Politics
In Nebraska, a Trump-Inspired Candidate Cracks Open Divide in the G.O.P.
WAHOO, Neb. — In his run for governor of Nebraska, Charles W. Herbster is doing his greatest imitation of former President Donald J. Trump.
His 90-minute stump speech is full of complaints about unlawful immigrants, tales boasting of his enterprise triumphs, a conspiracy idea connecting China, the coronavirus pandemic and the 2020 election, and denials of the current accusations that he’s groped ladies at political occasions.
He even vows to wash up the “swamp” — however he means Lincoln, the state capital.
Like his political function mannequin — and chief backer — Mr. Herbster is proving to be a one-man political wrecking ball. In a state lengthy recognized for genteel, collaborative politics and, for the final 24 years, one-party rule, Mr. Herbster’s bid has cracked his social gathering into three camps, with Trump supporters, institution conservatives and business-friendly moderates battling for energy. A significant donor for years to conservative candidates, Mr. Herbster has been deserted by longtime political allies and seen his working mate stop his ticket to run for governor herself. The allegations of groping are coming from fellow Republicans.
Behind all of the drama is a query with resonance far past Nebraska. Mr. Trump’s endorsement of Mr. Herbster, a serious donor to Mr. Trump’s political profession, isn’t simply the first-time candidate’s prime credential — it’s his marketing campaign’s total rationale. Mr. Trump’s title is on Mr. Herbster’s garden indicators, adverts and billboards. Mr. Herbster spent Friday stumping across western Nebraska with Stephen Moore, the previous Trump financial adviser who’s a minor Trumpworld superstar.
Mr. Herbster is about to seek out out if a Trump endorsement alone is sufficient to win a serious Republican main.
“This can be a proxy conflict between your entire Republican institution in America in opposition to President Donald J. Trump,” Mr. Herbster, who campaigns carrying a white cowboy hat and a black vest bearing the emblem of his cattle semen enterprise, stated in an interview Thursday. “Anyone who the institution can’t management, they’re frightened of.”
Mr. Herbster, a longtime Trump ally who was with members of the Trump household through the Jan. 6, 2021, assault on the Capitol, is working in opposition to Jim Pillen, a College of Nebraska regent who’s backed by the state’s highly effective Ricketts household political machine, and Brett Lindstrom, a youthful state senator who has consolidated assist from the social gathering’s remaining moderates and Democrats. Greater than 8,000 Democrats and independents have switched their registration in current weeks to have some affect on a governor’s contest in an overwhelmingly Republican state. Polling within the remaining days earlier than Tuesday’s vote exhibits the race is a three-way lifeless warmth.
If Ohio’s current Senate main is a information, the three-way race is working in Mr. Herbster’s favor. The Trump-endorsed candidate for Senate, J.D. Vance, gained in a crowded discipline, taking lower than one-third of the vote. (There’s precedent for this in Nebraska. Eight years in the past, Gov. Pete Ricketts gained the nomination with simply over 1 / 4 of the vote.)
However Mr. Trump’s contact is trying much less golden in different states, significantly in two-way contests for governor. In Georgia, former Senator David Perdue, Mr. Trump’s selection, is lagging far behind Gov. Brian Kemp in polling, main Mr. Trump to distance himself from that marketing campaign. In Idaho, the previous president has backed Lt. Gov. Janice McGeachin’s problem in opposition to Gov. Brad Little. Ms. McGeachin has struggled to achieve traction, and Mr. Trump hasn’t talked about her since his endorsement in November.
How Donald J. Trump Nonetheless Looms
Mr. Trump has thrown his full weight behind Mr. Herbster. On Sunday, he traveled to Nebraska for a rally and appeared on a convention name for Herbster supporters Thursday evening, the place he forged Mr. Herbster’s rivals as “Republicans in title solely.”
“Charles was a die-hard MAGA champion,” Mr. Trump stated on the decision. “Once you vote for Charles within the main, you may give a stinging rebuke to the RINOs and sellouts and the losers who’re so poorly representing your state.”
