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Vice President Kamala Harris could be ‘playing politics’ by allowing her subordinates to take the lead on her making major policy shifts, rather than pushing them herself, a Republican strategist says.

Unnamed officials have announced Harris’ new stance on key issues that she previously supported during her 2019 presidential run, such as fracking and ‘Medicare for All,’ but Harris herself has not yet publicly addressed these position shifts.

While the Harris campaign appears to be pushing a reworked agenda, one political strategist told Fox News Digital that ‘anonymous on background campaign staffers do not take public policy positions, candidates and elected officials do.’

Dallas Woodhouse, State Director for American Majority-North Carolina, a nonprofit conservative training organization, said that Americans should assume that every position taken by Harris during her previous presidential campaign for President and the positions taken by the Biden-Harris administration are exactly hers today, ‘until she herself explains otherwise.’ 

‘The American public will never accept a candidate changing all their stated positions from just a few years ago without thorough examination and explanation,’ he added.

1. Fracking

Harris said that she would ban fracking if elected during her first presidential bid – a key issue among a critical voting bloc in battleground states like Pennsylvania.

‘There’s no question I’m in favor of banning fracking, I have a history of working on this issue,’ Harris said in 2020.

Republicans, including former President Trump, have used her past comments on the issue to blast her in several campaign ads since she launched her 2024 campaign.

But campaign officials for the Democratic nominee are now saying that Harris will not ban fracking if she’s elected president.

2. ‘Medicare for All’

Harris published a plan for ‘Medicare for All’ during her 2019 presidential election, writing that her goal was to ‘end these senseless attacks on Obamacare’ and that she believes ‘health care should be a right, not a privilege only for those who can afford it. It’s why we need Medicare for All.’

‘The idea is that everyone gets access to medical care. And you don’t have to go through the process of going through an insurance company, having them give you approval, going through the paperwork all of the delay that may require. Let’s eliminate that,’ Harris wrote in 2019.

Additionally, then-Senator Harris cosponsored Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt., Medicare for All Act of 2019.

Despite her past support, a campaign official told Fox News senior White House correspondent Peter Doocy that Harris will not push the subject of ‘Medicare-for-all’ this cycle.

Colin Reed, a Republican strategist, previous campaign manager, and co-founder of South and Hill Strategies, expressed skepticism regarding the credibility of Harris’ recent policy change.

‘When Vice President Harris ran for the White House five years ago, she was a sitting U.S. Senator and the former attorney general of the largest state in the nation. In other words, an extremely accomplished individual with plenty of time on the national stage to form opinions on the big issues,’ Reed told Fox. ‘The idea that she could, over the span of five changes, just change her tune on a dime on a slew of major big ticket items strains credulity,’

Reed highlighted her shift on ‘Medicare For All,’ which he says ‘would cost $44 trillion dollars – more than our entire $35 trillion dollar national debt.’

‘Either she was wrong then or is playing politics now, and voters will figure it out whenever she decides to answer questions in an unscripted setting.’

Fox News Digital asked the Harris campaign if she plans to personally announce her new stance on the key issues, but did not receive an initial response.

Harris advisers told Axios that ‘Harris doesn’t want to be completely defined by the Biden-Harris record,’ publishing a report that said she is seeking to distance herself from Biden on several issues, including his economic policies.

3. No Taxes on Tips

Under the current Biden-Harris Internal Revenue Service (IRS), taxpayers must report all tip money as income on their tax returns. Initially, she supported measures that allowed the IRS to track and tax workers’ tips, and even casted a tie-breaking vote in 2022 to pass legislation that increased IRS funding for this exact purpose. 

However, Harris recently revealed that she supports ending taxes on tips for service worker employees – an idea floated earlier this summer by Trump, who received positive feedback on the idea.

‘We’ll continue our fight for working families of America,’ Harris said at a recent campaign rally. ‘Including minimum wage and eliminate taxes on tips for service and hospitality workers.’

4. The Border Crisis

Vice President Kamala Harris has previously supported the rolling back of Trump-era border policies, but is taking a stronger position on the the southern border crisis this election cycle.

When record numbers of migrants were coming through the border in 2022, Harris said that ‘the border is secure,’ during an appearance on NBC’s ‘Meet the Press.’

Harris was criticized by border state Rep. Henry Cuellar, D-Texas, shortly thereafter, who told CNN that ‘the border is not secure.’

