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Republican Texas Sen. Ted Cruz warned Republicans against underestimating Vice President Kamala Harris as she emerges as the top contender for the Democratic Party’s nomination for president.

‘Republicans, I worry, vastly underestimate Kamala Harris. They don’t think very highly of her. They don’t think she’s terribly bright. When you or I bring up Kamala Harris’ name in Republican circles, people laugh. It’s immediately a punchline,’ Cruz said Monday on his podcast ‘Verdict with Ted Cruz.’ 

Cruz warned against Republicans preemptively celebrating a Trump-Vance win months out from the election, arguing Democrats and the media will promote Harris as an ‘historic’ candidate. 

‘I think people are underestimating what billions of dollars of free media, of the entire corrupt corporate media complex, pitching her as a combination of Mother Teresa, Oprah and Gandhi,’ Cruz said. 

‘I still think Trump wins in November, but this is not a layup. It is not given.… If you’re a Democrat, what makes you nervous is chaos, and this much chaos 100 days out is scary. But you know what? Even more scary is going to an election where you’re almost certain to lose, which is where Biden was,’ he continued. 

President Biden announced Sunday afternoon on X that he was bowing out of the presidential race, which was quickly followed by him endorsing his vice president to run in his place. 

‘My very first decision as the party nominee in 2020 was to pick Kamala Harris as my Vice President. And it’s been the best decision I’ve made. Today I want to offer my full support and endorsement for Kamala to be the nominee of our party this year. Democrats — it’s time to come together and beat Trump. Let’s do this,’ Biden said in a follow-up social media post endorsing Harris. 

The vice president held her first public address Monday since Biden’s announcement, praising Biden for his decades in government. 

‘I am a firsthand witness that every day our President Joe Biden fights for the American people and we are deeply, deeply grateful for his service to our nation,’ she said Monday from the South Lawn of the White House during an event celebrating NCAA athletes. 

‘Celebrate after Election Day. Celebrate after we’ve won. Now is not the time for celebration. Now is the time for hard work.’

Harris is not yet the official nominee of her party, as the DNC must first certify her – or another potential candidate – next month. 

Former President Trump officially became the nominee of the Republican Party last week after announcing Ohio. Sen. JD Vance as his running mate. Cruz said the RNC, which was held in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, was the ‘best’ he’s attended in all his years in politics. However, he remarked it was concerning to see some in the GOP were ‘overconfident’ that Trump has an election win locked. 

‘I was very worried at the convention,’ Cruz said. ‘… I am afraid people were overconfident at the convention. There was an air of celebration. It was, ‘We’ve won. We’re on to victory. This is a landslide. Trump’s coming back in. We’ve got a huge Republican majority.”

‘In my view, and I was trying to say this, ‘Look, there’s a time for celebration. Celebrate after Election Day. Celebrate after we’ve won. Now is not the time for celebration. Now is the time for hard work.”

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It didn’t matter if she was missing the sleepovers or the parties or the vacations with friends or any of the other things people her age were doing. She could catch up when her gymnastics career was over.

Except one Olympic cycle became two and then three. As Biles watched her friends have weddings and babies, as she got married and her husband’s career took off, she realized there are no second chances on these rites of passage.

Gymnastics remains a priority, but she has found a way to make her life outside the gym a priority, too. Three years after the ‘twisties’ nightmare of the Tokyo Olympics that nearly ended her career, she’s a happier person − and a better athlete − because of it.

‘Life is not slowing down anymore. I could make sacrifices before, but now I’m at a point where some of these sacrifices, I can’t make anymore. Life is moving on, with or without me,’ Biles told USA TODAY Sports. ‘I’d rather ride that wave.’

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Simone Biles’ pursuit of balance

That Biles is the greatest gymnast ever was settled long ago. She’s rewritten the record books with more medals at the world championships and Olympics than any other gymnast, male or female, and has pushed the boundaries of the sport by doing skills that once seemed unfathomable.

But Biles’ greatest legacy will be the way she has forced everyone to rethink their ideas about athletes and the demands put on them.

Gymnastics was once a sport that used to chew up young women and spit them out before their 20th birthdays. Athletes were supposed to be super-human, ignoring the stress and anxiety that are your insidious companions when your self-worth is determined by a clock or a judge. By pulling out of the Tokyo Olympics when her physical safety was at risk, and being unflinchingly honest about the mental health issues that brought on “the twisties,” Biles not only made it OK for athletes to ask for help, but she also forced sports leaders to recognize the need for a healthier, more supportive environment.

