“Education Week” – School Shootings This Year: How Many and Where?

Dear Commons Community,

Education Week has done a quick analysis of this year’s school shootings in its current edition. Here is a summary.

There have been 23 school shootings this year that resulted in injuries or deaths. There have been 205 such shootings since 2018. There were 38 school shootings with injuries or deaths last year. There were 51 in 2022, 35 in 2021, 10 in 2020, and 24 each in 2019 and 2018.

Latest Situation

On Sept. 4, a 14-year-old student shot and killed four people—two students and two teachers—and injured at least nine people at Apalachee High School in Winder, Ga. This is the first deadly school shooting of the 2024-25 academic year and is the deadliest school shooting since March 2023 when six people were killed at The Covenant School in Nashville, Tenn.

Injuries & Deaths This Year

23     School shootings with injuries or deaths

49     People killed or injured in a school shooting

11     People killed

5     Students or other children killed

6     School employees or other adults killed

38     People injured

Where the Shootings Happened

The size of the dots correlates to the number of people killed or injured. Click on each dot for more information.

So sad!

Tony

Dick Cheney says he will vote for Kamala Harris

Getty images.

Dear Commons Community,

Former Vice President Dick Cheney, a lifelong Republican, will vote for Kamala Harris for president, his daughter Liz Cheney said yesterday.

Liz Cheney, who herself endorsed Harris on Wednesday, made the announcement when asked by Mark Leibovich of The Atlantic magazine during an onstage interview at The Texas Tribune Festival in Austin.  As reported by The Atlantic and The Associated Press.

“Dick Cheney will be voting for Kamala Harris,” Liz Cheney said to audience cheers.

“Wow,” Leibovich replied.

Like his daughter, Dick Cheney has been an outspoken critic of former President Donald Trump, notably during Liz Cheney’s ill-fated re-election campaign in 2022.

In a campaign ad for Liz Cheney as she sought a fourth term as Wyoming’s lone congressperson, Dick Cheney called Trump a “coward” for trying to “steal the last election using lies and violence to keep himself in power after the voters had rejected him.”

The ad did little good for his daughter in a deep-red state that once held the Cheney family dear but is now thoroughly in Trump’s corner. By a 2-to-1 margin, Liz Cheney lost her Republican primary to Trump-endorsed attorney Harriet Hageman.

Notably absent from Friday’s endorsement announcement was the former vice president.

Dick Cheney, 83, has made few if any public appearances over the past year or more. He has dealt with heart issues since his 40s and underwent a heart transplant in 2012.

Cheney put out a statement confirming his endorsement of Harris, part of it similar to the 2022 ad for his daughter.

“He can never be trusted with power again,” the statement said. “As citizens, we each have a duty to put country above partisanship to defend our Constitution. That is why I will be casting my vote for Vice President Kamala Harris.”

Asked for comment, Trump spokesperson Steven Cheung said, “Who is Liz Cheney?”

The campaign confirmed Cheung was being sarcastic by also pointing to a comment Liz Cheney posted online four years ago in which she called Harris a “radical liberal.”

Dick Cheney has been friends with Democrats over the years but never supported one for president.

Both Cheneys backed Trump in 2016 but after Liz Cheney criticized Trump foreign policy decisions and Trump criticized the “endless wars” in Afghanistan and Iraq launched when Dick Cheney was vice president, their support waned.

If either Cheney supported Trump in 2020, they were mum about it. Meanwhile, their home state of Wyoming that year delivered Trump his widest margin of victory.

By 2021, Liz Cheney’s vote to impeach Trump and her investigation into him for the 2021 U.S. Capitol riot made them irredeemable to Trump — and soon most of the GOP.

There were exceptions. One was Cheney ally Rep. Adam Kinzinger of Illinois, a Republican Trump critic who earlier this year endorsed Biden and spoke in support of Harris at the Democratic National Convention in August.

Several other Republicans have come out in support of Harris while some, including Sen. Mitt Romney and former Vice President Mike Pence, say they won’t be voting for Trump.

Of them only Romney, who is not seeking re-election, is still in office.

Dick Cheney is not one of my favorite politicians but his endorsement of Harris is welcomed.

Tony

 

Trump’s wealth shrinks by $4 billion as his TMTG media company shares hit a record low!

Dear Commons Community,

Donald Trump’s personal stake in Trump Media & Technology Group topped more than $6 billion in March when its shares soared after making their public market debut. Nearly six months later, that fortune has dwindled to less than $2 billion amid losses and shrinking revenue.  As reported by CBS News.

A months-long slump has lopped more than 70% from the stock’s valuation since its late March peak, with the shares hitting a new low on Wednesday. As the biggest shareholder in Trump Media & Technology, Trump has suffered the largest losses, although the decline is only on paper for now since he’s not yet able to sell any of his shares.

