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    Biden slightly behind Trump but voters’ views of economy improve, poll shows

    Joe Biden officially begins his general election campaign with a slight polling deficit against Donald Trump, and no indications that his forceful State of the Union address has provided much of a boost with voters, according to a public opinion survey released on Wednesday.But the newly released USA Today/Suffolk University poll also shows views of the economy have hit their highest level of Biden’s presidency, a sign that voters may be starting to agree with the president that his policies helped the country recover from the Covid-19 pandemic.Biden and Trump on Tuesday clinched the final delegates they needed to win the Democratic and Republican nominations, respectively, with primary victories in Washington state, Mississippi and Georgia. They will be officially named the nominees at their party’s conventions over the summer, but by all indications, Americans are not looking forward to the first rematch between presidential candidates in almost seven decades.Polls have repeatedly shown both men are unpopular with voters, but the USA Today/Suffolk University survey finds Trump has a slight advantage over Biden nationally, with 40% of voters preferring him over the president’s 38%.And while unfavorability ratings for both men are 55%, the poll finds Republicans are more fired up about a second Trump presidency than Democrats are for another four years of Biden. Forty-three per cent of Republicans say they are “excited” about Trump’s nomination, versus 22% of Democrats about Biden.Biden’s approval ratings have been underwater for more than two and a half years, and the dip roughly coincided with the intensification of inflation that accompanied the economy’s bounceback from the mass layoffs and business closures caused by Covid-19.While the White House has tried to redirect voters’ attention to the strong labor market, ebbing rate of price growth and the potential offered by Biden’s legislative accomplishment, views of the economy specifically have remained negative.But the USA Today/Suffolk University poll shows that voters are becoming less pessimistic. A third of registered voters believe the economy is recovering, the highest share saying that since Biden took office, the survey says.“This data point is particularly important to track. If the trend continues, more voters could connect the economic recovery to President Biden, especially if the economy continues to dominate other issues as we get closer to November,” David Paleologos, director of the Suffolk University Political Research Center, said.skip past newsletter promotionafter newsletter promotionDemocrats were also cheered by Biden’s performance at the annual State of the Union address last week. The president laid into Trump in a passionate speech that, for some of his allies, quieted fears about the 81-year-old Biden being too old to campaign effectively.But it didn’t do much to move the needle among the poll’s respondents. While a majority watched the speech, they were nearly evenly split on whether it improved or worsened their views of Biden, and 39% said it made no difference at all. More

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    The voting bloc that could decide the US election: Swifties

    After weeks of maddening speculation over whom Taylor Swift might support in the 2024 US presidential elections, the venerated pop star finally revealed her endorsement: the right to vote itself.“Vote the people who most represent YOU into power,” Swift urged fans in an Instagram story amid Super Tuesday’s primary elections, perhaps the last chance to stop Donald Trump from once again seizing the Republican nomination for president.Although Swift could still endorse a candidate in the months ahead, her “no comment” on who should win on Super Tuesday was a noted refusal to engage in party politics at this stage. Joe Biden’s campaign is still jockeying for her endorsement, while Trump has said Swift would be “disloyal” for backing Biden and rightwingers have suggested that her 18-year career is a “psy op” – a ludicrous theory that nearly one in five Americans have said they believe.What is true, though, is that Swift currently possesses unprecedented power: an endorsement from the most beloved singer in the United States could potentially tip the balance in what’s likely to be a close election. A reported billionaire, Swift can reroute economies, trigger congressional action and spur tens of thousands of people to register to vote. While her endorsement is unlikely to sway a voter who is undecided between Trump and Biden – if such an American exists – experts believe Swift could convince people who don’t feel energized by Biden to vote for him anyway.But whether Swift will wield that power or instead stay out of the electoral fray remains unclear. Although Swift endorsed Democrats in 2018, she has in recent years increasingly withdrawn from such overt displays of partisanship or making controversial statements. That change that has coincided with her return to the top of the celebrity food chain and, in the process, left some Swifties feeling like their idol could do better.View image in fullscreen“She’s at the height of her popularity right now, so I think she’s probably pretty hesitant to do any sort of political activism,” said Jared Quigg, a 22-year-old Indiana journalist who said he listened to Swift every day. “But because of the influence she has, if she came out and called for a ceasefire in Gaza, I think that … would put more pressure on the US government, especially if Biden wants her endorsement.“I don’t think that’s an exaggeration,” Quigg added. “She is one of the most popular people in the world.”So are Swifties a voting bloc the parties should be targeting?Usually portrayed as a blur of sequin-wearing women draped in friendship bracelets, Swifties are not quite so homogeneous as they may seem. More than half of Americans identify as Swift fans and 16% say they are “avid fans”, according to a March 2023 Morning Consult poll that was conducted before the launch of Swift’s Eras tour. While the avid fans are mostly white and suburban, 48% are men, contrary to the popular perception that Swift’s music appeals largely to women.If about one in six Americans is a Swiftie, there is simply no way they’ll all agree – on Swift, or on anything else.However, there is a clear political tilt within Swiftiedom. Swift’s own politics lean to the left, and her listeners follow suit: more than half of her avid fans are Democrats, while 23% are Republicans and another 23% are independents.Swift has long taken a pragmatic approach to politics. She timed her Instagram post endorsing Democrats in the 2018 midterms to hit the internet after the US leg of her Reputation tour concluded, breaking her career-long silence on politics but shielding herself from red-state backlash. Swift then portrayed her next album, Lover, as an embrace of liberalism and love – including queer love, in the song You Need to Calm Down.By any normal artist’s standard, both Reputation and Lover were wildly successful, but neither album sold quite as well as 2014’s 1989. Notably, neither garnered many Grammy nods; in her 2020 documentary Miss Americana, which tracked Swift’s political awakening, Swift was devastated by the snub to Reputation.Yet, at her (extremely relative) commercial lowest – and when politics could feed into the personal narrative linked to Lover – Swift was willing to use her cachet for divisive political causes. In May 2020, when that year’s presidential nomination process was all but sewn up – much like this year’s Super Tuesday – Swift took to the platform then known as Twitter to spit at Trump: “After stoking the fires of white supremacy and racism your entire presidency, you have the nerve to feign moral superiority before threatening violence? ‘When the looting starts the shooting starts’??? We will vote you out in November.”Today, three original albums and one Ticketmaster-breaking world tour later, Swift has managed to soar past even the stratospheric heights of her 1989 fame, becoming as ubiquitous as gravity and just as untouchable. Yet after endorsing Democrats in 2018 and 2020, including Biden, she only urged fans to “vote” in the 2022 midterm elections, just as she did on Super Tuesday.“I feel like a lot of the things that she has spoken out about are things that are directly benefiting her if they go one way or negatively affecting if they go the other way,” said Jess Simpson, a 21-year-old who is a member of the University of Oregon Taylor Swift Society, which holds Swift-related karaoke and trivia events. “She claims to be a feminist, but that’s not what that is. It’s not just speaking out about the things that you fall into. It’s about reaching past that.”Ryan Kovatch, who also belongs to the University of Oregon Taylor Swift Society, was frustrated to see the Eras tour visit states that had passed laws attacking the rights of LGBTQ+ children.View image in fullscreenSwift did give a short, relatively vague speech about those laws and Pride month. “There have been so many harmful pieces of legislation that have put people in the LGBTQ and queer community at risk,” Swift told a Chicago crowd in June. “It’s painful for everyone, every ally, every loved one, every person of these communities, and that’s why I’m always posting, ‘This is when the midterms are, this is when these important key primaries are.’”Meanwhile, far less successful artists, such as Swift’s friend Haley Kiyoko, took a risk by bringing drag queens on stage in Tennessee after the state passed a law banning drag shows. Ariana Grande, whose fame comes closer to Swift’s, has publicly pledged to donate more than $1m to fight bills targeting transgender people.“It feels like the stakes have gotten higher and she’s backed off pretty starkly,” Kovatch said. “It is strongly disappointing, as a member of the LGBT community, to see that and see the potential there and watch it be foregone time and time again.“Especially using the rainbow during the You Need to Calm Down set,” Kovatch added, referring to a song in which Swift struts amid rainbow lights and proclaims her support for LGBTQ+ rights.“What is there to lose? You have billions of dollars,” asked Trey Pokorny, a 21-year-old whose drag persona is Treylor Swift and another member of the University of Oregon Taylor Swift Society. “Small artists – their careers can be canceled by a tweet. It takes so much more than a tweet to end Taylor Swift.”Swifties have also repeatedly raised eyebrows at Swift’s use of private jets. In 2022, Yard named Swift as the celebrity with the worst CO2 emissions; a Reddit post about the topic on the main subreddit for Taylor Swift fans triggered more than 2,000 comments.“It’s a little rough to see how many celebrities abuse their power of flying all over the place in their private jets and clogging up the environment,” said 19-year-old Addy Al-Saigh, who said she paid $2,000 to sit in nosebleed seats at the Eras tour. But, she added: “In the end, I know that there’s not really much I can do about it.”If Swift does endorse Biden, Al-Saigh said she would probably direct her Pennsylvania college’s Swift fan club to get involved in the 2024 elections. “If she came out and actually did that, I think I would have a reason to also put it up and say, ‘Go vote for Biden,’ because we’re related to Taylor,” she said.View image in fullscreenWhen it came to the 2024 elections, the Swifties who the Guardian spoke to said they were confident any Swift endorsement would ultimately be for Biden – a move they support. (Or, at least, preferred to the alternative.) But Quigg also cautioned fans to think for themselves.“I generally believe that people should not get their politics from a pop star,” he said. “At the end of the day, she’s a songwriter. She’s not a political genius.”He’s not sure fellow fans share that view. He recently saw a post on X declaring: “I definitely believe Taylor could convince Swifties to do a January 6.”“There is something to that,” Quigg said. More

