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‘It is abusive’: Iowa AG rips leading pediatric group for not ‘following the science’ for trans youth

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EXCLUSIVE: Iowa Attorney General Brenna Bird is doubling down on her calls for the country’s leading pediatric association to update its guidelines for transgender youth to include warnings about the risks of puberty blockers and other hormone treatments.

Bird said the American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) “is involved in children’s healthcare in Iowa and all around the country, and we want them to update their policies right now.” 

“They say that puberty blockers are safe for kids and that it’s reversible, and the science doesn’t support that irreversible and causes permanent changes to children should they change their mind later,” Bird, who joined a letter signed by 20 state attorneys general this week to the AAP, said. 

‘ABUSIVE’: PEDIATRICIAN GROUP’S SUPPORT FOR TRANS THERAPIES REBUKED BY STATE AGS

On Tuesday, Idaho Attorney General Raúl Labrador sent a letter Tuesday to the AAP accusing the organization of abandoning “its commitment to sound medical judgment.” Bird, along with AGs from Alabama, Arkansas, Florida, Georgia, Idaho, Iowa, Kansas, Louisiana, Mississippi, Missouri, Montana, Nebraska, North Dakota, Ohio, South Carolina, South Dakota, Texas and Utah, as well as the president of the Arizona Senate and the speaker of the Arizona state House of Representatives, signed the letter. 

“That halt on what is fairly described as medical experimentation on children is long overdue – particularly since the majority of children initially diagnosed with gender dysphoria desist and ‘grow out’ of the condition by the time they are adolescents or adults,” the letter reads. “It is abusive to treat a child with biologically altering drugs that have an unknown physiological trajectory and end point. It is also inhumane to endorse such experimentation without a confident safety profile, especially if more times than not, it proves to be medically unnecessary.”

BIDEN SLAMMED ON SOCIAL MEDIA AFTER ANNOUNCING TRANSGENDER DAY OF VISIBILITY ON EASTER SUNDAY

As procedures for transgender youth have become a hot button issue in the culture wars, it’s an issue that former President Trump has vowed to address by restricting the accessibility of procedures to minors. Meanwhile, VP Kamala Harris’ stance is unclear, but the Biden-Harris administration backtracked earlier this year and said it supports overturning bans on sex change surgeries for children.

According to unsealed documents published over the summer, health officials in the Biden administration successfully pressured the World Professional Association for Transgender Health (WPATH) to omit the age limit in its guidelines for transgender surgical procedures for adolescents. 

“I think there’s a clear difference between the candidates,” Bird said. “And here is just another example of Vice President Harris blindly following the liberal, progressive party line. And here, President Trump has the science, he has the facts and is supportive of the science here.”

BIDEN OFFICIALS PUSHED TO DROP AGE LIMIT ON TRANS SURGERIES FOR MINORS: REPORT

Last year, the AAP recommitted its pledge to support “gender-affirming care” and expanded its guidelines for pediatricians to “ensure young people get the reproductive and gender-affirming care they need and are seen, heard and valued as they are,” AAP CEO Mark Del Monte said at the time.

AAP has published several reports on reaffirming transgender youth in their preferred gender identities. In January, the AAP published a report titled, “Prohibition of Gender-Affirming Care as a Form of Child Maltreatment: Reframing the Discussion,” which claimed that many bills aimed at restricting transgender treatments for children lead to poor mental health. 

Fox News Digital has reached out to AAP for comment.

RFK Jr mocks Kamala Harris’ favorite phrase with audience call-and-response at Michigan rally

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Robert F. Kennedy Jr. involved a rally audience in a call-and-response joke at his Michigan rally this week.

Kennedy spoke at the Falk Productions manufacturing facility in Walker, Michigan on Friday — participating in a campaign event hosted by Republican presidential nominee former President Donald Trump.

During the rally, Kennedy mocked Vice President Kamala Harris for her frequent references to having been born in the “middle class” when asked to respond to a difficult question.

HARRIS DODGES QUESTION ON LOWERING PRICES BY DESCRIBING ‘MIDDLE-CLASS’ ROOTS: NEIGHBORS ‘PROUD OF THEIR LAWN’

“All you have to know is seven words, and you never have to admit to doing anything wrong again,” Kennedy told the Michigan audience. “And you know what those seven words are? ‘I was born in the middle class.'”

