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Harris holds first fundraiser as presumptive Democratic nominee: “We are the underdogs in this race”

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Pittsfield, Massachusetts — Vice President Kamala Harris attended her first major fundraiser Saturday since becoming the presumptive Democratic presidential nominee. 

Speaking to more than 800 attendees in Pittsfield, Massachusetts — mostly composed of Democratic donors — Harris made her campaign pitch and defended her record to that of her rival, former President Donald Trump. 

“As attorney general, I took on one of our country’s largest for-profit colleges that was scamming students,” Harris told the fundraiser’s attendees. “Well, Donald Trump ran a for-profit college that scammed students,” referencing the now defunct Trump University. In 2016, Trump agreed to pay $25 million to settle several civil lawsuits brought by former students. 

Harris also referred to the May 2023 civil verdict in which a New York jury found Trump liable for sexually abusing writer E. Jean Carroll in the mid-1990s. 

“As a prosecutor I specialized in sexual abuse cases,” she said. “Well, Trump was found liable for committing sexual abuse.”

The vice president told her crowd she hopes Trump will agree to debate her. Prior to President Biden’s exit from the race — in the wake of the fallout over his performance in the first debate — the two had agreed to a second debate to take place Sept. 10 on ABC. Trump has said he would debate Harris, but has called for it to be hosted by Fox News. 

“You may have seen he just pulled out of our debates,” Harris said. “I hope he reconsiders. I hope he reconsiders. We have a lot to talk about.” 

Trump campaign spokesperson Steven Cheung said Thursday it could not schedule a debate with Harris as “Democrats very well could still change their minds” on their nominee.  

During the fundraiser, Harris also pledged to “finally pass the John Lewis Voting Rights Act,” named after the late Georgia congressman and civil rights icon. The bill would restore a provision of the 1965 Voting Rights Act which was eliminated by the Supreme Court.

Harris also committed to working to curb gun violence and advancing her fight for reproductive rights

“When Congress passes a law to restore reproductive freedom, as president of the United States, I will sign it into law,” she said. 

Harris acknowledged the success of her campaign in the first days since its launch, saying “momentum is on our side,” but also telling her donors that “we got to fight and we are the underdogs in this race.” The Harris campaign said this week it has raised more than $100 million since its launch. 

The fundraiser, benefiting the Harris Victory Fund, raised $1.4 million, according to a Harris campaign official, more than triple the initial $400,000 goal. The event marked the first major political event in the Berkshires since a visit from then first lady Michelle Obama in 2012. 

Pittsfield locals lined up outside of the Colonial Theater where the fundraiser was held, expressing enthusiasm over their city serving as a protagonist in the presidential race. 

Harris supporters held up banners reading “Girl Boss,” “first female president” and “if my cat could vote, she would vote for you,” a reference to recently-surfaced comments from Sen. JD Vance, the Republican vice presidential nominee, who claimed in a 2021 interview that 

the U.S. was being run by “a bunch of childless cat ladies,” and specifically referenced Harris. 

“I firmly believe that it is past time to have a woman in charge and I just don’t want to go back,” said Patricia Labendz, a Pittsfield resident. “We are not going back. I grew up in the ’70s, and there was misogyny. A woman’s body is her body and nobody should be telling her what to do with it.”

Some residents were also there to show their support for Trump, holding large Trump flags, while a group of pro-Palestinian protesters gathered near the venue. 

“Stop playing both sides, pick a side to stand on and stand with it,” said Eyad Alkurabi, a Pittsfield local. “If you want to stand with the Palestinian people you need to stand 100%.”



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Climate groups working to mobilize early voters and track new climate voters in battlefield states

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Across Philadelphia, dozens of silver haired, climate-conscious canvassers are going door to door in the last weeks before Election Day, leaving green slips of paper with guides on how to register to vote this year. 

“It’s the most consequential one that I’ve been a part of,” climate canvasser Daniel Carlson told CBS News. “I’ve been voting for four decades.”