By carving out a life for herself outside gymnastics, Biles, who at 27 is better than she’s ever been, is showing every athlete they do not have to be one-dimensional. That there is more to them than their sport.

“Gymnastics was everything to me. And it still is, but I just have a different outlook on it,” she said. “Gymnastics is something that I do, but this is who I am outside of the sport. Rather than making it a whole blob.”

Biles didn’t wake up one morning and have an epiphany about this. It started after the Rio Olympics, when she took a year and a half off. She got to travel, and she bought a house.

Not being able to train for several months at the start of COVID played a role, too. When the world sees you as one thing, it can be hard to see yourself as anything else. But with the sports world shut down, Biles was forced to think about what she might want to do after gymnastics.

She had also just met Jonathan Owens, an NFL safety who is now her husband. The two hunkered down together during the initial shutdowns, and Biles saw there is more than one way to approach being an athlete.

‘(Elite athletes are) such creatures of routine and habit, it’s really easy to get stuck in that cycle of, ‘I’m comfortable or tired today, so I don’t want to do anything,” said Owens, now with the Chicago Bears. ‘But you have to put yourself first. Get a good refresher.

‘That’s why it’s always great to have a good balance,’ he added. ‘Work hard, but know that you do have to give yourself some time and grace.’

And then came Tokyo.

Most Olympic athletes will talk of feeling adrift when their competitive career ends, of not knowing what their purpose. But this was different. Biles was so devastated by her experience that she didn’t know if she would — or could — ever do gymnastics again.

So she focused on the rest of her life. She began going to therapy once a week, time that is now sacrosanct. She and Owens got engaged, and she planned every last detail of their destination wedding.

Biles was able to go to Owens’ games, both home and away. His friends and their partners became her friends. They went out to dinner and movies and took vacations. She and Owens began building their dream house outside Houston.

For the first time in her adult life, she was on a similar track as everyone else her age.

‘It was really a time we got to connect, build our relationship a lot. We had an offseason together. She was able to go to a bunch of games,’ Owens said. ‘Just be normal. Not be ‘Simone Biles, the gymnast.’ Be Simone Biles, the friend, daughter, wife.’

Or as her mother, Nellie, said, ‘It was the new Simone. A Simone that was doing other things.’

Simone Biles finds her super powers — and gymnastics again

Eventually, though, Biles began missing gymnastics. She’d drop in at World Champions Centre, the gym her parents own and where Biles trains, and play around on the equipment. She started wondering aloud if she should come back. Owens said a conversation Biles had with track and field great Carl Lewis, who won nine Olympic gold medals over four Summer Games, made a deep impression on her.

‘He told her, ‘It’ll come back faster than you think. If you can do it, do it. You don’t want regrets,’’ Owens recalled.

When Biles decided to return for the 2024 Paris Olympics, she did so with the determination it would not upset the new balance in her life. She sat down with her coaches, Cecile and Laurent Landi, agent Janey Miller and a calendar to figure out how she could make it all work.

For example, one of Owens’ closest teammates was getting married in Hawaii at the end of February and Biles didn’t want to miss that wedding. With almost three months before her first competition, the Landis said she could take a couple of days off without impacting her preparation. She found ways to spend time with Owens, who played for the Green Bay Packers last season. She and Miller figured out when she needed to shut things down with sponsors and media, and scheduled almost everything either before that or for after Paris.

‘I still make gymnastics a priority. I get my work done and then say, ‘OK, I have a wedding to go to because I know how important this teammate is to Jonathan. So let’s go there, come back, get back to training,’’ Biles said. ‘We can’t put life on hold or pause anymore.’

The difference is noticeable.

Biles is as dominant as ever, winning her sixth world title in 2023 and her ninth title at the U.S. championships in June. But unlike before Tokyo, when she appeared anxious and weighed down, she is smiling and laughing on the competition floor now. She jokes around with other gymnasts and gives them a steadying presence.

‘I think that’s kind of her superpower. The fact she’s able to do both is what works for her and what helps her thrive in the sport,’ said Aly Raisman, who was teammates with Biles at the 2016 Olympics in Rio de Janeiro and remains a close friend.

‘When she leaves the gym, her mind is where she is,’ Raisman added. ‘Most gymnasts are perfectionists, and for me it was really hard to turn that Type-A perfection off outside the gym. She has the ability to be detail oriented but still be goofy and silly and let things go. I wish I’d had more of that.’

Biles acknowledges that being older has helped shift her perspective. So, too, her relationship with the sport and her motivations for doing it.