Trump owns about 60% of Trump Media & Technology Group, a money-losing social media company that trades under the ticker DJT (the former president’s initials). The company has gained a following among Trump’s supporters, typically retail investors who have flocked to groups on Truth Social to express concern about the declining share price and blame short sellers for the stock’s swoon.

“Just a thought why doesn’t [Trump Media & Technology Group] just halt the stock (based on say on company news) while they check into all the manipulation,” one member of the DJT investor group wrote on Truth Social on Wednesday. “This would get the shorters scrambling!!!”

Trump Media shares sank $1.10, or 6%, to $16.98 on Wednesday, its lowest price since it began trading in March. The stock was little changed in Thursday trading.

But short sellers — investors who bet that a stock will fall by borrowing shares and then buying the stock if it declines, allowing them to lock in the difference — aren’t to blame for the slide in the company’s market value, according to Ihor Dusaniwsky, managing director of financial data firm S3 Partners. For one, there’s very little stock available to short, he noted.

“With today’s DJT trading volume at 5.3 million shares, even if every available share to borrow was shorted today it would be less than 8% of today’s trading volume,” Dusaniwsky told CBS MoneyWatch. “DJT’s stock price move over the last couple of weeks was primarily due to long selling and not short selling.”

Trump Media didn’t return a request for comment.

Here are three reasons why Trump Media shares are under pressure.

Meme-stock behavior

Analysts have previously noted that Trump Media shares tend to perform similarly to so-called meme stocks, or companies whose stock prices are more influenced by buzz and social media than underlying business fundamentals, such as revenue or profit growth.

For instance, after Trump survived an assassination attempt in July, Trump Media’s stock price soared more than 30%. Polls at the time also gave him the edge in the November presidential election.

But about one week later, President Joe Biden stepped back as the Democratic nominee and was replaced by Vice President Kamala Harris, who has been gaining in the polls and now stands neck and neck with Trump in key battleground states, according to the latest CBS News polling.

Since Biden’s decision to step back on July 21, Trump Media shares have shed 51% of their value.

Shrinking revenue and losses

Truth Social might have a core base of Trump fans, but that hasn’t yet translated into either profits or growing revenue.

Last month, Trump Media said its second-quarter revenue fell 30% to $836,900 from a year earlier. It also reported losing $16.4 million during the quarter, a narrower shortfall from its $22.8 million loss in the year-ago period, according to a regulatory filing. The company blamed the decline in ad sales to a change in revenue sharing with one of its advertising partners.

Recent advertisers on Truth Social include companies hawking ivermectin, the antiparasitic drug cited by some people as a miracle cure for the coronavirus and other illnesses, as well as dating sites for conservatives, Truth Social hoodies and MyPillow.

An expiring lockup

Lastly, Trump Media is approaching the end of a so-called lock-up provision, which so far has restricted Trump and other company insiders from selling their shares.

These lock-ups, a common restriction on Wall Street, are designed to keep big investors from dumping their shares in a company soon after the company goes public. That’s because large stock sales by insiders can cause a company’s shares to tank.

That lockup will expire on September 19, allowing Trump and other insiders to sell their shares in the company. While it’s unclear whether any will do so, the possibility of such sales could also be adding to the stock’s volatility.

Trump fails in the business world again!

Tony

Father of Georgia school shooting suspect arrested on charges including second-degree murder!

 

Colin and Colt Gray.  Photo:  Reuters.

Dear Commons Community,

The father of a 14-year-old boy accused of fatally shooting four people at a Georgia high school was arrested yesterday and faces charges including second-degree murder and involuntary manslaughter for letting his son possess a weapon, authorities said.

It’s the latest example of prosecutors holding parents responsible for their children’s actions in school shootings. In April, Michigan parents Jennifer and James Crumbley were the first convicted in a U.S. mass school shooting. They were sentenced to at least 10 years in prison for not securing a firearm at home and acting indifferently to signs of their son’s deteriorating mental health before he killed four students in 2021.

Colin Gray, 54, the father of Colt Gray, was charged with four counts of involuntary manslaughter, two counts of second-degree murder and eight counts of cruelty to children, Georgia Bureau of Investigation Director Chris Hosey said at a news conference.  As reported by The Associated Press.

“His charges are directly connected with the actions of his son and allowing him to possess a weapon,” Hosey said.

In Georgia, second-degree murder means that a person has caused the death of another person while committing second-degree cruelty to children, regardless of intent. It is punishable by 10 to 30 years in prison, while malice murder and felony murder carry a minimum sentence of life. Involuntary manslaughter means that someone unintentionally caused the death of another person.

Father and son have been charged in the deaths of students Mason Schermerhorn and Christian Angulo, both 14, and teachers Richard Aspinwall, 39, and Cristina Irimie, 53, according to Hosey. Colt Gray has a first court appearance scheduled Friday, but no proceedings were yet scheduled for his father. Neither Gray appeared in online court records for Barrow County.