Like Mr. Trump within the 2016 Republican presidential main, Mr. Herbster is going through accusations that he has mistreated ladies and tried to make use of that truth to achieve assist. Two ladies, together with a state senator, publicly accused him of groping them at a political occasion in 2019. Mr. Herbster has denied the claims and broadcast a TV advert slamming his accuser.
“Any allegation that was despatched my approach is 100% completely false,” he stated in an interview.
He has repeatedly blamed the accusations on Mr. Ricketts, a conservative two-term incumbent who can’t run once more due to time period limits. The Ricketts household has feuded with Mr. Trump. It spent tens of millions on a last-ditch effort to dam Mr. Trump from profitable the Republican presidential nomination in 2016; Trump then stated the household higher “watch out.”
Mr. Ricketts, who tried speaking Mr. Trump out of endorsing Mr. Herbster final 12 months, is blunt about his opposition to Mr. Herbster’s bid. He considers the groping allegations disqualifying. Ought to Mr. Herbster win the Republican nomination, Mr. Ricketts is not going to endorse him except he “apologizes to the ladies he’s accomplished this to,” he stated in an interview.
Mr. Herbster was going through criticism effectively earlier than the allegations. Some Republicans bristled at his concentrate on the type of divisive cultural points that don’t usually dominate the political conservation within the state. He campaigns on eliminating intercourse training in Nebraska’s public colleges, cracking down on unlawful immigration and curbing China’s affect.
In July, his working mate, the previous state senator Theresa Thibodeau, stop the ticket and later jumped into the race herself. She stated Mr. Herbster had little curiosity in something aside from making an attempt to emulate Mr. Trump.
“If you wish to lead the state, it is best to get your data up on insurance policies that have an effect on our state,” she stated on Thursday. “He had no initiative or willingness to do this.”
However Mr. Herbster’s message resonated with Trump conservatives, and shortly one in all his rivals adopted go well with. Mr. Pillen, a 66-year-old former defensive again for the College of Nebraska’s soccer workforce with a grandfatherly demeanor, promised to ban essential race idea on the College of Nebraska and bar transgender ladies from collaborating in ladies’s sports activities or utilizing ladies’s loos.
“Each the Pillen and the Herbster campaigns have centered on nationwide problems with which they’ve little management over and they need to have been extra centered on state points,” stated former Gov. Dave Heineman, a Republican who was on Mr. Herbster’s payroll after leaving workplace. He hasn’t but made an endorsement.
Mr. Pillen downplayed Mr. Trump’s affect within the race.
“Nebraskans, we prefer to determine issues out and clear up our personal issues and suppose for ourselves,” he stated.
Mr. Lindstrom, a 41-year-old state senator who additionally performed soccer for Nebraska, is working a marketing campaign transported from the pre-Trump period. He highlights cooperation with Democrats in Nebraska’s unicameral legislature and, whereas he stated he had no regrets about voting twice for Mr. Trump, stated he’d desire “a brand new face” in 2024.
Whereas Nebraska’s Republican primaries are usually determined by conservative rural voters who’re deeply loyal to Mr. Trump, Mr. Lindstrom, a wonky monetary adviser, is betting his marketing campaign on interesting to city professionals round Omaha — the place Mr. Trump misplaced one of many state’s Electoral School votes to President Biden.
“The model and model that’s happening within the Republican Occasion proper now has created lots of wedges,” Mr. Lindstrom stated. “That isn’t actually wholesome.”
At a Wednesday fund-raiser for Mr. Lindstrom at an upscale Italian restaurant in Omaha, about half of the 2 dozen folks interviewed stated they voted for Mr. Biden in 2020. A handful had switched events to vote for Mr. Lindstrom within the main.
Allen Frederickson, the chief govt of a well being care firm who turned a Republican to vote for Mr. Lindstrom, stated electing Mr. Herbster would make it laborious to recruit staff to Nebraska’s booming financial system, which has the nation’s lowest unemployment price.
“Trumpism would affect our inner and exterior picture as a state,” he stated. “We’d like Nebraska to be an interesting state from a enterprise perspective.”
