Tag Archives: nomination

Trump, Biden could clinch 2024 nomination after today’s Republican and Democratic primaries in Washington, Georgia, Mississippi – CBS News

  1. Trump, Biden could clinch 2024 nomination after today’s Republican and Democratic primaries in Washington, Georgia, Mississippi CBS News
  2. Locking it up: Trump, Biden, expected to clinch GOP, Democrat presidential nominations in Tuesday’s primaries Fox News
  3. Election 2024 live updates: Trump, Biden could clinch nominations in today’s primaries The Washington Post
  4. Fact-Checking Donald Trump’s Super Tuesday Speech The New York Times
  5. Biden and Trump could clinch nominations in Tuesday’s contests, ushering in general election The Associated Press

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Danielle Brooks Has an Oscar Nomination. So Why Is She in Mourning? – The New York Times

  1. Danielle Brooks Has an Oscar Nomination. So Why Is She in Mourning? The New York Times
  2. Danielle Brooks, America Ferrera and More Oscar-Nominated Actresses Reflect on Roles Celebrating Female Resilience: ‘It Was a Reminder to Me That I Can Weather the Storm’ Variety
  3. Oscar and Bafta nominee Danielle Brooks on The Color Purple, fair pay and typecasting: ‘We are more than just sassy Black women’ The Independent
  4. ‘The Color Purple’ Star Danielle Brooks’ Top 5 | A.frame A.frame
  5. Oscar nominee and Simpsonville native Danielle Brooks Greenville News

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‘The Color Purple’s Danielle Brooks On Earning The Film’s “Bittersweet” Solo Oscar Nomination & Life On The ‘Minecraft’ Set With Jennifer Coolidge – Deadline

  1. ‘The Color Purple’s Danielle Brooks On Earning The Film’s “Bittersweet” Solo Oscar Nomination & Life On The ‘Minecraft’ Set With Jennifer Coolidge Deadline
  2. Niecy Nash-Betts congratulates ‘real cousins’ Sterling K. Brown and Danielle Brooks on their Oscar nominations CNN
  3. 2024 Oscar Nominations: First-Time Nominees Known For TV Roles TVLine
  4. Danielle Brooks, Lily Gladstone talk to TODAY about Oscar noms TODAY with Hoda & Jenna
  5. Upstate actress nominated for Oscar for supporting role in ‘The Color Purple’ WSPA 7News

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Gov. Josh Shapiro reportedly pulls Dr. Debra Bogen’s nomination for secretary of health – CBS Pittsburgh

  1. Gov. Josh Shapiro reportedly pulls Dr. Debra Bogen’s nomination for secretary of health CBS Pittsburgh
  2. Gov. Josh Shapiro withdraws nomination of Debra Bogen as Pa. health secretary Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
  3. Gov. Josh Shapiro quietly recalls pick for Pennsylvania Department of Health secretary The Philadelphia Inquirer
  4. Three Shapiro Cabinet nominees to assume their positions without a confirmation vote PennLive
  5. Inside Pennsylvania DEP’s efforts to cut red tape on environmental permitting – Pittsburgh Business Times The Business Journals
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Oscars 2023: The Academy lets Andrea Riseborough keep her nomination

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The matter is finally settled: Andrea Riseborough will be allowed to keep her Oscar nomination.

Following a week of controversy, the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences met Tuesday to assess whether the intense social media campaign contributing to Riseborough’s surprising best-actress nod for “To Leslie,” a little-seen independent film, abided by the organization’s guidelines. While the Academy didn’t find reason to rescind the nomination, it found fault with unspecified “social media and outreach campaigning tactics” and announced it would address those concerns with the responsible parties.

“Given this review, it is apparent that components of the regulations must be clarified to help create a better framework for respectful, inclusive, and unbiased campaigning,” Academy CEO Bill Kramer said in a statement, adding that the changes would be implemented after the conclusion of this awards cycle.