‘In 2016, I thought gymnastics, if I didn’t do well, it was the end of the world. In Tokyo, I was like, ‘OK, I’m choosing to do this, but I still feel like I have to live up to X, Y, Z.’ Now I’m like, ‘Nobody is forcing me to do this. I’m doing this on my own,’” Biles said.

‘It takes a lot as athletes to get to this mature place and a lot of us, as athletes, don’t have these opportunities to get to this mature age and still be competing at a high level,’ she added. ‘It is not the end of the world if it doesn’t go your way. You’ll always have these other opportunities.’

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The attitude that has given Biles a sense of peace she’s never had before has also made an impression on other athletes. Joscelyn Roberson, who trains with Biles at WCC and is an Olympic alternate, said it’s “amazing” both to see Biles have interests outside the gym and make time for them.

Athletes know they need to be proactive to help their bodies recover, be it getting massages or spending time in a whirlpool or a cold tub. Watching Biles, Roberson said, has made her realize this is just as important.

‘That’s how a lot of recovery happens mentally,’ said Roberson, who is 18. ‘You go out, you have fun with your friends, you go to the movies, whatever. It helps your brain more than anything else. I feel like that’s the biggest takeaway I took from her outside of gymnastics.’

Biles knows all too well that singular focus comes with a price. Her parents always told her there was more to life outside gymnastics. Now she also knows how much more she’s gained by broadening her world.

‘You can get stuck when you’re doing the same things for years and years. I was scared that my daughter would get stuck. But she’s not,’ said Nellie Biles, Simone’s mother. ‘She found another home and she found another passion, just doing things outside of gymnastics. And I love it for her.’

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

No, it probably won’t be the worst season in Los Angeles Angels franchise history. Yet you’d be hard-pressed to come up with a more disastrous 12-month period than the one about to wrap up.

On July 26, 2023, the Angels were fired up, trading a handful of prospects to acquire Chicago White Sox pitchers Lucas Giolito and Reynaldo Lopez. A day later, Shohei Ohtani pitched his greatest game as a professional, one-hitting the Detroit Tigers in a doubleheader sweep.

And then? Well, the bottom fell out.

Just three games out of a wild card spot and flush with reinforcements, the Angels finished that season 18-40. Ohtani blew out his arm in August and left as a free agent in December. The veterans were flipped to save luxury tax penalties as quickly as they were brought in.

It’s gone no better this season, with a 41-57 mark and .418 winning percentage, which would be third-worst in franchise history, and they kicked off the second half by dropping a pair of games to the woebegone Oakland Athletics and cementing their status in the bottom five of USA TODAY Sports’ power rankings.

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

Some good news: Mike Trout should return this week after missing nearly three months with a meniscus tear. Perhaps that will kickstart 12 months of better vibes. It’s not a very tough act to follow.

A look at this week’s rankings:

1. Philadelphia Phillies (-)

J.T. Realmuto returns and the gang’s all here.

2. Baltimore Orioles (+1)

They’re 13-7 in Corbin Burnes’ starts – and the AL is 1-0.

3. Cleveland Guardians (-1)

Very quietly have lost seven of 10.

4. Los Angeles Dodgers (+1)

If your current closer (Evan Phillips) is on the struggle bus, might as well win a game off your old closer (Kenley Jansen).

5. New York Yankees (-1)

Aaron Boone says they keep getting beat on third and long, otherwise known as days Gerrit Cole doesn’t pitch.

6. Milwaukee Brewers (+1)

They can sweeten the trade market by knocking the Cubs further from contention this week.

7. Atlanta Braves (-1)

Shelving Max Fried and Ozzie Albies probably puts division hopes out of reach.

8. Boston Red Sox (-)

All-Star MVP Jarren Duran was drafted three GM regimes ago.

9. Minnesota Twins (-)

A Brewers sweep in the Upper Midwest jamboree means they’re once again tied with the…

10. Kansas City Royals (-)

With first career complete game, Seth Lugo’s starter transformation is, well, complete.

11. Houston Astros (+1)

Won’t see Mariners again until Sept. 23. Might live rent-free in their heads until then.

12. St. Louis Cardinals (+1)

Struggling Paul Goldschmidt sinks to No. 7 in lineup, lowest he’s hit as a Cardinal.

13. Seattle Mariners (-2)

Six runs scored Sunday breaks four-game streak of zero, one, or two pushed across.

14. Arizona Diamondbacks (+1)

Jordan Montgomery should be back this week, with Eduardo Rodriguez and Merrill Kelly not far behind.

15. San Diego Padres (+1)

Dylan Cease and Michael King come out of break unhittable.

16. New York Mets (-2)

Kodai Senga is back this week.

