Connect with us

Kare11

Experts weigh in on presidential debate strategy

Avatar

Published

on



It may be the only chance for the two major party presidential candidates to share the same stage.

MINNEAPOLIS — The eyes of the nation will be on a stage in Philadelphia Tuesday night as Vice President Kamala Harris and former President Donald Trump debate for the first, and possibly last, time.

The ABC News debate presents challenges for both candidates, according to University of Minnesota political science professor Kathryn Pearson. But she asserts Harris has more to lose because she’s the lesser known of the pair.

“There’s definitely more at stake for Harris because she’s been in this race for such a short period of time. Eight weeks out until the election, she’s only been the candidate officially since early August,” Pearson explained. “Running as the candidate of change when a Democrat currently occupies the White House and you’re the sitting vice president is a challenge. I understand why she’s trying to do that.”

Pearson said that Trump’s challenge will be to stay on point and talk about issues rather than personalities.

“Former President Trump really needs to essentially give a similar performance to his debate performance the end of June,” Pearson remarked.

“Strikingly, they’ve actually never met in person, which is a little bit hard to believe. He also has a history of having a hard time debating women. The fact the mics are off when the candidates aren’t talking is really helpful, because it sort of prevents some of things he’s said that have gotten him in trouble in the past.”

The candidates are also facing the task of trying to appeal to a new wave of younger voters who the candidates’ messages to more compact and compelling, according to messaging expert Kristi Piehl of the Media Minefield consulting agency.

“Their audience is completely different than any other audience that a presidential candidate has ever had to deal with because we have Gen Z voters in a TikTok era who want to feel something,” Piehl told KARE. “They want to be moved to action. And they want that done in about 15 seconds!”

Piehl said viewers will also be watching closely for the nonverbal messages from the candidate, something that loomed large in the Trump-Biden debate.

“What will their faces be doing when the other person is speaking? There are all of these other messages that will be communicated, will be pulled apart, will be slowed down and analyzed after the debate,” Piehl said.

Presidential historian Talmage Boston said he’ll be watching closely to see how disciplined the candidates are when it comes to keeping the focus on the future.

“Are they really responding, are they really advancing the argument. If there’s a chance for rebuttal, is the person making the rebuttal advancing?” Boston told KARE. “Any effort to get sidetracked with personal attacks or filibuster, whatever it may be, is not helpful to advancing the discussion of the issues. Can Harris maintain the composure and confidence she had in the Dana Bash interview? Can Trump focus on the issues and not his standard schtick?”

Boston, a veteran attorney based in Dallas, recently penned a book “How the Best Did It: Leadership Lessons from Our Top Presidents” highlighting the US presidents who were the most effective communicators.

“You cannot change someone’s mind unless you change their heart, and the great communicators understand that and speak in words that touch the heart first. That’s the top priority, and everything else follows from that,” Boston said. 



Read the original article

Leave your vote

Continue Reading

Kare11

Supreme Court’s newest member takes the oath

Avatar

Published

on



A ceremony was help honoring the Minnesota Supreme Court’s newest member.

ST PAUL, Minn. — A vast array of judges, lawyers, family and friends gathered at the Minnesota History Center in Saint Paul to honor the newest member of the Minnesota Supreme Court.

Chief Justice Natalie Hudson administered the oath of office to Associate Justice Theodora Gaitas, who was appointed last spring to replace retiring Associate Justice Margaret Chutich.

“A strong judiciary guards against tyranny, against oppression, against injustice. But a strong judiciary also serves the people,” Gaitas told the crowd.

Gaitas, who spent her childhood in Greece, quoted Greek philosopher Aristotle several times in her speech.

“Aristotle wrote law is order and good law is good order,” she said. “Here in Minnesota, we have good order. Good order relies on a strong judiciary.”

Gaitas has spent the past four years as a jurist on the Minnesota Court of Appeals and before that spent two years as a Ramsey County District Court Judge. She took the legal oath previously before joining the Supreme Court in August, so Monday’s event was purely ceremonial. 

Gov. Walz appointed Gaitas and Judge Sarah Hennesy last April to fill two vacancies that were expected on the high court in the months ahead.  Justice Hennesy joined the Supreme Court on May 13, replacing the retiring Associate Justice G. Barry Anderson.

