The liberal Navigator public monitoring ballot flashed a serious warning signal for Democrats in mid-October, reporting a 20 share level bounce since September within the share of impartial voters involved concerning the financial system and fuel costs.
Washington
Democrats fear the midterm map is slipping away
Candidates say they’ve felt the bottom shift.
“The financial concern is unquestionably worse, and I feel that’s most likely a part of what has corroded concern about abortion rights,” stated Marie Gluesenkamp Perez, 34, a Democratic candidate for Congress in southern Washington State.
Perez is a logo of the Democratic struggles, combating in a margin-of-error race in opposition to precisely the form of “ultra-MAGA” candidate Democrats have elevated this 12 months — Republican Joe Kent, who denies the end result of the 2020 election, argues U.S. Capitol rioters have been mistreated and desires a moratorium on all authorized immigration. However Democrats in Washington haven’t but been in a position to make investments instantly in her race, as they play protection elsewhere on far much less favorable points.
“Anyone in the actual world could be very involved about crime, very involved concerning the worth of groceries,” stated Perez, whose personal auto-repair store, in northeast Portland, has been damaged into 4 occasions within the final 12 months.
Quite than increasing their ambitions, Democratic strategists are actually attempting to maintain voters, donors and volunteers from shedding their nerve. Although there may be broad settlement that the atmosphere has deteriorated in latest weeks, it’s far stronger for Democrats than it was within the spring, they argue.
“It’s manner higher than it was. It’s no tougher than we thought it will be,” stated Tim Persico, the chief director of the Democratic Congressional Marketing campaign Committee, who has stated he want there was more cash to fund Perez. “We’re in a midterm in a tricky financial local weather in opposition to a particularly well-resourced opponent. It’s presupposed to be arduous. It’s not presupposed to be a straight line.”
President Biden additionally tried to tamp down any sense of Democratic panic Friday, when he predicted fortunes would once more enhance earlier than the Nov. 8 elections.
“It’s been backwards and forwards with them forward, us forward, them forward. Backwards and forwards. And the polls have been in every single place. I feel that we’re going to see another shift again to our facet within the closing days,” he stated on the White Home. “I feel that we’re going to see another shift again to our facet within the closing days.”
Not like the Senate, the place a handful of high-profile races will resolve management, the following Home majority will likely be slotted collectively like a jigsaw puzzle on Election Day, with the items chosen by retirements, redistricting, recruiting failures, nationwide temper and regional issues. The GOP is all however sure to choose up not less than a number of of the 5 seats they should take management by way of new district traces and some extra from flagship races the place Democrats have all however stopped spending. However Democrats additionally discover themselves able to topple some Republican incumbents.
The actual open questions are the handfuls of races the place polling gives no clear sign. Way more Democratic seats sit on a knife edge than Republican ones, topic to unknown components like turnout and voter whims over the approaching weeks. Predicting the precise end result has been made much more tough as a result of polling in 2020 largely didn’t see the sturdy night time Republican Home candidates had. Alternatively, latest particular elections this cycle have proven Democrats outperform expectations.
“The election is so shut that we’re simply previous the purpose of nationwide polling being able to inform us the place we’re. It will go race by race at this level,” stated Simon Rosenberg, a Democratic strategist who has labored with the DCCC. “The massive remaining query is whether or not the Democratic overperformance of public polls in latest elections carries on to present voting.”
For the second, Republicans have the momentum, with Democratic margins in senate races throughout the nation eroding over the past month and alarming polls popping out of Democratic strongholds like Washington and New York that present statewide Democrats with solely single-digit benefits. Generic polling averages, which check whether or not voters desire an unnamed Republican or Democrat for Congress, have additionally begun to maneuver towards Republicans, at the moment standing 8 to 10 factors extra favorable for the GOP than at this level in 2020.
“The problems that closely favor Republicans, just like the financial system and crime, maintain gaining significance with voters the nearer we get to Election Day,” stated Michael McAdams, the communications director for the Nationwide Republican Congressional Committee. “That has created a dire state of affairs for Democrats.”
The shift has occurred at the same time as Democrats have devoted huge quantities of cash to promoting on the problem of abortion and the Supreme Courtroom’s June choice overruling abortion rights in Dobbs v. Jackson Ladies’s Well being Group.
“All the difficulty set is working in opposition to us. It’s actually arduous for a Democrat in a marginal district,” stated one other Democratic Home strategist, who spoke on the situation of anonymity to be able to communicate frankly. “There was numerous consideration on abortion instantly post-Dobbs. As time has handed the immediacy has dissipated. The on a regular basis actuality of shopping for fuel and shopping for groceries has overtaken it.”
