United States elections 2024


Republican House panel subpoenas Gov. Walz in investigation of Minnesota nonprofit that ran a Covid aid scheme​

The group Feeding Our Future faces federal criminal charges that it created fake children's names to seek reimbursements for meals that were never served.
Image: Tim Walz politics political politician

The subpoena comes as Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz campaigns as the Democratic vice presidential nominee.Andrew Harnik / Getty Images file


Sept. 4, 2024, 12:01 PM EDT / Updated Sept. 4, 2024, 5:28 PM EDT
By Kyle Stewart
WASHINGTON — The House Education and Workforce Committee issued subpoenas Wednesday to Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz, the Minnesota Department of Education and the U.S. Department of Agriculture for how they responded to what federal prosecutors have called the largest pandemic fraud schemes in the country.

The subpoenas, obtained first by NBC News, demand that Walz, Minnesota Commissioner of Education Willie Jett, U.S. Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack and Agriculture Inspector General Phyllis Fong turn over documents concerning oversight of the nonprofit Feeding Our Future, which is alleged to have misused millions of dollars intended to feed children during the pandemic.


Walz's record has faced new scrutiny since Vice President Kamala Harris tapped him as her running mate last month, though this new request by the Republican-led committee is part of an investigative effort that goes back to 2022.

Rep. Virginia Foxx, R-N.C., the committee chair, wrote in a letter to Walz that the committee is requesting this information to show "the extent of your responsibilities and actions addressing the massive fraud that resulted in the abuse of taxpayer dollars intended for hungry children."

A Walz spokeswoman called the alleged fraud "an appalling abuse of a federal COVID-era program," adding: “The state department of education worked diligently to stop the fraud and we’re grateful to the FBI for working with the department of education to arrest and charge the individuals involved.”

According to a June state audit report, the Minnesota Education Department failed to properly oversee Feeding Our Future, saying the department's "actions and inactions created opportunities for fraud."

State education officials are tasked with overseeing federal programs that reimburse groups like Feeding Our Future for providing free, nutritious meals to children. The state audit called the Minnesota Education Department's oversight "inadequate."


Jett, the top education official, submitted a written response to the report that put the blame on the individuals involved in the scheme. “What happened with Feeding Our Future was a travesty — a coordinated, brazen abuse of nutrition programs that exist to ensure access to healthy meals for low-income children," he wrote. "The responsibility for this flagrant fraud lies with the indicted and convicted fraudsters.”

Following the report, Walz said there was no “malfeasance” at the state level. “There’s not a single state employee that was implicated in doing anything that was illegal,” Walz said at a press conference in June according to The Minnesota Star Tribune. “They simply didn’t do as much due diligence as they should have.”

In December 2022, Walz announced the addition of an inspector general position at the state department of education, “a critical step to ensuring proper oversight of federal funds,” he said in a statement at the time.

Prosecutors allege that Feeding Our Future opened more than 250 sites throughout Minnesota and submitted fraudulent attendance rosters of the names of fake children they claimed were receiving the meals.

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The U.S. Justice Department has charged 70 individuals in connection to the scheme. Eighteen have pleaded guilty and five were convicted in June.

The state education department reported Feeding Our Future to the FBI in April 2021 on fraud suspicions, according to the audit. The FBI started an investigation the next month.

Prior to that, the education department had notified the USDA inspector general’s office in the fall of 2020 during President Donald Trump's administration about concerns over the growth of Feeding Our Future but the agency did not take action, the audit said.

Foxx, along with the Republican leaders of the House Oversight and Accountability Committee and the Agriculture Committee, first requested documents from the U.S. Agriculture Department in September 2022 after federal charges were unsealed in the case concerning Feeding Our Future. At that point, Republicans were in the minority in the House so they did not control committees.

Once in the majority in 2023, Foxx and her fellow committee chairs followed up with USDA. The group of Republicans also requested documents from Jett in June.

Foxx said in letters accompanying the subpoenas that both the USDA's and the Minnesota Education Department's "production of information has been neither timely nor fully responsive."

The top Democrat on the committee criticized the timing of the subpoena and noted in a timeline that it marks the first public outreach to Walz by Republicans. “The timing of the Republican’s subpoena to Governor Walz is weird,” Rep. Bobby Scott, D-Va., said.