Kennedy instructed the rally-goers to repeat after him in a series of back-and-forths.

“The next time your boss asks you why you were late for work, what are you gonna say?” Kennedy asked.

JD VANCE TAKES APPARENT JAB AT KAMALA HARRIS SAYING SHE’S FROM A WORKING CLASS FAMILY

“I was born in the middle class!” the audience responded.

“And the next time your wife asks you why you didn’t take out the garbage, what are you gonna say?” Kennedy asked.

“I was born in the middle class!” the audience responded.

“That’s all you have to know and you don’t have to answer any questions!” Kennedy joked.

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Republican vice presidential nominee Sen. JD Vance also referenced the vice president’s tendency to bring up her middle class roots during a rally earlier this week.

“They ask Kamala, of course, because she’s the vice president and she is the reason why we have sky-high inflation and a wide open border, ‘What are you going to do? What is your specific plan to solve the inflation crisis that’s making it unaffordable to buy groceries and housing?’ And Kamala will say, ‘Well, did you know that I grew up in a middle-class family? I had a very nice lawn back there in Berkeley, California,’” he continued. “It’s like, ‘Well, that might be true. What the hell does that have to do with lower inflation?’”

FLASHBACK: Arizona Dem Senate candidate called Trump voters ‘dumb’: ‘Worst people in the world’

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A House Democrat running for Senate in a key swing state bashed voters who supported then-President-elect Donald Trump in a resurfaced interview.

“I think Donald Trump ran a xenophobic campaign that drew out the worst people in the world that we are not going to appeal to and never will,” Rep. Ruben Gallego, D-Ariz., said in a 2016 interview directly after Trump won the presidential election.

Gallego also said in the interview that he will try to “protect” Americans from the policies of Trump, including those who were “dumb enough” to vote for him.

Fox News Digital reached out to the Gallego campaign for comment but did not receive a response. 

ENIGMATIC VOTER GROUP COULD SPLIT TICKET FOR TRUMP, DEM SENATE CANDIDATE IN ARIZONA

“Ruben Gallego thinks you are a bad person if you support President Trump,” NRSC spokesperson Tate Mitchell told Fox News Digital. “Gallego is running to be a Senator for the far-left, not all of Arizona.”

The presidential race in Arizona is expected to be one of the closest in the country with the Real Clear Politics (RCP) average showing Trump with a tight lead, but the RCP average also shows that Gallego has a lead over his GOP opponent, Kari Lake.

On the campaign trail, Gallego has been a fierce critic of Trump despite the former president’s popularity in the state.

ARIZONA POLICE ORG ENDORSING TRUMP CROSSES AISLE TO BACK PROGRESSIVE DEM IN CLOSE SENATE RACE

Gallego called Trump a “craven politician” in an interview with MSNBC earlier this year and has routinely gone after the former president on social media, including posts suggesting Trump and Lake are threats to democracy.

Lake has made the case on the campaign trail that Gallego is a rubber stamp for a Biden-Harris administration.

“President Trump’s consistently strong lead in Arizona proves that Arizonans are tired of and dissatisfied with the policies of Kamala Harris and Ruben Gallego that have caused record-high inflation and made our state less safe by opening the border to millions of unchecked illegal immigrants,” a Lake spokesperson told Fox News Digital earlier this year. 

“As voters learn the truth about Gallego’s voting record and the fact that he has voted for Biden-Harris policies 100% of the time, they will reject Radical Ruben just as they reject Kamala Harris.”

The Cook Political Report ranks the Arizona Senate race as “Lean Democrat.”

Fox News Digital’s Julia Johnson contributed to this report

Harris-Trump cash dash: Former president looks to flip script with fundraising swing in oil country

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Trailing Vice President Kamala Harris in the 2024 cash dash, former President Trump heads next week to Texas, a state that’s long served as an ATM for Republican White House candidates.

Aiming to narrow the fundraising gap with Harris, the former president will headline a luncheon Oct. 2 in Midland, Texas, as he courts donors in oil country. That luncheon will be followed by a cocktail reception in Houston, sources in Trump’s political orbit confirmed to Fox News Digital.

Trump will also headline a fundraiser in Dallas during his Texas swing.

According to the latest figures available from the Federal Election Commission, Harris hauled in nearly $190 million in fundraising for her 2024 campaign in August, more than quadrupling the $44.5 million that Trump’s team reported bringing into his principal campaign account last month.

