The president, in other words, is increasingly subordinate to the courts. Yet, as the judiciary seizes more and more power, the battle over who gets to shape it grows increasingly lopsided. 

Republicans enjoy an advantage in the Electoral College. Just how much is up for debate, but that advantage does mean that even if the American people hand Vice President Kamala Harris a modest victory in the popular vote this November, Donald Trump could still become president. He’d then get to nominate loyal Republican judges eager to implement his party’s agenda from the bench, much as he did during his first term.

Even if Harris wins by a large enough margin to overcome the Electoral College’s Republican bias, she still may not get to have much of an impact on the judiciary. Her presidency — and specifically her ability to name judges — is likely to be restricted by a Republican Senate. For Democrats to control even a tied 50-50 Senate, one in which Vice President Tim Walz would hold the deciding vote if Harris prevails, they must not just win in every single blue and swing state Senate race this year, but also Senate races in at least two of the red states of Ohio, Florida, Montana, and Texas. 

That could happen, but it would require the kind of unusually triumphant Democratic election year that the party hasn’t seen since at least 2008 and possibly not since President Bill Clinton’s landslide reelection victory in 1996. And that seems quite unlikely.

A Harris victory could halt America’s slide into a MAGA-dominated future but it is unlikely to give her the power to reshape the judiciary in the way Trump was able to during his first term.

The Electoral College and Senate malapportionment has completely warped the judiciary 

During the Biden administration, the Republican Supreme Court wielded its power aggressively. It greenlit abortion bans in numerous red states. It abolished affirmative action at nearly all universities. It has turned itself into a printing press for court orders benefiting the Christian right. It’s given itself sweeping veto power over literally anything done by a federal agency that should be controlled by the president. And then there was that whole affair where the Republican justices said that Donald Trump was allowed to commit crimes while he was in office.

Along the way, the Court has pulled new legal rules out of thin air, then used these newly invented rules to nullify many of Biden’s most ambitious programs.

If the American people had voted for this agenda then it would be difficult to criticize the Republican Party for pushing it. But the electorate did nothing of the sort.

After 2016, Trump was in a position to nominate three Supreme Court justices not because most Americans wanted him to be president but because enough Americans in the right places did. The Electoral College system means each American’s vote is not equal: Hillary Clinton, after all, won nearly 3 million more votes than Trump in 2016, but still lost the presidency.

Trump had a Republican Senate willing to put his choices on the bench because Republicans have an enduring advantage in the upper chamber, one that makes it more difficult for Democrats to control the Senate. Each state, regardless of population, gets two senators. 

These antidemocratic features of the US Constitution have been with the United States almost from the beginning, but they have an increasingly pronounced effect today, largely because the parties have sorted based on population density. People in cities and other densely populated areas tend to vote for Democrats, while outlying areas become more and more Republican as they become less dense. 

That means that a system that effectively gives extra representation to the most sparsely populated states will unfairly favor the Republican Party. In 2021, for example, when the Senate split evenly between Democrats and Republicans, the Democratic “half” represented nearly 42 million more people than the Republican “half.” 

Though the trend appears to be accelerating, this antidemocratic skew long predates the Trump presidency. Senate malapportionment has been one of the most consequential factors shaping US politics for decades. By some counts, if senators were distributed equally according to how the majority of Americans voted, Democrats would have controlled the Senate in every single year since the late 1990s.

In that world, Democrats not only may have enacted more significant legislation, they would also almost certainly control the courts. Obama would have confirmed a justice to fill the vacancy created when Justice Antonin Scalia died in Obama’s last year in office, and none of Trump’s nominees would have likely been confirmed.

Similarly, while Republicans probably would have still filled some Supreme Court seats during the 1990s and 2000s, it’s unlikely that they would have successfully confirmed an ideologue like Justice Clarence Thomas or an unapologetic GOP partisan like Justice Samuel Alito if Senate seats were distributed fairly by population. In a fair Senate, Republican presidents would have to negotiate with Democrats to choose moderate nominees in the vein of, say, Justices Lewis Powell and Sandra Day O’Connor.

