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Oprah preaches unity in DNC speech, urges Americans to “choose common sense over nonsense”
Washington — Oprah Winfrey preached unity, while taking slight digs at former President Donald Trump and his running mate, Ohio Sen. JD Vance, at the Democratic convention Wednesday night.
“There are people who want you to see our country as a nation of ‘us against them’ — people who want to scare you, who want to rule you,” she said. “People who’d have you believe that books are dangerous and assault rifles are safe, that there’s a right way to worship and a wrong way to love. People who seek first to divide and then to conquer. But here’s the thing — when we stand together, it is impossible to conquer us.”
“Despite what some would have you think, we are not so different from our neighbors,” Winfrey said. “When a house is on fire, we don’t ask about the homeowner’s race or religion, we don’t wonder who their partner is or how they voted. No. We just try to do the best we can to save them.”
And with a reference to comments Vance made in 2021 about women who have cats and not children, she added, “And if the place happens to belong to a childless cat lady, well, we try to get that cat out too.”
She called out “ridiculous tweets and lies and foolery” and swiped at Trump’s comments that Christians would not have to vote again if they voted for him in November.
“There’s a certain candidate that says, ‘if we just go to the polls this one time, that we’ll never have to do it again,'” she said. “Well, you know what, you’re looking at a registered independent who’s proud to vote again and again and again, because I’m an American, and that’s what Americans do.”
She then sought to sway independents and undecided voters to back Vice President Kamala Harris and her running mate, Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz. She argued “values and character” matter, and “decency and respect” are on the ballot.
“Common sense tells you that Kamala Harris and Tim Walz can give us decency and respect. They’re the ones that give it to us,” she said. “Let us choose loyalty to the Constitution over loyalty to any individual, because that’s the best of America. And let us choose optimism over cynicism, because that’s the best of America. And let us choose inclusion over retribution. Let us choose common sense over nonsense, because that’s the best of America. And let us choose the sweet promise of tomorrow over the bitter return to yesterday. But more than anything else, let us choose freedom. Why? Because that’s the best of America.”
Winfrey refrained from endorsing politicians until 2008, when she backed Barack Obama just before the Iowa caucuses. She then endorsed Hillary Clinton in 2016 and President Biden in 2020.
“She hadn’t intended to be involved, to be honest with you, she tries to stay out of politics, I think,” Gayle King, the co-host of “CBS Mornings” and Winfrey’s close friend, said Wednesday night. “She’d always tried to stay out of the political fray, and I think now the thinking is, for her, she feels there’s a lot at stake and she just wants to — she has some things to say tonight.”
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Ben Schwartz and James Marsden on returning for “Sonic the Hedgehog 3”
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House Ethics Committee quietly voted to release Matt Gaetz ethics report
Washington — The House Ethics Committee has quietly voted to release its report on the investigation into former Rep. Matt Gaetz regarding allegations of sexual misconduct and obstruction, two sources familiar with the matter said, reversing course after Republicans originally blocked its release.
The report will likely be unveiled in the coming days, after the final votes of the 118th Congress, the sources said. Lawmakers face a Friday deadline to approve new government funding and avoid a shutdown before heading home for the holidays. CNN first reported on Thursday that the committee voted behind closed doors to release the report earlier this month.
House Republicans recently blocked two Democratic resolutions that would have compelled the Ethics Committee to release the potentially damaging report on its investigation into Gaetz, voting to refer the matter back to the committee.
Gaetz resigned from Congress shortly after President-elect Donald Trump said he planned to nominate Gaetz to be attorney general in November. But Gaetz soon withdrew from consideration, facing a likely contentious confirmation process. Gaetz has said he does not intend to take the oath of office for the same seat in the 119th Congress, and is launching a new show on the pro-Trump One America News Network in January.
It’s highly unusual, but not unprecedented, for the House Ethics Committee to release a report on a member who is no longer in office. Congressional leaders, including some Democrats, have expressed concerns about the precedent set by unveiling the Gaetz report.
In June, the committee released a statement saying it was investigating allegations against Gaetz that included sexual misconduct, illicit drug use, and bribery.
Multiple sources at the time told CBS News that four women had informed the Ethics Committee that they had been paid to go to parties that included sex and drugs, and that Gaetz had also attended. The committee has Gaetz’s Venmo transactions that allegedly show payments for the women.
Gaetz has repeatedly denied wrongdoing and has called the committee’s investigation a “frivolous” smear campaign.
Some of the sexual misconduct allegations under review by the committee were the subject of a previous Department of Justice probe into Gaetz. Federal investigators sought to determine if Gaetz violated sex trafficking and obstruction of justice laws, but no charges were filed.
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Grateful Dead’s legacy takes center stage at Kennedy Center Honors
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