While Riseborough’s performance as an alcoholic who struggles after winning the lottery in “To Leslie” garnered praise from critics, it made little splash on its own, earning less than $28,000 during its limited theatrical run.

The 41-year-old English actress surprised the public by landing a best-actress nomination last week — alongside Ana de Armas, Cate Blanchett, Michelle Williams and Michelle Yeoh — which turned attention to the unusual push behind it.

Just as voting for the Oscar nominations began, dozens of prominent actors began sharing praise for the low-budget film and its lead performance on their personal social media accounts. Actress Mary McCormack, the wife of “To Leslie” director Michael Morris, reportedly coordinated much of the efforts by personally encouraging people to watch and share their thoughts online.

Many posts contained similar language, including the now-viral phrase describing “To Leslie” as “a small film with a giant heart.” Gwyneth Paltrow posted a photo on Instagram of herself standing alongside Demi Moore, Morris and Riseborough, whom she said “should win every award there is and all the ones that haven’t been invented yet.” Edward Norton wrote in a rare post that Riseborough gave “the most fully committed, emotionally deep, physically harrowing performance I’ve seen in a while.” (Though Norton previously stated through a representative that he didn’t post with regard to the Oscars.)

Blanchett, herself an Oscars front-runner, even gave Riseborough a shout-out in her Critics Choice Awards speech.

Riseborough has worked steadily over the past two decades, appearing in the Oscar-winning dark comedy “Birdman,” political satire “The Death of Stalin” and several horror films. While actors often commend their peers in public arenas, the posts about her performance in “To Leslie” noticeably ramped up the second week of January — just in time for the Oscar nominations voting period. Actress Frances Fisher went so far as to share multiple posts about Riseborough, at one point addressing the Academy’s actors branch directly and writing a detailed description of the voting process.

TCM host and Entertainment Weekly awards correspondent Dave Karger said while he believed the controversy over Riseborough’s nomination was overblown, the Academy “is smart to deal with this and understand how social media changes the game.” Matthew Belloni, former editorial director at the Hollywood Reporter who co-founded the media company Puck, called the organization reckoning with Oscar campaigns in the social media age “the biggest legacy” of the debacle.

“There’s an entire economy around the Oscars, and it’s all predicated on the legitimacy of the awards,” Belloni said. “If the awards are tainted by this specter of cronyism, that does have an impact on their legitimacy. That’s something the Academy should care about.”

Of course, he added, “there’s been cronyism in the Oscars since literally the second year they gave them.”

The Academy has become more transparent about its internal workings since the #OscarsSoWhite backlash in 2015, a year after which the board of governors announced its goal to double the number of “women and diverse members” in the voting body. Last year, the organization elected as president Janet Yang, who was described in a news release at the time as “instrumental in launching and elevating several Academy initiatives on membership recruitment, governance, and equity, diversity, and inclusion.”

Much of the criticism directed toward Riseborough’s nomination framed it as a slight against Viola Davis (“The Woman King”) and Danielle Deadwyler (“Till”), who were each nominated for major precursor awards. Multiple industry experts argued that while the Academy certainly has a ways to go regarding its recognition of Black talent, that is a separate conversation from the one about Riseborough.

“With all these high-profile awards shows that are televised and reported on, even casual movie fans have become conditioned to the [idea] that at a certain point, certain performers have earned a slot in the Oscars race,” Karger said. “These are all different voting bodies, and different people. Just because one person got three other nominations doesn’t mean they’re automatically going to get the fourth.”

The Oscars use a ranked-choice voting system in which Academy members list awards contenders in order of preference. This can allow for narrow margins between those who snag a nomination and those who miss out. If the large majority of voters ranked either Blanchett (“Tár”) or fellow front-runner Yeoh (“Everything Everywhere All at Once”) as their No. 1 choice for best actress, for example, the threshold to land one of the remaining three slots would have been quite low. With a small number of votes making all the difference, there is no guarantee Davis or Deadwyler placed sixth; Riseborough could just as easily have “pushed out” contenders such as Olivia Colman (“Empire of Light”) or Jennifer Lawrence (“Causeway”).

