Tag Archives: voting

Trump Lackeys Discussed Using Stolen Voting Data to Decertify Georgia Runoff: CNN – The Daily Beast

  1. Trump Lackeys Discussed Using Stolen Voting Data to Decertify Georgia Runoff: CNN The Daily Beast
  2. Exclusive: Text messages reveal Trump operatives considered using breached voting data to decertify Georgia’s Senate runoff in 2021 CNN
  3. Testimony Suggests Trump Was at Meeting About Accessing Voting Software The New York Times
  4. Report: Team Trump’s Attempt to Overturn the Election in Georgia Even More Comically Corrupt Than Previously Thought Vanity Fair
  5. ‘Here’s the plan’: See Trump operatives’ texts about breached voting data CNN
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Charles Barkley rips Kendrick Perkins for suggesting racial bias plays role in MVP voting – Fox News

  1. Charles Barkley rips Kendrick Perkins for suggesting racial bias plays role in MVP voting Fox News
  2. Charles Barkley suggests Kendrick Perkins is suffering from ‘ESPN disease’ Awful Announcing
  3. Former Boston Celtics championship big man threatens to out George Karl for skeletons in his closet Hardwood Houdini
  4. JJ Redick slams Kendrick Perkins’ suggestion NBA MVP voting is racially biased, criticizes ESPN show’s format Fox News
  5. TNT’s Charles Barkley Blasts Kendrick Perkins, ‘ESPN Disease’ Sports Illustrated
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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How the Film Independent Spirit Awards Winners Could Impact Oscar Voting – IndieWire

  1. How the Film Independent Spirit Awards Winners Could Impact Oscar Voting IndieWire
  2. Everything Everywhere sweeps Independent Spirit Awards BBC
  3. Independent Spirit Awards 2023: Sequins, Feathers, and Lace Rule the Blue Carpet Jezebel
  4. Spirit Awards: Ke Huy Quan Thanks His ‘Everything Everywhere All at Once’ “Family” in Best Supporting Performance Acceptance Speech Hollywood Reporter
  5. Independent Spirit Awards’ Acting Categories Dominated By Women As They Go Gender Neutral For First Time Deadline
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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2023 Baseball Hall of Fame voting: 11 takeaways, including hope for Carlos Beltrán and Todd Helton

The results of the 2023 BBWAA portion of the Baseball Hall of Fame vote have been revealed and Scott Rolen is now a Hall of Famer, having received 76.3 percent of the vote. Here are the full results with official vote percentages. Players needed 75 percent of the vote to make it and at least five percent of the vote to remain on the ballot for next year, up to 10 years. 

Let’s dive deeper into the bigger takeaways from our Hall of Fame season. 

1. This is actually a two-man class

First of all, the Contemporary Era committee already selected Fred McGriff. There will be a Hall of Fame ceremony honoring two players this coming summer. McGriff is 59 years old while Rolen is 47. Both played for a handful of teams and it should make for a fun event weekend. 

2. Rolen’s case can provide hope 

In 2018, on a much more crowded ballot, Rolen got just 10.2 percent of the vote. But as the ballot cleared over the years with inductions of Hall of Famers and big-name players falling off without induction, spots cleared on the ballots of voters for Rolen. There was also a swell of support from several corners of the internet, pointing out Rolen’s defense deserved a lot more credit and that showed up in stats like WAR. 

Rolen’s move from 10.2 percent of the vote to making it via the writer vote was the biggest in history. It’s a record that might not stand long, as there are a few players we’ll discuss below making a move similar to Rolen. 

Certainly, big moves after pretty small beginnings is a theme with several of the prominent candidates on this ballot. 

3. Helton right on the precipice

As I detailed in discussing Rolen last month, it’s incredibly rare for players to top 62 percent with time to spare on the ballot and not get voted in shortly thereafter, whether just one or two more rounds of voting. Rolen was over that mark last year and made it this time around. Next up, Todd Helton. 

Helton, in his fifth year, got 72.2 percent. It would be unprecedented for a player to get to that level of the vote in his fifth year and not be inducted into the Hall. 