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    My feeling about this presidential election? Nauseous optimism | Robert Reich

    I feel a nauseous optimism about the presidential election.I chose the word nauseous over cautious because my stomach is churning at the very possibility Trump could get a second term. But I don’t believe that will happen. The progressive forces in America are overtaking the regressive.I’m not paying attention to polls. It’s way too early to worry about them. Most of the public hasn’t even focused on the upcoming election.Biden gave a powerful State of the Union address – feisty, bold, energetic and upbeat. He was combative – taking on Trump with gusto, even besting Republican hecklers like Marjorie Taylor Greene. I’m convinced he’s equipped to win re-election.The broad American public is starting to see just how weird Maga Republicans really are. Republicans comprise only 28% of voting Americans. More than 40% of voters consider themselves independent, unaffiliated with either party. Most of these independents don’t want the unhinged running the government.During the State of the Union, Americans saw Republicans heckle and boo Biden and then sit on their hands when Biden declared that “No child should go hungry in this country.” Hello?And the official Republican response to Biden’s speech by the Alabama senator Katie Britt was, to say the least, bizarre. Delivered from her kitchen, her rebuttal vacillated from wholesome to horrific.The centerpiece of her attack on Biden’s border policies was a story about a 12-year-old Mexican girl who was sexually trafficked and raped multiple times a day at the hands of cartels before escaping. But the girl was not, in fact, trafficked across the US border; she never sought asylum in America; and her terrifying experience occurred when George W Bush was in the White House.Britt’s oddball performance baffled even fellow rightwingers. “What the hell am I watching right now?” a Trump adviser asked Rolling Stone. “One of our biggest disasters ever,” a Republican strategist told the Daily Beast.The Republican party is so out of touch with American values that it’s putting up outspoken bigots for major offices.Case in point: Mark Robinson, who won the Republican nomination for governor of North Carolina last Tuesday night, has hurled hateful remarks at everyone from Michelle Obama to the survivors of the Parkland school shooting. He’s called homosexuality and transgenderism “filth” and formerly said he wants to outlaw all abortions. He’s also ridiculed the #MeToo movement, women generally and the climate crisis.Oh, and he has a history of Holocaust denialism and antisemitic remarks. He’s suggested that 9/11 was an “inside job”, that Hollywood and the music industry are run by Satan, and that the billionaire Democratic donor George Soros orchestrated the Boko Haram kidnappings of schoolgirls in 2014. (Robinson denies he is antisemitic, and has said that some of his claims were “poorly phrased”.)Robinson is hardly the only rather out-there Republican nominee, but he typifies the grotesque values of Maga leaders, including those of the Republican party’s likely presidential candidate.Of course, the reason these bigots and haters are fighting so hard to defeat us is they know progressives are the future of America.Neither their filibusters, nor their gerrymanders, nor their attempts at voter suppression can stop our rise – nor can their absurd “great replacement theory” or their supreme court majority.I’ve been at this game for almost three-quarters of a century. It’s a long game, and America still has a long way to go. But apart from Trump fanatics, the nation is in many ways better and stronger now than it has ever been – more inclusive, tolerant, diverse, accepting, dynamic. And it will be far better and stronger years from now, because we are rising.Sure, we must do better at organizing, mobilizing and energizing. We need elected lawmakers, along with judges and supreme court justices, who reflect our beliefs and values. The Democratic party must be bolder at countering the power of big corporations and big money, and more aggressive in recruiting and supporting a new generation of progressive leaders in electoral politics.All of us must become a pro-democracy movement – with all the passion and tenacity that movements require.Even so, I see a new progressive era dawning in America and I don’t believe Trump Republicans can hold back the tide.For one thing, I see the strongest support for unions since the 1960s. Last year, at least 457,000 workers participated in a record 315 strikes in the US – and won most with contracts providing higher wages and better benefits.skip past newsletter promotionafter newsletter promotionOver the past 18 months, graduate student-teachers and research assistants at Berkeley, MIT and Caltech have voted overwhelmingly to unionize. The United Auto Workers has scored signal victories for autoworkers, as has the Teamsters for UPS workers. Hell, even Dartmouth College’s men’s basketball team has voted to unionize.Microsoft just agreed not to oppose unionization efforts. Starbucks – which has spent the last two and a half years employing union-busting attorneys and refusing to bargain with any of the roughly 400 outlets that have voted to go union – has just agreed to do the same.Here’s the bottom line: the majority of Americans view today’s record-breaking inequalities of income and wealth as dangerous. They believe government has no business forcing women to give birth or telling consenting adults how to conduct the most intimate aspects of their lives.They want to limit access to guns. They see the climate crisis as an existential threat to the nation and the world. They want to act against systemic racism. They don’t want innocent civilians killed, whether on our streets or in Gaza. They don’t want to give Putin a free hand. They want to protect American democracy from authoritarianism.The giant millennial generation – a larger cohort than the boomers – is the most progressive cohort in recent history. They’ve faced an inequitable economic system, a runaway climate crisis, and the herculean costs of trying to have a family – including everything from unaffordable childcare to wildly unaffordable housing. They’re demanding a more equitable and sustainable society because they desperately need one.Young women have become significantly more progressive over the past decade (even if young men have remained largely unchanged). They’re more likely than ever to support LGBTQ+ rights, gay or lesbian couples as parents, men staying home with children and women serving in the military. And more likely to loathe Donald Trump and any politician who emulates him.Over the next two decades, young women will be moving into positions of greater power and leadership. They now compose a remarkable 60% of college undergraduates.Meanwhile, the United States is projected to become a majority-minority nation within around two decades.This is not to say that just because someone is a person of color means that they believe in all the progressive values I mention above, of course. Yet overall, people of color are deeply concerned about the nation’s widening inequalities. They’re committed to social justice. They want to act against systemic racism, and they want to protect American democracy.Unsurprisingly, these trends have ignited a backlash – especially among Americans who are older, whiter, straighter, without college degrees, and male. These Americans have become susceptible to an authoritarian strongman peddling conspiracy theories and stoking hatred.Trump Republicans want us to be discouraged. They want us to despair. That’s part of their strategy. They figure that if we’re pessimistic enough, we won’t even fight – and they’ll win everything.But I believe their backlash is doomed. The Republican party has become a regressive cesspool, headed by increasingly unmoored people who are utterly out of touch with the dominant and emerging values of America. And most Americans are catching on.I don’t mean to be a Pollyanna. We’re in the fight of our lives. It will demand a great deal of our energy, our time, and our courage. But this fight is critical and noble. It will set the course for America and the world for decades. And it is winnable.
    Robert Reich, a former US secretary of labor, is a professor of public policy at the University of California, Berkeley, and the author of Saving Capitalism: For the Many, Not the Few and The Common Good. His newest book, The System: Who Rigged It, How We Fix It, is out now. He is a Guardian US columnist. His newsletter is at robertreich.substack.com More

