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Barack Obama warns Democrats of ‘tight race’ to defeat Donald Trump

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Barack Obama warns Democrats of ‘tight race’ to defeat Donald Trump

Barack Obama declared that the US was “ready for a new chapter” with Kamala Harris as president in a rousing speech on Tuesday but warned Democrats that they were facing a “tight race” to elect her and defeat Donald Trump in November.

Speaking at the Democratic convention in Chicago, the former president deployed his political star power to try to quash any doubts within the party over Harris’s candidacy, while cautioning the crowd against complacency about the election outcome.

“Make no mistake: it will be a fight,” Obama said. “For all the incredible energy we’ve been able to generate over the past few weeks, for all the rallies and the memes, this will still be a tight race in a closely divided country.”

Although Obama, 63, has now been out of office for nearly eight years, he is among the most popular and influential Democrats, and party leaders hoped his primetime address would help unite and mobilise its supporters behind Harris.

Obama’s return to Chicago, where he began his political career, came as some Democrats tried to draw parallels between his successful 2008 campaign to be elected the first Black US president and Harris’s bid to become the country’s first female president.

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As he took the stage, Obama was met with chants of “yes we can”, his own campaign slogan. Later he started a chant of “yes she can”, referring to Harris.

Obama’s speech deployed some of the soaring rhetoric that was a hallmark of his presidency but also mocked Trump as a “whining” self-interested billionaire and conspiracy theorist whose act had gone “pretty stale”.

“The other day, I heard someone compare Trump to the neighbour who keeps running his leaf blower outside your window every minute of every day,” he said. “We don’t need four more years of bluster and chaos. We’ve seen that movie — and we all know that the sequel’s usually worse.”

Obama endorsed Harris last month, a few days after she launched her campaign following Joe Biden’s decision to drop his re-election bid. But Tuesday’s address was his most forceful statement of support for her.

The former Democratic president spoke just after Michelle Obama, the former first lady, who remains hugely popular within the party. “Something wonderfully magical is in the air,” she told the audience. “America, hope is making a comeback.”

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But like her husband, Michelle Obama also used her speech to urge action from fellow Democrats — and to tear into Trump.

“In some states, just a handful of votes in every precinct could decide the winner,” she said. “We need to vote in numbers that erase any doubt. We need to overwhelm any effort to suppress us.”

The former first lady received some of the loudest cheers of the night when she called out Trump for his “limited narrow view of the world” and, referring to her husband and herself, said he had been “threatened by the existence of two hardworking, highly educated, successful people who also happen to be Black”.

“Who’s going to tell him that the job he’s currently seeking might be one of those ‘Black jobs’?” she added, in a reference to Trump’s suggestions that immigrants are taking jobs from African-Americans.

The Obamas’ speeches were significant for a party trying to paper over splits related to Israel’s war in Gaza and bad blood surrounding the ousting of Biden from the top of the ticket.

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Kamala Harris, left, and Tim Walz held a rally in Milwaukee on Tuesday in the same arena where the Republicans held their July convention © Jacquelyn Martin/AP

Barack Obama had initially defended Biden, with whom he had a complicated relationship in office that was occasionally marked by disagreements, after a disastrous debate against Trump in late June.

But he was conspicuously silent as Democrats piled pressure on the 81-year-old president to quit the race.

On Tuesday, Obama spent a few words honouring Biden’s legacy, saying he had “defended democracy at a moment of great danger”.

As the Obamas spoke, Chicago police clashed with protesters outside the Israeli consulate near the city’s central business district.

Their addresses were preceded by a ceremonial roll call vote that formally nominated Harris as the party’s presidential candidate, a tally that was capped with a roaring endorsement by Gavin Newsom, the governor of California, her home state.

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Harris and Tim Walz, her running mate, were not present, instead campaigning in Milwaukee in front of about 15,000 people in the same arena where Trump held the Republican convention last month.

While Democrats have shown new enthusiasm for Harris since she replaced Biden on the ticket just a month ago, she will need to translate the initial burst of excitement for her bid into votes in battleground states.

“We shouldn’t delude ourselves that it’s an automatic victory,” Anita Dunn, a former senior adviser to Biden at the White House, said on the sidelines of the DNC.

Trump on Tuesday travelled to Michigan, another big swing state, to speak about “crime and safety”.

According to a FiveThirtyEight polling average, Harris is leading Trump by almost 3 percentage points nationally and is marginally ahead in most of the swing states.

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A dead woman’s key fob and two grisly crime scenes: How the Utah triple-murder suspect was tracked across state lines | CNN

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A dead woman’s key fob and two grisly crime scenes: How the Utah triple-murder suspect was tracked across state lines | CNN

As investigators raced to find the person responsible for three killings in rural Wayne County, Utah, they used automated license plate readers and a victim’s own vehicle key fob to track their suspect – a man police said has no connection to the victims or the region that is known for its awe-inspiring landscapes dotted with quiet, small towns.

It would take just hours to pin down the suspect in a search that spanned multiple states in the Four Corners region of the Southwest – ending early Thursday with the arrest of 22-year-old Iowa resident Ivan Miller, who is charged with three counts of first-degree, aggravated murder, officials said.

Miller was taken into custody in Colorado, officials said –– more than 350 miles from where the bodies of three women were found at two locations in Utah.

Miller’s first court appearance is scheduled for Friday afternoon in Archuleta County, Colorado. He will be represented by a public defender, court records show.

The victims were identified as Margaret Oldroyd, 86; Linda Dewey, 65; and Natalie Graves, 34, Utah’s Department of Public Safety said.