17. Tampa Bay Rays (+1)

Taj Bradley emerging as frontline guy.

18. Pittsburgh Pirates (+1)

Win a series vs. Phillies on a Skenes-less weekend. This bears watching.

19. Texas Rangers (-2)

Reality sets in: They’re 11th among 15 AL teams.

20. San Francisco Giants (-)

Hayden Birdsong’s 12 strikeouts vs. Colorado most by a Giants rookie since Timmy Lincecum in 2007.

21. Washington Nationals (+2)

James Wood’s three-run homer caps stirring sweep of Cincy.

22. Detroit Tigers (+2)

Trade Tarik Skubal? Silly talk.

23. Cincinnati Reds (-2)

Nine-game trip begins grimly – and has to turn around at Atlanta and Tampa Bay or it’s break up the band.

24. Chicago Cubs (-2)

Back of rotation is low-key killing them; just 4-14 in Kyle Hendricks’ starts.

25. Toronto Blue Jays (-)

Will it be one stick of dynamite or a skyscraper implosion come deadline day?

26. Los Angeles Angels (-)

Win their final game ever at Oakland Coliseum.

27. Oakland Athletics (-)

Zack Gelof’s average drops to .199.

28. Colorado Rockies (-)

Todd Helton could relate to this squad, as the Hall of Famer finished fourth or fifth in 12 of his 17 seasons.

29. Miami Marlins (-)

Jazz Chisholm says Miami is ‘home for me.’ We’ll see for how much longer.

30. Chicago White Sox (-)

Have been swept 14 times.

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Fans who want to see Simone Biles compete will have plenty of opportunities during the 2024 Paris Olympics.

There are six days of gymnastics competition, and Biles is likely to compete at least five of those days. If she makes the uneven bars final, then she will compete on all six days. Although bars is considered Biles’ “worst” event, she’s made the final in the event at the last four major international events she’s done. She also won the uneven bars title at the 2024 U.S. championships.

Here’s a look at when Biles is likely to compete in Paris. NBC and Peacock will carry the action live and will re-air it in primetime in the U.S.

When will Simone Biles compete at the Olympics?

Biles will open competition in Paris with team qualifying, which starts at 3:30 a.m. ET Sunday, July 28.
The women’s team final begins at 12:15 p.m. ET Tuesday, July 30.
The women’s all-around final is at 12:15 p.m. ET Thursday, Aug. 1.
The women’s vault final is at 10:20 a.m. ET Saturday, Aug. 3.
The women’s uneven bars final is at 9:40 a.m. ET Sunday, Aug. 4.
The women’s balance beam final (6:36 a.m. ET) and floor exercise final (8:20 a.m.) are Monday, Aug. 5.

Meet Team USA: See which athletes made the U.S. Olympic team and where they are from

When is gymnastics qualifying at Paris Olympics?

Women’s qualifying begins Sunday, July 28 at 3:30 a.m. ET (11:40 a.m. Paris time) with subdivision 1.

How does team qualifying work? Every gymnast, whether they’re competing as part of a team or as an individual, has to go through qualifying. How many events they do depends both on whether they’re trying to make the all-around final and, if their country is one of the 12 in the team competition, where they’re needed most.

What will Biles compete on in qualifying? Biles will, of course, be doing all four events in qualifying. She’s the reigning world all-around champion and she has the top U.S. score on every event except uneven bars. But sometimes there, too.

When is Olympic gymnastics team final Paris 2024?

The women’s team final is on Tuesday, July 30, at 12:15 p.m. ET (6:15 p.m. Paris time).

What to know: The U.S. women will have to really screw up to not win the gold. The Russians have been their biggest competition over the last decade — Russia won gold in Tokyo and was runner-up to the Americans at the 2019 and 2018 world championships — and they won’t be in Paris.

How does scoring work in the team final? The scoring format for team finals requires countries to count the scores of all three gymnasts on each event, which can leave you vulnerable if someone falls or has a poor routine. But the U.S. has so much depth and difficulty that it would need to botch two, possibly three events, and another team would have to be perfect to bump the Americans from the top of the podium.

When is gymnastics all-around final at Paris Olympics?

The women’s all-around final is on Thursday, Aug. 1, at 12:15 p.m. ET (6:15 p.m. Paris time).

What to know: Biles will be heavily favored to become only the third woman, and first since 1968, to win the Olympic all-around title twice. Larysa Latynina did it in 1956 and 1960 and Vera Caslavska did it in 1964 and ’68. Biles has not lost an all-around competition since 2013, and she won her sixth title at last year’s world championships.

When is gymnastics vault final at Paris Olympics?