Authorities have charged 14-year-old Colt Gray as an adult with four counts of murder in the shootings Wednesday at Apalachee High School outside Atlanta, Hosey said. Arrest warrants obtained by the AP accuse him of using a semiautomatic assault-style rifle in the attack, which killed two students and two teachers. Nine other people were hurt, seven of them shot.

The teen denied threatening to carry out a school shooting when authorities interviewed him last year about a menacing post on social media, according to a sheriff’s report.

Conflicting evidence on the post’s origin left investigators unable to arrest anyone, the report said. Jackson County Sheriff Janis Mangum said she reviewed the report from May 2023 and found nothing that would have justified bringing charges at the time.

“We did not drop the ball at all on this,” Mangum told The Associated Press in an interview. “We did all we could do with what we had at the time.”

When a sheriff’s investigator from neighboring Jackson County interviewed Gray last year, his father said the boy had struggled with his parents’ separation and often got picked on at school. The teen frequently fired guns and hunted with his father, who photographed him with a deer’s blood on his cheeks.

“He knows the seriousness of weapons and what they can do, and how to use them and not use them,” Colin Gray said, according to a transcript obtained from the sheriff’s office.

The teen was interviewed after the sheriff received a tip from the FBI that Colt Gray, then 13, “had possibly threatened to shoot up a middle school tomorrow.” The threat was made on Discord, a social media platform popular with video gamers, according to the sheriff’s office incident report.

The FBI’s tip pointed to a Discord account associated with an email address linked to Colt Gray, the report said. But the boy said “he would never say such a thing, even in a joking manner,” according to the investigator’s report.

The investigator wrote that no arrests were made because of “inconsistent information” on the Discord account, which had profile information in Russian and a digital evidence trail indicating it had been accessed in different Georgia cities as well as Buffalo, New York. The teen said he stopped using the account a few months earlier after it was hacked.

The attack was the latest among dozens of school shootings across the U.S. in recent years, including especially deadly ones in Newtown, Connecticut; Parkland, Florida; and Uvalde, Texas. The classroom killings have set off fervent debates about gun control and frayed the nerves of parents whose children are growing up accustomed to active-shooter drills. But there has been little change to national gun laws.

Classes were canceled yesterday at the Georgia high school, though some people came to leave flowers around the flagpole and kneel in the grass with heads bowed.

The nine people — eight students and one teacher — who were taken to the hospital after the shooting were all expected to survive, Barrow County Sheriff Jud Smith said.

What a horror for the students, teachers, and staff of Apalachee High School.

The father is as culpable as the son in this case.

Tony

James Carville Names ‘Only Way’ Republicans Can Get Their ‘Party Back’ In November!

James Carville
James Carville. Courtesy of  Jason Kempin/Getty Images

Dear Commons Community,

Longtime Democratic strategist James Carville said a massive victory by Vice President Kamala Harris over former President Donald Trump could prove crucial to the GOP following the election in November.

Carville, in an interview with MSNBC’s Ari Melber on Wednesday, was asked about a recent Politico column that cited some “long-standing” GOP figures who wouldn’t admit publicly that they’re looking to move on from the Trump era.

“Remember, Republicans got blown out in ’64 and won the presidency in ’68. Democrats got blown out in ’72 and won the presidency in ’76,” noted Carville, who cited conservative radio host and pundit Erick Erickson claiming Republicans could “benefit from a blowout.”

He continued, “So — what I tell my Republican friends — if you want your party back, if you want the kind of pro-business, lower taxes, lighter regulatory cuts, you know, stand erect at attention during the anthem, the only way you’re gonna get that back is through a blowout.”

He added that if Harris gets 280 electoral votes, however, “it’s not gonna change” for the party.

“And I think there’s a growing recognition of that — not just from kind of elite, Washington, never-Trumpers but there seems to be a sense of that on the ground also.”

The comments from Carville, once a lead strategist for former President Bill Clinton’s 1992 campaign, come just days after he recently outlined how he thinks Harris could beat Trump in a column for The New York Times.

With Election Day about two months away, new CNN polls show Harris holding a lead among likely voters in Michigan and Wisconsin while Trump is ahead of the vice president among the same group in Arizona.

The polls didn’t determine a clear leader in other key swing states including Georgia, Nevada and Pennsylvania.

Carville is so right!

Tony

 

Republican Liz Cheney Endorses Kamala Harris!

Photo. Haiyun Jiang/The New York Times

Dear Commons Community,

Former Rep. Liz Cheney, R-Wyo., yesterday endorsed Vice President Kamala Harris for president, the latest high-profile Republican endorsement for Democrats.

Cheney made her announcement during an appearance at Duke University’s Sanford School of Public Policy.  As reported by NBC News.

“Because of the danger that Donald Trump poses, not only am I not voting for Donald Trump, but I will be voting for Kamala Harris,” Cheney said in a video of remarks posted to X. The university separately provided a clip of Cheney’s remarks to NBC News.