Harris, however, has used her recent rallies to convince voters that tough border security is a top priority for her 2024 campaign.

Harris is also investing in a new narrative, recently putting out a border-related campaign ad, titled, ‘Tougher.’

‘Kamala Harris has spent decades fighting violent crime. As a border state prosecutor, she took on drug cartels and jailed gang members for smuggling weapons and drugs across the border,’ a narrator says. ‘As vice president, she backed the toughest border control bill in decades. And as president, she will hire thousands more border agents and crack down on fentanyl and human trafficking.’

‘Fixing the border is tough, so is Kamala Harris,’ a voice in the ad can be heard saying. 

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Celebrities have a ‘powerful’ ability to influence elections and increase voter turnout, a Harvard study found.

‘While some polling shows that people claim they aren’t influenced by celebrity voices when it comes to politics, more rigorous evidence indicates that these voices are incredibly powerful,’ reads a study conducted by Harvard’s Ash Center for Democratic Governance and Innovation. ‘Nonprofits report higher rates of online voter registration or poll worker sign-ups when a celebrity promotes these calls to action. This potential impact is why nonprofits, candidates, and elected officials are increasingly seeking ways to engage celebrities.’

Researchers working on the study analyzed the approaches of 15 managers, publicists, nonprofit partners, philanthropic advisers and celebrities, including well-known names such as Hailey Bieber, David Dobrik, Billie Eilish, Trevor Noah, Taylor Swift, Kerry Washington and The Roots co-founder and drummer Questlove.

‘Celebrities, like all of us, face choices about how to engage in democracy. For example, they can serve as surrogates for political candidates, helping to ‘rally the base’ or reach new audiences,’ the study reads, adding that there is also evidence that ‘celebrities can help with candidate fundraising, attracting large crowds to political events or volunteer shifts, which draws press attention.’

Overall, the researchers found that celebrities are motivated to activism not only because of their beliefs, but because it can also be ‘good for their brands,’ something that was supported by a previous study on the issue.

‘It helps your audience stay connected to you—a connection based on values, which humanizes an artist and a celebrity in a way that the audience then feels like they know you. And then, when your next film or album comes out, this audience that’s connected to you wants to support you, wants to show up,’ Questlove’s Manager Dawn White told researchers.

The study argues that the impact celebrities have can be massive, pointing to a 2018 Instagram story posted by Swift to her 112 million followers to register to vote at vote.org. That one post led to 65,000 new registrants in 24 hours and 250,000 over 72 hours.

Swift has continued to make similar posts over the years since, while her following has more than doubled to 283 million over the same time period.

Researchers found that celebrities have a more profound impact on ‘younger generations,’ which are not as easy to reach through traditional ‘mainstream media and other get-out-the-vote efforts.’

‘Their control of and presence on social media positions them as centralized sources of information to be tapped into and utilized by those looking to increase voter participation,’ the study reads.

However, the research also found that celebrity impact has been limited by a lack of organization, including a lack of formal programs that would allow them to test and track their efforts.

‘Consequently, there is an extraordinary opportunity and potential to grow, mature, and formalize celebrity civic engagement efforts, which can significantly impact civic culture,’ the study included. ‘That being said, the available data indicate that some approaches work better than others.’

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Anti-Israel groups are planning a massive show of force at the Democratic National Convention in Chicago next week as the party plans to celebrate Vice President Kamala Harris’ nomination.

The U.S. Palestinian Community Network will bring in busloads of protesters from Minnesota, Michigan, Indiana, Wisconsin and elsewhere. The group is organizing the event under the hashtag ‘March on DNC 2024,’ with leaders arguing ther is no daylight between Harris and President Biden when it comes to Israel-Gaza policy.

‘We’re not going to do anything different. We’re going to mobilize,’ the groups’ leader, Hatem Abudayyeh told NBC News.Harris represents the administration; she represents Biden. There is nothing that she has expressed independently that tells us she does not support the policies.’

‘The movement is saying not only are we needing to stop the genocide, but we need to stop the possibility that this thing is going to be a regional war,’ he added.

‘Genocide Joe Biden has stepped down from running for President as the Democratic Party nominee. His decision doesn’t change the policies of Democratic Party leadership, specifically their support of the genocide in Palestine, so our movement must continue to apply pressure,’ the group further stated on its website.

Meanwhile, federal, state and local law enforcement say they are aware of and are currently monitoring plans for the protest and any threat they may pose to the convention.