That is to say, the impact of recent population sorting is felt acutely in the courts. In all of US history, only three justices were nominated by a president who lost the popular vote and confirmed by a bloc of senators who represent less than half of the nation’s populace. All three of them currently sit on the Supreme Court; they are Gorsuch, Brett Kavanaugh, and Amy Coney Barrett, Trump’s three appointees to the Court.

What a broken Senate means for a potential Harris administration 

In the event that Harris wins the presidency but Republicans capture the Senate, we only need to turn the clock back less than a decade to predict what is likely to happen.

Obama’s final two years in office were the only two when Republicans controlled the Senate. And shortly after Scalia’s death in February 2016, Senate Republicans announced that they would confirm no one Obama nominated to fill that seat. 

This vacancy should not be filled until we have a new president,” then-Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell announced at the time. (Four years later, when Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg’s death allowed Trump to fill a vacancy in the final months of his presidency, Republicans abandoned the position they adopted in 2016 and swiftly confirmed Trump’s nominee.)

The GOP’s blockade on Supreme Court confirmations should have surprised no one who watched the Senate closely because Senate Republicans had already imposed a near-total halt on all confirmations to federal appellate courts, powerful bodies that hand down precedential decisions that determine what the law is in multiple states at a time. In Obama’s last two years in office, he successfully appointed only two judges to the appellate bench, and one of these judges was confirmed to a highly specialized, relatively nonpolitical court that primarily deals with patent law.

By contrast, President George W. Bush confirmed 10 appellate judges during his last two terms in office, during a period when Democrats controlled the Senate.

Similarly, during Obama’s last two years in office, he appointed only 18 judges to federal district courts, the lowest rank of federal judge who enjoys a lifetime appointment. That compares to 58 judges during Bush’s final two years in office, according to data from the Federal Judicial Center. In Trump’s final two years in office, when Republicans controlled both the White House and the Senate, an astonishing 121 district judges were confirmed, including some infamously partisan judges like Aileen Cannon and Matthew Kacsmaryk

President Biden, for what it’s worth, has confirmed more than 200 judges thanks to Democrats’ narrow majority in the Senate, including a total of 116 since the current Congress took office. Over his entire presidency, he’s filled 44 appellate seats.

Without the power to confirm judges, Harris will have no way to dilute the influence of judges like Cannon or Kacsmaryk, and Republicans could easily refuse to confirm anyone to any judicial vacancy that comes open until the GOP regains the White House. Alternatively, Harris may be able to strike deals with Republicans to confirm a few of her preferred judges, but the GOP has a history of demanding a very high price to confirm even a single Democratic judge. 

In 2014, for example, thanks in part to a now-weakened Senate process that allowed senators to veto anyone nominated to a federal judgeship in their state, Georgia’s Republican senators convinced Obama to nominate four Republican judicial choices — including a Republican appellate judge — in return for confirming only two Democrats. One of the Republican nominees was eventually dropped because his views on abortion, marriage equality, and the Confederate Flag offended Democrats, but Republicans still walked away with more confirmed judges than Obama did. Harris could very well find herself in a similar situation. 

The problems for Harris likely wouldn’t stop there. Because Republicans continue to dominate the judiciary, Harris would likely spend her presidency watching her policies get struck down on dubious legal theories invented by GOP judges, much as the Supreme Court struck down President Biden’s student loan forgiveness policy despite the fact that it was unambiguously authorized by an act of Congress.

Democrats are starting to awaken to the threat of a Republican judiciary, but they haven’t yet found a solution to their constitutional problem

Absent constitutional reform, Democrats have good reason to fear a Republican judiciary for decades to come. A malapportioned Senate means that Democrats are increasingly defenseless against the GOP’s efforts to control the bench. In recent years, however, Democrats have become more aware of a GOP judiciary’s power to thwart their agenda and have started to try to explore ways around it. 