The women’s vault final is on Saturday, Aug. 3 at 10:20 a.m. ET (4:20 p.m. Paris time).

What to know: Biles already has an Olympic gold medal on vault, winning the title at the Rio Games in 2016. She was the silver medalist on vault at the 2023 world championships, finishing 0.201 behind Brazil’s Rebeca Andrade. But Biles’ score included a half-point deduction for having coach Laurent Landi stand on the landing mat as a safety precaution during her Yurchenko double pike. With Landi no longer doing that, Biles should have the edge mathematically.

When is gymnastics uneven bars final at Paris Olympics?

The women’s uneven bars final is Sunday, Aug. 4 at 9:40 a.m. ET (3:40 p.m. Paris time).

What to know: This is the one final that’s a question mark for Biles. She won the uneven bars title at the U.S. championships and was second to Suni Lee at the Olympic trials. But countries are limited to two gymnasts in each final, and Hezly Rivera outscored Biles on bars on the second night of trials.

“For so many years, everybody told me I’m not good at bars and I thought I wasn’t good at bars,” Biles said at nationals. “But it’s not the worst. I can swing bars. I can do a routine. It is gonna put me on a world podium again? Who knows?”

When is gymnastics balance beam final at Paris Olympics?

The women’s balance beam final is Monday, Aug. 5, at 6:36 a.m. ET (12:36 p.m. Paris time).

What to know: Biles is the reigning world champion on beam and has bronze medals on the event from the last two Olympics. In Tokyo, beam was where Biles made her return after being forced out of most of the Olympics with “the twisties,” which caused her to lose track of where she was in the air and put her physical safety at risk. She reworked her routine to remove twisting elements and finished behind Guan Chenchen and Tang Xijing of China.

When is gymnastics floor exercise final at Paris Olympics?

The women’s floor exercise final is Monday, Aug. 5, at 10:20 a.m. ET (2:20 p.m. Paris time).

What to know: Biles will be as big a favorite here as she is in the all-around. She’s won the floor title at every world championships she’s been to — that’s six, for those who are counting — and was the gold medalist on floor at the Rio Olympics. She has nearly a full-point advantage in difficulty, giving her a massive head start on the competition.

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Republican Texas Sen. Ted Cruz warned Republicans against underestimating Vice President Kamala Harris as she emerges as the top contender for the Democratic Party’s nomination for president.

‘Republicans, I worry, vastly underestimate Kamala Harris. They don’t think very highly of her. They don’t think she’s terribly bright. When you or I bring up Kamala Harris’ name in Republican circles, people laugh. It’s immediately a punchline,’ Cruz said Monday on his podcast ‘Verdict with Ted Cruz.’ 

Cruz warned against Republicans preemptively celebrating a Trump-Vance win months out from the election, arguing Democrats and the media will promote Harris as an ‘historic’ candidate. 

‘I think people are underestimating what billions of dollars of free media, of the entire corrupt corporate media complex, pitching her as a combination of Mother Teresa, Oprah and Gandhi,’ Cruz said. 

‘I still think Trump wins in November, but this is not a layup. It is not given.… If you’re a Democrat, what makes you nervous is chaos, and this much chaos 100 days out is scary. But you know what? Even more scary is going to an election where you’re almost certain to lose, which is where Biden was,’ he continued. 

President Biden announced Sunday afternoon on X that he was bowing out of the presidential race, which was quickly followed by him endorsing his vice president to run in his place. 

‘My very first decision as the party nominee in 2020 was to pick Kamala Harris as my Vice President. And it’s been the best decision I’ve made. Today I want to offer my full support and endorsement for Kamala to be the nominee of our party this year. Democrats — it’s time to come together and beat Trump. Let’s do this,’ Biden said in a follow-up social media post endorsing Harris. 

The vice president held her first public address Monday since Biden’s announcement, praising Biden for his decades in government. 

‘I am a firsthand witness that every day our President Joe Biden fights for the American people and we are deeply, deeply grateful for his service to our nation,’ she said Monday from the South Lawn of the White House during an event celebrating NCAA athletes. 

‘Celebrate after Election Day. Celebrate after we’ve won. Now is not the time for celebration. Now is the time for hard work.’

Harris is not yet the official nominee of her party, as the DNC must first certify her – or another potential candidate – next month. 

Former President Trump officially became the nominee of the Republican Party last week after announcing Ohio. Sen. JD Vance as his running mate. Cruz said the RNC, which was held in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, was the ‘best’ he’s attended in all his years in politics. However, he remarked it was concerning to see some in the GOP were ‘overconfident’ that Trump has an election win locked. 