Mr. Herbster makes little effort to enchantment outdoors of the Trump constituency. He begins his speeches, whether or not to Trump-hatted supporters in Wahoo or bankers within the Omaha suburbs, by providing “greetings from the forty fifth president of america of America, Donald J. Trump.”
Like Mr. Trump, Mr. Herbster casts doubt on the legitimacy of American elections. In Wahoo, he posited an outlandish idea in regards to the former president’s loss.
“That is the reality,” he advised supporters. “The pandemic got here from China. It was timed completely to guarantee that they might rig the elections so Mark Zuckerberg might put $400 million into the toll the final 4 months of the election. As a result of whether or not you prefer it or not, they didn’t need Donald J. Trump to be president for 2 phrases, that’s precisely what occurred.”
Mr. Herbster has little use for or curiosity within the traditions of Nebraska politics. He referred to as for ending the state’s system of nonpartisan elections, eliminating the state board of training and stated that, on his first day in workplace, he’d demand the tourism bureau change its quirky slogan: “Nebraska. Actually, it’s not for everybody.”
The query Nebraska’s Republican main voters will decide on Tuesday is whether or not any of that issues — or issues greater than Mr. Trump’s stamp of approval.
“It’s every part,” stated former Consultant Lee Terry of Omaha, a Herbster supporter. “There’s lots of Trump folks in Nebraska.”
Politics
Chloe Fineman confirms that 'rude' Elon Musk was the 'SNL' host who made her cry
Comedian Chloe Fineman says Space X owner Elon Musk made her cry when he hosted “Saturday Night Live” in 2021.
Fineman recalled working with the tech billionaire in a since-deleted TikTok, months after fellow cast member and writer Bowen Yang alluded to the behind-the-scenes drama during an appearance on Bravo’s “Watch What Happens Live!” Yang cryptically revealed in August that a host brought several staffers to tears because “he hated the ideas” they had. Speculation abounded and Fineman confirmed her part in it Monday.
The “SNL” star broke her silence after blowing up the Tesla chief executive’s “butt hurt” reaction to “SNL” alumnus Dana Carvey’s impression of him in Saturday’s post-election episode. (Carvey returned to Studio 8H as a bouncy, fist-pumping version of the “Dark MAGA”-boasting Musk in the cold open, claiming he would run the country after former President Trump’s re-election last week. Fineman said that world’s richest man and Trump loyalist is “clearly watching the show” despite his barrage of “rude” criticism on his X platform.
“I’m gonna come out and say at long last that I’m the cast member that he made cry, and he’s the host that made someone cry,” Fineman said in her video. “Maybe there’s others.”
“Guess what, you made I, Chloe Fineman, burst into tears,” she continued, “because I stayed up all night writing this sketch. I was so excited. I came in, I asked if you had any questions and you stared at me like you were firing me from Tesla and were like ‘It’s not funny.’”
The “Megalopolis” and “Despicable Me 4” star said she waited for Musk to say he was just kidding, but he did not. Then she accused him of “pawing” through her script and — while mimicking his South African accent — claimed he didn’t laugh at the sketch a single time. She did not name the sketch; however, she and Musk appeared together in “The Ooli Show” sketch of the May 2021 episode on which she received a writing credit. Fineman played an Icelandic talk-show host and Musk played her smitten producer.
She conceded that the sketch that made it into the episode “was fine” and that she “actually had a really good time” doing it. She also admitted that Musk was “really funny in it.
“But, you know, have a little manners here, sir,” she concluded.
Although Fineman deleted the video, it was saved and re-posted on X where Musk replied to it Monday and explained his assessment of the work.
“Frankly, it was only on the Thursday before the Saturday that ANY of the sketches generated laughs,” Musk said. “I was worried. I was like damn my SNL appearance is going to be so f— unfunny that it will make a crackhead sober!! But then it worked out in the end”
Musk did not apologize or mention making any cast members cry.
Representatives for Fineman and “Saturday Night Live” did not immediately respond Tuesday to The Times’ requests for comment.
Before Fineman posted her TikTok, Musk ranted about the most recent episode on X.
“Dana Carvey just sounds like Dana Carvey,” Musk tweeted in response to a clip from the cold open, adding in another tweet that, “They are so mad that @realDonaldTrump won.”