One local Chicago organization posted a particularly threatening video on social media earlier this week. The video shows a masked individual vowing to welcome ‘killer Kamala’ to the city.

‘As home to the largest Palestinian diaspora in the country, we want to give Killer Kamala, her partners in crime, and her future VP a warm welcome to our city,’ the individual said.

The Secret Service confirmed to NBC News that they are aware of the video.

The FBI says it is also monitoring the event, but said in a statement that it is not aware of any specific threats.

‘At this time, the FBI is not aware of any specific and articulable threats related to the DNC,’ the FBI told reporters earlier this week. ‘We will continue to evaluate and share intelligence received from domestic and international partners related to the DNC just as we would for any large-scale event within the Chicago area.’

The Chicago Police Department did not immediately respond to a request for comment from Fox News Digital.

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Grocery price growth, once the scourge of the post-pandemic inflation surge, has finally settled down.

On Wednesday, the Bureau of Labor Statistics reported that food-at-home prices increased 1.1% year-on-year — the ninth-straight month of sub-2% increases.

For the average consumer, the new price levels can take years to adjust to, economists say. Between January 2021 and December 2022, grocery prices shot up more than 20%.

As of July, consumers pay about $0.80 more for a gallon of milk (about $4 total), though dairy prices were already increasing before the pandemic hit. Likewise, a loaf of wheat bread is now $0.80 more to about $2.69 and a pound of ground beef is up $1.62 to $5.50.

One outlier is eggs. The cost of a dozen — though volatile thanks to avian flu — has doubled to more than $3.

Still, between January 2023 and July 2024, average grocery prices have only increased a cumulative 1.4%.

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Consumer price growth in July slowed to its lowest post-pandemic level, a sign that the surging inflation that has gripped the U.S. economy is finally ebbing.

On a 12-month basis, the Consumer Price Index (CPI) cooled to 2.9%, down from 3% in June — the first time the index dipped beneath 3% since March 2021. Month over month, it rose 0.2% after falling 0.1% in June.

The latest reading adds to growing signs that the swift price increases consumers have suffered since the pandemic are abating, and it raises pressure on the Federal Reserve to cut interest rates as soon as next month.

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By the time Major League Baseball and the MLB Players’ Association gave the go-ahead to slap advertising patches on jerseys, the modern consumer had long since accepted defeat.

Brand bombardment is simply a way of life, and any notion that the big league uniform was too hallowed a space for corporate encroachment was almost laughable.

Yet that doesn’t mean fans have to like it.

Each rollout of a jersey patch brings with it some level of protest, and the visceral social media reaction to major league uniforms looking a little too much like European soccer kits can be seen on a nightly basis.

For now, 23 of 30 teams have taken the extra cash that comes with uniform partnerships, the annual revenue bump ranging from a few million dollars to enough to pay a No. 1 starter. And it’s probably just a matter of time before the Rockies, Nationals, Rays, Twins, White Sox, Mariners and Athletics (wherever they may be) make it a clean 30 for 30.

Follow every MLB game: Latest MLB scores, stats, schedules and standings.

But not all patches are created equal. Some brands might be quicker to offend the sensibilities. And while results may vary by consumer, USA TODAY Sports attempts to cut through the cloth and rank the 23 jersey ads, from worst to least offensive:

23. New York Yankees: Starr Insurance

The Yankees might have you believe that they are built different, simply because they ban unkempt facial hair and for whatever reason have yet to roll out a City Connect fit, and don’t besmirch the back of their jerseys with player names. Well, like anyone else, they simply have a price. And that’s reportedly $25 million annually for this insurance outfit to slap a patch on the pinstripes. Kind of a disappointment, in that you’d think the Yankees could at least procure a top-shelf national #brand for this deal.

22. Cleveland Guardians: Marathon Oil

 A real full-circle moment here: Cleveland was unknowingly the birthplace of the modern environmental movement when the Cuyahoga River caught fire yet again in 1969. Now, its hometown ballclub is prominently sponsored by a corporation that ranks among the top 20 polluters in the nation and ran a stealth operation to roll back emissions standards. Alas, at least nothing can muddy Emmanuel Clase’s reliably clean ninth innings.

21. Los Angeles Dodgers: Guggenheim Baseball

We get it: A bunch of rich dudes own the team. It’s great that Guggenheim Partners controls more than $300 billion in assets and that CEO/Dodgers owner Mark Walter has a net worth estimated north of $6 billion.  We’re told they can afford to purchase good ballplayers. Yet tossing the brand, such as it is, on a jersey patch only serves to remind fans they are simply watching a proxy war between wealth managers and private equity bros.