WHAT THE LATEST FOX NEWS POWER RANKINGS SHOW IN THE 2024 ELECTION

And the vice president’s campaign entered September with $235 million cash on hand, well ahead of the $135 million in Trump’s coffers, according to the FEC filings.

The latest cash figures are another sign of the vice president’s surge in fundraising since replacing President Biden atop the Democrats’ 2024 ticket over two months ago.

CHECK OUT THE LATEST FOX NEWS POLLING IN THE HARRIS-TRUMP SHOWDOWN

This isn’t the first time Trump’s faced a fundraising deficit. He raised less than 2016 Democratic presidential nominee Hillary Clinton in his White House victory and by President Biden four years ago in his re-election defeat.

“The Democrats’ small-dollar fundraising machine is just better,” acknowledged Dan Eberhart, an oil drilling CEO and prominent Republican donor and bundler who raised big bucks for Trump in the 2020 and 2024 cycles.

Eberhart pointed to Trump’s surge in grassroots fundraising earlier this year, after he made history as the first former or current president convicted in a criminal trial, and noted that “Trump is the best small-dollar fundraiser the Republicans have ever had. But I still think, just overall, the Democrats’ small-dollar fundraising machine is just better.”

HARRIS-TRUMP SHOWDOWN: WHICH CANDIDATE HOLDS THE EDGE ON THIS CRUCIAL ISSUE

The Biden campaign and the Democratic National Committee enjoyed a fundraising lead over Trump and the Republican National Committee earlier this year. But Trump and the RNC topped Biden and the DNC by $331 million to $264 million during the second quarter of 2024 fundraising.

Biden enjoyed a brief fundraising surge after his disastrous performance in his late June debate with Trump as donors briefly shelled out big bucks in a sign of support for the 81-year-old president.

But Biden’s halting and shaky debate delivery also instantly fueled questions about his physical and mental ability to serve another four years in the White House and spurred a rising chorus of calls from within his own party for the president to end his bid for a second term. The brief surge in fundraising didn’t last and, by early July, began to significantly slow down. 

Biden bowed out of the 2024 race July 21, and the party quickly consolidated around Harris, who instantly saw her fundraising soar, spurred by small-dollar donations.

And the Harris campaign spotlighted that the vice president hauled in $47 million in the 24 hours after her first and likely only debate with Trump earlier this month.

“We’ve been playing catch-up ever since Act Blue first started, figuring out an effective way to mine the low-dollar, small-dollar fundraising,” Republican Jewish Coalition CEO Matt Brooks told Fox News, pointing to the Democrats’ on-line fundraising platform.

Brooks, who has close ties to the GOP’s donor class, said while “there’s no question that the Democrats have perfected” their small-dollar fundraising, “I think we’re doing better and better. I like the trajectory we’re on.”

But a source in Trump’s political orbit said “the max-out donors have already given. There’s not a lot of juice left from that. Any juice left would be in the small-dollar on-line fundraising, and the moments for that are kind of passed in terms of debates, making the running mate pick, the conventions. All that stuff is past.”

Fundraising, along with polling, is a key metric in campaign politics and a measure of a candidate’s popularity and a campaign’s strength. The money raised can be used — among other things — to hire staff, expand grassroots outreach and get-out-the-vote efforts, pay to produce and run ads on TV, radio, digital and mailers and for candidate travel.

“We’re going to be outspent, and that’s going to lead to a better ground game for Harris,” a veteran Republican operative who asked to remain anonymous to speak more freely, told Fox News.

But Brooks emphasized that “the saving grace is that we have strong support among major donors and big dollar donors going into the super PACs, which you have to take into consideration.”

“I think you have to look at the totality of the pro-Trump money out there, and I think the super PACs help level the playing field significantly,” he added.

When asked about the fundraising deficit, Republican National Committee Chair Michael Whatley told Fox News Digital earlier this month “the Democrats have a ton of money. The Democrats always have a ton of money.”

However, he emphasized that “we absolutely have the resources that we need to get our message out to all the voters that we’re talking to and feel very comfortable that we’re going to be able to see this campaign through, and we’re going to win on Nov. 5.”

Get the latest updates from the 2024 campaign trail, exclusive interviews and more at our Fox News Digital election hub.