He also claimed that the long-running, Emmy-winning sketch series “has been dying slowly for years, as they become increasingly out of touch with reality.” Musk, who is expected to be an influential voice in Trump’s incoming administration, also accused the show of a “last-ditch effort to cheat the equal airtime requirements” when Vice President Kamala Harris appeared in the Nov. 2 episode, before the election, claiming that it “only helped sink her campaign further.”
Politics
Trump tells world leader election gives him a 'very big mandate'
President-elect Donald Trump said his election victory “gives me a very big mandate to do things properly” in a newly released video by Indonesia’s president.
Prabowo Subianto could be heard congratulating Trump, adding, “Wherever you are, I am willing to fly to, to congratulate you personally sir.”
“We had a great election in the U.S…. Amazing what happened, we had tremendous success. The most successful in over 100 years they say. It’s a great honor and so it gives me a very big mandate to do things properly,” Trump told him at one point in the conversation.
Subianto also told Trump, “We were all shocked when they tried to assassinate you, but we are very happy that the almighty protected you sir.”
TRUMP EXPECTED TO NAME SEN. MARCO RUBIO AS SECRETARY OF STATE
“Yes, I got very lucky. I just happened to be in the right place in the right direction otherwise I wouldn’t be talking to you right now,” Trump responded. “I got quite lucky actually, somebody was protecting me I guess.”
Subianto, a former Indonesian military general and defense minister, was sworn in as the country’s eighth president on Oct. 20.
TRUMP LIKELY TO MAKE SEVERAL BORDER SECURITY MOVES ON FIRST DAY, SAYS EXPERT
“Whenever you are around you let me know and I’d like to also get to your country sometime, it’s incredible, the job that you are doing is incredible,” Trump told Subianto during the call. “You’re a very respected person and I give you credit for that, it’s not easy.”
“Please send the people of Indonesia my regards,” he added.
In a statement on X alongside the video, Subianto said, “I am looking forward to enhance the collaboration between our two great nations and to more productive discussions in the future.”
Politics
California immigrants prepare for a second Trump administration
WASHINGTON — The morning after former President Trump won a second term on a promise to deport millions of immigrants, a line formed outside a Riverside County legal aid organization before it had even opened its doors.
Legal permanent residents wanted help applying for citizenship. Asylum seekers who had given the federal government their home addresses wondered whether they should pack up and move.
A woman in the country illegally told the organization that her children had refused to go to school because they feared she would be detained while they were away. A man said he had stayed home from his landscaping job.
“It’s all hands on deck right now,” said Luz Gallegos, executive director of the TODEC Legal Center. “We have to prepare for the worst.”
Trump has listed mass deportations and the curtailing of temporary legal status for millions of immigrants as among his top priorities. His newly appointed “border czar,” Tom Homan, said Monday that the Trump administration will prioritize deporting people who are living in the country illegally and pose a threat to public safety. He also said officials will increase workplace raids as part of a crackdown on labor and sex trafficking.
“If sanctuary cities don’t want to help us, then get out of the way, because we’re coming,” Homan said in an interview on “Fox & Friends.”
California leaders and immigrant rights organizations are responding with promises of legal action and assurances to protect immigrant residents from Trump policies. Gov. Gavin Newsom last week called a special session of the Legislature to safeguard the state’s progressive policies, including on immigration. California Atty. Gen. Rob Bonta has vowed to defend the state’s policies in court.
Advocates are urging the Biden administration to bolster protections for immigrants ahead of Trump’s inauguration by redesignating certain countries for temporary protected status and prioritizing pending work permit applications.
In California, they hope to expand programs offering pro bono legal representation to immigrants facing deportation proceedings. They will also push local governments to enshrine sanctuary policies that go beyond the state’s sanctuary law.
During Trump’s previous term, advocates for immigrants held frequent “know your rights” sessions and encouraged families to establish contingency plans. Parents signed guardianship agreements allowing family members or friends to care for their children if they were detained. Immigrants carried business cards listing their rights (ask to see a warrant, request an attorney, remain silent) and the phone numbers for rapid-response networks that would go to the scene of an immigration arrest.