20. Atlanta Braves: Quikrete

The Atlanta-based “concrete and cementious products manufacturer” has a five-year deal and is “proud to have our hometown team wear our iconic yellow bag QUIKRETE logo on their sleeve,” said Will Magill, CEO of QUIKRETE. Yet folks watch ballgames to relax. The “iconic yellow bag” simply reminds the viewer that they’re probably ditching a home repair or improvement project to watch a frivolous sporting event. It could have been worse: Home Depot’s headquarters is about three miles from Truist Park.

19. San Francisco Giants: Chevrolet

At first glance, this looks like a great marriage: Baseball, hot dogs, apple pie and the iconic brand of General Motors. In reality, it’s a result of Bay Area Tech Brain run amok. It’s easy to forget that the Giants slapped Chevy on their sleeve after one failed season with Cruise, which bills itself as the “leading driverless ridehail service.” This ill-fated partneship began with a video featuring manager Gabe Kapler and closer Camilo Doval, who are both out of those jobs, and it only got worse. Cruise’s CEO resigned after one of its robotaxis dragged a pedestrian 20 feet and state officials accused Cruise of withholding key information. GM is the parent company of both Chevrolet and Cruise.

18. Texas Rangers: Energy Transfer

Remember Enron Field, the original name of the Astros’ ballpark before the energy company’s shameful collapse? Well, its bones reside, somewhat, within the Rangers’ jersey. Kelcy Warren, Energy Transfer’s co-founder, former CEO and now executive chairman of the board of directors, purchased thousands of miles of pipelines after Enron’s demise, building an energy behemoth. Energy Transfer now has a $54 billion market cap and a piece of the Rangers’ threads.

17. Philadelphia Phillies: Independence Blue Cross

Billed as “Philadelphia’s hometown health insurer for more than 85 years,” and “proud to have our brand cemented in Phillies history.” Yet we are once again asking why health-care providers are in the promotion and brand-building business rather than, you know, curtailing the cost of getting sick.

16. Houston Astros: Occidental Petroleum

Yeah, you can’t fit all that on a patch so “Oxy” adorns the sleeve, just like its significant signage around Minute Maid Park. It is Texas and it is oil, perhaps the most inevitable marriage, or, as Astros vice president Jeff Stewart put it: “We’re proud of our longstanding relationship with Oxy and are grateful for their shared commitment to both community and our fans.” The extra revenue will help offset the sunk cost into Jose Abreu, at least.

15. Chicago Cubs: Motorola

Sure, it seems benign enough. Yet the Cubs-Motorola partnership was announced two years after the Padres struck a deal with Motorola for MLB’s first jersey patch. You’d think the iconic Cubs brand wouldn’t take a back seat to the Padres, but it checks out when you take a look at the National League standings. The agreement also includes the “motorola razr room,” located next to the Cubs’ team store, and the intentional lower-case spelling will surely convince Gen Zers to ditch their iPhones.

14. Toronto Blue Jays: TD

The Canadian commercial banking division of TD Bank is a typically drab and relatively benign sponsor. But those patches? The green stands out, way too much, on all the Blue Jays’ jerseys, be it the home whites, the powder or darker blues.

13. Miami Marlins: ADT

The Marlins join forces with “the most trusted brand in smart home and small business security,” and hey, even with the pitch clock ensuring a faster game, you don’t wanna worry too much about your home getting ransacked while watching Roddery Muñoz toe the rubber: “The partnership will showcase the commitment from ADT and the Marlins in a shared belief that everyone deserves to feel safe. The two local organizations will identify areas at loanDepot park to use ADT’s industry-leading smart security products to help keep fans, players, and visitors safe at home when they visit the ballpark.”

12. New York Mets: New York Presbyterian

In a scattershot manner to which Mets fans have grown accustomed, the patch rollout was quickly revised when observers noted the patch resembled “Phillies colors.” Whatever. The newer patch is more aesthetically pleasing, anyway. The Mets-hospital collab will include a “branded seventh-inning stretch” to promote active lifestyles and on-field recognition of health care workers. Meanwhile, newborns birthed at New York Presbyterian will receive Mets onesies. Cute!