Walz took a break from the vice-presidential campaign trail Monday afternoon to attend the ceremony and thank Gaitas for accepting the new role.

“One of the questions we asked is what life experiences shaped who you are,” Walz said. “Justice Gaitas’ personal journey, her personal heartaches, as well as her commitment to others shined through in so many ways. Putting others in front of herself, and her work as a public defender doing it with every ounce of her intellect, but with the compassion that needed to be there too, shined through.”

The heartache he referenced was the sudden death in 2023 of Justice Gaitas’s husband R. Christopher Sur. He died while cross-country skiing in Theodore Wirth Park in Minneapolis with a friend. Their daughter Clea performed with a musical combo at the ceremony and held a copy of the US and Minnesota Constitutions as Gaitas took the oath.

Lt. Gov. Flanagan praised Gaitas for her breadth of experience and connection to those who use the court system.

“Justice Gaitas has excelled at every level of the legal profession and the judiciary. Her extensive experience as an appellate public defender and judge in the district court and court of appeals instilled a deep understanding of how our justice system can and should treat real people.”



Read the original article

Leave your vote

Continue Reading

Kare11

Former secret service agent reacts to latest Trump apparent assassination attempt

Avatar

Published

on



Mike Olson served in the Secret Service for over two decades and has some thoughts on what went wrong and what could be done better by the Secret Service.

WEST PALM BEACH, Fla. — It’s no secret that the agency tasked with protecting former president Donald Trump are constantly on the lookout for threats, especially following the assassination attempt in July. 

The heightened level of concern has former Secret Service agent Mike Olson questioning the actions of Secret Service agents on Sunday. Olson was in the Secret Service for over two decades, and now runs his own security firm, 360 Security Services. 

“I have been a part of those golf outings in my career and typically there is much more security on those outer roads outside of the fence line,” Olson said. 

Ryan Wesley Routh, 58, faces charges of possessing a firearm despite a prior felony conviction and possessing a firearm with an obliterated serial number. He did not fire any shots and never had Trump in his line of sight, the Secret Service’s acting chief said.

Routh appeared briefly in federal court in West Palm Beach, kickstarting a criminal case in the final weeks of a presidential race already touched by violence and upheaval. Though no one was injured, the episode marked the second attempt on Trump’s life in as many months, raising fresh questions about the security afforded to him during a time of amped-up political rhetoric. It prompted Republican allies and even some Democrats to demand to know how a would-be shooter could get so close.

The Secret Service’s acting chief said the golf outing was ‘off the record’ and not released a part of the former president’s public schedule. 

“True off the record is going without all the cars and trying to go undercover so to speak,” Olson said.

Routh was arrested Sunday afternoon after authorities spotted a firearm poking out of shrubbery on the West Palm Beach golf course where Trump was playing. He was spotted by a Secret Service agent assigned to Trump’s security detail who opened fire. Routh sped away before being captured by law enforcement in a neighboring county, the authorities said.

Olson said in his experience, there were few levels of protection in off the record outings, usually meaning there wasn’t a massive outside perimeter around the location. This is the part he has questions about, considering the predictability of where the former President likes to golf in West Palm Beach and the day of the week he usually golfs. With heightened level of threat following the first assassination attempt at a rally in July, Olson thinks even ‘off the record’ outings need to be treated as a normal event. 

“I am saying across the board, we need to really step things up between now and the election,” Olson said. 



Read the original article

Leave your vote

Continue Reading

Kare11

U.S. Surgeon General issues health warning on parental stress

Avatar

Published

on



The U.S. surgeon general calls parental stress an urgent public health issue that requires the nation’s immediate awareness and action.

MINNEAPOLIS, Minnesota — We all know parenting can be stressful but the U.S. surgeon general said it goes beyond that. 

U.S. Surgeon General Dr. Vivek Murthy has issued an advisory on parental stress, calling attention to an “urgent public health issue.” Murthy said. “advisories are reserved for significant public health challenges that require the nation’s immediate awareness and action.” 

Dr. Murthy said there are many factors affecting parents today. Beyond the traditional challenges, he mentions “there are new stressors that previous generations didn’t have to consider. These include the complexity of managing social media, parents’ concerns about the youth mental health crisis, and an epidemic of loneliness that disproportionately affects young people and parents, just to name a few.”

