CBS News
Vice President Harris and governors dish on immigration, abortion, special counsel — but not on dumping Biden
Washington — A weekend meeting hosted by Vice President Kamala Harris with battleground state governors included no conversation about removing President Biden from the Democratic Party ticket, but plenty of talk about how to discredit special counsel Robert Hur’s report and campaign more aggressively on issues like abortion rights and immigration.
The first-of-its-kind gathering, at least for this administration, unfolded over three hours around the dining room table at the Vice President’s Residence in Northwest Washington, where she served coffee and lights snacks, and later, cocktails, according to multiple people familiar with the meeting. She shared forthcoming campaign plans and told the governors she considers them critical to winning their battleground states and the key constituencies they represent.
It was described by people familiar with the exchange as an intimate listening session, where governors who have overseen their large states during the COVID-19 pandemic, won tough reelection fights and could one day face off against the vice president in future bids for the White House unloaded their concerns to Harris and close aides.
The biggest concern? “The lack of creativity and agility that comes from the West Wing,” according to one person familiar with the exchange.
The president “needs to be more aggressive,” this person added. “He needs to call out the GOP on immigration more. And Biden’s language on abortion needs to change.”
There appeared to be no disagreement around the table, according to sources.
The concerns were raised just days after Republicans successfully blocked a bipartisan proposal to overhaul southern border security and immigration policy that had been crafted over several months with the encouragement of the president, who was responding to Republican demands he address the record number of crossings at the U.S.-Mexico span.
And the meeting occurred as the president’s language on abortion rights has changed slightly. At a private fundraiser last week, he said, “I’m a practicing Catholic. I don’t want abortion on demand, but I thought Roe v. Wade was right.”
That’s a more succinct acknowledgment of his devout Roman Catholic faith, but fellow Democrats have demanded that he strongly defend abortion rights. The president spent most of his public life opposed to federal funding for abortion services, but reversed course during his 2020 campaign. He has struggled since Roe v. Wade was overturned in 2022 to convey the urgent concerns of members of his party over the future of abortion access, rarely discussing the issue and allowing it become instead a major focus for Harris, who’s traveled the country in recent months discussing the issue with college students especially.
In a recent interview on “Face the Nation,” Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer suggested more “blunt language” from the president on abortion rights “would be helpful.”
Whitmer was among the governors in attendance Saturday. Also there: Govs. Tim Walz of Minnesota; JB Pritzker of Illinois; Tony Evers of Wisconsin; Roy Cooper of North Carolina; Josh Shapiro of Pennsylvania; and Wes Moore of Maryland, all of whom were invited to bring along their chiefs of staff.
Walz is chairman of the Democratic Governors’ Association. All except Shapiro and Moore were elected in 2018 and reelected in 2022 and have served with the same chief of staff their entire terms. The Midwestern governors frequently collaborated on a regional level during the pandemic amid concerns the Trump administration mishandled the response and punished Democratic-controlled states.
“It’s a group of battle-tested governors who came in during COVID, knew how to do the right thing and have the expertise to help and want to,” one person familiar with the meeting told CBS News.
Another person described it as “a group of governors that know how to win. They know how to be administrators and win. That’s something that’s really unique.”
Shapiro and Moore won key races in 2022 and have campaigned frequently with the president. They are also seen as future presidential aspirants.
The vice president was joined by her vice presidential chief of staff, Lorraine Voles; Sheila Nix, her campaign chief of staff; and Louisa Terrell, a former White House official now serving at the Democratic National Committee as a liaison to governors.
In a sign of how detailed-oriented the vice president was with the governors, she told them Terrell is assigned as their liaison to the campaign and should be contacted for anything from questions about campaign travel, potential campaign staff hires or ensuring key supporters get a photo taken with the president or vice president at fundraisers or rallies.
Despite ongoing chatter in the broader party and polls showing a sustained desire for other candidates to run instead, there was no conversation about removing the president from the party ticket, according to those familiar with the meeting.
“People around that table understand he isn’t going anywhere,” one person said.
But the vice president once again strongly criticized Hur’s conclusions in his investigation into Mr. Biden’s alleged mishandling of classified materials. In one of her most forceful defenses ever of the president, on Friday she called the report “clearly politically motivated” and cited her own career as a prosecutor to blast it as “gratuitous, inaccurate and inappropriate.”
She did it again on Saturday and credited Pritzker, who on Friday told Illinois reporters, “It was extremely unfair for a Trump appointee, originally to the Department of Justice, to offer his own opinions about the mental acuity or age of the president of the United States.”
Harris and the governors agreed that’s the strategy to adopt: Question the partisan motivations of Hur and keep focused instead on raising concerns about Donald Trump possibly returning to the White House.
Harris also laid out plans for a big campaign-style push after the State of the Union address on March 7. She said she and the president would be traveling to highlight “issues they still want to accomplish that they won’t have cooperation on this year,” said one person familiar with the meeting who declined to specify the issues.
If the governors have their way, that’ll mean a big focus on abortion rights and immigration, especially.