The former congresswoman said in her remarks that it is “crucially important” for people to understand that people do not have “the luxury of writing in candidates’ names, particularly in swing states.”

The Harris campaign welcomed Cheney’s support.

“She is a patriot who loves this country and puts our democracy and our Constitution first,” Harris campaign chair Jen O’Malley Dillon said in a statement Wednesday night. “Vice President Harris will be a president for all Americans, regardless of political party. For any American who is looking to reject the chaos and division of Donald Trump, turn the page, and pursue a new way forward that protects our freedoms and defends the American values we all believe in, there is a place for you in the Harris-Walz coalition, and we will continue working to earn your support.”

Cheney previously served in Republican caucus leadership before being ousted for her criticism of former President Donald Trump. Cheney has also said that Trump would attempt to stay in power beyond four years if he was elected to a second term. In the same interview on NBC’s “TODAY” show with host Savannah Guthrie, Cheney said that she would “never vote for Donald Trump, and I will do whatever it takes to make sure that Donald Trump is defeated in 2024.”

Sen. JD Vance of Ohio, the Republican vice presidential nominee, criticized Cheney during a moderated discussion at an event hosted by the conservative group Turning Point Action on Wednesday night.

“A very good thing that I could say about the next presidency of Donald J. Trump is that he’s going to make sure people like Liz Cheney are laughed out of the Oval Office instead of rewarded,” Vance told moderator Charlie Kirk.

In August, the Harris campaign unveiled more than two-dozen endorsements from Republicans, many of whom are politicians who have been vocally opposed to Trump’s candidacy.

Former Rep. Adam Kinzinger, who like Cheney served on the Jan. 6 commission, has also endorsed Harris. He had endorsed President Joe Biden when he was still in the race. Kinzinger spoke at the Democratic National Convention, where he said that Trump has “suffocated the soul” of the GOP.

In 2022, Cheney was ousted in a Republican primary by a Trump-backed challenger. She was first elected to the House in 2016.

Welcome Liz!

Tony

AI making workers more efficient in a customer service center!

Photo:  AP –  Eric Gay.

Dear Commons Community,

Since generative AI burst on the scene two years ago, concerns have been expressed about its effects on jobs and unemployment. And rightfully so.  The Associated Press had an article yesterday looking at AI as the means for making work more efficient specifically in a customer service center.  

In the months and years ahead, we will see many similar examples of the deployment of AI as a means for improving how we work. 

The AP article is but one example.

Below is an extended excerpt from the article.

Tony

————————————————————————–

Imagine a customer-service center that speaks your language, no matter what it is.

Alorica, a company in Irvine, California, that runs customer-service centers around the world, has introduced an artificial intelligence translation tool that lets its representatives talk with customers who speak 200 different languages and 75 dialects.

So an Alorica representative who speaks, say, only Spanish can field a complaint about a balky printer or an incorrect bank statement from a Cantonese speaker in Hong Kong. Alorica wouldn’t need to hire a rep who speaks Cantonese.

Such is the power of AI. And, potentially, the threat: Perhaps companies won’t need as many employees — and will slash some jobs — if chatbots can handle the workload instead. But the thing is, Alorica isn’t cutting jobs. It’s still hiring aggressively.

The experience at Alorica — and at other companies, including furniture retailer IKEA — suggests that AI may not prove to be the job killer that many people fear. Instead, the technology might turn out to be more like breakthroughs of the past — the steam engine, electricity, the internet: That is, eliminate some jobs while creating others. And probably making workers more productive in general, to the eventual benefit of themselves, their employers and the economy.

Nick Bunker, an economist at the Indeed Hiring Lab, said he thinks AI “will affect many, many jobs — maybe every job indirectly to some extent. But I don’t think it’s going to lead to, say, mass unemployment. We have seen other big technological events in our history, and those didn’t lead to a large rise in unemployment. Technology destroys but also creates. There will be new jobs that come about.’’

At its core, artificial intelligence empowers machines to perform tasks previously thought to require human intelligence. The technology has existed in early versions for decades, having emerged with a problem-solving computer program, the Logic Theorist, built in the 1950s at what’s now Carnegie Mellon University. More recently, think of voice assistants like Siri and Alexa. Or IBM’s chess-playing computer, Deep Blue, which managed to beat the world champion Garry Kasparov in 1997.

AI really burst into public consciousness in 2022, when OpenAI introduced ChatGPT, the generative AI tool that can conduct conversations, write computer code, compose music, craft essays and supply endless streams of information. The arrival of generative AI has raised worries that chatbots will replace freelance writers, editors, coders, telemarketers, customer-service reps, paralegals and many more.

“AI is going to eliminate a lot of current jobs, and this is going to change the way that a lot of current jobs function,’’ Sam Altman, the CEO of OpenAI, said in a discussion at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in May.