Meghan Tompkins of Golden Valley is a mom to three — ages 5, 3 and 11 months. 

“My husband and I were just talking about it the other day, actually… deciding if we want to have another kid or not. We’re almost at this point, even with a 5-year-old and a 3-year-old and just their kind of basic activities… there’s kind of an expectation to put your kids in all these things and try everything and you want them to. But then we also feel like we’re kind of capped out almost,” Tompkins said.

According to the surgeon general’s advisory, 41% of parents say most days they are so stressed they cannot function. 

“I try to talk to my mom about it and tell her that it’s different, that it is more stressful and the stresses are different, and she doesn’t really understand it,” said Emma Skala of Minneapolis.  

Skala’s kids are ages 7 and 4. Skala homeschools her boys, citing school shootings as one of the main reasons behind her decision. 

According to the report, school shootings or the possibility of one are a significant source of stress for nearly 75% of parents. 

“I can’t fathom putting a small child through an active shooter drill. I just, it breaks my heart every time I hear about it. I cry every time I hear about any kind of school shooting that happens. That’s I think one of the main things is the safety of our children,” Skala. 

The advisory also mentions nearly 70% of parents say parenting is now more difficult than it was 20 years ago, with children’s use of technology and social media as the top two cited reasons.

“I let my 3.5-year-old scroll YouTube and I’m nervous about that. Should I really be letting him do that? How much control do I have on that? And you know that we need to limit screen time, and yet that’s an easy go-to when I’m trying to make dinner… I’m trying to do my part-time job from home,” said Kristi Thao, who also has a 3-month-old baby. 

Thao also mentioned how social media and access to so much advice can put more pressure on parents. 

“Then we try all these different things but it’s like, then there’s so many options. I think having too many options can also make things more stressful. There’s too many choices,” Thao said. 

The advisory acknowledges an “intensifying culture of comparison—often propagated by influencers and online trends—with unrealistic expectations around the milestones, parenting strategies, achievements and status symbols that kids and parents must pursue. Chasing these unreasonable expectations has left many families feeling exhausted, burned out, and perpetually behind.”

Lena K. Gardner became a mom three months before the pandemic. 

“In my personal journey, I am a single mom by choice,” Gardner said. “And I thought I could do that because I have a big support network but COVID took that all away.” 

The advisory states, “This high level of stress among parents preceded the COVID-19 pandemic, and the pandemic notably contributed to additional stressors on parents and caregivers.”

During the pandemic, Gardner isolated with her daughter. At the same time, her daughter would only sleep for 1.5 hours at a time before waking up. 

“I became so sleep-deprived, I started having hallucinations. I called my therapist and I was like, ‘That’s it. Motherhood has broken me.’ And she said, ‘No it hasn’t. This is the first sign of extreme sleep deprivation.’ And she’s like, ‘You need help,'” Gardner recalled. 

Once her daughter was in daycare, Gardner said she had to navigate daycare closures or exclusions during the pandemic. 

“It still happens. Your kid gets COVID. They’re excluded for how many days and you’re left to bear the brunt of it,” said Gardner, whose parents have both passed away. 

The report said social isolation and lack of social support can lead to heightened stress. On top of that, parents, on average, are working more than before. 

“Most people are required to be at their jobs from something like 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. But schooling is from like 7 a.m. to 3 p.m., and it just doesn’t make logistical sense,” Gardner said. 

She went on to say, “There are a lot of solutions and it baffles me why we’re not doing them more.” 

Dr. Murthy mentioned the need for a cultural shift that recognizes the importance of raising children. 

At the same time, he also pointed to the need for policy changes. Among his recommendations include promoting and expanding funding for programs such as Head Start and the Healthy Start program, establishing a national paid family and medical leave program, and ensuring parents and caregivers have access to affordable and high-quality mental health care. 

The full advisory can be found, here



Read the original article

Leave your vote

Continue Reading

Copyright © 2024 Breaking MN

Log In

Forgot password?

Forgot password?

Enter your account data and we will send you a link to reset your password.

Your password reset link appears to be invalid or expired.

Log in

Privacy Policy

Add to Collection

No Collections

Here you'll find all collections you've created before.