Walz and the state and federal officials have until Sept. 18 to provide the requested documents, according to the subpoenas, though none of them are required to testify.

NBC News has reached out to all of the individuals subpoenaed for comment.
 

Harris trails Biden, Clinton vs. Trump at this stage of race​

by Amie Parnes - 09/05/24 6:00 AM ET
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Vice President Harris, for all her momentum since becoming the Democratic presidential nominee, is behind where President Biden and Hillary Clinton stood at this point in their own battles against former President Trump during the 2020 and 2016 presidential races.

Harris is outpacing Trump in national polls kept by the FiveThirtyEight political website with 47 percent support to 44 percent with 62 days to go before the election.


But Biden had a bigger lead by that measurement in 2020. He was ahead of then-President Trump by 7 points, 50 percent to 43 percent, at this point in the 2020 race, according to FiveThirtyEight.

Clinton, running in 2016 at the end of former President Obama’s second term in office, was ahead of Trump with 42 percent support to 38 percent, according to the same data, at this stage of that race.

The RealClearPolitics polling average shows a similar trend to the one from FiveThirtyEight.

Its polling average has Harris ahead of Trump nationally by 2 points.

But at this point in 2020, Biden was ahead of Trump by 7 points — 49 percent support to 42 percent. In 2016, the RealClearPolitics national average of polls also showed Clinton ahead of Trump with 46 percent support to his 42 percent.

Harris is also trailing among some key demographics in comparison to where Biden stood when he defeated Trump in 2020.


While Harris has shown polling gains among Black voters since becoming the Democratic standard-bearer, a Suffolk University poll released Tuesday found her winning a big margin, but a smaller one than those enjoyed by Biden and Clinton.

The poll, which surveyed 1,000 likely voters, found Harris winning 76 percent of the Black vote compared to 12 percent for Trump. But a similar survey conducted by Suffolk in early September 2020 showed Biden with 82 percent of support from Black voters compared to 4 percent for Trump. During the same time period in 2016, Suffolk revealed that Clinton had an 88-point lead among Black voters over Trump, 92 percent to 4 percent.

Similarly, a Reuters/Ipsos poll released this week showed Harris with a 13-point lead over Trump with Hispanic voters. In 2020, a Quinnipiac University poll taken after both the Democratic and Republican conventions showed Biden leading Trump with 56 percent support to 36 percent among Hispanic voters. A Quinnipiac poll from 2016 reported that those voters backed Clinton 50-33 percent.


Scott Tranter, the director of data science at Decision Desk HQ, said the polling highlights that “it’s not in the bag” for Harris.

“She’s had a great six weeks,” Tranter said of Harris. “I’d rather be her than him but I’m not betting the house.”

To be sure, Harris has seen her number bounce up with some groups, and she is in a much better position than President Biden was before he dropped out of the race and endorsed his vice president.


An ABC/Ipsos survey released this week, for example, showed that Harris is leading Trump with 54 percent support to 41 percent among women, the same percentage Clinton received according to exit polls in 2016. Before the Democratic Party gathered in Chicago last month, Harris was up by 6 points with women.

Exit polls in 2020 showed that women supported Biden over Trump 57 percent to 42 percent.

Biden was trailing Trump in the seven swing states likely to determine the election’s winner. Since entering the race, Harris has closed those gaps, making Nevada, Arizona, Georgia and North Carolina competitive. Some polls have had her ahead in Michigan, Wisconsin and Pennsylvania.


Polling averages for those three states kept by Decision Desk HQ and The Hill show Harris with the lead, though it is close. In Pennsylvania, she leads by only seven-tenths of a percentage point in the polling average.

While Harris didn’t see a bounce coming out of the Democratic National Convention, the increasing support from women shown in polls has energized some in the party.

“Harris seems to still be on an upward trajectory, and she’s already ahead nationally and in most battlegrounds,” said Democratic strategist Christy Setzer. “I’ll take it!”


“There’s plenty of time to get to and surpass Biden’s 2020 performance,” she added.

Democratic strategist Basil Smikle, who served as the executive director of the New York State Democratic Party, said Harris still has time to better her standing.