‘I was very worried at the convention,’ Cruz said. ‘… I am afraid people were overconfident at the convention. There was an air of celebration. It was, ‘We’ve won. We’re on to victory. This is a landslide. Trump’s coming back in. We’ve got a huge Republican majority.”

‘In my view, and I was trying to say this, ‘Look, there’s a time for celebration. Celebrate after Election Day. Celebrate after we’ve won. Now is not the time for celebration. Now is the time for hard work.”

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Vice President Kamala Harris praised President Biden on Monday for his accomplishments in the first few years of his term, claiming he has done more than other presidents and with less time than they had.

‘In one term, he has already surpassed the legacy of most presidents who have served two terms in office,’ she said in opening remarks at the White House’s event for National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) championship teams.

Biden announced his decision to step aside and suspend his 2024 presidential campaign after significant pressure mounted for him to do so. ‘It has been the greatest honor of my life to serve as your president,’ he wrote in a letter posted to X, formerly Twitter, on Sunday. ‘While it has been my intention to seek reelection, I believe it is in the best interests of my party and the country for me to stand down and focus solely on fulfilling my duties as president for the remainder of my term.’

The president endorsed Harris as his successor after announcing his decision. ‘I am honored to have the President’s endorsement and my intention is to earn and win this nomination,’ she responded in a statement.

Harris’s remarks on Monday were the first after she accepted Biden’s endorsement, making her intention to be the 2024 Democratic nominee known.

She complimented the president, specifically for ‘his honesty, his integrity, his commitment to his faith and his family, his big heart and his love, deep love of our country.’

‘I am first-hand witness that every day our president, Joe Biden, fights for the American people. And we are deeply, deeply grateful for his service to our nation,’ she added.

The vice president also told attendees that Biden wanted to attend the event, adding that ‘He is feeling much better and recovering fast, and he looks forward to getting back on the road.’

Biden tested positive for COVID-19 last week, according to the White House. 

Harris also announced on X that she would be heading to the campaign headquarters in Wilmington, Delaware to say hello to the staff during her first full day of campaigning for president. ‘One day down. 105 to go. Together, we’re going to win this,’ she wrote. 

While some Democrats stopped short of endorsing Harris as Biden had on Sunday, a plethora of high profile endorsements for her poured in on Monday morning, many of which were from those being speculated to challenge her. Without a prominent challenger thus far, Harris could be poised to have the party coalesce around her as the nominee. 

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Twenty-four hours after President Biden’s blockbuster announcement that he was dropping his re-election bid, speculation is soaring over whom Vice President Kamala Harris will choose as her running mate.

The president endorsed Harris immediately after suspending his own campaign, which ignited a surge of endorsements by Democratic governors, senators, House members and other party leaders in backing the vice president to succeed Biden as the party’s 2024 standard-bearer.

As Harris moves toward securing the presidential nomination, the running mate race is igniting. And populating the list of possible contenders are plenty of politicians who were thought to have national ambitions in 2028.

Here are 10 top Democrats – in alphabetical order – whose names have been floated in the past 24 hours as potential Harris running mates.

Kentucky Gov. Andy Beshear

The 46-year-old Beshear was elected attorney general in 2015 and four years later won election as governor in deep red Kentucky.

Last November, he was re-elected by five points in a state Biden lost by 26 points in 2020.

Beshear is following in his father’s footsteps. Steve Beshear won election and re-election as Kentucky governor in 2007 and 2011.

The younger Beshear has been effective in keeping his distance from the national party by focusing on state issues and highlighting economic progress and his handling of natural disasters. But he’s also spotlighted his support for abortion rights and his progress on health care and education.

He didn’t rule out serving as running mate in an interview Monday on MSNBC’s ‘Morning Joe,’ saying ‘the only way I would consider something other than this current job is if I believed I could further help my people and to help this country.’

Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg

The former South Bend, Indiana, mayor went from long shot to a top contender for the 2020 Democratic presidential nomination.

As transportation secretary, the 42-year-old Buttigieg has been one of Biden’s most visible Cabinet members, often speaking out on behalf of the administration in TV interviews.

Buttigieg, a Rhodes scholar who also served in the war in Afghanistan, made history as the first openly gay person confirmed to a presidential Cabinet position.

North Carolina Gov. Roy Cooper

Cooper, 67, served 16 years as North Carolina attorney general before winning election in 2016 and re-election in 2020 as governor, during the same years that former President Trump carried the Tar Heel State for the GOP in the presidential contests.

The governor is term-limited and was prevented from running for re-election this year.