Historically, elected Republicans have viewed the courts as a favorable issue that rallies their base, while Democrats have behaved much more cautiously. Many Republicans credit Trump’s decision to delegate judicial selection to the Federalist Society, a bar association for right-wing lawyers, and to release a list of potential Supreme Court nominees during his 2016 candidacy, for giving him enough support to prevail in that year’s election.

Biden, by contrast, began his presidency very reluctant to take on the courts. After many Democrats called for Supreme Court reform in the wake of the Senate’s disparate treatment of the Scalia and Ginsburg vacancies, Biden tried to take the wind out of the sails of reform by promising to appoint a commission to study the issue — and then filling the commission with Republicans and scholars who historically have not supported reform.

But, as the Supreme Court’s polling numbers collapsed and as the Court outraged elected Democrats with opinions like its Trump immunity decision, Democrats have grown more aggressive. Biden proposed term-limiting the justices and imposing a binding ethics code on the Court, proposals also supported by Harris. Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-NY) has a bill that would strip the Court of jurisdiction to enforce its immunity decision.

One of the most ambitious recent Supreme Court reform proposals, from Sen. Ron Wyden (D-OR), includes a number of very aggressive reforms. Wyden’s proposal would make every justice submit to a tax audit each year, require a two-thirds supermajority for the Court to overrule an act of Congress, and gradually expand the size of the Court to 15 seats.

Yet, while these proposals show that Democrats are moving in a more court-skeptical direction than they were four years ago, they would not solve the structural problems with US democracy that gave us the courts we have today. And they have virtually no chance of passing, especially in a world where it is increasingly difficult for Democrats to win the Senate even when they convincingly win the national popular vote.

Realistically, turning the United States into a nation where every vote counts equally — and where each voter is actually able to shape the judiciary — would require rewriting its Constitution. Until that happens, Democrats like Harris will struggle to win elections even when most Americans support them. And Democratic presidents will increasingly be at the mercy of Republicans in both the Senate and the courts.