11. St. Louis Cardinals: Stifel

A St. Louis-based financial services holding company, “one of the nation’s leading full-service wealth-management and investment banking firms.” Says they “are delighted that baseball fans across the country will see our logo tastefully integrated into the Cardinals’ iconic uniform.”

10. Milwaukee Brewers: Northwestern Mutual

In part, says Northwestern CEO John Schlifske, because “We’re spending $1 billion downtown on our campus. But ultimately, to attract employees to Milwaukee, we need to be a big league city, so having the Brewers here is a huge part of that overall package when you live and work and play in Milwaukee.”

9. Arizona Diamondbacks: Avnet

8. San Diego Padres: Motorola

Why do the Padres rank so far ahead of the Cubs? They were there first, for one. Motorola will also serve as the presenting partner of the Padres Hall of Fame. As sports partnerships go, telecommunications is in San Diego’s blood, as it was Qualcomm which yanked the name off Jack Murphy Stadium more than a quarter-century ago and the two corporations, in their frequent collaborations, “share passion for disrupting the status quo.”

7. Los Angeles Angels: Foundation Building Materials

FBM on the sleeve, it’s a company founded just a few miles from Angel Stadium and “a leading distributor of building materials and construction products such as gypsum wallboards, metal framing, door and window frames, ceiling tile, drywall, insulation, suspended ceiling systems, fasteners and stucco.” Too bad they can’t add “functional ownership’ to the mix.

6. Baltimore Orioles: T. Rowe Price

The Baltimore-based company is now the “exclusive investment and wealth management sponsor of the team.” In a nod to the times, the iconic Baltimore Sun sign on the Camden Yards scoreboard disappeared in 2023, and now T. Rowe Price is in its place. Could be a plot point for a fictional Season 6 of The Wire.

5. Boston Red Sox: MassMutual

The 10-year partnership “brings together two resilient, respected, and successful Massachusetts brands rooted in their shared values of interdependence and commitment to their customers.” And it’s true: We’re firmly in the home stretch of rankings where each #brand has at least a nominal regional tie.

4. Cincinnati Reds: Kroger

To give you an idea of the scale of these deals, Sports Business Journal reports that the Reds are getting $5 million annually, a fifth of the Yankees’ haul. Kroger is hardly a Ma and Pa store – the grocery conglomerate is in 35 states and always fiending to add more – but it is Cincinnati-based.

3. Kansas City Royals: QuikTrip

A godsend for highway warriors, you wonder how many lives QuikTrip has saved caffeinating motorists for the long slog across Kansas. The Royals agree: “How do we find a partner with the same values and beliefs, acts with the same heart and grit, who shares that same integrity from generation to generation?” asked Royals executive vice president, chief commercial and community impact officer Sarah Tourville in announcing the partnership.

2. Detroit Tigers: Meijer

A Reds-Tigers World Series would have more than just I-75 running through it – two of the Midwest’s food giants would each have fabric in the game. Meijer already had a sponsorship with the Red Wings and the Tigers saw fit to match “two of the most iconic brands in the state, creating millions of memories for fans and families each year,” said executive vice president and chief operating officer Ryan Gustafson.

1. Pittsburgh Pirates: Sheetz

Yes. Hell, yes. If nothing else, America is loosely binded by a series of full-service gas station/convenience mart/fast food conglomerates, and nothing says Western Pennsylvania quite like Sheetz. “If you take our market area and the Pirates’ fanbase and overlay those two, you’d be hard pressed to find many gaps,” Sheetz president & CEO Travis Sheetz said.

It’s true: The state that may determine our next president is cleaved almost perfectly in half, Sheetz to the west, Wawa to the east. The Phillies blew it by ignoring Wawa, home of Schwarber-fest, no less. The Pirates understood the assignment and aced it.

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EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J. — Jordan Phillips’ odds of making the 53-man roster of the New York Giants were dropping with every passing day as younger players in a crowded defensive line room around centerpiece Dexter Lawrence continued to emerge this summer.

So now Phillips is a Cowboy.

In a rare trade between NFC East rivals, the Giants are sending Phillips and a seventh-round draft pick in 2026 to the Dallas Cowboys in exchange for a sixth-round draft pick in 2026, a person with knowledge of the deal confirmed to NorthJersey.com, part of the USA TODAY Network.

Phillips, who turns 32 next month, signed a 1-year contract with the Giants this offseason. But in a competition within a deep position group, the Giants are facing a numbers’ game with final cuts coming fast.