“She can make up some of this ground,” Smikle said, adding that both Clinton and Biden were “known quantities” to the electorate. “It’s a difficult but not insurmountable challenge.”


He said one of the most striking metrics — to counter the comparison of Harris’s standing with that of her Democratic predecessors — has been the sheer volume of fundraising, much of which has come from a significant population of first-time donors who are looking to be part of a movement.

“There’s a willingness not only to get to know her but to also be a part of something that is bigger than her,” he said.

Still, Smikle said the campaign has done a good job at managing expectations, with two months to go until Election Day.

“It’s important to maintain almost an underdog status” in the remaining weeks of the campaign, he said.

Democratic strategist and pollster Fernand Amandi said Harris “has performed so flawlessly” in recent weeks. Still, he called the polling comparisons “troubling.”

“The fact that Trump has been in self-sabotage, worst-candidate-ever mode and the polls still are as close as they are, is remarkable,” Amandi said. “If any Democrat says they’re not concerned between now and Nov. 5th, they’re lying.”

Brett Samuels contributed
 

CNN political director warns of 'trouble sign for Harris' as she lags with White male voters in key states​

Chalian also noted that Harris 'is not doing well with White college-educated voters' in Georgia​

By Alexander Hall Fox News
3 min read|Published September 5, 2024 9:42am EDT
CNN political director highlights 'trouble sign' for Harris with White voters in new pollVideo

CNN political director highlights 'trouble sign' for Harris with White voters in new poll

CNN political director David Chalian spoke about the racial divide between the two presidential candidates as non-college educated White voters overwhelmingly support former President Trump.
New CNN polling Wednesday showed Vice President Kamala Harris is struggling to win over non-college-educated White men in six battleground states, which one analyst said could spell "trouble."

"Harris has the advantage in Michigan and Wisconsin, Trump has the advantage in Arizona, and then there‘s the proof of just how close the race is 60-plus days out," CNN host Kate Bolduan said. "They’re essentially tied in the key battlegrounds, Nevada, Georgia and Pennsylvania."

Digging into the numbers, CNN political director David Chalian discussed what the polls indicate along the lines of race and education.


"If you look at the White voters without college degrees, this is a Trump base constituency, obviously. You see his huge numbers with this group, you see that this is a trouble sign for Harris," Chalian said. "She also in places like Georgia is not doing well with White college-educated voters. She probably wants to make up some ground with White college-educated voters across these battlegrounds as well."

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Chalian speaks about a poll

CNN political director David Chalian spoke about the stark racial and gender gaps among support for either candidate. (Screenshot/CNN)
By contrast, the CNN political director also noted how Black voters overwhelmingly support Harris.

"Well, if you take a look here among Black voters where we over-sampled, you know, and able to look at the Black voting population in three of the states, Michigan, Georgia, and Pennsylvania, take a look here. Eighty-six percent of Black voters in Michigan are with Harris, 11% with Trump," Chalian said. "Eighty-five percent in Georgia, 84% of Black voters support with Pennsylvania.

"I just want to note that in Pennsylvania, in 2020, Joe Biden, according to exit polls, his number among Black voters was 92%, so there‘s still room here for Harris to grow and consolidate the Black vote, which is going to be necessary if she is going to win in places like Georgia and Pennsylvania, which are clearly in play here and toss-up races."

Trump Harris split image

The 2024 election continues to be a tight race, revealing salient divides among voters in terms of both race and gender. (Getty Images)
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Chalian also commented on the stark gender gap in polls.


"Among female likely voters in these states, you see, this is a 17-percentage point lead and Wisconsin among female voters for Harris, a 16% percentage point lead in Michigan, you see it gets more narrowed down here in Arizona," he said.

But the "flip side," Chalian said, is with male voters who support Trump.

"You‘ve seen Donald Trump‘s advantage, very significant with male voters. Eighteen points in Nevada, 15-point advantage in Pennsylvania," he said. "That‘s the gap when we talk about the gender gap. Harris’ advantage with women in addition to Trump‘s advantage with men and who wins that battle, who extends that advantage, could have a lot to say in these battleground states."

Harris, Trump campaign in key swing states as polls indicate the race is 'neck and neck'Video
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"An important gut check for both campaigns and on multiple levels in multiple states is what’s coming out here," the news host concluded.
 

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