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Biden heads to the Carolinas to survey catastrophic damage from Hurricane Helene

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President Biden is heading to the Carolinas on Wednesday for an aerial tour of the widespread damage caused by Hurricane Helene, as well as a briefing on the ground on recovery efforts. Vice President Kamala Harris is heading to Georgia to get updates on the emergency response to the storm’s devastation there. 

The president first heads to Greenville, South Carolina, where the city says utility crews and city public work teams are trying to clear roadways and return power. He’ll go on an aerial tour of the affected region, a way for a president to get a sense of the seismic devastation without interfering with recovery efforts. Greenville is about 60 miles south of Asheville, North Carolina, where some of the worst of the damage is. 

Before Mr. Biden arrived, the White House announced he had authorized the deployment of 1,000 active-duty U.S. soldiers “to support the delivery of food, water, and other critical commodities to communities impacted by Hurricane Helene.” The White House said the troops will add to the more than 4,800 federal personnel who have been deployed to help states in the region respond to the storm.

On Monday, the president said 600 people remained unaccounted for, as the search for survivors in the Southeast continues. There were at least 175 storm-related deaths as of Wednesday. 

The president will then head to Raleigh, North Carolina, for an operational briefing at an emergency operations center. Raleigh, further east, was spared the worst of the damage from Helene. Western North Carolina, where Asheville is, endured the brunt of the damage. Parts of highways were wiped out, and many residents are still without running water, a steady supply of food and other basic needs. Eastern Tennessee also saw severe damage from the storm. 

The president has said he doesn’t want to get in the way of first responders or interrupt recovery efforts, explaining why he didn’t visit sooner after last week’s storms and why he isn’t visiting more places on the ground. 

On Wednesday afternoon, Harris heads to Augusta, Georgia, where she will receive updates on the federal government’s response to the crisis. Former President Donald Trump was in Valdosta, Georgia, earlier in the week to survey damage.

Mr. Biden has said Congress may need to return to Washington to pass supplemental emergency funding for the federal response to the disaster. House Speaker Mike Johnson told Fox News on Wednesday morning that he, too, believes Congress will need to pass additional funding to respond to Helene, but that may not happen until after Election Day. All members of the House are up for reelection this year, and they’re in their districts campaigning. 



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Takeaways from Jack Smith’s unsealed brief in Trump election case

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Takeaways from Jack Smith’s unsealed brief in Trump election case – CBS News


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Judge Tanya Chutkan on Wednesday made public portions of a key filing in former President Donald Trump’s federal 2020 election interference case. Harry Litman, former deputy assistant attorney general, joins “America Decides” with analysis.

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Breaking down newly unsealed evidence in Trump 2020 election case

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Breaking down newly unsealed evidence in Trump 2020 election case – CBS News


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A federal judge unsealed new evidence Wednesday in former President Donald Trump’s 2020 election interference case. Trump has pleaded not guilty to the four charges in the case, including conspiracy to defraud the U.S. CBS News’ Jan Crawford, Robert Costa and Nancy Cordes have the latest.

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Harris says she won’t ban fracking

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Harris says she won’t ban fracking in an exclusive KDKA-TV interview


Harris says she won’t ban fracking in an exclusive KDKA-TV interview

02:55

PITTSBURGH (KDKA) — Vice President Kamala Harris said she won’t ban fracking natural gas, telling KDKA-TV that her position hasn’t changed since she joined the Biden ticket in 2020. 

As a senator back in 2019, Harris once said she would ban fracking, which is the method used to extract the natural gas the Pittsburgh region uses to heat homes and factories. 

The Trump campaign insists that is still Harris’ view, so in her first television interview with a Pittsburgh station since announcing her candidacy for president, KDKA-TV’s Jon Delano repeated one campaign ad and asked her directly. 

“The ad claims that if you are elected president you will ban fracking and cost Pennsylvania over 300,000 jobs. Have you changed your view on fracking, and if so, why?” Delano asked. 

“So let me start by saying that that ad as you described it is absolutely a mischaracterization which I think is intended to make people afraid,” Harris replied.

Harris said her view today is the same as in 2020 when she joined the Biden ticket. Biden said repeatedly in that campaign that he would not ban fracking, a position repeated by Harris. 

“I will not ban fracking. I did not as vice president. In fact, I cast the tie-breaking vote to open up more fracking leases,” Harris said. “And my perspective on this is grounded in a number of things, including that we don’t have to ban fracking to do the work that we can do to also invest in a clean energy economy.” 

And the vice president took direct aim at campaign ads claiming otherwise, calling them intentionally misleading. 

“I’m going to bring jobs back to rural communities. I’m going to make sure that we invest in those communities that have done the kind of work that you have in mind when you talk about Pittsburgh, when you talk about the greater aspect of Pennsylvania. And I’m going to keep doing that work,” she said. 

And while she obviously had a different view five years ago, the vice president is adamant she will not ban fracking.

“That’s where I stand, period. As president of the United States, I will not ban fracking,” she said. 

Despite her strong and clear words on the issue, it’s not likely to stop the Trump campaign from insisting her earlier views on fracking are her real ones, leaving it up to voters to decide who’s telling the truth. 



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