Yet the widespread assumption that AI chatbots will inevitably replace service workers, the way physical robots took many factory and warehouse jobs, isn’t becoming reality in any widespread way — not yet, anyway. And maybe it never will.

The White House Council of Economic Advisers said last month that it found “little evidence that AI will negatively impact overall employment.’’ The advisers noted that history shows technology typically makes companies more productive, speeding economic growth and creating new types of jobs in unexpected ways.

They cited a study this year led by David Autor, a leading MIT economist: It concluded that 60% of the jobs Americans held in 2018 didn’t even exist in 1940, having been created by technologies that emerged only later.

The outplacement firm Challenger, Gray & Christmas, which tracks job cuts, said it has yet to see much evidence of layoffs that can be attributed to labor-saving AI.

“I don’t think we’ve started seeing companies saying they’ve saved lots of money or cut jobs they no longer need because of this,’’ said Andy Challenger, who leads the firm’s sales team. “That may come in the future. But it hasn’t played out yet.’’

At the same time, the fear that AI poses a serious threat to some categories of jobs isn’t unfounded.

Consider Suumit Shah, an Indian entrepreneur who caused a uproar last year by boasting that he had replaced 90% of his customer support staff with a chatbot named Lina. The move at Shah’s company, Dukaan, which helps customers set up e-commerce sites, shrank the response time to an inquiry from 1 minute, 44 seconds to “instant.” It also cut the typical time needed to resolve problems from more than two hours to just over three minutes.

“It’s all about AI’s ability to handle complex queries with precision,’’ Shah said by email.

The cost of providing customer support, he said, fell by 85%.

“Tough? Yes. Necessary? Absolutely,’’ Shah posted on X.

Dukaan has expanded its use of AI to sales and analytics. The tools, Shah said, keep growing more powerful.

“It’s like upgrading from a Corolla to a Tesla,’’ he said. “What used to take hours now takes minutes. And the accuracy is on a whole new level.’’

Similarly, researchers at Harvard Business School, the German Institute for Economic Research and London’s Imperial College Business School found in a study last year that job postings for writers, coders and artists tumbled within eight months of the arrival of ChatGPT.

A 2023 study by researchers at Princeton University, the University of Pennsylvania and New York University concluded that telemarketers and teachers of English and foreign languages held the jobs most exposed to ChatGPT-like language models. But being exposed to AI doesn’t necessarily mean losing your job to it. AI can also do the drudge work, freeing up people to do more creative tasks.

The Swedish furniture retailer IKEA, for example, introduced a customer-service chatbot in 2021 to handle simple inquiries. Instead of cutting jobs, IKEA retrained 8,500 customer-service workers to handle such tasks as advising customers on interior design and fielding complicated customer calls.

Chatbots can also be deployed to make workers more efficient, complementing their work rather than eliminating it. A study by Erik Brynjolfsson of Stanford University and Danielle Li and Lindsey Raymond of MIT tracked 5,200 customer-support agents at a Fortune 500 company who used a generative AI-based assistant. The AI tool provided valuable suggestions for handling customers. It also supplied links to relevant internal documents.

Those who used the chatbot, the study found, proved 14% more productive than colleagues who didn’t. They handled more calls and completed them faster. The biggest productivity gains — 34% — came from the least-experienced, least-skilled workers.

At an Alorica call center in Albuquerque, New Mexico, one customer-service rep had been struggling to gain access to the information she needed to quickly handle calls. After Alorica trained her to use AI tools, her “handle time’’ — how long it takes to resolve customer calls — fell in four months by an average of 14 minutes a call to just over seven minutes.

Over a period of six months, the AI tools helped one group of 850 Alorica reps reduce their average handle time to six minutes, from just over eight minutes. They can now field 10 calls an hour instead of eight — an additional 16 calls in an eight-hour day.

Alorica agents can use AI tools to quickly access information about the customers who call in — to check their order history, say, or determine whether they had called earlier and hung up in frustration.

Suppose, said Mike Clifton, Alorica’s co-CEO, a customer complains that she received the wrong product. The agent can “hit replace, and the product will be there tomorrow,” he said. “ ‘Anything else I can help you with? No?’ Click. Done. Thirty seconds in and out.’’

Now the company is beginning to use its Real-time Voice Language Translation tool, which lets customers and Alorica agents speak and hear each other in their own languages.

“It allows (Alorica reps) to handle every call they get,” said Rene Paiz, a vice president of customer service. “I don’t have to hire externally’’ just to find someone who speaks a specific language.

Yet Alorica isn’t cutting jobs. It continues to seek hires — increasingly, those who are comfortable with new technology.

“We are still actively hiring,’’ Paiz says. “We have a lot that needs to be done out there.’’

 

Harris vs. Trump: Who Do Americans Think Would Do a Better Job at Protecting Social Security!