Читать статью полностью на: vox.com
Brian Daboll’s Giants seat is cool by suddenly tumultuous NFC East standards
The Giants coach is in good shape, as far as his relative security in the NFC East.
nypost.com
Francisco Alvarez has been the Mets’ missing postseason threat
Mets manager Carlos Mendoza sat at the dais in the bowels of Citi Field and expressed confidence that Francisco Alvarez will find his groove in the postseason.
nypost.com
Son writes hilarious, loving obituary for his dad: ‘He is God’s problem now’
“There are some people who might think it was irreverent and offensive, but I think it sounds about perfect,” Charles Boehm said of his father’s obituary.
washingtonpost.com
Freeze warning chills parts of NY, NJ, as winter-like weather cools tri-state area
This week's weather is set to send shivers down your spine as a freeze warning was issued for several counties in New Jersey and the Hudson Valley, while parts of Connecticut are under a frost advisory.
nypost.com
"Mysterious black balls" close 2 popular beaches in Australia
A local mayor says the balls littering two beaches in the Sydney area could be "tar balls," which form when spilled oil clumps together with debris in the water.
cbsnews.com
Meet D.C.’s new fire marshal, Ed Kauffman
Hours after three people died in a suspected arson, a new fire marshal assumed the office that investigates fires and enforces fire prevention.
washingtonpost.com
In Reston, Va., luxury townhouses with optional rooftop terraces
Buying New | Lake Anne Towns has 36 units
washingtonpost.com
Texas man faces execution despite doubts over shaken baby syndrome
Robert Roberson of Texas is scheduled to die by lethal injection despite doubts over shaken baby syndrome, the scientific theory used to convict him in the death of his daughter.
washingtonpost.com
PrizePicks Promo Code POSTMAX: Earn $50 Bonus for Dodgers-Mets with $5 entry on Wednesday
Sign up with PrizePicks promo code POSTMAX for Wednesday's action and get $50 instantly when you create a $5 entry.
nypost.com
Liberty know the ‘little details’ that will decide WNBA Finals
In a WNBA Finals tied 1-1, the Liberty have had trouble holding that lead late in both games. They hope to improve that in Game 3 Wednesday night.
nypost.com
Lilly Ledbetter’s Enduring Vision
Her willingness to challenge the status quo helped shape a new era in corporate responsibility, writes Marc Benioff.
time.com
Netflix Documentary Sweet Bobby Explores How a Woman Got Catfished by Her Cousin
A woman recalls being catfished in the Netflix documentary Sweet Bobby
time.com
Code 11.59 by Audemars Piguet adds 7 new pink-gold watches
The iconic model continues its evolution this year, expanding with seven new 18-karat pink-gold offerings.
nypost.com
Trump says Josh Allen was going to be No 1 pick in 2018 NFL Draft before social media posts surfaced
Former President Donald Trump said Josh Allen would have been the No. 1 overall pick in the 2018 NFL Draft if it were for offensive comments that surfaced.
foxnews.com
Meet the woman who teamed with Rolex to photograph the world
The Mexico native has spent over three decades traveling to more than 130 countries.
nypost.com
Aaron Judge makes the Yankees collapse-proof
The soon-to-be two-time MVP may have changed the trajectory of his playoff legacy with one swing.
nypost.com
Delta is giving its cabin interiors a new look. Here's a peek inside.
Delta says new seating materials and other cabin design enhancements "elevate the travel experience."
cbsnews.com
Fox News Host Faces MAGA Pile On for Harris Interview That Hasn’t Even Happened Yet
Dustin Franz/ AFP via Getty ImagesFox News anchor Bret Baier is fending off pre-emptive fire from Donald Trump's fans as he attempts to convince the MAGA-verse that his upcoming interview with Vice President Kamala Harris won’t be rigged.Following their familiar playbook, users on X claimed—without evidence, and this time before even seeing the interview—that the Special Report host planned to edit Wednesday’s interview tape to make the Democratic presidential candidate look better.Baier spent several hours Tuesday assuring MAGA users he hadn’t made any concession to Harris to land the interview and wouldn’t be giving her the questions in advance, but his explanations didn’t seem to get through.Read more at The Daily Beast.
thedailybeast.com
Details of iconic shipwreck revealed in never-before-seen footage
"Endurance" features thousands of 3D scans shot by a 4K camera deployed to a depth of nearly 10,000 feet.
cbsnews.com
Diddy Lawyers’ New Demand: His Accusers Must Be Named