CBS News
Russia says Ukraine fired 6 U.S.-made ATACMS missiles at Bryansk as Moscow warns such strikes risk world war
Zhytomyr, Ukraine — Exactly 1,000 days after Russia launched its full-scale invasion of neighboring Ukraine, Russia’s defense ministry accused Ukrainian forces on Tuesday of firing six U.S.-made and -supplied ATACMS missiles at the Russian region of Bryansk. If confirmed, it could be the first time Ukrainian troops had taken advantage of President Biden easing restrictions over the weekend on Ukraine’s use of the U.S.-made missiles to strike targets deeper inside Russian territory.
Ukraine’s military said it hit a Russian weapons depot in Bryansk overnight, but it didn’t say what weapons were used. U.S. officials confirmed to CBS News on Tuesday that U.S.-supplied ATACMS had been used on targets inside Russia.
In a statement carried by state media, Russia’s Defense Ministry said the military had shot down five ATACMS fired by Ukraine and damaged another. The reports said fragments had fallen at or near a military facility and that some of the debris had ignited a fire, but the ministry said there was no damage or casualties.
The strike in Bryansk came hours after another Ukrainian residential neighborhood was left charred and smoking. Ukrainian officials said 10 people were killed Monday in a Russian drone and missile attack on the southern city of Odesa.
The strike came a day after another strike on the power grid in Odesa, which also destroyed several homes.
With Mr. Biden finally granting Ukraine the long-sought permission to fire ATACMS — which have a range of about 190 miles — deeper into Russia, President Volodymyr Zelenskyy’s forces had a new option to retaliate for the latest carnage.
Russia, however, has accused the U.S. of adding fuel to the fire.
In September, President Vladimir Putin warned that if the U.S. allowed Ukraine to use ATACMS inside his country, it would mean the U.S. and its NATO allies were at war with Russia.
Putin has yet to respond directly to Mr. Biden’s weekend decision, but lawmakers in Moscow fumed over the move on Monday, including a senator who called it “a very big step toward the beginning of the third world war.”
Neither side has confirmed its death tolls during the war, but Ukraine’s military has paid a steep price for trying to defend the country from the invasion, with around 70,000 troops believed to have been killed. More than 100,000 soldiers from Russia — a country with a population more than three times larger than Ukraine’s — have been killed, according to U.S. officials.
Col. Maksym Balagura, a special forces commander in Ukraine’s state border guard, acknowledged the vast size discrepancy when asked by CBS News if his country was short on manpower, saying it “isn’t possible to compare Russia and Ukraine… Their country is 10 times the size of ours, and of course they have more manpower.”
But with the grueling ground and air war showing no signs of letting up, Russia’s military has already been bolstered by more than 10,000 North Korean soldiers, according to Ukrainian, South Korean and U.S. officials.
Zelenskyy warned Tuesday that the North Korean contingent supporting Russia’s forces could grow to 100,000, as the two Western adversaries deepen their security ties.
contributed to this report.
CBS News
Bodycam shows Las Vegas man who called 911 for help killed by police in his home
A family is demanding answers after a Las Vegas father was shot and killed in his own home after calling police to report a potential home invasion.
Newly released police bodycam video shows Brandon Durham, 43, struggling with an alleged intruder over a knife in the early hours of Nov. 12. The intruder, later identified as Alejandra Boudreaux, 31, was wearing a red hoodie, while Durham was shirtless, the video shows. Durham’s 15-year-old daughter was home at the time, but was not at the scene, officials said.
Las Vegas police said Officer Alexander Bookman entered the home and ordered the pair to drop the knife before firing his weapon, police said. Durham was struck and fell to the floor. Bookman then fires five more rounds, the video shows.
Durham was pronounced dead at the scene. Now, his family is pushing for answers.
“He called the police for safety and instead, he was brutally murdered,” his daughter Isabella said in a news conference.
“Someone needs to explain to me why my son is not here with us today,” added Durham’s mother.
Bookman is on paid leave while the Las Vegas Metro Police Department investigates whether he acted appropriately or should face criminal charges. Clark County District Attorney Steve Wolfson told Durham’s family the investigation could take 30 to 90 days, according to CBS affiliate KLAS.
“Every time a police officer used force, he has to be able to articulate why he used that force,” Felipe Rodriguez, an adjunct professor at John Jay College of Criminal Justice and a former detective sergeant for the NYPD, told CBS News. “And even if he did use one round, you know, how is it that he was, you know, he continued shooting after the person was down in such a rapid succession? It’s going to have a lot of explaining.”
Boudreaux was arrested and faces multiple charges, including one count of home invasion with a deadly weapon, a count of assault with a deadly weapon, a count of performing an act of willful or wanton disregard of safety resulting in a person’s death, and one count of child abuse, according to police.
Boudreaux and Durham knew each other and had a sexual relationship, according to an arrest report obtained by KLAS 8. Boudreaux told detectives she intended to have police kill her on the day of the home invasion, the station reported, and Boudreaux has refused to appear at two court hearings.
CBS News
Russian strikes continue in Ukraine, marking 1,000 days since the invasion
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