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Dewey and Graves, an aunt and niece who’d gone for a hike together, were found dead near a trailhead just outside the town of Torrey, Utah’s DPS said. The women’s bodies were found by their husbands who grew concerned when the pair didn’t return from their hike, Utah Highway Patrol spokesperson Lt. Cameron Roden said at a news conference Thursday.

Investigators found Oldroyd’s vehicle at the trailhead and deputies went to her home in nearby Lyman, where they discovered her body, Roden said.

After his arrest, Miller told investigators he spent a night in Oldroyd’s back shed and snuck into her house while she was out, according to an indictment filed in court Thursday. Miller “waited for her behind a door and shot her in the back of the head … while she was sitting down to watch television,” the indictment said.

Miller made efforts to clean up the scene before dragging the 86-year-old’s body to a cellar under the shed, where she was later found, the indictment read. He then stole her Buick Regal and traveled to the trailhead, investigators said. Miller told investigators “he did not like the car and wanted to find a different vehicle,” the indictment said.

At the trailhead, Miller said he saw Dewey and Graves get out of a white Subaru and shot them both, according to the indictment. Miller told investigators he stabbed one of the women in the chest multiple times because she was still moving, the document said.

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He then admitted dragging their bodies into a ditch, where the two were discovered by their husbands, the indictment said.

Officials said Miller ditched Oldroyd’s car at the trail and drove away in the white Subaru. Miller also admitted stealing the women’s credit cards and using one to pay for gas, according to documents.

Investigators used a network of license plate scanners to track the Subaru “through southern Utah into northern Arizona and eventually into Colorado,” Roden said.

“Colorado law enforcement located the vehicle abandoned in Pagosa Springs, Colorado, and after a brief search, took the individual into custody without incident,” Utah DPS said Thursday.

One of the husbands was also able to track the car’s location using an app that monitored the vehicle’s key fob, investigators said. Just after 9 p.m. Wednesday, the key fob appeared to be in Farmington, New Mexico — about two hours southwest of where Miller would later be taken into custody, according to the indictment.

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Miller had a handgun and a large knife in his possession at the time of his arrest, according to police in Pagosa Springs.

Miller told investigators he killed the women because he needed money, according to the indictment. “Miller confessed that it ‘had to be done’ but he did not like to do it,” the document reads.

Miller, who lived in Blakesburg, Iowa, set out on a cross-country road trip about two and a half weeks ago, his brother, who spoke with The New York Times on condition of anonymity, said.

Miller’s brother said the two stayed in contact during the trip, and Miller mentioned crashing his truck after hitting an elk, according to the Times.

The brother was concerned about how Miller was traveling around after that and offered to bring him back to Iowa, which he declined, the Times reported.

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After his arrest, Miller told officials that he had been staying at a hotel in the area for a few days after he hit an elk with his truck, which he then sold to a tow truck company, according to the indictment.

On Thursday, shaken residents across Wayne County placed pink ribbons around trees and fences in their communities as they remembered the three women who were killed in apparently random attacks carried out by a stranger.

“We wanted to honor our friend and neighbor,” Mary Sorenson, who put up ribbons around Lyman, told CNN affiliate KSL.

The Wayne County School District announced it would be closed for the rest of the week and would “have counselors in place to support students when we are back in session next week.”

In a statement Thursday, Torrey Mayor Mickey Wright described the multiple homicides as a “heartbreaking moment for our small, close‑knit community.”

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“Our community is strong. In the coming days, we will support one another, check on our neighbors, and ensure that those affected by this tragedy are not alone,” Wright said. “We stand together today — in grief, in compassion, and in solidarity.”

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Iran’s fight for survival / The widening war / Trump’s nebulous goals : Sources & Methods

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Iran’s fight for survival / The widening war / Trump’s nebulous goals : Sources & Methods
The U.S.-Israeli war with Iran is spilling out across the region. What are the goals? And how does it end?Host Mary Louise Kelly talks with International Correspondent Aya Batrawy, based in Dubai, and Pentagon correspondent Tom Bowman, about the U.S.-Israeli war with Iran. Six days of war have turned the middle east upside down, and it’s still not clear how the U.S. will determine when its objectives have been accomplished.Recommended Iran reading:Blackwave by Kim GhattasAll the Shah’s Men by Stephen KinzerPrisoner by Jason RezaianPersian Mirrors by Elaine SciolinoListener spy novel recommendation: Pariah by Dan FespermanEmail the show at sourcesandmethods@npr.orgNPR+ supporters hear every episode without sponsor messages and unlock access to our complete archive. Sign up at plus.npr.org.
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Map: 4.9-Magnitude Earthquake Shakes Louisiana

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Map: 4.9-Magnitude Earthquake Shakes Louisiana

Note: Map shows the area with a shake intensity of 4 or greater, which U.S.G.S. defines as “light,” though the earthquake may be felt outside the areas shown.  All times on the map are Central time. The New York Times

A light, 4.9-magnitude earthquake struck in Louisiana on Thursday, according to the United States Geological Survey.

The temblor happened at 5:30 a.m. Central time about 6 miles west of Edgefield, La., data from the agency shows.

U.S.G.S. data earlier reported that the magnitude was 4.4.

As seismologists review available data, they may revise the earthquake’s reported magnitude. Additional information collected about the earthquake may also prompt U.S.G.S. scientists to update the shake-severity map.

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Source: United States Geological Survey | Notes: Shaking categories are based on the Modified Mercalli Intensity scale. When aftershock data is available, the corresponding maps and charts include earthquakes within 100 miles and seven days of the initial quake. All times above are Central time. Shake data is as of Thursday, March 5 at 8:40 a.m. Eastern. Aftershocks data is as of Thursday, March 5 at 10:46 a.m. Eastern.

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