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    Brett Kavanaugh knows truth of alleged sexual assault, Christine Blasey Ford says in book

    The US supreme court justice Brett Kavanaugh is not a “consummately honest person” and “must know” what really happened on the night more than 40 years ago when he allegedly sexually assaulted Christine Blasey Ford, his accuser writes in an eagerly awaited memoir.A research psychologist from northern California, Ford was thrust into the spotlight in September 2018 as Kavanaugh, a Bush aide turned federal judge, became Donald Trump’s second conservative court nominee. Her allegations almost derailed Kavanaugh’s appointment and created headlines around the world.Ford’s memoir, One Way Back, will be published next week. The Guardian obtained a copy.“The fact is, he was there in the room with me that night in 1982,” Ford writes. “And I believe he knows what happened. Even if it’s hazy from the alcohol, I believe he must know.“Once he categorically denied my allegations as well as any bad behavior from his past during a Fox News interview, I felt more certainty than ever that after my experience with him, he had not gone on to become the consummately honest person befitting a supreme court justice.”Kavanaugh’s nomination became mired in controversy after a Washington Post interview in which Ford said Kavanaugh, while drunk, sexually assaulted her at a party in Montgomery county, Maryland, when they were both in high school.“I thought he might inadvertently kill me,” Ford, then 51, told the Post. “He was trying to attack me and remove my clothing.”Kavanaugh vehemently denied the accusation, helping fuel hearing-room rancor not seen since the 1991 confirmation of Clarence Thomas, a rightwinger accused of sexually harassing a co-worker, Anita Hill.Supported by Republicans and Trump, Kavanaugh rode out the storm to join Thomas on the court. Trump would later add another conservative, Amy Coney Barrett, tipping the court 6-3 to the right. That court has since passed down major rightwing rulings, most prominently removing the federal right to abortion.In her book, Ford says she thought Kavanaugh might “step down to avoid putting his family through an investigation or further scrutiny”, adding that she wanted to tell him he should “save us both the trouble”, because “I don’t want this as much as you don’t want this”.She has been asked, she says, what she would have done if Kavanaugh had “reached out and apologised”.She writes: “Who would he be apologising to – me? The country? What would he be apologising for – that night? The harassment [of Ford by Trump supporters] around the testimony?“All I can guess is that if he’d come to me, really leveled with me, and said, ‘I don’t remember this happening, but it might have, and I’m so sorry,’ it might have been a significant, therapeutic moment for survivors in general … I might’ve wobbled a bit. I might have thought, ‘You know what, he was a jackass in high school but now he’s not.’“But when my story came out and he flat-out denied any possibility of every single thing I said, it did alleviate a little of my guilt. For me, the question of whether he had changed was answered. Any misgivings about him being a good person went away.”Ford says she decided to press through the difficulties of coming forward – meeting Democratic senators opposed to Kavanaugh, being grilled by Republicans supporting him, becoming famous herself – because of the importance of the court.She writes: “Honestly, if it hadn’t been the supreme court – if my attacker had been running for a local office, for example – I probably wouldn’t have said anything.Calling this “a sad, scary thing to admit”, Ford adds: “But this was a job at one of our most revered institutions, which we have historically held in the highest esteem. That’s what I learned at school.”Saying she was “thinking and behaving according to principle”, she adds: “I was under the impression (delusion?) that almost everyone else viewed it from the same perspective.“Wasn’t it inarguable that a supreme court justice should be held to the highest standard? A presidency you could win, but to be a supreme court justice, you needed to live your perfection. These nine people make decisions that affect every person in the country. I figured the application process should be as thorough as possible, and perhaps I could be a letter of (non)reference.”Ford also describes occasions on which she discussed the alleged attack as Kavanaugh rose to prominence. As well as conversations in therapy reported by the Post, she cites others triggered by high-profile events.Among such moments, Ford says, were the 1991 Thomas hearings in which Hill was brutally grilled by senators of both parties; a 2016 criminal case in which a Stanford swimmer was convicted of sexual assault but given a light sentence; and the #MeToo movement of 2017, in which women’s stories of sexual assault led to convictions of prominent men.After Kavanaugh was named as a potential supreme court nominee, Ford contacted Anna Eshoo, her Democratic California congresswoman, and the Post. She may have inadvertently leaked her identity, she writes, by contacting a tip line using her own phone. Either way, she was soon at the centre of a political hurricane.“I never, ever wanted [Kavanaugh’s] family to suffer,” Ford writes, adding: “When my allegations came out publicly, the media started reporting that he was getting threats. It troubled me a lot.“Then I remembered that I’d already had to move to a hotel because of the threats to me and my family. Again and again I thought, ‘Why is he putting us all through this? Why can’t he call those people off? Say something – anything – to condemn the harassment happening on both sides?”Kavanaugh, she writes, was at the mercy of rightwing interests pushing for his confirmation. Ultimately, she says, he should have expected “a thorough review of [his] entire history to be part of” becoming a justice.“If you can’t handle that,” Ford writes, “then maybe you’re not qualified for the job.” More