Riseborough has in some ways become a scapegoat for the Academy’s own failings, suggested Melissa Silverstein, founder of Women and Hollywood, an initiative advocating for gender diversity and inclusion in the entertainment industry. Silverstein described Riseborough as an actress who “has toiled for decades underneath the surface of the recognition she has deserved,” and said it is unfortunate this situation occurred “in a year with just unbelievably extraordinary Black women in leading roles.”

In an ideal world, according to Silverstein, there would be room for more actresses to be recognized.

“It’s a multimillion-dollar game,” she said, “and we’re all part of it.”



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Andrea Riseborough to Keep Best Actress Oscar Nomination

Andrea Riseborough’s Oscar nomination for independent drama “To Leslie” will not be rescinded, but the use of social media in a grassroots campaign supporting her did not sit well with the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences.

After the film academy announced it would be “conducting a review of campaign procedures” in the wake of Riseborough’s shock best actress nomination, the body’s board of governors deliberated at a previously scheduled meeting on Tuesday.

“Based on concerns that surfaced last week around the ‘To Leslie’ awards campaign, the Academy began a review into the film’s campaigning tactics. The Academy has determined the activity in question does not rise to the level that the film’s nomination should be rescinded. However, we did discover social media and outreach campaigning tactics that caused concern. These tactics are being addressed with the responsible parties directly,” Academy CEO Bill Kramer said in a statement.

“The purpose of the Academy’s campaign regulations is to ensure a fair and ethical awards process — these are core values of the Academy. Given this review, it is apparent that components of the regulations must be clarified to help create a better framework for respectful, inclusive and unbiased campaigning. These changes will be made after this awards cycle and will be shared with our membership. The Academy strives to create an environment where votes are based solely on the artistic and technical merits of the eligible films and achievements,” he concluded.

Since the Oscar nominations announcement, industry professionals and reporters have been discussing whether the awards campaign for the 41-year-old English actor violated any of the Academy’s strict rules and guidelines. Directed by Michael Morris, “To Leslie” grossed only $28,000 at the box office. That did not stop a best actress campaign from forming, along with rumors that the group may have exercised “aggressive” tactics to target the 1,302 members of the Actors Branch to secure a nomination for Riseborough.

Among the most prominent potential campaigning violations was a since-deleted Instagram post from the “To Leslie” account that quoted an excerpt from Richard Roeper’s top 10 films of the year, which referenced Riseborough’s fellow best actress nominee Cate Blanchett (“Tár”).

Variety spoke with multiple anonymous AMPAS voters over the past week, with the majority agreeing there was no wrongdoing and that her nomination should not be rescinded. That has only happened nine times in the Academy’s history.

The Academy’s first statement after the nominations announcement didn’t specifically name Riseborough or “To Leslie.”

“We are conducting a review of the campaign procedures around this year’s nominees to ensure that no guidelines were violated and to inform us whether changes to the guidelines may be needed in a new era of social media and digital communication,” the statement read. “We have confidence in the integrity of our nomination and voting procedures and support genuine grassroots campaigns for outstanding performances.”

Annually, the Academy and its Board of Governors meet for a postmortem following its ceremony to discuss any potential changes to the show or its rules. Updates and revisions to rules and regulations could arrive following the Oscars ceremony on March 12.



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Hugh Jackman begs Oscars not to “validate” Ryan Reynolds with Best Song nomination

Ryan Reynolds and Hugh Jackman back in 2009
Photo: Frazer Harrison (Getty Images)

Earlier today, Hugh Jackman issued a heartfelt plea to The Academy Of Motion Pictures Arts And Sciences: Please don’t validate or encourage Ryan Reynolds.

Jackman performed his comedic begging on social media today, as part of a post that was ostensibly about saving himself—ahead of a year of filming alongside Reynolds on the upcoming Deadpool movie—from the insufferability of “Oscar-nominated performer Ryan Reynolds.” The real reason, of course, was to give a shout-out to Reynolds and the rest of the cast and crew of last year’s Spirited, with the movie’s song “Good Afternoon” having apparently been shortlisted for Oscars consideration.