Jerritt Clark/Getty for Epic RecordsFaced with a growing mountain of sex-abuse lawsuits, lawyers for Sean “Diddy” Combs would very much like to know who’s been saying what. The disgraced mogul’s team argues in a new court filing that, because of the “unique” aspects of the case—namely Diddy’s “celebrity status” and “wealth,” as well as the sheer volume of allegations—they should get to know the names of his accusers, The Guardian reports.His attorneys say the “torrent” of claims “by unidentified complainants, spanning from false to outright absurd,” has created a “pervasive ripple effect.” They reportedly gesture toward recent efforts by Texas lawyer Tony Buzbee to sign up alleged victims: Buzbee says at least 120 people have come to him with complaints about the rapper, and on Monday, his clients filed six anonymous sexual assault complaints. Diddy’s team wrote that “swirling allegations have created a hysterical media circus that, if left unchecked, will irreparably deprive Mr. Combs of a fair trial, if they haven’t already.”Read more at The Daily Beast.
thedailybeast.com
NFL's top brass agree finger-gun celebrations send 'the wrong messages'
NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell and league executive Troy Vincent agreed on Tuesday that there was "no place" for finger-gun celebrations in the sport.
foxnews.com
Travis Kelce had ‘mixed feelings’ while cuddling up with Taylor Swift at Yankees playoff game
Travis Kelce was torn during his Yankee Stadium outing with Taylor Swift.
nypost.com
Afghan national accused in terror plot was not vetted for SIV status, despite past Biden admin claims
The Biden-Harris administration has backtracked and now admits that an Afghan national accused of an Election Day terror plot did not undergo certain vetting they previously claimed he passed.
foxnews.com
Former Vegas Democrat politician convicted of killing reporter faces at least 20 years at sentencing hearing
Robert Telles, a former Las Vegas-area Democratic politician convicted of killing a journalist, could face up to 28 years in prison before he becomes eligible for parole.
foxnews.com
Rapper Lord Jamar says Kamala Harris isn’t qualified enough to run ‘Dunkin Donuts or a 7-11’
Lord Jamar suggested Kamala Harris "is not qualified to run, you know, a Dunkin Donuts or a 7-11, let alone the corporation that we call the United States of America."
nypost.com
Patek Philippe’s new royal purple Twenty~4 watch is fit for a queen
To celebrate its 25th anniversary, Patek Philippe has introduced a new rose-gold version with a (fittingly) royal-purple dial.
nypost.com
The Trump Loyalist Democrats Have a Chance to Defeat
Thanks to a bluer district and a formidable opponent, Pennsylvania Representative Scott Perry is now the nation’s most vulnerable MAGA Republican.
theatlantic.com
All in the family: Hart High has 10 sets of brothers playing football
Happening at Hart High is a sports anomaly: Ten sets of brothers are playing on the varsity and junior varsity football teams.
latimes.com
Melania Trump to release 'Collector's Edition' of memoir featuring images photographed by former first lady
EXCLUSIVE: Former First Lady Melania Trump is releasing a special collector’s edition of her new memoir containing exclusive images she photographed at the White House and around the world.
foxnews.com
The Sports Report: Can Shohei Ohtani fix his swing before Game 3?
Starting with an 0-for-4 performance in Game 5 against the Padres, Shohei Ohtani hasn’t looked like himself.
latimes.com
Is every car dealer trying to rip me off?
A Vox reader writes: “Why are car dealers so shady? How do consumers avoid them? Is it frustrating for everyone?” Americans have long hated the car-buying experience. It’s not uncommon to spend hours (or even the whole day) at a dealership, finally reaching a deal and still walking away feeling vaguely hoodwinked. “It’s a process that generally stinks, and it’s designed that way,” says Tom McParland, founder of Automatch Consulting, a service that helps car buyers find the best price on the vehicle they want. A lot of the distaste comes down to the uncertainty of what you’ll end up paying. In an age when you can buy almost anything online without interacting with another human being, where you can easily shop around for the best deal, cars remain one of the few purchases where your personal negotiation skills — as well as, sometimes, your race, gender, and income — can determine the price.  