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    Biden and Trump clinch nominations, sealing presidential rematch in 2024 election

    Both Joe Biden and Donald Trump won primary elections in Georgia, Mississippi and Washington state on Tuesday, soldidifying a rematch a majority of voters aren’t looking forward to.Both men captured nearly all the votes cast so far in what had become token state primaries, along with the primary for Democrats Abroad and the Republican caucus in Hawaii. Biden also won the Northern Mariana Islands primary Tuesday morning, earning 11 delegates.In Georgia, a nascent effort to register opposition to the Biden administration’s support for the war in Gaza could not be easily expressed with “no preference” protest votes in Georgia, because the ballot does not provide a way to do so. One woman in Roswell, Georgia described voting for Representative Dean Phillips, who dropped out of the Democratic contest last week, as a substitute.“I voted a protest vote against the war in Gaza because I think it is horrible what is happening and I’m ashamed of my country right now,” said Robin Hawking, 56, a software developer from Roswell. She said she is normally a Republican voter. “I’m hoping if enough people vote for not-Biden, he’ll get the message that he’s going to lose this election unless he does a cease fire.”Uchenna Nwosu, a gynecologist, said her decision was a no-brainer.“It’s clear that I couldn’t vote for somebody who repealed women’s rights for abortion, for instance, for healthcare,” she said. “I don’t know why Trump should be in the race. I mean, that alone is a good reason. He doesn’t stand for anything that I stand for. So that’s it.”Trump ran unopposed in Georgia, though other names appeared still appeared on the ballot, attracting a few voters.Scott Carpenter of Roswell voted for former ambassador Nikki Haley because he hated Trump, he said. He voted for Biden in 2020. “I don’t like Trump. I don’t like Biden. I just wanted a different choice,” he said.Travis Foreman, 46, an attorney in Alpharetta, said he thought Trump was good for America and expressed frustration with the Democratic party.“I don’t agree with the party and some of their core beliefs,” Foreman said, adding that he’s voted Democratic and independent during his life. “And it’s hard for me as a preacher’s kid from South Georgia to just agree with some of their core fundamental beliefs that they want me to. A whole gender ideology, movement – I just have a problem with it. I don’t mind what anyone chooses to do with their lives and how they live their lives, but don’t try to force me to accept certain things against my own principles. It just came to me that’s the No 1 issue.”skip past newsletter promotionafter newsletter promotionBiden won enough delegates in Georgia almost immediately to win the Democratic nomination, which required 1,968 on the first ballot to win.“Four years ago, I ran for president because I believed we were in a battle for the soul of this nation. Because of the American people, we won that battle, and now I am honored that the broad coalition of voters representing the rich diversity of the Democratic party across the country have put their faith in me once again to lead our party – and our country – in a moment when the threat Trump poses is greater than ever,” he said in a statement.Trump was also on track to secure the required 1,215 delegates needed for the Republican nomination. More

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    Full live results of the 2024 presidential primaries, state by state