Cooper has been a champion of abortion rights in a state where the Republicans dominate the legislature. He’s also focused on expanding Medicaid.

Sen. Mark Kelly of Arizona

The 60-year-old Kelly, a former Navy pilot and NASA astronaut, has represented swing state Arizona in the Senate since 2020.

He won a special election to succeed the late GOP Sen. John McCain, becoming the first Democrat in four decades to hold the seat. Kelly easily won re-election in 2022.

As a border state Democrat, Kelly has highlighted his differences with the Biden-Harris administration when it comes to combating the influx of migrants over the southern border with Mexico. That could come in handy as the Trump campaign and Republicans repeatedly blast Biden and Harris over the issue of border security.

Kelly is the husband of former Rep. Gabby Giffords of Arizona, who was severely injured in a 2011 shooting and has become a prominent gun safety advocate. 

Maryland Gov. Wes Moore

Moore is a 45-year-old Army combat veteran and Rhodes scholar who, as a first-time candidate in 2022, won a landslide election as governor in the heavily blue state of Maryland.

Moore, who made history as the third Black candidate ever elected governor in the U.S., is seen as a rising star in the Democratic Party.

California Gov. Gavin Newsom

Newwom, 56, is one of the most high-profile Democratic governors in the nation.

The former San Francisco mayor and California lieutenant governor won election as governor in 2018, easily beat back a recall attempt in 2021 and cruised to a landslide re-election two years ago.

While there’s been plenty of speculation that Newsom has national ambitions in 2028, he’s been a top Biden surrogate this election cycle.

Newsom would face a major hurdle if named as Harris’ running mate because they both hail from California, and the 12th Amendment to the Constitution states that presidential and vice presidential candidates running on the same national ticket ‘shall not be an inhabitant of the same state with themselves.’

Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker

The 59-year-old Pritzker, who’s in his second term as Illinois governor, has been a vocal Biden surrogate in criticizing Trump.

Pritzker, a billionaire whose family started the Hyatt hotel empire, has the ability to self-fund his campaigns.

The governor has been outspoken in fighting for women’s reproductive rights, and has signed into law a slew of prgressive measures, including an assault weapons ban and a minimum wage increase.

Pennsylvania Gov. Josh Shapiro

Shapiro, 51, served six years as Pennsylvania’s attorney general before winning election as governor in 2022.

If named to the ticket, it’s likely the governor would give the Democrats a boost in Pennsylvania, a crucial northeastern battleground state.

Shapiro could also make history as the first Jewish vice president in the nation’s history.

Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz

The 60-year-old Walz is in his second term as governor of Minnesota, a state that Democrats have reliably won in presidential elections but which is now considered to be competitive.

Walz can also showcase a slew of progressive policy victories, including protecting abortion rights, legalizing recreational marijuana and restricting gun access.

Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer

Whitmer is another high-profile swing state governor and top Biden surrogate who’s taken the fight to Trump.

The 52-year-old Whitmer was considered to be on Biden’s 2020 short-list for running mate.

But when asked Monday if she would would serve as the Democrats’ vice presidential nominee if asked, Whitmer told reporters’I am not leaving Michigan.’ 

This post appeared first on FOX NEWS

House Republicans are pushing a new resolution demanding that U.S. Secret Service Director Kimberly Cheatle be fired over the failed assassination attempt against former President Trump.

Rep. Nick Langworthy, R-N.Y., unveiled the legislation Monday during a tense hearing on Capitol Hill where both Republicans and Democrats expressed frustration with Cheatle’s lack of candor in her answers. It’s already gotten support from a number of House Oversight Committee Republicans.

Langworthy told Fox News Digital that Cheatle ‘must be held accountable for the unacceptable failure to keep President Trump and rallygoers safe on July 13th.’

‘In our Oversight hearing today, she did nothing but dodge questions and deflect blame. Corey Comperatore is dead because of this failure of the Secret Service. The American people deserve transparency and competence from their leaders, especially those tasked with the critical responsibility of protecting our nation’s highest office. She must be fired now,’ Langworthy said.

It comes amid mounting calls for the Secret Service director to leave her role after a 20-year-old gunman was able to open fire on Trump’s rally in Butler, Pennsylvania from a rooftop just outside the event perimeter. One attendee died and two others were injured.

Trump himself was shot in the ear and was evacuated offstage by Secret Service agents.

Demands for Cheatle to be relieved of her duties have come primarily from the right, though on Sunday, Rep. Brendan Boyle, D-Pa., the top Democrat on the House Budget Committee, also urged her to step down.