‘Not American’: Rural and urban voters in crucial battleground state alarmed by violent political rhetoric

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During a swing through Central Pennsylvania, Fox News Digital spoke with several voters in urban and rural areas, and got their take on the effects of charged political rhetoric among other topics.

In Wakefield, the rural community just north of the Maryland line, Marsha Peterson co-owns Peterson’s Grocery Outlet with her husband.

Asked about the level of political rhetoric, Peterson said the left has spent years on a drumbeat of telling Americans former President Trump “is a danger and he must be stopped.”

“Then, you see people on social media laughing and saying they wouldn’t have missed [shooting] him,” she said. “They want words to matter – but only the right’s words.” 

SHAPIRO BLASTED FOR SIGNING MISSILE ALONGSIDE ZELENSKYY IN BIDEN’S HOMETOWN

Closer to home, Peterson said the affordability crisis has been a major issue for both her and her customers.

“We run a little mom-and-pop little grocery store, and we absolutely see the difference in price increases from one administration to the next, even with COVID [considerations], things were not this high,” she said.

Outside a large flea market off US-222, Eric Beezer said the issues at hand have driven him to run for state office in Lancaster City.

The Republican said he originally was facing off with 34-year incumbent State Rep. Mike Sturla, but noted the senior Democrat suddenly withdrew from the race in August. 

He said he hopes his top issues of affordability, housing and keeping taxes low will resonate with voters in the otherwise heavily-Democratic stronghold.

“Lancaster’s issues are the same as most of the country,” Beezer said.

Sam and Kate Mylin of Willow Street, Pa. offered their take while visiting Quarryville, saying the negativity in politics has to stop.

“Especially people and politicians saying [Trump] is a threat and he needs to be taken out and stuff like that,” said Sam, a retired artist. “That’s is wrong. That’s just totally wrong. That’s not American.”

Meanwhile, Kate Mylin questioned the veracity of claims inflation is going down. She noted disparities in costs as of late.

CRISS-CROSSING PA TO REGISTER VOTERS, SCOTT PRESLER SAYS HE’S ‘MOVING THE NEEDLE’ TO FLIP COUNTIES RED

“Gas goes down. But then your eggs are $5 for a dozen? Give me a break.”

Sam Mylin added he wants to hear the truth from politicians as to whether our troops truly are not at war.

“We have more wars right now than we ever had. And supposedly the troops aren’t in a combat zone, but I see that they are. And it’s all lies, man. It is. It’s all lies coming from the left. And it’s really dishonest itself,” he said.

“The other thing is the affordability of housing for people is ridiculous. So something’s got to change,” he added, noting he and his wife are supporting Trump.

Tim Gochenaur and Michelle Williams of rural Christiana traveled west into East Drumore Township to visit the Solanco fairgrounds.

Both believed political rhetoric played a part in Trump being targeted twice for assassination.

“They’re inciting these people,” Gochenaur said. “Somebody might be off a little bit to start with and that pushes them in that directions.”

 Asked about electoral fairness, Williams said the tabulations will be “as fair as they allow it to be – the system should be fair.”

The way that the laws are put in place, it’s meant for integrity. And that’s a founding principle of our of our country — for there to be an appropriate and proper vote. But if that is not carried out, then it will not be a fair election.”

On the other end of Harrisburg Pike, in the namesake capital city, a man who goes by “Minister Fifty” spoke out while waiting for a bus by the Hilton hotel downtown.

“Is that a rhetorical question?” Minister Fifty responded when asked about political rhetoric inciting malign behavior.

“Common sense tells us, of course, it’s having an effect – any type of unsavory communication is never going to be helpful,” he said.

“So when we resort to things other than the issues and then we get animated in a dark way toward other people or non-issues, then things get clouded and things get deflected and then we lose sight of what the true goal is.”

“We also have an opportunity to show the world and everyone else that America is built on decency…” Minister Fifty countered.

He added he believes the election will indeed be fair, calling the national structure “too big to fail.”

Lisa, of Harrisburg, said she is a proud “Black lady for Donald J. Trump,” in her words, said that when it comes to political rhetoric, it is important to “maintain a blessed attitude” and remember “the golden rule – do unto others as they would do unto you.”

“Both sides can really use just more tolerance towards the other side,” said Lisa, who declined to appear on camera but agreed to have her comments recorded audially.

