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Biden surveys Hurricane Idalia’s damage in Florida
President Biden and first lady Jill Biden traveled to Florida Saturday to survey the damage wrought by Hurricane Idalia and the state, local and federal response to it.
The president and first lady took an aerial tour of storm-affected areas, before traveling to Live Oak, Florida, where they received a briefing on response and recovery efforts and met with first responders, federal personnel and local officials. The president also toured damage on the ground in Live Oak.
“No winds this strong had this area in a hundred years. I pray God it will be another hundred years before this happens again,” Mr. Biden told reporters in Live Oak.
Prior to making his trip, the president had said he would be meeting with Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis during the visit, but DeSantis’ spokesperson, Jeremy Redfern, said the governor’s office did not have plans for the two to meet, and DeSantis was absent from Biden’s visit. Instead, Biden was greeted by Republican Sen. Rick Scott of Florida.
Mr. Biden on Saturday dismissed the controversy, responding, “No, I’m not disappointed,” when asked about not meeting with DeSantis. “He may have had other reasons. Because — but he did help us plan this. He sat with FEMA and decided where we should go, where would be the least disruption.”
Mr. Biden also said he has “been in frequent touch with Gov. DeSantis since the storm made landfall.” DeSantis was captured on video earlier this week taking a call from Mr. Biden, a conversation which appeared cordial.
DeSantis on Friday had voiced concerns with the president’s “security apparatus” being disruptive to recovery efforts and power restoration in the hardest-hit areas that are difficult to access.
DeSantis Saturday instead spent time distributing food in the hard-hit coastal town of Horseshoe Beach, located about 75 miles southwest of Live Oak.
In a statement Friday night, White House spokesperson Emilie Simons said the Biden’s trip had been “planned in close coordination with FEMA as well as state and local leaders to ensure there is no impact on response operations.”
Residents of the Big Bend region of Florida are grappling with the aftermath of a Category 3 hurricane that flooded and splintered homes and businesses. Mr. Biden approved DeSantis’ major disaster declaration request, and says the Sunshine State will receive whatever it needs.
“And as I said, you know, and to the people of Florida and throughout the southeast, I’m here to make clear that our nation has your back,” the president said during a visit to the Federal Emergency Management Agency in Washington, D.C., on Thursday, adding, “We’re not going to walk away. We’re not going to give up. We’re not going to slow down.”
Power outages continue to plague the state, particularly in Taylor, Madison, Lafayette, Hamilton, Swanny, Jefferson and Dixie counties, DeSantis said Friday, though power has been restored to hundreds of thousands of homes and other buildings.
The storm has brought a moment of bipartisanship between a Democratic president running for reelection and a Republican governor running for the GOP nomination. Mr. Biden told reporters he hasn’t sensed politics or political motivation in his calls with DeSantis.
Following the trip, Mr. Biden and the first lady flew to Dover Air Force Base in Delaware. This marked Mr. Biden’s second trip in two weeks to a state devastated by a natural disaster, after he visited Maui last month. The island is still reeling from wildfires and working to rebuild its infrastructure.
The president has stressed the need to rebuild a more resilient American infrastructure in light of the disasters in Hawaii and Florida, saying no one can “deny the impact of the climate crisis anymore.” This is a point of contention between the president and DeSantis. DeSantis supports improving infrastructure against major storms but doesn’t say that climate change has affected their impact.
— Cristian Benavides contributed to this report.
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Analysis of the words Trump and Harris relied on in their first debate: “taxes,” “criminals,” “weak”
At the first and only scheduled presidential debate between Vice President Kamala Harris and former President Donald Trump, Harris mentioned Trump by name 38 times. Trump didn’t say Harris’ name a single time.
The former president mentioned inflation nine times; Harris only did so twice. Trump called Harris “weak” five times, and she returned the insult four times.
CBS News analyzed the words both candidates used during Tuesday night’s debate to determine what key themes and rhetoric they used to appeal to American voters as the 2024 election approaches. The analysis also compared the words used in this debate to the June 27 debate between President Biden and Trump. Here’s what we found.
Breaking down the words by topic
The debate kicked off with a question about the economy, but Trump’s response was mostly about immigration, a topic he returned to frequently throughout the night. He said “border” 12 times. Thirty percent of the times that Trump mentioned the word “people,” he was referring to migrants.
Repeatedly citing incorrect numbers, Trump said “million” or “millions” in reference to immigrants entering the U.S. 12 times. Seventeen times he referred to these migrants as “criminals” or referred to “crime” in the context of immigration.
When the candidates did talk about the economy, Trump and Harris said “tax,” “taxes” or “tariff” about the same number of times. Harris referenced “small business” or businesses seven times, a phrase Trump didn’t mention in either debate.
Trump emphasized inflation, using the term nine times — the same number of times he did in the June debate. Harris only mentioned it twice, and once was when she named the Inflation Reduction Act. Harris also made fewer references to “jobs” than Trump did.
On the topic of abortion, Trump spent time on late-term abortion and repeated the false claim that Democrats, including vice presidential nominee and Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz, condone killing newborns. He used the word “baby” six times, while Harris’ remarks about abortion more often focused on women’s bodily autonomy. In the context of abortion, she used the words “woman” or “women” seven times and “body” six times.
Examining how the candidates talked about each other
The candidates’ targeted attacks on Tuesday night included Harris calling Trump a “disgrace” twice and Trump labeling Harris a “Marxist,” echoing his social media nickname for her, “Comrade Kamala.” He also called her the “border czar” three times, a term that overstates her role in managing the country’s immigration policy.
One word that was one of the most frequent jabs the candidates employed was “weak.” Trump described Harris or Harris and Mr. Biden collectively as “weak” five times. He described Mr. Biden as “weak” once in the June debate and once on Tuesday. Harris called Trump or his actions “weak” four times.
Other insults included “incompetent,” used by Trump four times, and “immoral” and “unconscionable” by Harris each once.
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