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    'I’m more for Trump than I was before': president clings to narrow lead in Iowa as Biden closes in

    When Aaron Schatz surveys the wreckage of 2020, he finds himself doing surprisingly well.Profits on his Iowa dairy farm are up thanks to coronavirus. The pandemic feels a distant threat, and Schatz has yet to wear a mask. Black Lives Matter protests are an annoyance but really someone else’s problem.But Schatz is worried that Donald Trump, the man he hesitantly backed four years ago after twice voting for Barack Obama, may be in trouble.“I’m more for Trump than I was before. As a dairy farmer, I feel like I’m sitting better than I have in 10 years,” said the fifth-generation farmer in Howard county, north-eastern Iowa.“But I’m a little scared for Trump. It’s gonna be a tough battle. A year ago I wasn’t worried. I thought he’d have it.”Schatz was among voters instrumental in flipping Howard county from Obama to Trump four years ago by the largest margin of any county in the US. That swing, of more than 40 points in the rural and heavily white county, contributed to the president winning Iowa with the biggest Republican victory since Ronald Reagan in 1980. Just four months ago, the Democrats saw little reason to think the outcome would be any different this year.A Des Moines Register poll in March gave Trump a 10-point lead over his Democratic challenger, Joe Biden.But an election turned upside down by a pandemic that has created even more chaos than a president famed for disruption has put Iowa into contention. Now Trump is fighting to cling to a narrow lead over Biden. Just 45% of Iowans approve of Trump’s handling of the pandemic and only 37% think he has provided the right leadership on the Black Lives Matter protests.Perhaps most worrying for Trump, 45% of Republican voters in Iowa say the nation is on the wrong track. More

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    Boy with stutter delivers moving DNC speech: 'Joe Biden made me feel confident' – video

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    Brayden Harrington, 13, spoke about how he met Joe Biden, who stuttered himself as a boy, and how the Democratic presidential nominee gave him confidence. ‘He told me we were members of the same club: we stutter. It was really amazing to hear that someone like me became vice president,’ Brayden said.
    In the final night of the Democratic national convention, Biden outlined his plans to bring relief and solace to a country battered by the coronavirus pandemic as he accepted the nomination to challenge Donald Trump in the November election
    Biden vows to end ‘season of darkness’ as he accepts Democratic presidential nomination

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    Boy with stutter delivers emotional DNC speech after help from Joe Biden

    Democratic national convention 2020

    Brayden Harrington, 13, received speaking tips from the Democrat – a fellow stutterer – after a rally

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    Boy with stutter delivers moving DNC speech: ‘Joe Biden made me feel confident’ – video

    Political events aren’t often the venues for profoundly emotional moments, but during the last night of the Democratic national convention on Thursday, a young boy with a stutter managed to deliver one in two minutes.
    Thirteen-year-old Brayden Harrington was invited to speak at the event after he met Joe Biden at a rally in New Hampshire in February.
    When Biden, a fellow stutterer, learned about Harrington’s speech difficulties at the rally, he invited him backstage. There, Biden showed him the speech he had just delivered and the annotations he used to signal when to breathe, and gave him advice and exercises for overcoming his stutter.
    “He put his focus on Brayden and made time for him, talked to him, explained that it doesn’t define him, he’s stronger, that he’s a good person,” Brayden’s father, Owen, told CNN at the time. “It was really overwhelming for [him]. He started breaking down a little bit.”
    Six months later, Harrington was beamed into the homes of millions of Americans and ended up delivering one of the most widely praised speeches of the four-night convention.
    It was one of many stories highlighted by the all-virtual Democratic convention this week, which foregrounded a number of speeches by non-politicians such as Kristin Urquiza, whose father died of coronavirus, and the healthcare activist Ady Barkan.
    In Harrington’s address, the teenager said that “without Joe Biden I wouldn’t be talking to you today,” and that during their first meeting, Biden had told him they were “members of the same club”.
    “It was really amazing to hear that someone like me became vice-president. He told me about a book of poems by Yeats he would read out loud to practice,” he said. “He showed me how he marks his addresses to make them easier to say out loud. So I did the same thing today. And now I’m here talking to you today about the future, about our future.”
    The veteran US journalist Dan Rather described Harrington’s speech as “pure, unvarnished courage”, while CNN’s senior Washington correspondent Jeff Zeleny tweeted that he was “just remarkable. What courage and guts it took him to do this. Good luck, Brayden. You will go far.”
    Other viewers also found Harrington’s speech an emotional one to watch, and a show-stealer.

    Amy Siskind 🏳️‍🌈
    (@Amy_Siskind)
    13 year-old Brayden Harrington….tears….rolling.”We need the world to feel better.””Kids like me are counting on you to elect someone we can look up to.”Decency. I miss decency. The president should be a role model not a cautionary tale!Best part tonight so far 💙

    August 21, 2020

    Meena Harris
    (@meenaharris)
    Brayden Harrington stole the show, and I think that would make Joe very happy. ❤️

    August 21, 2020

    Meanwhile, some have contrasted Biden’s treatment of Harrington with Trump’s behavior towards those with disabilities, with Arianna Huffington highlighting the incident in the 2016 election campaign when Trump offensively imitated the reporter Serge Kovaleski, who is disabled.

    Arianna Huffington
    (@ariannahuff)
    Brayden Harrington’s video about having a stutter like Biden was also a stark contrast to the President who mocks reporters with disabilities. #DemConvention

    August 21, 2020

    The official video of Harrington’s speech uploaded by the DNC Twitter account has been viewed more than 2m times, although the real figure across all uploads is likely to be much higher.

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    'Light is more powerful than dark': Joe Biden accepts presidential nomination – video

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    Joe Biden has vowed to unite America and lead the country to overcome “this season of darkness”, as he accepted the Democratic presidential nomination on Thursday evening, a long-sought moment that comes more than 30 years after he first ran for president
    Biden vows to end ‘season of darkness’ as he accepts Democratic presidential nomination
    Biden gives the acceptance speech he’s been waiting decades to deliver

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