Dear Commons Community,

For the past several of months we have been inundated by various polls predicting who would win the presidential election – Harris or Trump.  Many of these polls also include preferences on which candidate would be better for the economy, on abortion, on immigration security, etc.  I tend to ignore these polls mainly because it is too early to matter and many voters will likely change their minds by election day or whenever they vote.  However, I saw a poll yesterday conducted by GOBankingRates that examined voter preferences for the candidate who would do a better job of administering the social security program.  As a senior citizen, who receives social security benefits, I found it interesting.  Below is a summary of the results, courtesy of GOBankingRates.

Tony

—————————————–

Since it was signed into law in the mid-1930s, Social Security has been a staple for Americans. The program was established to provide a financial safety net for retired workers over age 64. As of December 2023, an estimated 67 million Americans received Social Security.

For some Americans, Social Security is their main source of income. For others, it’s merely a supplement to cover any financial gaps from other sources.

With the upcoming presidential election, many people are worried about what will happen to Social Security and which presidential candidate would better protect the program. While any changes can take time to implement, it doesn’t hurt to be prepared.

GOBankingRates surveyed more than 1,000 Americans ages 18 and up to find out who they believe would do a better job protecting Social Security. These are the results, as well as key changes that could be coming to the program.

Which Presidential Candidate Could Best Protect Social Security?

In the recent GOBankingRates survey, here’s who respondents said they believe would protect Social Security the best if elected this November.

  • Of those surveyed, 35.06% think Donald Trump’s policies would be better for the program.
  • A total of 46.81% of respondents think Kamala Harris’ policies would protect the program better.
  • Of those asked, 3.09% said either candidate could protect Social Security.
  • A total of 7.87% believe neither presidential candidate would necessarily be good for the program.
  • And 7.17% indicated they don’t know.

However, responses were further broken down by gender.

  • A total of 38.03% of men believe Trump’s policies would protect Social Security the best, while just 32.15% of women said the same.
  • Alternatively, 47.28% of men think Harris’ policies would be better for Social Security, and 46.35% of women agreed.
  • Nearly 7% of men said they don’t think either presidential candidate would protect Social Security, while 9% of women said the same.
  • Around 3% of men and women think either candidate could be equally good for the program.

Responses were further broken down by age range.

  • Ages 18 to 24: More respondents think Trump’s policies would be better than Harris’ (43.37% vs. 33.73%).
  • Ages 25 to 34: Nearly 46% of respondents think Harris’ policies would be better, while 35.92% think Trump’s would be better.
  • Ages 35 to 44: More Americans think Harris would be better than Trump for Social Security (44.60% vs. 35.21%).

While the gap isn’t quite as big in these younger age ranges, those who are closer to the time when they could start collecting benefits tended to favor Harris.

  • Ages 55 to 64: Nearly 51% of respondents believe Harris’ policies would protect the program, while 31% believe Trump’s would better protect the program.
  • Ages 65-plus: A little over 52% of respondents think Harris’ policies would be better for Social Security than Trump’s (33.15%).

Whose Proposals Better Align With Preserving the Program?

The Social Security Board of Trustees has predicted that, by 2035, Social Security recipients will get only 75% of their scheduled benefits. This is due to a combination of factors, including rising costs, the aging population and dropping birth rates.

For this to change, the next U.S. president likely would have to make some serious changes.

It’s hard to say with certainty whether Harris or Trump would do a better job of protecting Social Security. Neither candidate has been very direct about their plans yet, though Trump has mentioned possibly cutting taxes on Social Security, while Harris has stated an interest in protecting and strengthening Social Security.

GOBankingRates spoke to Tim Rosenberger, a legal policy fellow at the Manhattan Institute, to get his thoughts on the matter.

“Trump/Vance have proposed a platform better aligned with the operation of Social Security,” he said. “If the Social Security trust becomes insolvent, serious cutbacks are in store for retirees.” He also noted that Trump’s proposals are more geared toward stalling the program’s predicted insolvency.

However, as Forbes reported, tax experts have criticized Trump’s proposal. “If that lost tax revenue isn’t made up through other funding sources, that means those programs will run out of money and become insolvent sooner,” per Forbes. Additionally, it reported that “tax experts project Trump’s proposed tax cut on Social Security would not provide that much benefit to middle-class Americans.”

Other policies could also potentially address the issue.

Trump “would likely have the relationships with Congress to either subsidize Social Security from general revenues or to reform Social Security in ways that would prolong its solvency,” Rosenberger said.

As for Harris, here’s what she recently posted on social media: “For 89 years, Social Security has made the difference between poverty or peace of mind for millions of seniors, people with disabilities, and other beneficiaries … As President, I will protect and expand them.”

Again, the details are unclear for now, so the American population will just have to wait and see.

Bottom Line

Regardless of who becomes the next U.S. president, they’re going to face some serious challenges in finding ways to sustain — or reform — the Social Security program in ways that benefit the American people. This could mean implementing new policies, making changes to taxation, generating additional revenue, or a balancing act of all of these and more.