Carlson is part of Third Act, a climate activist group for people over 60. The group is trying to mobilize voters on climate change in an election that’s been dominated by worries about the economy, immigration and abortion access.

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Philadelphia — Environmental Voter Project organizer speaks to first time canvassers, October  2024.

CBS News / Seiji Yamashita


CBS News polling has found climate change is “not a factor” for 32% of voters in the presidential race, but for millions, it’s their top issue, according to the Environmental Voter Project, another non-profit group; EVP works on identifying climate-minded voters and get them to the polls.

In particular, EVP focuses on low-propensity climate voters — those who did not vote in the last presidential election and are concerned about climate change. 

Nathaniel Sinnett, executive director of EVP, said, “In Pennsylvania, we’ve identified 245,000 of these voters,” Sinnett told CBS News, and he’s found equally high numbers in other key battleground states where EVP is active. In 2020, Joe Biden’s margin of victory over Donald Trump in Pennsylvania was 80,555.

EVP says it uses predictive modeling and data analytics to identify millions of climate-focused registered voters, and then it relies on voter files to target its efforts toward environmentalists who are registered to vote but who have not been voting. 

“We really like what we’re seeing in the early voting, nearly 130,000 first-time climate voters have already cast ballots in the 19 states where we work,” says Nathaniel Sinnett, executive director of the Environmental Voter Project, or EVP. Five of the states where EVP is tracking voters are battleground states — the group says it has identified hundreds of thousands of low-propensity climate voters in these battleground states:

  • Arizona: 229,311
  • Georgia: 491,369
  • Nevada: 108,694
  • North Carolina: 266,227
  • Pennsylvania: 245,206

Sinnett acknowledged these models and data don’t guarantee a climate vote is a vote for the Democratic ticket, but early voting and environmental voters have historically leaned liberal. 

EVP tracks the voters it’s identified and whether they’ve cast a ballot, and on a more granular level, the group is tallying the climate-focused voters they’ve found who did not vote in 2020 but cast a 2024 ballot during early voting this fall. Based on early voting returns, according to Sinnett, in some battleground states, climate voters are turning out at higher rates than the general electorate.

EVP has identified nearly 230,000 first-time climate voters in Arizona in 2024, and as of Oct. 25, EVP has seen 5,514 of those individuals cast early ballots. In 2020, Arizona was decided by fewer than 11,000 votes. The group is seeing similar returns in other battleground states and hopes its efforts will help nudge climate-friendly candidates to victory.

“Climate voters are not the largest voting bloc in the country,” said Sinnett. “But this fall, climate voters can have a real impact on the margins, and in an election where all seven swing states are statistically tied, a little movement in the margins will decide everything.”

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Third Act’s Bill McKibben speaks to a crowd of volunteers at Arch Street Meeting House, October 2024.

CBS News / Seiji Yamashita


Third Act is another environmental group working on turning out climate-concerned voters, but its focus is on older Americans. It was founded by Bill McKibben, an environmentalist who has written more than a dozen books on the topic and has organized climate protests all over the world. Although climate politics is often associated with young voters, McKibben thinks his generation has a unique perspective, having seen the civil rights movement and the conservation movement of the ’60s, ’70s and ’80s. 

“In the course of our lifetimes, we’ve seen a lot of change, and much of it for the better. You know, when I was born, Kamala Harris and her husband couldn’t have been married in half the states.”

Like EVP, McKibben and his group have run into some reluctance by many climate-minded Americans to show up to the polls. 

“They care deeply about the climate, but maybe they’re just decided there’s nothing that can be done, or whatever it is. So, we’ve got to reach them and just say this isn’t everything,” McKibben told CBS News. “The purpose of an election is not salvation.”

Environmental salvation is likely on Carlson’s mind, though. The 60-year-old is a pastor by day, and he decided to make the trip from Schenectady, New York to Philadelphia to doorknock for the first time — he says he’s trying to do his part to help boost turnout in a consequential election. 