‘I’m very sorry to reach this conclusion: I have no confidence in the leadership of the United States Secret Service. I hereby call on Kimberly Cheatle to resign,’ Boyle said. 

Democrats have also stepped out of Cheatle’s ongoing hearing on Monday to vent about answers they found insufficient during the all-day hearing.

‘If she continues to evade fairly simple and direct questions…I think she makes the case for her continuation much more problematic,’ Rep. Gerry Connolly, D-Va., told reporters.

Progressive Rep. Ro Khanna, D-Calif., on Monday called for Cheatle to resign during the Secret Service director’s hearing, saying, ‘If you have an assassination attempt on a president or a former president or a candidate, you need to resign.’

Fox News Digital reached out to the Secret Service for comment.

This post appeared first on FOX NEWS

Friday was a bad day for CrowdStrike Holdings (CRWD) as a bug was pushed out that disrupted Windows machines worldwide. The trouble for CRWD is the follow-up lawsuits etc that will likely plague the stock for some time to come. You’ll be shocked to see the warning signs all over the chart that portended some kind of correction for CRWD even before the pandemonium.

Another special discussion was Carl’s newfound Bond ETFs that follow Treasuries of all time periods. These ETFs pay dividends once a month and act as owning Treasures but with the flexibility of an ETF. Do a search on FMINVEST.com for more information. Below is the list of ETFs.

Carl goes over the DP Signal Tables which look especially bullish right now. Things are as good as they can get, now what? Carl proceeds with giving us a complete review of the market in general as well as his thoughts on Bitcoin, Bonds, Gold, Crude Oil and more.

A review of the Magnificent Seven rounded out Carl’s portion of the trading room. Erin takes the reins and discusses today’s rotation back into growth and Technology. Can it last? Which sectors are lined up the best going into this week?

Erin finishes up the trading room with symbol requests that answer the question of whether to buy or sell or hold those stocks.

01:03 DecisionPoint Signal Tables

03:47 Market Overview

13:06 Magnificent Seven Analysis

16:05 CrowdStrike Chart

18:56 Treasury ETFs & Questions

27:18 Sector Rotation

34:33 Symbol Requests

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Bear Market Rules

Good morning and welcome to this week’s Flight Path. We saw a lot of weakness this week but so far the “Go” trend has held in U.S. equities. GoNoGo Trend has reflected the weakness with a couple of aqua “Go” bars late in the week. Treasury bond prices showed a weaker aqua “Go” bar as well but remained in trend. The U.S. commodities index saw the “Go” trend crack and an amber “Go Fish” bar was followed by a pink “NoGo” trend bar. The dollar, having flirted with a “NoGo” all week, saw GoNoGo Trend paint an amber “Go Fish” bar on Friday.

$SPY Sees Price Fall From Highs

Last week we noted the Go Countertrend Correction Icons (red arrows) indicating that price may struggle to go higher in the short term. Indeed, we saw another red arrow early in the week before price really fell away. GoNoGo Trend has painted 3 consecutive weaker aqua bars. GoNoGo Oscillator has fallen sharply to test the zero level from above on heavy volume. It will be important for the Oscillator to hold the zero line if we are to prevent a deeper price drop. We are at an area that could offer price support from recent congestion levels and so this will be an important week.

Although we still see a strong blue “Go” bar this week on the longer time frame chart, it is a lower weekly close. We also see a Go Countertrend Correction Icon (red arrow) telling us that in the short term price may struggle to go higher. GoNoGo Oscillator shows that momentum has waned and it is in positive territory but no longer overbought.

Treasury Rates Remain in “NoGo” Trend

This week saw a new lower low for treasury bond rates on the daily chart. Strong purple “NoGo” bars dominated the chart until Friday when price gapped higher and GoNoGo Trend painted a weaker pink bar. GoNoGo Oscillator is in negative territory at a value of -2. We will look to see if a new lower high is set this week.

More Uncertainty for the Dollar

Last week we talked about the uncertainty in the dollar. This week we saw a week where GoNoGo Trend painted mostly “NoGo” bars. However, as the week came to a close, we saw an amber “Go Fish” bar. Uncertainty book ends the few “NoGo” bars we saw in between. GoNoGo Oscillator is rising toward the zero line on heavy volume. We will watch to see if it stays in negative territory or if it can attack the zero line.

The weekly chart looks much the same as it did last week. The “Go” trend is hanging on and price is at levels that are above what should be strong support. GoNoGo Trend is painting weaker aqua “Go” bars after price fell from the last Go Countertrend Correction Icon. GoNoGo Oscillator is at zero, where we will watch to see if it finds support.