Draft picks D.J. Davidson and Jordon Riley have potential. Ryder Anderson has impressed in his chances lining up next to Lawrence. Undrafted rookie Elijah Chatman might be the biggest winner, flashing an intriguing skill set that could factor into Shane Bowen’s defensive plans up front. Even Timmy Horne has had strong days with the second and third teams.

NFL STATS CENTRAL: The latest NFL scores, schedules, odds, stats and more.

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Hideki Matsuyama won a bronze medal at the Olympics in Paris. He then had his wallet stolen during a layover in London.

Matsuyama told Japanese reporters, including those at Golf Digest Japan, that someone swiped his wallet and also nabbed the passports and visas of his caddie, Shota Hayato, and coach, Mikihito Kuromiya. They had no choice but to return to Japan and request expedited travel documents instead of going to Memphis for the first leg of the FedEx Cup Playoffs. The top 50 in the season-long points race qualify for the second leg, the BMW Championship at Castle Pines in Denver.

‘There’s a chance they’ll make it (to Colorado), but we have to go into it thinking it’s close to zero,’ Matsuyama told Golf Digest Japan.

According to the report, the earliest they could make it to the U.S. would be just ahead of the Tour Championship in two weeks.

“I’m going to play golf as if I went back to the way I was before I had a coach,’ Matsuyama told the Japanese press in Memphis. ‘I feel like all the responsibility is on me.’

Matsuyama has hired Taiga Tabuchi, who caddies for fellow Japanese tour pro Ryo Hisatsune, to fill in as a caddie in the absence of Hayato, who famously bowed on the 18th green after his boss won the Masters in 2021.

‘I’m glad he accepted,’ said Matsuyama of Tabuchi, whose regular boss finished a career-best T-3 last week but fell short of the top 70 and a berth in the playoffs. ‘He’s worked with Hisatsune this year, so I think he knows the ropes, and he can speak English, so I can rely on him.’

Matsuyama, who won the Genesis Invitational in February, enters the FedEx Cup Playoffs in eighth place. He did note that the bronze medal remained safely in his possession.

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NASCAR is taking away driver Austin Dillon’s automatic berth to the playoffs after he was involved in two wrecks on the last lap before winning the Cook Out 400 in Richmond, Virginia, on Sunday night.

He’s still declared the race winner but loses the automatic bid and he and the Richard Childress Racing No. 3 team will be docked 25 points, it was announced on Wednesday.

Dillon had hit Joey Logano on Sunday night from behind in the fourth turn on the final lap and sent him crashing into the wall. Dillon then clipped Denny Hamlin, causing another crash, and crossed the finish line first for his first win in nearly two years.

According to NASCAR.com, the automatic playoff berth was taken away under Section 12.3.2.1.b, which says: “Race finishes must be unencumbered by violation(s) of the NASCAR Rules or other action(s) detrimental to stock car auto racing or NASCAR as determined in the sole discretion of NASCAR.”

Elton Sawyer, NASCAR senior vice president of competition, told NASCAR.com: ‘We came to the conclusion that a line had been crossed. Our sport has been based going for many, many years, forever, on good, hard racing. Contact has been acceptable. We felt like, in this case, that the line was crossed.”

Brandon Benesch, the No. 3 team’s spotter, will be suspended for three races after being heard on audio saying, ‘Wreck him.’

Logano was furious with Dillon, calling his actions a ‘chicken (expletive) move.’ But he is also being penalized for his actions while driving on pit road after the race and was fined $50,000.

With Dillon losing the automatic entry, the postseason field sits at 12. He dropped to 31st overall in the standings after the 25-point deduction. He can still clinch one of the four available spots if he wins one of the remaining three races, starting with Sunday’s FireKeepers Casino 400 at Michigan International Speedway.

The playoffs start Sept. 8 at Atlanta Motor Speedway.

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A new report by an American energy advocacy group is sounding the alarm on a legal training program that it says is ‘corruptly influencing the courts and destroying the rule of law to promote climate cult alarmism.’ 

The new report released by the American Energy Institute (AEI) alleges that the Environmental Law Institute’s Climate Judiciary Project (CJP) is ‘falsely portraying itself as a neutral entity teaching judges about questionable climate science.’ 

The report also alleges that CJP is a partner to more than two dozen public plaintiffs suing energy providers to hold them liable for damages resulting from climate change effects. To date, CJP has trained more than 2,000 state and federal judges, the report says. 