Kamala Harris Campaigns with Joe Biden in Pennsylvania!

Courtesy of The Sun.

Dear Commons Community,

It was impressive to see Joe Biden campaigning with Kamala Harris in Pennsylvania yesterday.   He has a lot to offer the presidential nominee and should be called upon  to support her candidacy. I remember in 2020 when AL Gore was running for president, he misjudged President Bill Clinton’s popularity and avoided using him in the campaign. The neglect of Clinton contributed to Gore’s loss.

Below is coverage of the joint Harris/Biden event courtesy of The Associated Press.

Tony

——————————————————–

The Associated Press

Reporting by Colleen Long, Will Weissert, and Erin B. Logan

September 3rd, 2024

Vice President Kamala Harris used a joint campaign appearance with President Joe Biden in the critical swing state of Pennsylvania on Monday to say that U.S. Steel should remain domestically owned — concurring with the White House’s monthslong opposition to the company’s planned sale to Japan’s Nippon Steel.

Her comments came during a rally before cheering union members marking Labor Day in the industrial city of Pittsburgh, where Harris said U.S. Steel was “an historic American company and it is vital for our country to maintain strong American steel companies.”

“U.S. Steel should remain American-owned and American-operated, and I will always have the backs of America’s steelworkers,” she said.

That echoes Biden, who repeated Monday what he’s said since March — that he opposes U.S. Steel’s would-be sale to Nippon, believing it would hurt the country’s steelworkers. It also overlaps with Republican former President Donald Trump. It’s little surprise that Harris would agree with Biden on the issue, but it nonetheless constitutes a major policy position for the vice president, who has offered relatively few of them since Biden abandoned his reelection bid and endorsed his vice president in July.

Biden took the stage first and was met with chants of “Thank You, Joe” as he and Harris appeared in an International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers hall.

The president called Harris the only “rational” choice for president in November. He said choosing her to be vice president was the “single best” decision of his presidency and told the union members that electing her will be “the best decision you will ever make.”

Biden also started to say, “Kamala Harris and I are going to build on this” as if he were still running and she was his running mate — but he corrected himself. It underscored just how much the race has changed and how Harris has been careful to balance presenting herself as “a new way forward” while remaining intensely loyal to Biden and the policies he has pushed.

Her delivery is very different — and in some cases she’s pushed to move faster than Biden’s administration — but the overall goal of expanding government programs to buoy the middle class is the same.

“We know this is going to be a tight race till the very end,” Harris told the Pittsburgh crowd.

The joint rally with Biden was Harris’ second of the day and followed Pittsburgh’s Labor Day parade, one of the country’s largest. It was their first joint appearance at a campaign event since the election shakeup six weeks ago.

Harris opened her Labor Day campaigning solo with an event in Detroit, where hundreds of audience members wore bright yellow union shirts and hoisted “Union strong” signs. The vice president said “every person in our nation has benefited” from unions’ work.

“Everywhere I go, I tell people, ‘Look, you may not be a union member, you’d better thank a union member,” Harris said, noting that collective bargaining by organized labor helped secure the five-day work week, sick pay and other key benefits and solidify safer working conditions.

“When unions are strong, America is strong,” she said.

The 81-year-old Biden has spent most of his lengthy political career forging close ties with organized labor. The White House said he asked to introduce Harris in Pittsburgh — instead of the usual other way around — because he wanted to highlight her record of supporting union workers.

In addition to opposing the Nippon Steel sale, Biden has endorsed expanding tariffs on imported Chinese steel — another area of policy agreement with Trump, who has cheered steeper foreign tariffs on many imports. Still, in a statement Monday, U.S. Steel said it remains “committed to the transaction with Nippon Steel, which is the best deal for our employees, shareholders, communities, and customers.”

“The partnership with Nippon Steel, a long-standing investor in the United States from our close ally Japan, will strengthen the American steel industry, American jobs, and American supply chains, and enhance the U.S. steel industry’s competitiveness and resilience against China,” the company said, noting that it employs nearly 4,000 people in Pennsylvania alone.

Nippon Steel reacted to Harris’ comments by saying it was confident that its “acquisition of U. S. Steel will revitalize the American steel rust belt, benefit American workers, local communities, and national security in a way no other alternative can.” The Harris campaign released a statement countering that sentiment from David McCall, president of the United Steelworkers union, who said Harris’ opposition to the sale “once again made it clear that she will always stand up for steelworkers.”

The 59-year-old Harris has sought to appeal to voters by positioning herself as a break from former president Trump’s acerbic rhetoric while also looking to move beyond the Biden era. Harris events feel very different from Biden’s, which usually featured small crowds. But the vice president’s agenda includes the same issues he’s championed: capping the cost of prescription drugs, defending the Affordable Care Act, growing the economy, helping families afford child care — and now her position on the sale of U.S. Steel.