“I’m rooting for the best candidate to win,” she said.

Pam Hower, a former Republican who was out enjoying a twilight trip along the Susquehanna River trail, said she became disaffected with the GOP over its “crazy rhetoric” but added there may be something to be said on that front on both sides.

She said Trump has “hurt a lot of people” with claims of migrants eating pets in Ohio, and – as a person with a disability – was horrified at a situation from Trump’s first bid wherein he was accused of mocking a New York Times reporter who suffered from a congenital skeletal condition.

Trump, however, denied the claim, saying he didn’t know of Serge Kovaleski’s disability, and only effected his “groveling” manner in the situation he had been describing.

Hower said disability issues as well as Medicare and Medicaid solvency are key to her vote.

She added that while she has gone hunting with family members and grew up around legal firearms, she disagrees with the availability of semiautomatic rifles given the amount of school and public shootings in recent years.

“My daughter is a speech therapist in an elementary school. I’m terrified for her. And I know that that has an impact on the way she thinks going into the schools. And I don’t want her to have to be afraid every day,” she said.

“I don’t have a problem with guns because I grew up with them. I have a problem with assault rifles. I have a problem with access to them,” she said.

When asked about the housing crisis, Hower said one aspect of it is being missed by the media and the candidates. As a person with a disability, only about 5% of new housing is required to be wheelchair accessible, she said.

“So we are in a critical stage of lack of housing in this country. In Pennsylvania, it’s really terrible. But across the country for people with disabilities [as well].”

“I’m hoping for Kamala. I’m doing everything I can because [Trump] scares the heck out of me,” she said.

Rudolph of Harrisburg said virulent political rhetoric is “typical.”

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“I think each year that the antics get dirtier. And so what are we fighting for? And I really don’t understand the whole process because everybody knows — the smart people know anyway — that the popular vote don’t elect the president. It’s the electoral college,” he said.

As for some of the threats on Trump, Rudolph suggested some aspects may have been “staged” because the Republican is a “good marketer.”

However, Rudolph also praised some of Trump’s work in his first term:

“He made us stand up to China. And so he has some good ideas. But his rhetoric is causing division among the people. And that’s not a good thing because, you know, I’ve got White friends. I got Black friends, I got Green friends, I mean,” he riffed.

“Nobody is going to trust anybody,” he said.

“I’m going [with] the Democratic ticket. It is the lesser of two evils.”

Fox News Digital’s Matteo Cina contributed to this report.

NC gubernatorial candidate Mark Robinson hospitalized following ‘incident’ at campaign event

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North Carolina gubernatorial candidate Mark Robinson was hospitalized following an “incident” at a campaign event on Friday evening, Fox News Digital has confirmed. 

It happened while Robinson was attending the Mayberry Truck Show in Mt. Airy, North Carolina. 

“Lt. Gov. Mark Robinson was treated at Northern Regional Hospital for second-degree burns. He is in good spirits, appreciates the outpouring of well wishes, and is excited to return to the campaign trail as scheduled first thing tomorrow morning,” Mike Lonergan, Robinson’s campaign communications director told Fox News Digital. 

It’s unclear exactly how Robinson was burned.

NC GUBERNATORIAL CANDIDATE MARK ROBINSON HIRES TRUMP-FRIENDLY LAWYER TO INVESTIGATE PORN WEBSITE ALLEGATIONS

Robinson, the current Republican lieutenant governor running against Democratic state Attorney General Josh Stein to replace Democratic Gov. Roy Cooper in the battleground state, was recently accused of making controversial comments on a porn website. 

Robinson denies the allegations. He hired an attorney who previously worked for former President Trump. The Binnall Law Group from northern Virginia is investigating claims raised in a CNN report published earlier this week. 

“Normally, something like this, an investigation, you know, run by the Department of Justice and the FBI would take months or years,” Binnall previously told Fox News Digital. “We can’t do that in this case because the voters need an answer before the election. And so we are going to move very quickly and still give them a very fulsome report.” 

“He absolutely denies saying any of the things that are in the CNN piece,” Binnall said of Robinson. “What my investigation is going to do is we are going to follow the facts. We are going to investigate this strenuously. We are going to leave no stone unturned. We’re going to be very, very aggressive. And the citizens of North Carolina deserve nothing less than a full investigation of this matter, which is what we are going to do.”