Jason Isaac, CEO of the American Energy Institute, says the training program is ‘really like interfering with the referees before a match and before a game.’

‘You’re getting access to them and sharing your opinions and steering them down a certain path,’ Isaac said in an interview with Fox News Digital. 

Nick Collins, a spokesperson for the Environmental Law Institute (ELI) said the report ‘is full of misinformation.’

‘The Climate Judiciary Project is a non-partisan, educational initiative that provides judges with a mainstream, evidence-based scientific curriculum. CJP does not take stances on individual cases, advocate for specific outcomes, participate in litigation, support for or coordinate with parties in litigation, or advise judges on how they should rule. ELI’s funders include individuals, foundations, and organizations, ranging from energy companies to government agencies to private philanthropies, and none of them dictate our work,’ Collins said. 

In recent years, several lawsuits have percolated through the courts targeting Big Oil companies, leveraging mechanisms like public nuisance laws to incur liability for climate change damage. 

One such case is pending before the U.S. Supreme Court. In 2020, the city of Honolulu sued several major fossil fuel companies, including Exxon and Chevron, alleging the companies’ products cause greenhouse gas emissions and global warming without warning consumers about the risks.

The energy companies appealed to the Hawaii Supreme Court, arguing that federal law prevents individual states from effectively shaping energy policies for all states. 

But the court ruled against the companies, advancing the case to trial. The companies appealed again, this time to the Supreme Court, which signaled interest in June in taking up the case.

Hawaii Supreme Court Justice Mark E. Recktenwald quietly disclosed in May that he presented for a course in the Climate Judiciary Project. According to the ELI, the Climate Judiciary Project is designed to educate judges across the country on how to handle climate change litigation that comes before them.

‘As the body of climate litigation grows, judges must consider complex scientific and legal questions, many of which are developing rapidly,’ CJP states on its website. ‘To address these issues, the Climate Judiciary Project of the Environmental Law Institute is collaborating with leading national judicial education institutions to meet judges’ need for basic familiarity with climate science methods and concepts.’

But the AEI says the program ‘is a partner in this anti-democratic social engineering’ through its influence of judges involved in the types of cases, like the Hawaii case, and through its funding by ‘the same leftwing (sic) moneymen bankrolling the climate change cases.’ 

The ‘educational materials’ are, the report states, ‘prepared by activist academics who are advising the plaintiffs or supporting their claims with legal briefs. And the materials are full of pro-plaintiff messaging, including rigged made-for-litigation ‘studies.’’

The report also alleges that ‘CJP conceals its ties to the plaintiffs, such that judges seeking information in good faith may not know that CJP is an untrustworthy source’ and calls on ‘relevant state authorities [to] ensure that public resources are not being used toward a campaign that is corrosive to the rule of law and trust in the courts.’

According to AEI’s report, CJP has received ‘millions in funding from the same activist groups who are providing grants to the Collective Action Fund through which money is flowing to Sher Edling LLP,’ the law firm spearheading the Hawaii case, to help cover the legal fees required to bring the climate cases. Sher Edling is counsel for two dozen climate plaintiffs, according to its website.

The U.S. Judicial Conference, which governs U.S. court systems, has warned judges of seminars where they may be ‘influenced inappropriately.’

‘That influence, it is argued, may be exerted through program content, contact between judges and those who litigate before them, and prerequisites provided to program attendees,’ the U.S. Judicial Conference states. 

AEI’s report alleges that CJP ‘hides its partnership with the plaintiffs because they know these ties create judicial ethics problems.’

AEI says that the ELI vice president and director of judicial education, Sandra Nichols Thiam, acknowledged as much in a 2023 press statement, saying, ‘If we even appeared biased or if there was a whiff of bias, we wouldn’t be able to do what we’re doing.’

‘Taken together, it appears CJP made the thinnest possible disclosures to create the appearance of rectitude,’ AEI states. ‘But their admissions confirm that CJP exists to facilitate informal, ex parte contacts between judges and climate activists under the guise of judicial education. And secrecy remains essential to their operation, whose goal, as Thiam has said, is to develop ‘a body of law that supports climate action.” 

AEI, a group self-described as ‘dedicated to promoting policies that ensure America’s energy security and economic prosperity,’ says CJP’s work is ‘an attack on the rule of law.’

‘In America, the powerful aren’t allowed to coax and manipulate judges before their cases are heard,’ the report reads.

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