Sign up for the Explain It to Me newsletter The newsletter is part of Vox’s Explain It to Me. Each week, we tackle a question from our audience and deliver a digestible explainer from one of our journalists. Have a question you want us to answer? Ask us here. Sometimes, the tactics car salespeople use go beyond just the hard sell to the downright deceptive. One common trap is bait and switch prices, where a car is initially advertised as one price (usually achieved by piling on discounts that you may not qualify for). When you run to the dealership to snag the deal, you’re told the vehicle has already been sold but there’s a similar one that’s more expensive. Or take yo-yo sales, in which you drive your new car home only to be told a few days later that the financing fell through so you’ll have to accept a higher interest rate or make a bigger down payment. A dealer might also try to sneak unneeded add-ons — like extended warranties or protective coatings — onto the total price of the car. Last year, the Federal Trade Commission received more than 184,000 auto-related consumer complaints, making it the third most common category after complaints about credit bureaus, as well as banks and lenders. While there are some fair dealers, the car marketplace has “a lot of sharp and unethical business practices, and consumers are hurt by it,” says Chuck Bell, programs director of advocacy at Consumer Reports. “By the time that the consumer gets out the door, they feel like they’ve been doing battle.” Why is shopping for cars done this way? The first hint that you’re on unequal footing with a car salesperson comes when they’re cagey about giving a price quote even over the phone, let alone in writing. McParland says that the dealers he calls around to for clients often tell him that he has to come to the dealership for a price. “They’re basically just telling us to go pound sand,” he says. Dealers want you to come in because it’s much easier to upsell you that way. You’ve invested some effort into the process, and the salesperson can get a better read on how impatient you are to buy a car, how inexperienced you are with car shopping, and plenty of other factors to wield to their advantage. On the other hand, if they offer you an out-the-door price — which includes all extras and fees — before you ever meet in person, you could easily take the price to a competing dealer and ask if they can do better. While online used car dealers like CarMax and Carvana did make “no haggle” car prices more popular, they often come at a premium, according to McParland. Some traditional car dealers now offer fixed prices too, but it’s probably to your benefit to try to negotiate down. How did the system get to be like this? The general practice of negotiating car prices instead of paying a fixed price may actually stem from horse trading, in which sellers and buyers also haggled and buyers would even trade in their old horse to offset the price of the new one, much as we do with cars today.  The model has endured for so long, though, in part thanks to state franchise laws that ensure these middlemen car dealerships can’t be easily cut out. Most states ban carmakers from selling directly to consumers. Tesla is the rare exception of a car company that sells directly, and it has battled with car dealers for the right to do so. Car dealer trade groups have considerable political power, and they’re organized enough and deep-pocketed enough to lobby against reforms that would threaten the status quo, such as changing franchise laws that give them exclusive rights to sell a certain car brand in a particular territory. The National Automobile Dealers Association (NADA), for its part, argues that franchise laws in fact increase competitiveness and benefit the consumer, all the while creating local jobs. “They’re an enormously powerful lobby,” says Bell. Just look at how the industry pushed back against enforcement curtailing auto lending discrimination. Car dealers often arrange financing for customers, but they add a mark-up to the interest rate offered by banks because they can pocket that extra money for themselves. How much of a mark-up is applied is at the dealer’s discretion, and unlike mortgage lenders, they’re not required to collect data on the race of their customers, making it much harder to see if they’re complying with fair lending laws. Research shows that car dealers often charge higher interest rates to people of color. When the Consumer Finance Protection Bureau started cracking down on this practice in 2013, the industry fought back and won. Is there any hope for making the car-buying process better? Still, there’s reason to be optimistic about the future of shopping for cars. Late last year, the FTC announced new regulation that takes aim at the most rampant deceptive practices used by car dealers. It would, for one, require dealers to disclose the full, out-the-door price of a car, including all add-ons, before a customer visits the dealership. The price and other terms related to purchase of the car also have to be expressed in simple language. Dealers also wouldn’t be allowed to charge customers for useless add-ons. The FTC estimates the rule will save customers $3.4 billion and cut down the time spent shopping for cars by 72 million hours. The rule was supposed to go into effect this summer but was delayed after two car dealer trade groups, including