Using the available data, zero public ballots had 10 votes that did not include Helton. This is to say that even with players like Adrián Beltré and Joe Mauer coming on the ballot next year, the overwhelming majority of voters either voted for Helton or have spot(s) available to add him. There will be new voters. Some voters will lapse due to not covering the game anymore. Some voters reconsider their stance on players once they get this close to the 75 percent marker. 

For all those reasons, Helton is almost certainly going to be voted in next year. 

4. Beltrán has hope

Carlos Beltrán has a statistical dossier that belongs in the Hall of Fame, but since his retirement, the sign-stealing scandal has clouded his Hall of Fame chances (full breakdown here). 

The good news here for Beltrán is he’s starting at a pretty decent number: 46.5 percent of the vote in his first try. 

It’s not the best comparison to loop in PED-connected players, but it’s the best we’ve got. The players who have been held out of the Hall of Fame due to being tied to PEDs started in the mid-30s in percentage or lower. Most of them were lower, actually, it was really only Roger Clemens and Barry Bonds in the mid-30s. 

With Beltrán starting out here, he’s already in much better position. Anecdotally, I’ve also read several columns from prominent writers who said they are planning to reconsider in future years after not voting for Beltrán here in his first time on the ballot. And some people really do hold up “first-ballot Hall of Famer” as a sacred honor.

In all, I think the results for Beltrán are a net positive. We’ll see how much headway he makes next time around — with the “first ballot” thing not being attached and possibly a few of those aforementioned writers reconsidering his case — without making any sweeping declarations, though. 

5. A-Rod has less hope 

The Hall of Fame case for Alex Rodriguez is complicated. We all already knew that. Before the vote last year, we couldn’t be sure how exactly the vote would start shaping up for him. This was his second go-round on the ballot and it was his first without the likes of Barry Bonds and Roger Clemens. 

Bonds could be the best road map here between the PED connections and all-time great numbers by a position player, though Bonds never was suspended under MLB’s JDA and A-Rod was nailed with one of the biggest punishments in history. Bonds started in the mid-30s and topped out at 66 percent in his final year. The voting body will continue to evolve toward a more new-school mindset, but there are future voters who would’ve voted in Bonds and won’t go with A-Rod due to the suspension. 

Well, A-Rod got 34.3 percent of the vote last year and 35.7 percent this time. 

That’s probably within the range of stagnation, right? I know I often mention things about the voting body changing, opinions evolving and stuff like that, but he barely moved. 

Simply, while things could change, he seems to be stuck. 

6. Wagner, Jones in decent shape now

Billy Wagner started off in 2016 with around 10 percent of the vote (take note of the Rolen section above). Through four rounds, it was just 16.7 percent, but he’s on the move now. 

2020: 31.7%
2021: 46.4%
2022: 51%
2023: 68.1%

Wagner still has two ballots left and a real shot at getting home. It might even happen next year. He’s really close now. 

Not quite as close, but moving in range nonetheless is Andruw Jones. He started off having to sweat out just staying above five percent. He got just 7.5 percent in his second ballot, but then he started to get some traction. 

2020: 19.4%
2021: 33.9%
2022: 41.4%
2023: 58.1%

This was Jones’ sixth time on the ballot, so he’s got four more voting cycles to make up less than 20 percent. If so, he would snap Rolen’s record with ease. 

Still, with both players but particularly Jones since he’s further away: There’s always the danger of plateauing. That is, a player can get to a certain percentage and then stagnate. It varies player to player because, well, every single Hall of Fame case is unique and they are all being voted on by an ever-changing electorate. 

Overall, though, things are looking up for Wagner and it really seems like Jones has the momentum to get him in eventually. Someone who plateaued in recent years who had a possibly-great night was an all-time great bat waggler. 

7. Sheffield within range?

This was Gary Sheffield’s ninth time on the ballot. He made big gains in 2019-21, going from 13.6 percent to 40.6, but he got exactly 40.6 percent again in 2022. It looked like maybe all hope was lost. Instead, he’s moved into the possibly-overused-but-still-fun “so you’re telling me there’s a chance” range. 

Sheffield got 55 percent of the vote this year.