    View image in fullscreenGeorgia, Mississippi and Washington chose their presidential candidates on Tuesday in contests that come as both Joe Biden and Donald Trump are already their parties’ presumptive nominees.Hawaii also held its Republican caucuses on Tuesday and Democrats abroad and in the Northern Mariana territory voted as well.Biden has formally gained enough delegates to secure the nomination on 19 March. Meanwhile, Trump must win 140 delegates of 161 up for grabs on Tuesday to officially win the Republican party’s nomination.Trump no longer faces active opposition after former ambassador Nikki Haley’s withdrawal from the race after Super Tuesday. Biden only faces opposition from author Marianne Williamson, who has won no delegates.@font-face{font-family:Guardian Headline Full;src:url(https://assets.guim.co.uk/static/frontend/fonts/guardian-headline/noalts-not-hinted/GHGuardianHeadline-Light.woff2) format(“woff2”),url(https://assets.guim.co.uk/static/frontend/fonts/guardian-headline/noalts-not-hinted/GHGuardianHeadline-Light.woff) format(“woff”),url(https://assets.guim.co.uk/static/frontend/fonts/guardian-headline/noalts-not-hinted/GHGuardianHeadline-Light.ttf) format(“truetype”);font-weight:300;font-style:normal}@font-face{font-family:Guardian Headline Full;src:url(https://assets.guim.co.uk/static/frontend/fonts/guardian-headline/noalts-not-hinted/GHGuardianHeadline-LightItalic.woff2) format(“woff2”),url(https://assets.guim.co.uk/static/frontend/fonts/guardian-headline/noalts-not-hinted/GHGuardianHeadline-LightItalic.woff) 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    Georgia Republican primaryTue 12 Mar 2024Count in progress: 99% countedDonald Trump 84.5% 496,560 votes (56 delegates)Nikki Haley 13.2% 77,774 votes Ryan Binkley 0.1% 378 votes Ron DeSantis 1.3% Chris Christie 0.3% Tim Scott 0.2% Vivek Ramaswamy 0.2% Asa Hutchinson 0.1% David Stuckenberg 0.0% Doug Burgum 0.0% Perry Johnson 0.0% Georgia Democratic primaryTue 12 Mar 2024Count in progress: 99% countedJoe Biden 95.2% 274,967 votes (108 delegates)Marianne Williamson 3.0% 8,644 votes Dean Phillips 1.8% 5,255 votes Hawaii Republican caucusesTue 12 Mar 2024Count in progress: 0% countedNikki Haley 0% 0 votes Ryan Binkley 0% 0 votes Donald Trump 0% 0 votes Chris Christie 0% Ron DeSantis 0% Doug Burgum 0% Vivek Ramaswamy 0% David Stuckenberg 0% Mississippi Democratic primaryTue 12 Mar 2024Count in progress: 0% countedJoe Biden (uncontested) (35 delegates)Mississippi Republican primaryTue 12 Mar 2024Count in progress: 94.78% countedDonald Trump 92.6% 218,648 votes (40 delegates)Nikki Haley 5.3% 12,530 votes Ron DeSantis 1.6% Vivek Ramaswamy 0.4% Washington Democratic primaryTue 12 Mar 2024Count in progress: 79.43% countedJoe Biden 86.7% 559,996 votes (92 delegates) Uncommitted 7.5% 48,619 votes Dean Phillips 3.1% 19,883 votes Marianne Williamson 2.7% 17,309 votes Washington Republican primaryTue 12 Mar 2024Count in progress: 80.45% countedDonald Trump 74.2% 442,048 votes (43 delegates)Nikki Haley 21.7% 129,394 votes Ron DeSantis 2.2% Chris Christie 1.1% Vivek Ramaswamy 0.9% Alaska Republican caucusesTue 5 Mar 2024Count in progress: All precincts reportedDonald Trump 87.6% 9,243 votes (29 delegates)Nikki Haley 12.0% 1,266 votes Vivek Ramaswamy 0.4% Alabama Republican primaryTue 5 Mar 2024Count in progress: 99% countedDonald Trump 83.2% 497,739 votes (50 delegates)Nikki Haley 13.0% 77,564 votes Ryan Binkley 0.1% 508 votes Uncommitted 1.6% Ron DeSantis 1.4% Vivek Ramaswamy 0.3% Chris Christie 0.2% David Stuckenberg 0.1% Alabama Democratic primaryTue 5 Mar 2024Count in progress: 99% countedJoe Biden 89.5% 167,165 votes (52 delegates) Uncommitted 6.0% 11,213 votes Dean Phillips 4.5% 8,391 votes Arkansas Democratic primaryTue 5 Mar 2024Count in progress: 99% countedJoe Biden 88.5% 71,888 votes (31 delegates)Marianne Williamson 4.8% 3,876 votes Dean Phillips 2.9% 2,341 votes Stephen Lyons 1.8% Armando Perez-Serrato 1.1% Frankie Lozada 1.0% Arkansas Republican primaryTue 5 Mar 2024Count in progress: 99% countedDonald Trump 76.9% 204,664 votes (39 delegates)Nikki Haley 18.4% 49,035 votes (1 delegates)Ryan Binkley 0.1% 183 votes Asa Hutchinson 2.8% Ron DeSantis 1.2% Vivek Ramaswamy 0.3% Chris Christie 0.2% Doug Burgum 0.1% David Stuckenberg 0.1% California Democratic primaryTue 5 Mar 2024Count in progress: 84.65% countedJoe Biden 89.3% 2,794,314 votes (424 delegates)Marianne Williamson 3.9% 121,630 votes Dean Phillips 2.8% 87,220 votes Armando Perez-Serrato 1.2% Gabriel Cornejo 1.2% President Boddie 0.7% Stephen Lyons 0.6% Eban Cambridge 0.3% California Republican primaryTue 5 Mar 2024Count in progress: 85% countedDonald Trump 79.1% 1,742,482 votes (169 delegates)Nikki Haley 17.5% 386,000 votes Ryan Binkley 0.1% 3,267 votes Ron DeSantis 1.4% Chris Christie 0.8% Vivek Ramaswamy 0.4% Rachel Swift 0.2% David Stuckenberg 0.2% Asa Hutchinson 0.1% Colorado Democratic primaryTue 5 Mar 2024Count in progress: 93.25% countedJoe Biden 82.6% 473,533 votes (72 delegates)Dean Phillips 3.1% 17,717 votes Marianne Williamson 2.9% 16,487 votes Noncommitted Delegate 8.9% Gabriel Cornejo 0.7% Jason Palmer 0.7% Armando Perez-Serrato 0.4% Frankie Lozada 0.4% Stephen Lyons 0.3% Colorado Republican primaryTue 5 Mar 2024Count in progress: 93.71% countedDonald Trump 63.4% 549,263 votes (24 delegates)Nikki Haley 33.4% 289,386 votes (12 delegates)Ryan Binkley 0.3% 2,192 votes Ron DeSantis 1.5% Chris Christie 0.8% Vivek Ramaswamy 0.6% Asa Hutchinson 0.1% Iowa Democratic primaryTue 5 Mar 2024Count in progress: All precincts reportedJoe Biden 90.9% 11,083 votes (40 delegates) Uncommitted 3.9% 480 votes Dean Phillips 3.0% 362 votes Marianne Williamson 2.2% 268 votes Massachusetts Republican primaryTue 5 Mar 2024Count in progress: All precincts reportedDonald Trump 60.0% 340,312 votes (40 delegates)Nikki Haley 36.9% 209,113 votes Ryan Binkley 0.1% 611 votes No Preference 1.0% Chris Christie 0.9% Ron DeSantis 0.7% Vivek Ramaswamy 0.3% Asa Hutchinson 0.1% Massachusetts Democratic primaryTue 5 Mar 2024Count in progress: All precincts reportedJoe Biden 82.9% 524,626 votes (91 delegates)Dean Phillips 4.6% 29,163 votes Marianne Williamson 3.2% 20,089 votes No Preference 9.3% Maine Democratic primaryTue 5 Mar 2024Count in progress: 98.96% countedJoe Biden 92.8% 58,950 votes (24 delegates)Dean Phillips 7.2% 4,561 votes Maine Republican primaryTue 5 Mar 2024Count in progress: 98.88% countedDonald Trump 72.9% 78,493 votes (20 delegates)Nikki Haley 25.3% 27,300 votes Ryan Binkley 0.3% 303 votes Ron DeSantis 1.1% Vivek Ramaswamy 0.4% Minnesota Democratic primaryTue 5 Mar 2024Count in progress: 99% countedJoe Biden 70.7% 171,277 votes (64 delegates) Uncommitted 18.9% 45,914 votes (11 delegates)Dean Phillips 7.8% 18,960 votes Marianne Williamson 1.4% 3,459 votes Jason Palmer 0.3% Cenk Uygur 0.3% Armando Perez-Serrato 0.2% Gabriel Cornejo 0.1% Frankie Lozada 0.1% Eban Cambridge 0.1% Minnesota Republican primaryTue 5 Mar 2024Count in progress: All precincts reportedDonald Trump 69.1% 232,873 votes (27 delegates)Nikki Haley 28.8% 97,184 votes (12 delegates)Ron DeSantis 1.2% Vivek Ramaswamy 0.4% Chris Christie 0.4% North Carolina Democratic primaryTue 5 Mar 2024Count in progress: 98.97% countedJoe Biden 87.3% 606,303 votes (113 delegates) No Preference 12.7% North Carolina Republican primaryTue 5 Mar 2024Count in progress: 99% countedDonald