NADA, filed a challenge. The association told Vox that the rule would make the car-buying experience worse. “Consumers will have to spend an additional 60-80 minutes at the dealership, complete up to five new, untested forms, and will lose at least $1.3 billion a year in time as a result of this rule,” a spokesperson wrote in an email. But Bell is confident that the rule will ultimately go into effect, and if you’re looking for a car, you should behave as though these protections already apply. McParland advises asking dealers to provide, over email, an “itemized out-the-door price” on the vehicle you’re interested in. If they refuse, “that’s usually a red flag, so move on to somebody else,” he says. This story was featured in the Explain It to Me newsletter. Sign up here. For more from Explain It to Me, check out the podcast. New episodes drop every Wednesday.
vox.com
Bryan Danielson’s jarring end to full-time career was change AEW needed
The jarring end to Bryan Danielson’s full-time career shows how much he cares. As the American Dragon was stretchered out of the Tacoma Dome in his home state of Washington to end AEW’s WrestleDream pay-per-view on Saturday, he had just completed one of the most giving ends to a career as we have seen in...
nypost.com
Fanatics Sportsbook Promo: Begin 10-day $1,000 bet match offer on Dodgers-Mets in NLCS, any sport
Sign up with the Fanatics Sportsbook promo to bet on the Los Angeles Dodgers vs. the New York Mets on Wednesday. Once you register, you can start claiming a $100 bet match for 10 straight days.
nypost.com
Zelensky Pitches ‘Victory Plan’ in Ukraine’s Parliament
The proposal would rely heavily on increased Western assistance. So far, it has drawn a lukewarm response from Ukraine’s allies.
nytimes.com
Fuel tanker truck explosion kills at least 94 in Nigeria
Dozens of people in northern Nigeria were killed in a massive explosion as they tried to scoop up fuel from a crashed tanker truck.
cbsnews.com
London Jewelers hosts annual Watch Fair extravaganza, showcasing rare timepieces from top brands
This year’s crop of luxury watches takes inspiration from decades past.
nypost.com
Young migrants tied to 'shocking' increase in gang-led crime in NYC's Times Square, says NYPD
Twenty gang members have been arrested in connection to 50 separate crimes in New York City as officials warn of a lack of consequences.
foxnews.com
‘This Is Us’ alum Justin Hartley dishes on new season of ‘Tracker,’ his watch collection and parenthood
Star Justin Hartley became the king of prime time playing a guy who finds those people — often, for a hefty reward fee.
nypost.com
Sean "Diddy" Combs seeking release of names of his accusers
Lawyers for Sean 'Diddy' Combs have asked a New York judge to force prosecutors to disclose the names of his accusers in his sex trafficking case.
cbsnews.com
High school senior shot, killed in apparent murder-suicide on the way to homecoming dance: cops
A high school senior was shot and killed in an apparent murder-suicide by her older DJ boyfriend while they were on the way to her homecoming dance in Louisiana, officials said.
nypost.com
Harris and Trump make separate pitches to voters on FOX News and more top headlines
Get all the stories you need-to-know from the most powerful name in news delivered first thing every morning to your inbox.
foxnews.com
How TIME Chose Its Fall 2024 Class of Next Generation Leaders
For nearly a decade, through our Next Generation Leaders franchise, we've been sharing the stories of trailblazers shaping our future.
time.com
Connecticut dad dies from rare mosquito-borne virus he caught in his own backyard – and cases are on the rise
"I'm not joking when I say your life can change in the blink of an eye, because that was what happened to us," his grieving daughter said.
nypost.com
AOC fires back at Fetterman, accuses him of 'bleak dunk attempt'
Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez fired back, accusing Sen. John Fetterman of a 'bleak dunk attempt' after he shared a screenshot of a headline mentioning her.
foxnews.com
From mobsters to mulch: Inside Queens’ only certified public ‘tree museum’ and its gangster past
This Queens park has been totally spruced up.
nypost.com
How pre-election rhetoric could fuel post-presidential election pandemonium
As much as I want this presidential election to be over, I'm afraid of what comes next.
latimes.com
'Our opponents are going to need oxygen': UCLA reveals depth, pressure in scrimmage
These Bruins are deeper, more talented and feistier than the freshman-heavy bunch that finished with a losing record last season.
latimes.com
The crusade against overhead lighting
Mariah Carey issued the latest salvo against the “hideous” lighting from the big light. But there is a way to do overhead lighting right.
washingtonpost.com