Perhaps there will be a nice final-year bump? Kent got a boost of more than 13 percent, though that wouldn’t be enough. One of the largest single-year, final-ballot jumps ever seen was Larry Walker, who leaped from 54.6 percent in his ninth year to 76.6 to get in on his final try. 

If Sheffield can make such gains with the voting body next year, he’ll get in. That’s a very tall hill to climb, obviously, but it’s possible. 

8. Kent falls off the ballot

Jeff Kent was the one player on this ballot for the 10th time. As such, it was his proverbial swan song. We knew he wasn’t going to get close, but he did establish a new high with 46.5 percent of the vote, more than 10 percentage points above his previous high of 32.7 percent. It’s a feather in his cap to get nearly 50 percent of the vote while hanging around on the ballot for a decade. It’s tough just to get on the ballot and Kent can rest easy knowing he obviously made a mark on baseball history. 

Plus, my hunch is Kent will fare much better with the committee votes (like McGriff), so this could be a blessing in disguise. I’d wager he’s in the Hall within the next decade. 

9. Possible reason for optimism? 

The following players are lower on the ballot but have a chance to catch lightning in a bottle the way Rolen did (and similar in fashion to how it appears Helton, Jones and maybe Sheffield and Wagner are). 

  • Andy Pettitte jumped from 10.7 percent to 17. This is his fifth year on the ballot, so he’ll need some bigger leaps, but it’s a starting point. 
  • Bobby Abreu went from 8.6 to 15.4 percent in this his fourth year. It’s a very nice bump. 
  • Jimmy Rollins went from 9.4 to 12.9 percent. Very modest indeed on the gains and vote percentage, but it’s only his second ballot and Chase Utley is coming soon. It’s always possible when discussing Utley and Rollins together on the ballot that there’s a mutual push in voting for the double-play combo. It didn’t work for Lou Whitaker and Alan Trammell, but the times are changing. 
  • Mark Buehrle went from 5.8 to 10.8 percent. I dove into his case as an all-time workhorse recently and maybe more will continue to come around on him.
  • This was the ballot debut for Francisco “K-Rod” Rodriguez. He started with 10.8 percent of the vote. While Rolen’s entry provides hope for all players, the movement of Wagner is particularly telling with K-Rod and other elite-level closers moving forward. It’s much more difficult for closers to make the Hall, but Wagner getting in next year could help clear the way for some momentum for K-Rod. 

10. No-man’s land

Now onto the players who seem to not have a chance at induction even though they continue to linger on the ballot. 

  • Manny Ramirez actually went from 28.9 percent to 33.2 percent, but he’s still not even halfway home and has only three ballots left. I just can’t see enough room for improvement there. 
  • Omar Vizquel’s descent continues. From 52.6 in 2020 to 49.1 to 23.9 and now to 19.5 percent in his sixth try. There’s a better chance he’ll fall off the ballot before his 10 years are up than turning things around and gaining enshrinement. 
  • Torii Hunter went up from 5.3 to 6.9 percent, but he’s still awfully close to being five-percented after a very small gain in his third year. He probably needs to get up over 10 percent next year to have any sort of hope, but my guess is this is all a formality. 

11. Five-percented

The following players failed to reach five percent of the vote, meaning they are removed from the ballot moving forward: Bronson Arroyo, R.A. Dickey, John Lackey, Mike Napoli, Huston Street, Matt Cain, Jacoby Ellsbury, Andre Ethier, J.J. Hardy, Jhonny Peralta, Jered Weaver and Jayson Werth. Notably, these were all first-timers. Every holdover got at least five percent of the vote. 

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2023 Baseball Hall of Fame voting results: 11 takeaways, including hope for Alex Rodriguez, Carlos Beltrán

The results of the 2023 BBWAA portion of the Baseball Hall of Fame vote have been revealed and Scott Rolen is now a Hall of Famer, having received 76.3 percent of the vote. Here are the full results with official vote percentages. Players needed 75 percent of the vote to make it and at least five percent of the vote to remain on the ballot for next year, up to 10 years. 

Let’s dive deeper into the bigger takeaways from our Hall of Fame season. 