Trump 73.9% 790,763 votes (62 delegates)Nikki Haley 23.3% 249,654 votes (11 delegates)Ryan Binkley 0.1% 905 votes Ron DeSantis 1.4% No Preference 0.7% Vivek Ramaswamy 0.3% Chris Christie 0.3% Asa Hutchinson 0.1% Oklahoma Republican primaryTue 5 Mar 2024Count in progress: 99% countedDonald Trump 81.8% 254,688 votes (43 delegates)Nikki Haley 15.9% 49,373 votes Ryan Binkley 0.1% 303 votes Ron DeSantis 1.3% Chris Christie 0.4% Vivek Ramaswamy 0.3% Asa Hutchinson 0.1% David Stuckenberg 0.1% Oklahoma Democratic primaryTue 5 Mar 2024Count in progress: 99% countedJoe Biden 73.0% 66,824 votes (36 delegates)Marianne Williamson 9.1% 8,349 votes Dean Phillips 8.9% 8,177 votes Stephen Lyons 4.8% Cenk Uygur 2.2% Armando Perez-Serrato 2.0% Tennessee Republican primaryTue 5 Mar 2024Count in progress: 99% countedDonald Trump 77.3% 447,219 votes (58 delegates)Nikki Haley 19.5% 112,963 votes Ryan Binkley 0.1% 722 votes Ron DeSantis 1.4% Uncommitted 0.8% Chris Christie 0.3% Vivek Ramaswamy 0.3% Asa Hutchinson 0.1% David Stuckenberg 0.1% Tennessee Democratic primaryTue 5 Mar 2024Count in progress: 99% countedJoe Biden 92.2% 122,835 votes (63 delegates) Uncommitted 7.8% 10,461 votes Texas Democratic primaryTue 5 Mar 2024Count in progress: 99% countedJoe Biden 84.6% 826,423 votes (244 delegates)Marianne Williamson 4.5% 43,499 votes Dean Phillips 2.7% 26,341 votes Armando Perez-Serrato 2.8% Gabriel Cornejo 1.8% Cenk Uygur 1.6% Frankie Lozada 1.2% Star Locke 0.9% Texas Republican primaryTue 5 Mar 2024Count in progress: 99% countedDonald Trump 77.9% 1,805,040 votes (150 delegates)Nikki Haley 17.4% 404,116 votes Ryan Binkley 0.1% 2,579 votes Uncommitted 2.0% Ron DeSantis 1.6% Vivek Ramaswamy 0.5% Chris Christie 0.4% Asa Hutchinson 0.1% David Stuckenberg 0.1% Utah Democratic primaryTue 5 Mar 2024Count in progress: 71.44% countedJoe Biden 86.9% 58,643 votes (30 delegates)Marianne Williamson 5.2% 3,498 votes Dean Phillips 4.5% 3,010 votes Gabriel Cornejo 2.2% Frankie Lozada 1.3% Utah Republican caucusesTue 5 Mar 2024Count in progress: 95.33% countedDonald Trump 56.4% 48,350 votes (40 delegates)Nikki Haley 42.7% 36,621 votes Ryan Binkley 1.0% 826 votes Virginia Republican primaryTue 5 Mar 2024Count in progress: 99% countedDonald Trump 63.0% 440,314 votes (42 delegates)Nikki Haley 35.0% 244,527 votes (6 delegates)Ryan Binkley 0.1% 854 votes Ron DeSantis 1.1% Chris Christie 0.5% Vivek Ramaswamy 0.4% Virginia Democratic primaryTue 5 Mar 2024Count in progress: All precincts reportedJoe Biden 88.5% 316,944 votes (99 delegates)Marianne Williamson 8.0% 28,590 votes Dean Phillips 3.5% 12,576 votes Vermont Republican primaryTue 5 Mar 2024Count in progress: All precincts reportedNikki Haley 50.2% 36,226 votes (9 delegates)Donald Trump 45.9% 33,140 votes Ryan Binkley 0.4% 277 votes Chris Christie 1.4% Ron DeSantis 1.3% Vivek Ramaswamy 0.8% Vermont Democratic primaryTue 5 Mar 2024Count in progress: 99% countedJoe Biden 89.5% 56,906 votes (16 delegates)Marianne Williamson 4.5% 2,883 votes Dean Phillips 3.0% 1,933 votes Mark Greenstein 1.2% Cenk Uygur 1.1% Jason Palmer 0.6% North Dakota Republican caucusesMon 4 Mar 2024Count in progress: All precincts reportedDonald Trump 84.6% 1,632 votes (29 delegates)Nikki Haley 14.1% 273 votes Ryan Binkley 0.5% 9 votes David Stuckenberg 0.8% District of Columbia Republican primarySun 3 Mar 2024Count in progress: All precincts reportedNikki Haley 62.8% 1,274 votes (19 delegates)Donald Trump 33.3% 676 votes Ryan Binkley 0.0% 1 votes Ron DeSantis 1.9% Chris Christie 0.9% Vivek Ramaswamy 0.7% David Stuckenberg 0.4% Idaho Republican caucusesSat 2 Mar 2024Count in progress: All precincts reportedDonald Trump 84.9% 33,603 votes (32 delegates)Nikki Haley 13.2% 5,221 votes Ryan Binkley 0.1% 40 votes Ron DeSantis 1.3% Vivek Ramaswamy 0.2% Chris Christie 0.2% Missouri Republican caucusesSat 2 Mar 2024Count in progress: All precincts reportedDonald Trump 100.0% 924 votes (51 delegates)Nikki Haley 0.0% 0 votes David Stuckenberg 0.0% Michigan Democratic primaryTue 27 Feb 2024Count in progress: All precincts reportedJoe Biden 81.1% 623,415 votes (115 delegates) Uncommitted 13.2% 101,436 votes (2 delegates)Marianne Williamson 3.0% 22,805 votes Dean Phillips 2.7% 20,600 votes Michigan Republican primaryTue 27 Feb 2024Count in progress: All precincts reportedDonald Trump 68.1% 758,892 votes (12 delegates)Nikki Haley 26.6% 296,328 votes (4 delegates)Ryan Binkley 0.2% 2,348 votes Uncommitted 3.0% Ron DeSantis 1.2% Chris Christie 0.4% Vivek Ramaswamy 0.3% Asa Hutchinson 0.1% South Carolina Republican primarySat 24 Feb 2024Count in progress: 98.8% countedDonald Trump 59.8% 451,905 votes (47 delegates)Nikki Haley 39.5% 298,674 votes (3 delegates)Ryan Binkley 0.1% 527 votes Ron DeSantis 0.4% Vivek Ramaswamy 0.1% Chris Christie 0.1% David Stuckenberg 0.0% Nevada Republican caucusesThu 8 Feb 2024Count in progress: All precincts reportedDonald Trump 99.1% 59,984 votes (26 delegates)Ryan Binkley 0.9% 540 votes Nevada Democratic primaryTue 6 Feb 2024Count in progress: All precincts reportedJoe Biden 89.3% 119,758 votes (36 delegates)Marianne Williamson 3.1% 4,101 votes None of These Candidates 5.6% Gabriel Cornejo 0.6% Jason Palmer 0.4% Frankie Lozada 0.2% Armando Perez-Serrato 0.2% John Haywood 0.2% Stephen Lyons 0.1% Superpayaseria Crystalroc 0.1% Donald Picard 0.1% Brent Foutz 0.1% Stephen Leon 0.1% Mark Prascak 0.0% Nevada Republican primaryTue 6 Feb 2024Count in progress: All precincts reportedNikki Haley 30.6% 24,583 votes None of These Candidates 63.3% Mike Pence 3.9% Tim Scott 1.3% John Castro 0.3% Hirsh Singh 0.2% Donald Kjornes 0.2% Heath Fulkerson 0.1% South Carolina Democratic primarySat 3 Feb 2024Count in progress: All precincts reportedJoe Biden 96.2% 126,336 votes (55 delegates)Marianne Williamson 2.1% 2,726 votes Dean Phillips 1.7% 2,240 votes New Hampshire Democratic primaryTue 23 Jan 2024Count in progress: All precincts reportedJoe Biden write-in 63.9% 79,455 votes Dean Phillips 19.6% 24,335 votes Marianne Williamson 4.0% 5,006 votes Other write-in 8.3% Derek Nadeau 1.3% Vermin Supreme 0.7% John Vail 0.5% Donald Picard 0.3% Paperboy Prince 0.3% Paul LaCava 0.1% Jason Palmer 0.1% President Boddie 0.1% Mark Greenstein 0.1% Terrisa Bukovinac 0.1% Gabriel Cornejo 0.1% Stephen Lyons 0.1% Frankie Lozada 0.1% Tom Koos 0.1% Armando Perez-Serrato 0.1% Star Locke 0.0% Raymond Moroz 0.0% Eban Cambridge 0.0% Unprocessed write-in 0.0% Richard Rist 0.0% New Hampshire Republican primaryTue 23 Jan 2024Count in progress: All precincts reportedDonald Trump 54.3% 176,004 votes (12 delegates)Nikki Haley 43.2% 140,096 votes (9 delegates)Ryan Binkley 0.1% 315 votes Ron DeSantis 0.7% Chris Christie 0.5% Total Write-Ins 0.4% Vivek Ramaswamy 0.3% Mike Pence 0.1% Mary Maxwell 0.1% Tim Scott 0.1% Doug Burgum 0.1% Asa Hutchinson 0.0% Rachel Swift 0.0% Scott Ayers 0.0% Darius Mitchell 0.0% Glenn McPeters 0.0% Peter Jedick 0.0% Perry Johnson 0.0% David Stuckenberg 0.0% Donald Kjornes 0.0% Scott Merrell 0.0% John Castro 0.0% Robert Carney 0.0% Hirsh Singh 0.0% Samuel Sloan 0.0% Iowa Republican caucusesMon 15 Jan 2024Count in progress: All precincts reportedDonald Trump 51.0% 56,260 votes (20 delegates)Ron DeSantis 21.2% 23,420 votes (9 delegates)Nikki Haley 19.1% 21,085 votes (8 delegates)Ryan Binkley 0.7% 774 votes Vivek Ramaswamy 7.7% Asa Hutchinson 0.2% Other 0.1% Chris Christie 0.0% More