The truth of fuel costs has change into an obsession of types for the Democratic leaders, who’ve seen their fortunes rise and fall with the numbers posted each day at roadside stations. Costs peaked nationally in mid-June at over $5 a gallon, on the backs of the Russian invasion of Ukraine, earlier than falling to $3.65 in mid-September after which ticking again as much as $3.91 in mid-October, in response to the U.S. Vitality Info Administration.
Final week, they fell barely once more, prompting Biden to announce, “We’re transferring in the fitting course.”
Democratic strategists proceed to argue that their give attention to abortion rights in promoting is an efficient technique, regardless of the criticism of some of their social gathering. They are saying inside social gathering analysis finds there are nonetheless many citizens who haven’t absolutely digested the implications of the brand new authorized actuality. Democrats are holding out hope that the problem can elevate turnout, overcoming a slight voting enthusiasm benefit that Republicans have held in nationwide polls all 12 months.
“If I informed you we have been going right into a midterm with Democrats having full management and there being disapproval of the financial system and excessive inflation, this midterm ought to have been over already,” stated Jesse Ferguson, a Democratic strategists working in a number of races. “The truth of the abortion difficulty, the flawed Republican candidates, and Democrat’s progress on a few of the agenda are the explanations we’re nonetheless having the dialog.”
In latest weeks, Democrats have canceled tv reservations in Arizona, Texas and Wisconsin, all however conceding pickups for Republicans in three districts the place Democratic incumbents opted to not search reelection. The social gathering has additionally been alarmed by polling that reveals Republican Allan Fung, the previous mayor of Cranston, R.I., main Democratic state treasurer Seth Magaziner within the coronary heart of New England, in a state that has not elected a Republican to Congress for the reason that Nineties.
Republicans, in the meantime, have been testing Democratic boundaries with their further spending. The Congressional Management Fund introduced a $4 million funding within the district of Rep. Sean Patrick Maloney (D-N.Y.), the top of the DCCC, fulfilling a long-standing GOP plan to complicate life for Democratic strategists, who now have to fret that the person main the trouble would possibly lose his seat.
In locations like Washington’s third district, which hugs the northern border of Oregon, Perez has been outspending Kent in tv on the premise of her personal fundraising.
However she has not but obtained direct assist for adverts from the DCCC or the Home Majority PAC, the surface tremendous PAC supporting Home Democrats, at the same time as Kent’s adverts embody a disclaimer that credit a part of the spending to the NRCC. She additionally not been named to the Democratic Celebration’s Pink-to-Blue program, which helps candidates flip seats. Persico, the top of the DCCC, has described her district as a winnable race that he would spend money on if he “had more cash.”
“This is likely one of the golden alternatives,” Perez stated Saturday. “And we’re actually passing it by proper now. ”
Isaac Arnsdorf contributed to this report.
Washington
Washington Street closure extended in Quincy
QUINCY (WGEM) – The road closure for Washington Street between 7th and 8th streets has been extended for fire hydrant repair.
Officials stated that the closure has been extended to Jan. 15.
Officials also warn motorists to use alternative routes and drive with caution.
Copyright 2025 WGEM. All rights reserved.
Washington
A brief history of presidential inaugural speeches, from George Washington to today
The only constitutionally mandated event on Inauguration Day is for the president-elect to take the oath of office. But on the first Inauguration Day, in 1789, George Washington did something else.
He gave a speech.
Every president since has followed his example and delivered an inaugural address as part of the national celebration.
These addresses are more than just a series of individual speeches. Rhetoric scholars Karlyn Kohrs Campbell and Kathleen Hall Jamieson argue that each inaugural address is not simply marking one stage in the ritual of political transition. Each is also part of a genre that has characteristics which, at some level, are expected and understood by speakers and audiences. There have been 59 inaugural addresses, starting with Washington, and while they may have differed in style and even specific subjects, virtually all feature these characteristics, which range from calls to unify the country to setting forth political principles.
The political history collections at the National Museum of American History, where I am a curator specializing in the history of presidential campaigns and campaign rhetoric, include several objects that illustrate these characteristics.
Exploring the genre of inaugural addresses through quotations and objects from the past can help listeners better understand the opening speech of a new administration, the first act in a job that began with the taking of the oath.
(Re)Unification of the audience
Inaugurations serve as the transition point between the competition of a campaign and the needs of an administration beginning to govern. For the audience to properly fulfill their role as witnesses to this investiture of power, they must be unified and reconstituted as “we the people.”
In the words of political scientist Lee Sigelman, these speeches are “literally brimming with verbal tokens of unity.”
There are references to our founders, our nation and the future we face. In 1957, Dwight Eisenhower spoke of the purposes “to which we, as a people, are pledged,” and Benjamin Harrison called his 1889 inaugural moment a “mutual covenant” between himself and the people. George W. Bush in 2001 united his listeners, saying, “Americans are generous and strong and decent, not because we believe in ourselves but because we hold beliefs beyond ourselves.”