1. This is actually a two-man class

First of all, the Contemporary Era committee already selected Fred McGriff. There will be a Hall of Fame ceremony honoring two players this coming summer. McGriff is 59 years old while Rolen is 47. Both played for a handful of teams and it should make for a fun event weekend. 

2. Rolen’s case can provide hope 

In 2018, on a much more crowded ballot, Rolen got just 10.2 percent of the vote. But as the ballot cleared over the years with inductions of Hall of Famers and big-name players falling off without induction, spots cleared on the ballots of voters for Rolen. There was also a swell of support from several corners of the internet, pointing out Rolen’s defense deserved a lot more credit and that showed up in stats like WAR. 

Rolen’s move from 10.2 percent of the vote to making it via the writer vote was the biggest in history. It’s a record that might not stand long, as there are a few players we’ll discuss below making a move similar to Rolen. 

Certainly, big moves after pretty small beginnings is a theme with several of the prominent candidates on this ballot. 

3. Helton right on the precipice

As I detailed in discussing Rolen last month, it’s incredibly rare for players to top 62 percent with time to spare on the ballot and not get voted in shortly thereafter, whether just one or two more rounds of voting. Rolen was over that mark last year and made it this time around. Next up, Todd Helton. 

Helton, in his fifth year, got 72.2 percent. It would be unprecedented for a player to get to that level of the vote in his fifth year and not be inducted into the Hall. 

Using the available data, zero public ballots had 10 votes that did not include Helton. This is to say that even with players like Adrián Beltré and Joe Mauer coming on the ballot next year, the overwhelming majority of voters either voted for Helton or have spot(s) available to add him. There will be new voters. Some voters will lapse due to not covering the game anymore. Some voters reconsider their stance on players once they get this close to the 75 percent marker. 

For all those reasons, Helton is almost certainly going to be voted in next year. 

4. Beltrán has hope

Carlos Beltrán has a statistical dossier that belongs in the Hall of Fame, but since his retirement, the sign-stealing scandal has clouded his Hall of Fame chances (full breakdown here). 

The good news here for Beltrán is he’s starting at a pretty decent number: 46.5 percent of the vote in his first try. 

It’s not the best comparison to loop in PED-connected players, but it’s the best we’ve got. The players who have been held out of the Hall of Fame due to being tied to PEDs started in the mid-30s in percentage or lower. Most of them were lower, actually, it was really only Roger Clemens and Barry Bonds in the mid-30s. 

With Beltrán starting out here, he’s already in much better position. Anecdotally, I’ve also read several columns from prominent writers who said they are planning to reconsider in future years after not voting for Beltrán here in his first time on the ballot. And some people really do hold up “first ballot Hall of Famer” as a sacred honor.

In all, I think the results for Beltrán are a net positive. We’ll see how much headway he makes next time around — with the “first ballot” thing not being attached and possibly a few of those aforementioned writers reconsidering his case — without making any sweeping declarations, though. 

5. A-Rod has less hope 

The Hall of Fame case for Alex Rodriguez is complicated. We all already knew that. Before the vote last year, we couldn’t be sure how exactly the vote would start shaping up for him. This was his second go-round on the ballot and it was his first without the likes of Barry Bonds and Roger Clemens. 

Bonds could be the best road map here between the PED connections and all-time great numbers by a position player, though Bonds never was suspended under MLB’s JDA and A-Rod was nailed with one of the biggest punishments in history. Bonds started in the mid-30s and topped out at 66 percent in his final year. The voting body will continue to evolve toward a more new-school mindset, but there are future voters who would’ve voted in Bonds and won’t go with A-Rod due to the suspension. 

Well, A-Rod got 34.3 percent of the vote last year and 35.7 percent this time. 

That’s probably within the range of stagnation, right? I know I often mention things about the voting body changing, opinions evolving and stuff like that, but he barely moved. 

Simply, while things could change, he seems to be stuck. 

6. Wagner, Jones in decent shape now

Billy Wagner started off in 2016 with around 10 percent of the vote (take note of the Rolen section above). Through four rounds, it was just 16.7 percent, but he’s on the move now. 