Per Billboard, here’s Jackman: “Ryan Reynolds getting a nomination in the best song category would make the next year of my life insufferable.” Jackman went on to add: “It would be a problem.”

Spirited — “Good Afternoon” Official Audio I Apple TV+

Of course, given that he and Reynolds are actually buddies—and that Spirited’s music was co-written by Jackman’s Greatest Showman pals Benj Pasek and Justin Paul—it’s not hard to read between the happy lines. “Don’t get me wrong,” Jackman said, “I loved Spirited. It’s a great movie, we had a blast, the entire family watched it. I love Will [Ferrell], I love Octavia [Spencer]. Obviously I did The Greatest Showman with Benj [Pasek] and Justin [Paul] — they’re incredible and I love their music … And ‘Good Afternoon,’ by the way, the song ‘Good Afternoon’? I laughed the entire way through, it is absolutely brilliant.”

(As Billboard notes, there’s no actual way that Reynolds would personally get listed as a nominee for “Good Afternoon,” since that category doesn’t recognize performers; writers Khiyon Hursey, Sukari Jones, Benj Pasek, Justin Paul and Mark Sonnenblick would get the nod instead.)

Other songwriters on the Best Song shortlist this year include Taylor Swift, The Weeknd, Lady Gaga, and Rihanna. The actual nominations will roll out on January 24, ahead of the Oscars themselves on March 12.

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Biden 2024 nomination plan faces state Democratic rebellion

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Democrats on Friday faced a rebellion from their own leaders in New Hampshire, Nevada and Iowa as party officials in these states said publicly that they were not prepared to accept President Biden’s push for a new presidential nominating calendar in 2024.

Biden shocked many in his party on Thursday evening by asking for a complete remaking of the early nominating calendar, with South Carolina going first, followed by Nevada and New Hampshire on a joint date, then a primary in Georgia and one in Michigan. The plan, which is likely to be ratified soon by a key party panel, would eliminate Iowa’s historical role of kicking off the nation’s presidential nomination season by holding its caucuses.

As the Democratic National Committee’s Rules and Bylaws Committee met Friday in Washington to approve the recommendation, New Hampshire’s two Democratic senators both vowed to defy Biden’s wishes by supporting Republican Gov. Chris Sununu’s plan to keep the nation’s first primary there.

“New Hampshire does have a statute. We do have a law. And we will not be breaking our law,” said Joanne Dowdell, New Hampshire’s representative on the committee. “And I feel that any lawyer in the room or around the table would feel that it is not in the best interest of this body to even suggest we do that.”

Nevada state Senate Majority Leader Nicole Cannizzaro and Nevada state Assembly Speaker-elect Steve Yeager, both Democrats, released a joint statement refusing to move their primary date from Tuesday, Feb. 6, 2024, to meet the Biden plan.

“We strongly disagree with President Biden’s proposed new order of early presidential nominating states,” they said in a joint statement. “We are the right long-term choice to be first in the nation.”

At the same time, Nevada representatives in Washington told Democrats that they would welcome South Carolina’s primary going first, if it took place on the Saturday before Nevada’s scheduled date.

Carol Fowler, South Carolina’s representative on the committee, did not explicitly endorse Nevada’s proposal but said South Carolina “does not mind voting on a Saturday.”

By breaking with decades of tradition, Biden’s move is meant to signal his party’s commitment to elevating more diversity — demographic, geographic and economic — in the early nominating process. Iowa, the traditional kickoff state that has held its caucuses the week before New Hampshire’s primary, is largely White. The state also experienced embarrassing problems tabulating results in 2020.

Iowa’s representative on the committee, Scott Brennan, said his state would continue to fight for the state’s early role in the process, without saying whether Iowa Democrats would go rogue with New Hampshire to hold an unsanctioned contest.

“I cannot support the proposal before us,” Brennan said. “Small rural states like Iowa must have a voice.”