Thomas Jefferson’s first inaugural in 1801 may have been the most explicit: “We have called by different names brethren of the same principle. We are all Republicans, we are all Federalists.”
Reaffirmation of national values
New presidents must also establish their qualifications for the office by demonstrating they understand and will preserve the shared values that are key to what Bill Clinton in 1993 called “the very idea of America.”
These traditional values are expressed in words such as freedom, liberty, democracy and courage. In 1981, Ronald Reagan reminded the audience, “Freedom and the dignity of the individual have been more available and assured here than in any other place on Earth. Jimmy Carter in 1977 summarized these values into “our belief in an undiminished, ever-expanding American dream.”
Setting forth political principles
Unlike many other presidential addresses, most notably the State of the Union, the inaugural does not advocate specific legislation but rather articulates more general philosophies that will guide a new administration. When policies are offered, they are less a call for action than a demonstration of a president’s commitment to the democratic system.
In 1845, James Polk promoted his “plain and frugal” economic plans because he said a national debt “is incompatible with the ends for which our republican Government was instituted.” Herbert Hoover said that the policies he listed in his 1929 address would be tested against the “ideals and aspirations of America.”
Even William Howard Taft, whose 1909 inaugural was among the most policy specific, framed his ideas with respect to the “proper” role of the federal government “in what it can and ought to accomplish for its people.”
Enacting the presidential role
Candidates give speeches that are, for obvious reasons, partisan and self-promoting. But when the campaign ends and governing begins, presidents must demonstrate an understanding of their role within the broader system.
In his first inaugural in 1933, Franklin Roosevelt moved out of campaign mode and acknowledged the constraints on his “leadership of frankness and vigor.” He pledged to rely on his “constitutional duty” to work with Congress.
Rhetoric scholars Campbell and Jamieson add that these speeches must also enact the “public, symbolic role of president of all the people” by revealing traits such as humility and reliance on a higher power. A typical example is found in the conclusion of Warren Harding’s 1921 address: “I accept my part with single-mindedness of purpose and humility of spirit, and implore the favor and guidance of God in His Heaven. With these I am unafraid, and confidently face the future.”
Fulfilling ceremonial expectations
Because of the celebration that surrounds them, inaugural addresses are expected to reflect stylized, ceremonial speaking. Such speeches strive to reach beyond the immediate situation to evoke timeless themes using memorable phrases.
In 1961, John Kennedy challenged Americans across the decades to “Ask not what your country can do for you – ask what you can do for your country.” The phrases “mystic chords of memory” and “better angels of our nature,” among the most memorable words in presidential rhetoric, have been applied to countless situations since Abraham Lincoln first uttered them in 1861.
Not all inaugural addresses achieve greatness. Some have been quite forgettable. But each of them has tried to fulfill these expectations, helping to sustain what Franklin Roosevelt in his second inaugural called “our covenant with ourselves.”
Washington
Rainier Beach vs. Eastside Catholic: Live score, updates of Washington high school boys basketball (1/13/2025)
Dre Morris scored a game-high 27 points, and No. 1 Rainier Beach won the rematch of last year’s WIAA Class 3A championship game with a 99-72 victory Monday over reigning state champion Eastside Catholic.
Jaylen Petty and Kaden Powers added 23 points apiece as the Vikings built a 24-5 lead just 4:43 into the game.
The two programs met at 7:30 p.m. Pacific time.. A live feed is available on NFHS Network (subscription only).
SBLive is tracking scores across the state of Washington through Week 9. Stay with us for the latest score and game updates from pregame to teardown. Refresh this post and scroll down for the latest.
FINAL: RAINIER BEACH 99,. EASTSIDE CATHOLIC 72
GAME HIGHLIGHTS
FOURTH QUARTER
Beach 99, Eastside Catholic 72: Morris led all scorers with 27 points. Petty and Power had 23 apiece to round out Viks’ scoring. Dawson and Aklog led Crusaders with 19 points apiece.
THIRD QUARTER
Beach 68, Eastside Catholic 54: Dawson has kept Crusaders within earshot with his perimeter shooting, nailing a pair of 3s. But Powers picked it back up with 9 in quarter.
SECOND QUARTER
Beach 51, Eastside Catholic 35: Petty got going with seven points, including first FG at 4:13 mark.
FIRST QUARTER
Beach 34, Eastside Catholic 17: Viks start on 24-5 run, making their first three 3-pointers. Morris had 17 points in quarter.
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About Rainier Beach
Key players— G Dre Morris, G Jayden Petty, G Kaden Powers,
About Eastside Catholic
Key players— F Yabi Aklog, G Dash Ingram, F Achilles Reyna.
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