2020: 31.7%
2021: 46.4%
2022: 51%
2023: 68.1%

Wagner still has two ballots left and a real shot at getting home. It might even happen next year. He’s really close now. 

Not quite as close, but moving in range nonetheless is Andruw Jones. He started off having to sweat out just staying above five percent. He got just 7.5 percent in his second ballot, but then he started to get some traction. 

2020: 19.4%
2021: 33.9%
2022: 41.4%
2023: 58.1%

This was Jones’ sixth time on the ballot, so he’s got four more voting cycles to make up less than 20 percent. If so, he would snap Rolen’s record with ease. 

Still, with both players but particularly Jones since he’s further away: There’s always the danger of plateauing. That is, a player can get to a certain percentage and then stagnate. It varies player to player because, well, every single Hall of Fame case is unique and they are all being voted on by an ever-changing electorate. 

Overall, though, things are looking up for Wagner and it really seems like Jones has the momentum to get him in eventually. Someone who plateaued in recent years who had a possibly-great night was an all-time great bat waggler. 

7. Sheffield within range?

This was Gary Sheffield’s ninth time on the ballot. He made big gains in 2019-21, going from 13.6 percent to 40.6, but he got exactly 40.6 percent again in 2022. It looked like maybe all hope was lost. Instead, he’s moved into the possibly-overused-but-still-fun “so you’re telling me there’s a chance” range. 

Sheffield got 55 percent of the vote this year.

Perhaps there will be a nice final-year bump? Kent got a boost of more than 13 percent, though that wouldn’t be enough. One of the largest single-year, final-ballot jumps ever seen was Larry Walker, who leaped from 54.6 percent in his ninth year to 76.6 to get in on his final try. 

If Sheffield can make such gains with the voting body next year, he’ll get in. That’s a very tall hill to climb, obviously, but it’s possible. 

8. Kent falls off the ballot

Jeff Kent was the one player on this ballot for the 10th time. As such, it was his proverbial swan song. We knew he wasn’t going to get close, but he did establish a new high with 46.5 percent of the vote, more than 10 percentage points above his previous high of 32.7 percent. It’s a feather in his cap to get nearly 50 percent of the vote while hanging around on the ballot for a decade. It’s tough just to get on the ballot and Kent can rest easy knowing he obviously made a mark on baseball history. 

Plus, my hunch is Kent will fare much better with the committee votes (like McGriff), so this could be a blessing in disguise. I’d wager he’s in the Hall within the next decade. 

9. Possible reason for optimism? 

The following players are lower on the ballot but have a chance to catch lightning in a bottle the way Rolen did (and similar in fashion to how it appears Helton, Jones and maybe Sheffield and Wagner are). 

  • Andy Pettitte jumped from 10.7 percent to 17. This is his fifth year on the ballot, so he’ll need some bigger leaps, but it’s a starting point. 
  • Bobby Abreu went from 8.6 to 15.4 percent in this his fourth year. It’s a very nice bump. 
  • Jimmy Rollins went from 9.4 to 12.9 percent. Very modest indeed on the gains and vote percentage, but it’s only his second ballot and Chase Utley is coming soon. It’s always possible when discussing Utley and Rollins together on the ballot that there’s a mutual push in voting for the double-play combo. It didn’t work for Lou Whitaker and Alan Trammell, but the times are changing. 
  • Mark Buehrle went from 5.8 to 10.8 percent. I dove into his case as an all-time workhorse recently and maybe more will continue to come around on him.
  • This was the ballot debut for Francisco “K-Rod” Rodriguez. He started with 10.8 percent of the vote. While Rolen’s entry provides hope for all players, the movement of Wagner is particularly telling with K-Rod and other elite-level closers moving forward. It’s much more difficult for closers to make the Hall, but Wagner getting in next year could help clear the way for some momentum for K-Rod. 

10. No-man’s land

Now onto the players who seem to not have a chance at induction even though they continue to linger on the ballot. 