States that disobey the ultimate decision by the DNC probably will face serious sanctions from the party, including the unseating of delegates at the nominating convention, according to Democratic officials, following rules the DNC passed this year. Candidates who campaign for primaries or caucuses that are not sanctioned also could be punished by the national party, with any delegates they win in those states being stripped of voting power and the possible denial of access to party-sanctioned debate stages.

As the meeting began Friday morning, some members of the Rules and Bylaws Committee voiced support for the Biden plan. Stuart Appelbaum of New York called the Biden rubric “an elegant plan.”

“This is what our party looks like. This is what America looks like,” he said.

“I support what the president of the United States has asked us to do,” said another rules committee member, Randi Weingarten, the president of the American Federation of Teachers.

“I’m so proud that we are going to hear from more voices,” said Donna Brazile, another member of the committee, about Biden’s desire to make the early nominating process more diverse. “I’m not going to abandon a president who is winning for the American people.”

Biden, who has said he intends to run for reelection and does not yet face a primary challenger, has said he would like the order of early states to be reconsidered again for the 2028 election, when a more competitive nominating battle is likely.

Republicans, meanwhile, plan to stick to the traditional early calendar, with Iowa, New Hampshire, Nevada and South Carolina leading off the voting to nominate a GOP candidate. Republicans are expected to seek a split primary date in Michigan, to abide by GOP rules. Georgia Republicans have not yet indicated whether they will support moving up the Democratic primary in that state.

South Carolina’s Democratic Party leaders also did not say Friday whether they would abide by Nevada’s request that their primary be held on a Saturday, not the Tuesday before Nevada, as Biden has requested.

“I think we feel comfortable with the president’s direction,” South Carolina Democratic Party Chair Trav Robertson said.

Rep. James E. Clyburn (D-S.C.), a close Biden ally, celebrated the president’s move, although he said he did not ask Biden to push South Carolina to the front.

“I was perfectly pleased with South Carolina being last in the early window, but I did ask him not to put a big state like Michigan in front of South Carolina,” he said.

But Biden called Clyburn on Thursday to share that he was recommending that South Carolina go first, a move Clyburn said “maximizes the opportunity for our candidates to connect with the voting public.”

“I would say to all my friends on the rules committee, let’s work on what’s most successful for our candidates, not what satisfies people’s ego,” he said.

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McCarthy wins GOP nomination for speaker, with 31 Republicans voting against him

US Sen. Josh Hawley talks to reporters on Monday. (CNN)

The midterm results, which allowed Democrats to keep their Senate majority, have caused some Republicans to openly question who should lead the party moving forward ahead of leadership elections. 

Hawley says McConnell can’t take GOP back to the majority

Sen. Josh Hawley told CNN’s Manu Raju that “clearly what we’re doing isn’t working” to become the majority party.

“It hasn’t been working for a long time,” he said. “And I think you look at independent voters, I mean, we gave them nothing, no alternative. That was the decision by leadership. They didn’t want to have an agenda.”

Hawley added he’d vote for Sen. Rick Scott if he challenged Senate Republican Leader Mitch McConnell for leader, and reiterated that he believes the leadership elections should be delayed until after the Georgia runoff. 

Cruz on leadership elections: We need a leader who “doesn’t roll over immediately”

Sen. Ted Cruz criticized Senate GOP leadership for “capitulating to Democrats” during the last two years, sharply criticizing their messaging strategy during this cycle. 

“I believe we should have a leader that actually listens to the conference, and that is willing to stand and fight, doesn’t roll over immediately,” said Cruz. 

“Our current leadership believes the way you win elections is that you don’t stand for anything, you don’t have an agenda, you don’t have a plan. Instead, that the only thing you stand up and say is ‘Well, I’m not a Democrat. So vote for me.’ You know what? Election Day showed we need to be more than just not a Democrat,” he said.

Cruz said it would be “utterly insane” to hold leadership elections tomorrow, before a postmortem of the election results.