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    Man who sent bomb threat to Arizona election officials jailed for 42 months

    A Massachusetts man who threatened to blow up the secretary of state of Arizona in 2021 has been sentenced to three and a half years in prison, one of the most severe federal punishments yet handed down for the wave of violent threats against election officials unleashed by Donald Trump’s stolen election lie.James Clark, 38, was sentenced in federal district court in Phoenix on Tuesday to 42 months of imprisonment, to be followed by three years on probation. Judge Michael Liburdi said that his online bomb threat had inflicted “emotional and psychological trauma” on government employees and required a deterrent sentence to protect democracy.Liburdi remarked that there had been so many recent threats in Arizona against election officials that people were quitting their jobs. “If we do not have good people to fill these positions who are committed to the delivery of fair elections, we lose our ability to govern ourselves,” the judge said.The prosecution was handled under the auspices of the election threats task force, a specialist unit within the justice department. The task force was set up in 2021 in response to the plague of intimidation of election officials that has erupted since the former president made his baseless claim that the 2020 presidential election was rigged.Tuesday’s sentence of three and a half years in prison is on a par with the previous harshest sentence secured by the task force. In August, Francis Goetz from Texas was given a similar punishment for posting several threats against Arizona election officials on far-right social media platforms.Clark made his bomb threat a week after the January 6 attack on the US Capitol. In his plea agreement he admitted to logging into the website of the then secretary of state, Katie Hobbs, who is now Arizona’s governor.He demanded that she resign within two days or an “explosive device impacted in her personal space will be detonated”. Within minutes of sending the threat, Clark searched online for Hobbs’s home address and put her name against the search term “how to kill”.Four days after the bomb threat, he searched for details of the 2013 Boston marathon bombing.After Clark’s bomb threat was discovered, two floors of the Arizona government building were evacuated and the then Republican governor Doug Ducey was forced to shelter in place. Security sweeps were conducted of Hobbs’s home and car.Before the sentence was handed down, a statement from the current Arizona secretary of state, Adrian Fontes, was read out to court. He said that the bomb threat had made employees in his office suffer fear and anxiety.“It makes each of us feel vulnerable, and that trauma does not abate over time. This type of threat is anti-American and a threat to democracy,” Fontes said.Tanya Senanayake, a trial attorney with the public integrity section of the justice department who prosecuted the case, had pressed for an even longer prison sentence of almost five years. She said that a deterrent punishment was needed to protect public officials from “a growing trend of threats to their lives and to the safety of their families”.Defense attorney Jeanette Alvarado emphasized that Clark was in the throes of alcohol and drug abuse at the time he committed the offense. He was now in recovery and has been clean and sober for three years, she said.skip past newsletter promotionafter newsletter promotionClark himself addressed the judge and said that when he made the bomb threat “I was not the person I wanted to be … I am deeply, deeply ashamed.”Since Trump became the first president in US history to refuse to cede power, election administrators and their families have come under a barrage of verbal and online attacks. A study by the Brennan Center last year found that almost one in three election officials had been threatened or abused, and almost half were concerned about the safety of their colleagues and staff.Arizona has borne the brunt of much of the wave of harassment. In two separate incidents last month, the FBI arrested individuals in Alabama and California alleged to have made violent threats against election officials in Maricopa county, the largest constituency in Arizona that covers Phoenix.On 25 March, a further federal sentencing hearing will be held in Phoenix in the case of Joshua Russell, 44, of Bucyrus, Ohio. Russell pled guilty to having left three threatening voicemails in August 2022 targeting an unnamed election official in the Arizona secretary of state’s office.The messages accused the victim of perpetrating election fraud and said: “America’s coming for you, and you will pay with your life, you communist fucking traitor bitch.”The US attorney general Merrick Garland has made combating threats against election officials a priority for the justice department. In a speech in January he said: “These threats of violence are unacceptable. They threaten the fabric of our democracy.” More

