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WASHINGTON — The Democratic National Committee will move forward with the process to formally nominate a presidential candidate Wednesday when one of its committees meets in public amid ongoing efforts to set up a virtual roll call vote ahead of the convention, States Newsroom has been told. The nomination process has been playing out for months as the DNC committees with jurisdiction have been meeting to iron out the details for a virtual roll call. The need for a virtual roll call was triggered by deadlines in Ohio and some other states that required the political parties to have their nominee certified before or during the Democratic National Convention, scheduled to take place from Aug.

19 to Aug. 22. Following President Joe Biden’s decision to withdraw from the race and endorse Vice President Kamala Harris, the co-chairs of the DNC Rules Committee announced that it will be the panel’s “responsibility to implement a framework to select a new nominee, which will be open, transparent, fair, and orderly,” according to an individual familiar with their statement.



The committee is scheduled to meet publicly from 2 to 5 p.m. Eastern time Wednesday.

The meeting will be live-streamed on the DNC’s YouTube page. DNC Rules Committee co-chairs Bishop Leah D. Daughtry and Minnesota Gov.

Tim Walz said the “process presented for consideration will be comprehensive, it will be fair, and it will be expeditious,” according to an individual close to the process who was not authorized to speak publicly. Kansas Reflector is part of States Newsroom, a nonprofit news network supported by grants and a coalition of donors as a 501c(3) public charity. Kansas Reflector maintains editorial independence.

Contact Editor Sherman Smith for questions: [email protected] . Follow Kansas Reflector on Facebook and X .

President Joe Biden was scheduled to have a second 2024 presidential debate with GOP nominee Donald Trump in September. But with Biden having dropped out of the race and endorsing Vice President Kamala Harris for president, that won’t be happening. If another presidential debate occurs in 2024, it might be a Harris/Trump debate — that is, if Democrats choose her as the nominee.

And she is already lining up a lot of endorsements. But according to MSNBC's Steve Benen , Trump appears reluctant to debate Harris if Democrats nominate her. READ MORE : Can Kamala win? On Truth Social, Trump posted , "Now that Joe has, not surprisingly, quit the race, I think the Debate, with whomever the Radical Left Democrats choose, should be held on FoxNews, rather than very biased ABC.

Thank you! DJT." That post, Benen stresses , is quite a contrast to how eager Trump was to debate Biden. "When it came to a possible debate against Biden," Benen wrote, "Trump said, 'ANYTIME, ANYWHERE, ANYPLACE.

' When it comes to a possible debate against Harris, Trump's message is noticeably different . What's more, Politico reported overnight, 'One GOP source tells me he doubts Trump will debate Vice President Kamala Harris — he'll likely call her an illegitimate candidate.'" Benen adds , "In fairness, it's worth emphasizing that Jason Miller, a senior member of the former president’s campaign team, told NBC News that there will 'definitely' be another debate.

Whether his boss ends up agreeing remains to be seen." READ MORE : Kentucky's Andy Beshear 'auditions' for Kamala Harris' running mate Steve Benen's full MSNBC column is available at this link . CONTINUE READING Show less Paris (AFP) – As nations come together in Paris to celebrate peaceful competition, sports powerhouse Russia will be an Olympic outcast after being shunned over its Ukraine assault and will not even broadcast the Games.

For over two decades under Vladimir Putin, Russia has sought to burnish its international prestige through sport, but the 2024 Summer Games will be seen as the lowest point in its Olympic history, with just a tiny squad of 15 neutral athletes representing Moscow. In response to Russia's invasion of Ukraine, the International Olympic Committee banned Russia from competing as a team. The few sportspeople allowed to come cannot wear Russian team colours and will have no anthem.

Russian television has no plans to broadcast the Games, which begin on Friday, in the first such blackout since the Soviet Union shunned the 1984 Los Angeles Olympics. "Russia will be reduced to a shadow of itself at the Paris Games," said Jules Boykoff, a US-based academic who studies the Olympics. "The journey from Olympic powerhouse to pariah has been swift and striking.

" Ukraine's athletes have been told by their chiefs to avoid Russians in Paris as Moscow presses ahead with its offensive on the battlefield and kills civilians with aerial strikes. Over 450 Ukrainian sportspeople have been killed as a result of the assault. 'Understatement of Olympian proportions' Moscow has been violating the Olympic protocol for years.

In 2008, Russia broke the Olympic truce by launching a short but bloody war against Georgia. In 2016, Moscow's massive state-sponsored doping scheme came to light. According to a whistleblower, it involved agents of the FSB security service helping switch dirty urine samples at the Sochi Winter Games in 2014.