  • Manny Ramirez actually went from 28.9 percent to 33.2 percent, but he’s still not even halfway home and has only three ballots left. I just can’t see enough room for improvement there. 
  • Omar Vizquel’s descent continues. From 52.6 in 2020 to 49.1 to 23.9 and now to 19.5 percent in his sixth try. There’s a better chance he’ll fall off the ballot before his 10 years are up than turning things around and gaining enshrinement. 
  • Torii Hunter went up from 5.3 to 6.9 percent, but he’s still awfully close to being five-percented after a very small gain in his third year. He probably needs to get up over 10 percent next year to have any sort of hope, but my guess is this is all a formality. 

11. Five-percented

The following players failed to reach five percent of the vote, meaning they are removed from the ballot moving forward: Bronson Arroyo, R.A. Dickey, John Lackey, Mike Napoli, Huston Street, Matt Cain, Jacoby Ellsbury, Andre Ethier, J.J. Hardy, Jhonny Peralta, Jered Weaver and Jayson Werth. Notably, these were all first-timers. Every holdover got at least five percent of the vote. 

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House speaker vote in chaos as McCarthy fails to win majority in first two rounds of voting

Rep. Kevin McCarthy continued to struggle Tuesday to get enough votes to become House speaker, as 19 Republicans again voted against him in the second round, ensuring a third ballot round, a sign of the persistent divisions within the slim Republican majority in the 118th Congress.

Tuesday’s vote marked the first time in 100 years that the House speaker vote went to multiple ballots. 

Given Republicans’ razor-thin majority in the House, McCarthy could only afford to lose four Republican votes. In losing 19 Republican votes, McCarthy not only fell short of the majority needed, he also came up behind Democratic Rep. Hakeem Jeffries, who received all the Democratic votes. 

The House speaker, who is second in line for the presidency behind only the vice president, needs a majority of the full House of Representatives to be elected. Members cannot take their oaths of office until the House has a new speaker. 

 U.S. House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy (R-CA) reacts as Representatives cast their votes for Speaker of the House on the first day of the 118th Congress in the House Chamber of the U.S. Capitol Building on January 03, 2023 in Washington, DC. 

/ Getty Images


Republican Rep. Bob Good, of Virginia, who has voted against McCarthy in the first and second rounds, told CBS News the bloc of GOP lawmakers who opposed McCarthy’s bid to be speaker will “never back down.” 

During the House GOP conference meeting Tuesday morning, McCarthy raised his voice as he made an impassioned plea to Republicans, telling them he has “earned” the speakership, two sources familiar with the meeting told CBS News.

McCarthy met with the Republicans in the House Freedom Caucus on Monday night, telling reporters on Tuesday night that the meeting was “intense,” but he would not be held hostage by them and he was prepared for a battle on the House floor. 

“I will always fight to put the American people first, not a few individuals that want something for themselves,” McCarthy said ahead of the vote. “We may have a battle on the floor.  But the battle is for the conference and the country, and that’s fine with me.”

Outgoing House Speaker Nancy Pelosi received a bipartisan standing ovation as she gaveled in the meeting, her last act as leader. She announced after Election Day that she would not be seeking a leadership role, paving the way for a new generation of Democrats to take over, led by Jeffries. 

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Despite leading all players in fan voting, Tua Tagovailoa doesn’t make the Pro Bowl

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The fans stuffed the ballot box for Dolphins quarterback Tua Tagovailoa. In the end, getting the most votes of any NFL player wasn’t enough to propel him to the Pro Bowl. Or whatever it’s now called.

The AFC quarterbacks, based on the final voting consisting of one third fans, one third coaches, and one third players, are Josh Allen of the Bills, Patrick Mahomes of the Chiefs, and Joe Burrow of the Bengals.

Tagovailoa is a first alternate. He’ll definitely make it, if the Bills, Chiefs, or Bengals qualify for the Super Bowl.

Of course, the Dolphins could still qualify for the Super Bowl. And that’s a far bigger accomplishment for Tua, and for the team.

The Dolphins have three Pro Bowlers, for now: receiver Tyreek Hill, tackle Terron Armstead, and cornerback Xavien Howard.