The vice president has promised to work to lower grocery store costs to help fight inflation. She’s moved faster than Biden in some cases, calling for using tax cuts and incentives to encourage home ownership and ending federal taxes on tips for service industry employees. But she’s also offered relatively few specifics on major policies, instead continuing to side with Biden on top issues.

Harris appeared onstage with Biden after the president addressed the opening night of last month’s Democratic National Convention, but they had not shared a microphone at a political event since Biden himself was running against Trump. At that time, the campaign was using Harris mostly as its chief spokeswoman for abortion rights, an issue they believe can help them win in November as restrictions grow and health care worsens for women following the fall of Roe v. Wade.

For more than 3 1/2 years, Harris has been one of Biden’s chief validators. Now the tables are turned, as Harris looks to lean on Biden — a native of Scranton, Pennsylvania — to help win the potentially decisive state.

Although the vice president has appeared more forceful in speaking about the plight of civilians in Gaza, as Israel’s war against Hamas there nears the 11-month mark, she also has endorsed Biden’s efforts to arm Israel and bring about a hostage deal and ceasefire. Before she left Washington for Detroit, Biden and Harris met in the White House Situation Room earlier Monday with the U.S. hostage deal negotiating team.

“History will show what we here know: Joe Biden has been one of the most transformative presidents,” Harris said in Pittsburgh. “And as we know Joe still has a lot of work to do.”

When that event was over, Biden and Harris rode back to the airport together in the presidential limo. Air Force One and Air Force Two subsequently took off within moments of each other to return to suburban Washington — though the president and vice president never travel on the same plane for continuity of government reasons, just in case of an air emergency.

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Randi Weingarten AFT President – Labor Day Message

Dear Commons Community,

Below is AFT President Randi Weingarten’s Labor Day message.  She makes several important  points about the upcoming presidential election.

It is worth a read.

Tony

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Dear AFT Members:

It’s Labor Day, and unions continue to be at their highest favorability levels.

We know why: Unions are how we create a better life for ourselves, our families and our communities. Through our unions, we fight for the teaching and learning conditions that educators and support staff need to help students thrive, the safe staffing that healthcare workers need to help patients, and the safe working conditions that public employees need to better serve communities. Through our unions, we fight for the living wage, dignified retirement and high-quality healthcare you and your family deserve.

And we fight for elected officials who share our values. That’s why this year we are celebrating Labor Day in Detroit alongside our members and Vice President Kamala Harris.

As I said in my speech before the Democratic National Convention, one of the lessons my students taught me is to walk the walk. Kamala Harris and Tim Walz walk the walk.

This Labor Day, on behalf of myself and my fellow national officers Fedrick and Evelyn, I want to extend our deepest gratitude to each of you—the 1.8 million members of the AFT—and our steadfast allies who continue to stand in solidarity with us. We are profoundly thankful for your unwavering commitment. Every day, you make a difference in people’s lives. That is the essense of who we are as a union. And despite the escalating attacks from figures like JD Vance and Donald Trump—attacks that intensify as the election draws nearer—you embody the very best of America.

Kamala Harris and Tim Walz share our values.

They are not just building on the progress made by Joe Biden and Kamala Harris—they’re creating opportunities and fighting for our freedoms. Just take a look at their plans:

  • Lower housing costs and build 3 million new homes.
  • Fix the student debt crisis and tackle medical debt, knowing how many families live in fear because they are one illness away from bankruptcy.
  • Fight for affordable child care and revive the child tax credit.
  • Stand up for workers’ rights, including the freedom to organize and bargain.

These policies are pro-family and pro-worker, as was Harris’ choice of an educator and AFT member as her running mate.

So it’s no surprise that JD Vance attacked me—and by extention, every teacher, including nuns, who have not given birth to children. My family and I can handle the attacks, but it’s beyond the pale to demean families that don’t fit in Vance’s narrow view—stepparents, adoptive parents and so on. And to attack teachers who are right now working hard to welcome parents and their children into safe, welcoming and engaging classrooms as this school year begins—that speaks volumes about Vance’s character and priorities.

The choice in this election couldn’t be clearer.

The AFT is part of the labor activism sweeping the nation. We’re growing, and we’re the largest we’ve ever been. While more work remains, inflation is cooling, the Biden-Harris administration has created more jobs than any other in history, and America’s economy is the strongest in the world—powered by America’s workers.

We know that progress is possible but not guaranteed. That’s why we keep marching.

This November, we need to be all in. All of us. None of us can do this alone.

Here are three things you can do today:

  1. Check your voter registration status. Even if you think you’re registered, check today.
  2. AFT members can sign up to volunteer. We’ll have opportunities for AFT members to canvass, phone-bank, text-bank, and attend our bus tour rallies and town halls.
  3. Sign up to be in our videos pushing back on JD Vance’s attacks on families and teachers.

Thank you, and keep marching.

In unity,
Randi Weingarten
AFT President