As punishment for Russia, its athletes competed in the 2018 Games in Pyeongchang, the Tokyo Games in 2021 and the Beijing Winter Olympics in 2022 under a neutral flag. In the absence of the Russian flag, the country's athletes still performed well. Over 330 athletes from Russia competed in Tokyo, taking home 71 medals including 20 golds.

The Beijing Games were barely over when Putin invaded Ukraine in February 2022, and the International Olympic Committee's patience finally snapped. Athletes from Russia and its ally Belarus were banned from world sport, but the IOC has said Russian athletes can compete in Paris as long as they do not support the Kremlin's war against Ukraine or have any links to the army. The Russian athletes will be excluded from the opening ceremony on the Seine.

Moscow says such moves are "unprecedented" discrimination and some of the sportspeople cleared by the IOC have turned down the chance to take part in Paris. "To say that the relationship between the International Olympic Committee and Russia has deteriorated is to make an understatement of Olympian proportions," said Boykoff. - 'Nothing to see' - Just 15 Russians have accepted the invitation, seven of them tennis players including this year's men's Wimbledon semi-finalist Daniil Medvedev and 17-year-old sensation Mirra Andreeva.

The other eight will take part in cycling, swimming, canoe and trampoline competitions. Russian wrestlers and judokas will boycott the event. The Olympics have been a polarizing issue at home.

Some sports officials have called the athletes who are going to Paris "traitors" and a "team of bums", while others say they are "heroes." Russia has said it wants to stage an alternative to the Olympics dubbed the Friendship Games, and not a single Russian TV channel said it would broadcast the action from Paris. The pro-Kremlin tabloid Komsomolskaya Pravda said it had conducted a poll showing 87 percent of respondents were not interested in watching anyway.

"Without Russia these are not Olympics, so there's nothing to see there," the newspaper quoted one reader as saying. Sports commentator Mikhail Polenov decried the "political" boycott. "The fact that Russian TV channels will not show the Olympics is a national disaster," he told independent newspaper Novaya Gazeta Europe.

Veteran sports commentator Alexander Shmurnov told AFP claims that Russians were not interested in Olympic broadcasts were "lies." "A huge number of people in Russia would love to watch the Olympics," said Shmurnov, who quit state-controlled channel Match TV and left the country after the invasion. He said he would provide commentary of the Games on his YouTube channel.

He said many Russian athletes were "suffering" from growing isolation due to the Kremlin's politics. "A majority of Russian sportspeople are not warriors of the propaganda forces," he said. Global Rights Compliance, a Hague-based group, says two-thirds of the small group of Russian Olympians have expressed support for the war or had links to the military.

But Shmurnov said that, in current circumstances, even a Russian athlete's willingness to show up in Paris was nothing short of a positive "political act". "Sport is the antithesis of war," he said. "Sport is peace.

" CONTINUE READING Show less An overly confident Trump team indulged in a campaign luxury that could prove a critical liability on election night, a new political analysis contends. Former President Donald Trump's campaign is seriously concerned about running mate Sen. J.

D. Vance (R-OH) now that President Joe Biden has opted to step aside from the 2024 election, the Atlantic reported Monday. "The selection of Ohio Senator J.

D. Vance as Trump’s running mate, campaign officials acknowledged, was something of a luxury," writes staff writer Tim Alberta, "meant to run up margins with the base in a blowout rather than persuade swing voters in a nailbiter." ALSO READ: ‘Creepy weirdos’: Senator fears Trump WH staff would destroy government from ‘inside’ Trump's supporters were shocked that Biden chose to abide the calls from his own party that he step aside from the election after a disastrous debate performance raised concerns about his age, according to the report.

The reasoning was reportedly based on an old ethnic stereotype. "More than anything," Alberta writes, "Trump’s allies believed that the president’s stubborn Irish ego wouldn’t let him back out of a fight with a man he despised." Conservative confidence fueled a manic energy at the Republican National Convention where Vance mounted the stage and claimed his party's nomination for vice president, Alberta writes.

But Republicans optimistic that their winning streak would run from July through November were met with a brutal check when Biden stepped aside. "In many ways, the convention scene was one of a party peaking too early," writes Alberto. "With Biden appearing to dig in, they left Milwaukee believing that this run of luck might never end.

The president’s abrupt exit dashed any such fantasy." Now Republicans are fretting about the prospect that Vice President Kamala Harris will take the reigns and claim as her running mate someone who can deliver what Vance cannot — undecided voters in powerful swing states, the Atlantic article concludes. "For a campaign that went to bed Saturday believing it would dictate the terms of the election every day until November 5, Sunday brought an unfamiliar feeling of powerlessness," Alberta writes.

"For the first time in a long time, Trump does not control the narrative of 2024." CONTINUE READING Show less.

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