Now organizations across California are mobilizing the same tactics to prepare for another Trump administration. They are trying to walk a fine line between being realistic about possible federal actions and not adding to people’s fears.
“We take him at his word,” said Angelica Salas, executive director of CHIRLA — the Coalition for Humane Immigrant Rights in Los Angeles. “Members of immigrant rights organizations are completely clear-eyed about the fact that what is coming toward us is cruelty and manufactured pain for political outcomes.”
Salas said CHIRLA has received inquiries from schools, health clinics and labor unions to do on-site “know your rights” sessions. Advocacy organizations are also coordinating to maximize their reach. Last week CHIRLA joined hundreds of organizations in launching “We Are California,” an effort that aims to, among other things, rebuild rapid-response networks.
Nana Gyamfi, executive director of the Black Alliance for Just Immigration, who is based in L.A., said she particularly worries that Black immigrants will face heightened racism because the Trump campaign stoked lies that Haitian immigrants were eating pets in Springfield, Ohio.
“You can tell people are tired,” she said, “because we know as Black people that the hammer comes down on us harder.”
Joao Morales, 29, moved to Los Angeles from Nicaragua in August 2023 under the Biden administration’s program offering legal entry and temporary work permits to immigrants from certain countries who obtained financial sponsors.
Amid the uncertainty of what another Trump administration could mean for his ability to stay in the U.S., he has been attending meetings organized by the National Day Laborer Organizing Network to teachimmigrants throughout the country to advocate for themselves.
“With everything he has been saying and everything he plans to do to the migrant community, it’s not looking good,” Morales said. “The most important thing is that we unite.”
Still, several organizations expressed concern about how much it will cost to inform immigrant residents, provide legal representation to those facing deportation, resist federal infringement and advance local policies that will bolster protections for immigrants. They also face a more limited landscape of legal options, as the judiciary is more conservative because of judges Trump appointed in his first term.
“We don’t have the courts like we did last time, but we still have the Constitution, we still have civil rights, we still have local laws,” Salas said.
Advocates also plan to push back against efforts to expand immigrant detention facilities and ensure the state utilizes its watchdog powers. A new California law allows county health officers to inspect immigrant detention facilities. But GEO Group, which operates most of the state’s facilities, sued last month, saying the requirement significantly burdens federal immigration enforcement in violation of the Constitution.
“We’ve been here before,” said Talia Inlender, deputy director of the Center for Immigration Law and Policy at UCLA. “And we know how to fight back.”
People who came to the U.S. as children and now have temporary status under Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals, the Obama-era program that protects them from deportation and allows them to work legally, are also concerned about their futures under a second Trump term.
Born in Yugoslavia, Edvin Dapcevic has lived in the U.S. since he was 4. He is an executive who leads a sales team at a major tech company in Los Angeles, and asked that The Times not name the company publicly.
Dapcevic said Trump’s election has forced him to begin thinking about moving to another country, which would mean leaving behind his mother, a permanent resident, and brother, a U.S. citizen.
He noted that tech leaders such as Elon Musk and David Sacks, both South African immigrants who supported Trump’s bid for reelection, have been vocal about the U.S. needing highly skilled immigrants. He said he wishes he could tell them and the president-elect about the hundreds of thousands of DACA recipients such as himself, who have already been vetted and could fill that gap.
“I don’t have a concrete future in this country,” Dapcevic said. “I grew up here, pay taxes, have never been in trouble, never been arrested. I’m forced to identify [what country] might give me a permanent home — and it saddens me to say that America has not done that.”
Last week at TODEC, the legal aid organization in Perris, one of the people who showed up seeking advice was another DACA recipient, Marta, who asked to be identified only by her first name. The 23-year-old from Mexico said she fears being laid off from her restaurant job.
She worries even more about her parents, who are in the country illegally. During Trump’s last presidency, when they were afraid immigration agents would show up at their door, the family put a tinted film over their windows that blocks people from seeing in but allows them to see out.
“The fear of deportation worries us the most,” she said. “He started off strong during his first term, and this time I feel like he might come stronger.”
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