BATTLEGROUND STATE REPUBLICAN DENIES INVOLVEMENT IN PORN SCANDAL, DISMISSES IT AS ‘TABLOID TRASH’

The CNN report surfaced comments Robinson allegedly made more than a decade ago on a porn site messaging board, including describing himself as a “black NAZI;” saying he enjoyed transgender pornography; saying that he preferred Hitler to then-President Barack Obama in 2012; and criticizing the late Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. as “worse than a maggot.” 

Robinson has denied saying those words, but Republicans have begun to distance themselves from the candidate, who, if elected, would be North Carolina’s first Black governor. Trump did not mention Robinson, who he endorsed before the March primary and has spoken at other Trump events, during the Republican presidential nominee’s campaign rally in Wilmington, North Carolina, Saturday. 

“The allegations against me are outright lies, fabricated to distract voters from Josh Stein’s disastrous record,” Robinson previously said in a statement to Fox News Digital regarding the investigation. “The great people of North Carolina deserve the truth, and I am fully committed to ensuring they get it with complete transparency.”

Fox News Digital’s Danielle Wallace contributed to this report.

VP Harris outlines ‘orderly and secure’ immigration plan, rips Trump in first border stop since nomination

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DOUGLAS, Ariz. — Vice President Harris made her first appearance Friday at the southern border since becoming the Democratic nominee for president, and delivered a speech pledging to crack down on illegal immigration while blasting former President Trump.

“Those who cross our borders unlawfully will be apprehended and removed and barred from reentering for five years,” Harris told an enthusiastic crowd inside the gymnasium of the Cochise County College Douglas Campus located roughly two miles from the southern border. 

“We will pursue more severe criminal charges against repeat violators and if someone does not make an asylum request at a legal point of entry and instead crosses our border unlawfully, they will be barred from receiving asylum. While we understand that many people are desperate to migrate to the United States. Our system must be orderly and secure.”

HARRIS VISITS CRUCIAL BORDER STATE AS IMMIGRATION RECORD SPARKS SCRUTINY: A TIMELINE

Harris, who touted her record as a border state attorney general, claimed that Trump “tanked” the “strongest border security bill we have seen in decades” earlier this year and argued that if it were law today, it would be producing “results” for the country.

“It is my pledge to you that as President of the United States I will bring it back up and proudly sign it into law,” she said.

Harris also pledged to “understand how solutions get formed” and to “reach across the aisle and I will embrace common sense approaches and new techniques to get the job done.”

“Because I know transnational gangs coming across the border, trafficking in guns, drugs and human beings could[n’t] care less who somebody voted for in the last election,” she said.

Harris added, “I will surge support to law enforcement agencies on the front lines, more personnel, more training and more technology, including 100 new inspection systems that can detect fentanyl hidden in vehicles.”

Fentanyl was a common message in Harris’ speech, which she delivered after being introduced by Theresa Guerrero, whose son, Jacob, was killed by fentanyl poisoning at age 31.

“We will make sure that our ports of entry, including airports and seaports, have additional state-of-the-art technology to detect fentanyl and the chemical tools used to make it,” Harris said. “I will also double the resources for the Department of Justice to extradite and prosecute transnational criminal organizations and the cartels.”

Harris added, “The United States is a sovereign nation, and I believe we have a duty to set rules at our border and to enforce them. And I take that responsibility very seriously. We are also a nation of immigrants. The United States has been enriched by generations of people who have come from every corner of the world to contribute to our country and to become part of the American story.”

MARK CUBAN SPARS WITH RILEY GAINES OVER HARRIS’ HANDLING OF THE BORDER CRISIS

Harris claimed during her speech that Trump did “nothing” to fix our “broken immigration” system during his four years as president.

“He did not solve the shortage of immigration judges,” Harris said. “He did not solve the shortage of border agents. He did not create lawful pathways into our nation. He did nothing to address an outdated asylum system and did not work with other governments in our hemisphere to deal with what clearly is also a regional challenge.

“He separated families. He ripped toddlers out of their mothers arms, put children in cages, and tried to end protections for Dreamers. He made the challenges at the border worse. And he is still. And he is still fanning the flames of fear and division. And let me be clear, that is not the work of a leader. That is not the work of a leader. And that is, in fact, I think we all believe an abdication of leadership.”