“The world that my generation will leave to the next generation is definitely compromised and damaged in some really considerable respects, but I want to do all that I can to be of as much help as I can to the generations that are to come.”

Helen Grady, 85, a former Philadelphia school teacher, was also motivated to start canvassing when she heard many college students were considering not voting.

“That really angers me, and it frustrates me when I hear somebody say, there’s no point to voting because both sides are broken,” she told CBS News. “I used to tell my high school students, ‘you don’t vote, you can’t complain.'”



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AI helps organization send poorest households impacted by Helene and Milton $1,000

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AI is helping a philanthropic organization give $1,000 cash payments to Hurricanes Helene and Milton victims in North Carolina and Florida who need it most.

About 1,000 households in areas hit hardest by the hurricanes will start receiving emergency payments from nonprofit GiveDirectly this week. Unlike other forms of assistance, the cash funds are transferred rapidly and doled out with no strings attached. 

GiveDirectly said it started sending payments to households it identified as being both low-income and located in parts of the U.S. that were devastated by the storms. It does so using a Google-developed AI tool to identify particular areas with both high concentrations of poverty and storm damage. 

After identifying hardest-hit, low-income households, the nonprofit then alerts recipients at those addresses that they are eligible for the payments remotely through a smartphone app powered by Propel, an electronic benefits transfers app used to manage SNAP benefits. 

“We use satellite imagery that shows us flooding and roof damage and we overlay that with data on high-poverty areas,” Dustin Palmer, who runs GiveDirectly’s U.S. programs, told CBS MoneyWatch. “We look for intersection of damage and areas that have high poverty as a community.”

The first payments are being disbursed Friday and through the weekend, and will be deposited through the Propel app’s virtual debit card.

The approach is designed to get cash to people who need it the most, as fast as possible.


Dak Prescott’s foundation sends over $1.8 billion in supplies to Florida hurricane victims

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GiveDirectly is raising funds for second round of aid

“$1,000 is a meaningful enough amount to help people get out of the house if they need to, and get supplies,” Palmer said. GiveDirectly is currently raising funds in order to administer another round of aid to hurricane victims. 

He did note the limitations of relying on a smartphone and app to make the payments, but said the benefits trump the drawbacks. 

“We are aware of limitations of that and we’re comfortable with the trade-off of having really high confidence that people are low-income and ready to receive the money right away. We are privileging that speed is of the essence in time of disaster,” Palmer said.  

When the company administers larger, longer lead programs, it also offers in-person enrollment options that don’t require a mobile device, he added. Propel serves roughly 5 million of the 41 million people enrolled in SNAP benefits, or about one in four SNAP recipients.

Case for guaranteed income

West said one-time cash payments can be a huge help to families recovering from a disaster, but the money can make a more profound difference if it’s given for a sustained time.

Research on guaranteed income programs shows recipients spend the money on their needs, said Stacia West, founding director at the University of Pennsylvania’s Center for Guaranteed Income Research. “There is no one who can budget better than a person in poverty,” she said.

In a study tracking spending across 9,000 participants in more than 30 guaranteed income programs in the U.S., the Center for Guaranteed Income Research has found that the majority of the money is spent on retail goods, food and groceries and transportation.

GiveDirectly also plans to launch disaster preparedness programs in the U.S. to allow households to fortify their homes in anticipation of a hurricane, or evacuate, for example. 

“With anticipatory action, we send money before a disaster. Giving people cash payments ahead of time lets people stock up on supplies to fortify their houses or move,” he explained. “It’s about being resilient to climate disasters.”

contributed to this report.



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Costco’s Kirkland Signature smoked salmon recalled over listeria concerns

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Costco’s Kirkland Signature smoked salmon recalled over listeria concerns – CBS News


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Salmon sold at Costco is the latest product to be recalled over listeria concerns. Acme Smoked Fish Corp., which supplies the fish to Costco, sent a notice to shoppers this week. It urged them to return Kirkland Signature smoked salmon bought between Oct. 9 and 13 for a full refund.

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