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Musk Narrows Voting on Twitter Policy to Blue Members After Poll

(Bloomberg) — Twitter Inc. will restrict voting on major policy decisions to paying Twitter Blue subscribers, company owner Elon Musk said in one of his first tweets following a poll calling for him to step down.

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Responding to a Blue member going by the name Unfiltered Boss, Musk agreed with the suggestion that only subscribers should have a voice in future policy and said, “Twitter will make that change.” A day earlier, the billionaire chief pledged to submit all future policy decisions to a vote and offered Twitter users a choice on leadership, asking them if he should step down.

More than 10 million, or 57.5% of the vote, were in favor of Musk relinquishing his role as head of Twitter. He committed to abide by the result when asking for the vote, but nearly a day later, he had tweeted more than 10 times without directly addressing the outcome. Musk responded to a tweet suggesting the poll may have been manipulated by bots with a single word: “interesting.”

Musk’s dramatic offer to step down came shortly after he attended the World Cup final match in Qatar, triggering a wave of trending topics such as “VOTE YES” and “CEO of Twitter.” He didn’t identify an alternative leader and went so far as to say anyone capable of doing the job wouldn’t want it.

Musk has warned that Twitter is at risk of bankruptcy and instituted a “hardcore” work environment for the remaining workers after a drastic cutback in staff. In his less than two months at the helm, he has spooked advertisers, alienated Twitter’s most ardent creators and turned the service from a reflection of the news of the day into the main topic.

After losing the initial poll, Musk, who’s also chief executive officer of Tesla Inc., retweeted promotional material for the car company and for Twitter’s Blue for Business service. He also responded to an article about rival Toyota Motor Corp.’s criticism of electric vehicles with a simple “Wow.”

The stock of Tesla, by far Musk’s most valuable holding, has plummeted since the Twitter acquisition and critics have argued he’s spending too much time on the social media company.

(Updates with latest tweets from Musk in third paragraph)

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©2022 Bloomberg L.P.

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Majority of Americans don’t want Biden or Trump to run again in 2024, CNBC survey shows

US President Joe Biden speaks about strengthening the economy for union workers and retirees in the Eisenhower Executive Office Building, next to the White House in Washington, DC, on December 8, 2022.

Brendan Smialowski | AFP | Getty Images

“No thanks!”

That’s how majorities of the public responded when the CNBC All-America Economic Survey asked if President Joe Biden or former President Donald Trump should run again for president.

The survey found 61% of the public think Trump should not seek the presidency, compared with 30% who believe he should. And 70% say Biden should not run for a second term with just 19% supporting a run.

Substantial numbers in each politicians’ own party prefer their names not be on the ballot, including 37% of Republicans who don’t want Trump to run along with 61% of independents and 88% of Democrats.

For Biden, 57% of Democrats say he shouldn’t stand for office in 2024 along with 66% of independents and 86% of Republicans.

CNBC’s Democratic and Republican pollsters both believe Democrats will likely support Biden if he’s the nominee and that Republicans will support Trump. In a primary, each candidate would have a substantial level of support that could allow them to gain their party’s nod, especially against a large field of competitors who would split the vote.

Still, both pollsters pointed to the large opposition from within each party and said neither Trump nor Biden is starting off in a strong place. While Trump has announced he’s running, President Biden has yet to officially do so.

The poll of 801 Americans nationwide was conducted Nov. 26-30. It has a margin of error of +/-3.5%.

The survey found that 47% of those who think Biden should not run say age is a major reason, including 61% of Democrats who don’t want him on the ballot and 66% of seniors. By contrast, just 43% of the 18-49 demographic group cite age as a major reason. Biden turned 80 last month.

Just 8% say age is a major reason they don’t back another run for Trump, who is 76.

Biden approval ratings slip

Biden has other problems other than age. Despite a stronger than expected showing by Democrats in the congressional elections and several legislative victories, Biden’s overall approval slipped to 41% from 46% in the October survey, with his disapproval rising to 54% from 50%. The President’s economic approval slipped to 38% from 40% and disapproval rose a point to 57%.

Just 20% of the public think the Biden administration’s efforts to ease inflation are helping, a five-point decline from October; 28% believe they are hurting, a two-point decline, and 49% say they’re not making much difference, a 7-point jump.