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    Five key takeaways from the House hearing on Robert Hur’s Biden report

    The former special counsel Robert Hur, who investigated Joe Biden’s handling of classified documents, testified before a House committee on Tuesday in an often contentious hearing that found the witness on the receiving end of criticism from both Democrats and Republicans.Here were the key takeaways from the House judiciary committee hearing:Hur defended his assessment of Biden’s memoryIn his report, which was released last month, Hur concluded that no criminal charges were warranted against Biden. While stating that Biden had “willfully retained and disclosed classified materials after his vice-presidency when he was a private citizen”, Hur assessed that a jury would probably view him as “a sympathetic, well-meaning, elderly man with a poor memory” and thus would be unable to establish his guilt beyond a reasonable doubt.After the report’s release, Democrats celebrated Hur’s recommendation against criminal charges, but they accused the special counsel of overstepping the bounds of his assignment by offering such a stinging opinion on Biden’s memory. Hur directly confronted that criticism in his opening statement on Tuesday.“My task was to determine whether the president retained or disclosed national defense information ‘willfully’. That means knowingly and with the intent to do something the law forbids. I could not make that determination without assessing the president’s state of mind,” Hur said. “My assessment in the report about the relevance of the president’s memory was necessary and accurate and fair.”When Republican members of the committee attempted to press Hur on whether he found Biden to be “senile”, he said, “I did not. That conclusion does not appear in my report.”Hur asserted his impartiality even as he refused to rule out a potential role in a Trump administrationDemocrats on the committee accused Hur of directly inserting himself into the 2024 election by knowingly writing a report meant to paint a damning portrait of Biden, even as the special counsel simultaneously concluded that the president should not be charged.“You cannot tell me you’re so naive as to think your words would not have created a political firestorm,” said the Democratic congressman Adam Schiff of California. “You were not born yesterday. You understood exactly what you were doing.”Hur rejected that characterization, telling Schiff: “Politics played no part whatsoever in my investigative steps.”And yet, when Hur was directly asked whether he would rule out taking a position in the Trump administration if the former president wins the election in November, the special counsel would not do so.“I’m not here to speak about what may or may not happen in the future,” Hur said.Republicans complained of a double standard of justice, citing Trump’s indictment in Florida, but Democrats noted key differences in the two casesRepublicans argued that Hur had made a special exception for Biden to avoid charging a sitting president, and they disparagingly compared the case to Trump’s indictment for mishandling classified information after leaving the White House.Matt Gaetz, a hard-right Republican congressman of Florida, mocked the special counsel’s reasoning for not recommending charges against Biden as the “senile cooperator theory”.“Biden and Trump should have been treated equally. They weren’t. And that is the double standard that I think a lot of Americans are concerned about,” Gaetz said.Democrats fiercely pushed back against that argument, noting that Trump was accused of repeatedly refusing to turn over classified documents after federal authorities requested their return.“What kind of man bungles not one, but dozens of opportunities to avoid criminal liability? What must that say about his mental state?” asked Congressman Jerry Nadler, the top Democratic member on the judiciary committee.Nadler added, “House Republicans may be desperate to convince America that white conservative men are on the losing end of a two-tiered justice system – a theory that appeals to the Maga crowd but has no basis in reality.”skip past newsletter promotionafter newsletter promotionHur said Biden was not “exonerated” even though no charges were filed against the presidentIn her questioning of Hur, the Democratic congresswoman Pramila Jayapal, zeroed in on the special counsel’s conclusion that no charges should be brought against Biden.“You exonerated him,” Jayapal said.Hur interjected to say, “I did not exonerate him. That word does not appear in the report.”Although the word “exonerate” does not appear in Hur’s report, the first paragraph of the document reads, “We conclude that no criminal charges are warranted in this matter. We would reach the same conclusion even if Department of Justice policy did not foreclose criminal charges against a sitting president.”Transcripts painted a more nuanced picture of Biden’s conversations with HurDemocrats on the House judiciary committee released the transcripts of Biden’s interviews with Hur, and they somewhat clash with how the two have portrayed their conversations.For example, in his report, Hur wrote that Biden “did not remember, even within several years, when his son Beau died”.The comment infuriated Biden, who said at a fiery press conference held after the report’s release, “How in the hell dare he raise that? Frankly, when I was asked the question, I thought to myself, it wasn’t any of their damn business.”But the report reveals that Hur did not in fact inquire about the date of Beau Biden’s death. Hur was actually asking about where Biden kept certain documents after leaving the White House in January 2017, and the president invoked his son’s death as a reference point in the conversation.“And so what was happening, though – what month did Beau die? Oh, God, May 30,” Biden said.Biden did not specify which year his son died, prompting an aide to remind him that it was 2015. “Was it 2015 he had died?” Biden asked, and the aide confirmed it was.Other exchanges outlined in the transcripts raise questions about Hur’s assessment of Biden’s “poor memory”. Although the president frequently fumbled as he recounted the exact sequence of events related to the transfer of documents, Biden also offered detailed explanations and reminiscences of events in the past.At one point, Biden was so exact in the description of his Wilmington home that Hur joked, “We have some photographs to show you, but you have – appear to have a photographic understanding and recall of the house.”The Guardian’s Léonie Chao-Fong contributed to this report More