“I’ll tell you this, I believe if we don’t delay the election, I think it is very likely that we will see someone run against Mitch McConnell,” he added.

Ex-Trump chief of staff says it’s time for RNC chair to move on

Mick Mulvaney, former acting chief of staff to President Donald Trump, told CNN’s Kate Bolduan that he is not a fan of Ronna McDaniel running for reelection as chairwoman of the Republican National Committee.

“We got along well when I worked in the White House and I have no complaints about her personally. But we have a track record of losing with her in charge. Again, we lost in 2018. We lost in 2020. We didn’t win like we should have last week,” Mulvaney said on Tuesday. 

Mulvaney’s comments come amid reports that McDaniel told RNC members during a conference call on Monday that she intends to seek reelection to another term, according to people familiar with the call. 

Thune expects “candid conversation” at GOP lunch

Senate Republican Whip John Thune said he expects a “candid conversation” when members of the GOP conference meet for lunch Tuesday to assess why they had lackluster election results and to begin the process of deciding who their elected leadership team will be for the next Congress.   

“I expect leaders will be able to make their voices heard like we always do. But I also expect a lot of our members — who tend in most cases to be vocal at these lunches — to be vocal today. We’ll see where it goes,” Thune told reporters in the Capitol. “I think it’s good. We need these candid conversations, certainly within the family as we think about charting the future, learning from the past, being informed by the past, but getting ready for the future.” 

Thune also said he hoped former President Donald Trump would have waited until after the Georgia Senate runoff to announce another presidential election bid, which he is expected to do tonight.  

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Tulsi Gabbard, who sought 2020 Democratic nomination, says she’s leaving party


Washington
CNN
 — 

Former congresswoman and 2020 presidential candidate Tulsi Gabbard announced on Tuesday that she is leaving the Democratic Party.

For Gabbard, the announcement is the culmination of years in which she has been increasingly at odds with the Democratic Party and its policies.

“I can no longer remain in today’s Democratic Party. It’s now under the complete control of an elitist cabal of warmongers driven by cowardly wokeness, who divide us by racializing every issue & stoking anti-white racism, who actively work to undermine our God-given freedoms enshrined in our Constitution,” Gabbard said in a video posted to social media. The announcement was made on the first episode of her new podcast, “The Tulsi Gabbard Show.”

Gabbard, who made history by becoming the first American Samoan and practicing Hindu in Congress following her election in 2012, also criticized what she said were Democrats’ “open border” policies and anti-police rhetoric.

The former congresswoman, who represented Hawaii’s 2nd district, has long been a unique and occasionally controversial voice in the Democratic Party.

As one of the Democratic presidential contenders in the crowded 2020 field, she touted herself as an Iraq War veteran and staked out a distinctly anti-interventionist foreign policy. On the campaign trail, she blamed US intervention in Latin America for creating instability that triggered the surge in migration across the southern US border and was a co-sponsor of several bills aimed at keeping migrant families together at the border.

And when Gabbard was running for president, Hillary Clinton suggested in an interview that she was being groomed to run as a third-party candidate and was a favorite of the Russians. Clinton suggested that the person she was talking about was a “Russian asset,” while not naming the Hawaii Democrat.

Gabbard filed a defamation lawsuit over the matter that she subsequently dropped in May 2020.

Gabbard endorsed Joe Biden after suspending her presidential campaign in 2020, but she has since been a vocal critic of the President and regularly appears on Fox News.

“President Biden campaigned on a message of unity, healing the partisan divide bringing the country together. He just gave a big speech saying supporters of President (Donald) Trump are the most extremist group in our country and a threat to our democracy. That’s half the country,” she said in her announcement video on Tuesday.

Gabbard also faced criticisms earlier this year from local Democrats who voted to condemn her “for participating in an event that raised funds that will harm Democrats across the country” after she spoke at the Conservative Political Action Conference.

The former congresswoman did not indicate which party she would be affiliated with moving forward but called on “independent-minded Democrats” to join her in leaving the Democratic Party.



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