The survey found broadly negative views on the economy and the outlook with just 14% saying the economy is good or excellent, the lowest level since 2013

When it comes to top priorities for Congress, American are unusually united: they want lawmakers to tackle inflation. 87% of the public say it should be job No. 1 and it’s the top pick for both parties and for independents.

Other issues show the more traditional divisions: reducing the deficit and spending is the second overall pick for both the public, Republicans and independents. But just 47% of Democrats think it should be a Congressional priority, compared to 84% of Republicans.

National protection for abortion rights is the second highest priority for Democrats. It was chosen by 72% of Democrats but just 39% of independents and 17% of Republicans. And 68% of Republicans say investigating the Biden administration should be a top priority compared to 38% of independents and 12% of Democrats.

Immigration and border security rank highly for Republicans but not Democrats. And Democrats strongly support Congress providing aid for Ukraine, a low priority for Republicans.

(You can view the full survey here.)

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Rupert Murdoch to testify in Dominion voting machine defamation case | Rupert Murdoch

A defamation lawsuit claiming Fox News purposely promoted false claims that a voting tech company rigged the 2020 election is set to reach the apex of the media empire next week when the channel’s owner, Rupert Murdoch, is scheduled to sit for a deposition.

Lawyers for Dominion Voting Systems, which is suing Fox for $1.6bn, are seeking to learn what knowledge the 91-year-old billionaire might have of his company’s repeated broadcasts of the untruthful allegations.

Segments of shows hosted by the prominent rightwing Fox personalities Sean Hannity, Tucker Carlson and Laura Ingraham, among others, all featured a post-election narrative that Dominion’s voting machines were somehow crooked, including switching ballots from Donald Trump to Joe Biden in the former’s defeat to the latter in the race for the Oval Office, Dominion says.

The lawsuit alleges the unsubstantiated claims were amplified by conspiracy theorist guests such as Rudy Giuliani and Sidney Powell, both lawyers for Trump who have either been sanctioned, or are facing disciplinary measures, for pushing in court the former president’s big lie of a stolen election.

Murdoch, who will sit for depositions via video link on 13 and 14 December, is the most significant name yet to have received a subpoena. On Monday, his son Lachlan Murdoch – the chief executive of the channel’s parent company Fox Corp – gave testimony while others called in last month include the Fox News CEO, Suzanne Scott, and president, Jay Wallace.

Hannity gave a seven-hour deposition in August, the Washington Post reported. According to the newspaper, he was asked specifically about a November 2020 episode of his show in which Powell claimed Dominion “ran an algorithm that shaved off votes from Trump and awarded them to Biden” and added additional huge quantities of “fake” Biden votes.

The lawsuit, which was filed in June 2021 against Fox News, was expanded to include Fox Corp in June. It claims Fox “sold a false story of election fraud in order to serve its own commercial purposes, severely injuring Dominion in the process”.

Fox Corp attempted to have the suit dismissed, but a Delaware judge said Dominion, which provided voting machines to 28 states in the 2020 election, had shown adequate evidence for it to proceed.

Dominion was already suing other rightwing networks OAN and Newsmax for airing similar claims about the integrity of its machines.

Fox has rejected the claims, painting the case as a battle for a free press and its right to broadcast newsworthy allegations of an election fraud pressed by a prominent public official, namely Trump.

In a statement in August, Fox News said: “We are confident we will prevail as freedom of the press is foundational to our democracy and must be protected, in addition to the damages claims being outrageous, unsupported and not rooted in sound financial analysis.”

Fox News objects to what it sees as an attempt by Dominion to expose its internal processes, and it has sought to protect Hannity and fellow host Jeanine Pirro from having to reveal “confidential sources and information”.

Although Hannity has stated publicly that he is not a journalist, Fox appears intent on describing him as one, insisting it is “a journalist’s right to maintain his confidences”.

A five-week trial is set to begin in Delaware’s superior court in April unless a settlement is reached before then. The Post reports that the two sides are so far apart that such a deal is not seen as imminent.

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