Harris signaled that she will find a pathway to citizenship for “Dreamers” who she said are “American in every way.”

Harris told the crowd she will work with Democrats and Republicans to fix the border issue and said she rejects the “false choice” between securing the border and “creating a system of immigration that is safe, orderly, and humane.”

“We can, and we must do both. We must do both.”

Shortly before the speech, Harris walked the southern border with two border patrol officials who the White House says briefed her on “their efforts to combat traffickers and transnational criminal organizations.”

Following that briefing, Harris traveled by motorcade to the Raul H. Castro Port of Entry in Douglas where she was briefed on efforts to stem the flow of fentanyl at the border. 

Harris’ speech outlining how she will tackle illegal immigration comes under the backdrop of millions of illegal immigrants overwhelming the southern border during her tenure as vice president, which has sparked frequent criticism from Trump, Republicans, and the Border Patrol union. 

“After years of not just ignoring the problem, but helping create it, Vice President Kamala is finally headed down to the border,” the National Border Patrol Council said in a statement leading up to Harris’ visit. “This is nothing more than for her to check the box, but what it is in reality, is a slap in the face towards the men and women that put their lives on the line every day, and also a slap in the face to the American public. Where has she been?”

BORDER-DISTRICT REPUBLICANS HAMMER HARRIS, DEMAND ‘AN APOLOGY’ OVER ‘PHOTO OP’ CAMPAIGN STOP IN ARIZONA

Fox News Digital reported earlier this year that at least 7.2 million illegal immigrants entered the United States under President Biden, an amount greater than the populations of 36 states.

Harris faced criticism just hours before her speech after Immigration and Customs Enforcement released data showing that tens of thousands of illegal immigrants with sex offenses and homicide convictions are currently loose on the streets in the U.S.

Fox News polling released this week showed Trump with a 3 point lead in Arizona after Harris was in the lead by a point last month. 

The 3-point shift among registered voters is mainly due to movement among young voters, women and Hispanics.  

Polling has also shown that the vast majority of Americans believe the southern border is a “problem” after almost four years of the Biden-Harris administration and recent Fox News polling shows Americans trust Trump on the economy over Harris by 10 points.

Fox News Digital’s Adam Shaw and Dana Blanton contributed to this report

White House mum amid outrage over data showing how many illegal immigrant criminals are free in US

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The White House has yet to comment on new data released to lawmakers showing the number of illegal immigrants with convictions for sex offenses and homicide convictions who are not in Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) detention.

The agency provided data to Rep. Tony Gonzales, R-Texas, about illegal immigrants with criminal charges or convictions. The data, as of July 2024, is broken down by those in detention and those who are not in detention, known as the non-detained docket. 

The non-detained docket includes noncitizens who have final orders of removal or are going through removal proceedings but are not in ICE custody. 

There are more than 7.4 million people on that docket, up from around 3.7 million when former President Trump left office. 

TENS OF THOUSANDS OF ILLEGAL IMMIGRANTS WITH SEXUAL ASSAULT, MURDER CONVICTIONS ROAMING US STREETS: ICE DATA 

The data shows that, among those not in detention, there are 425,431 convicted criminals and 222,141 with pending criminal charges. The data does not reveal how many of those criminals are recent arrivals. 

For comparison, in August 2016, toward the end of the Obama administration, ICE said there were about 2.2 million noncitizens on the non-detained docket and about 368,574 were convicted criminals. 

In the latest data, the criminals include 62,231 convicted of assault, 14,301 convicted of burglary, 56,533 with drug convictions and 13,099 convicted of homicide. An additional 2,521 have kidnapping convictions, and 15,811 have sexual assault convictions. There are an additional 1,845 with pending homicide charges, 42,915 with assault charges, 3,266 with burglary charges and 4,250 with assault charges.

The White House did not immediately respond to requests for comment on the data and whether it had been aware of the numbers. Vice President Kamala Harris’ campaign also did not comment. Harris is at the southern border in Arizona. 

Fox News Digital has also reached out to the Department of Homeland Security.

The news sparked outrage from Republicans, who tied the numbers to the policies of the Biden administration and those sanctuary jurisdictions who refuse to cooperate with ICE.

‘POLITICAL STUNT’: CRITICS DISMISS HARRIS’ EXPECTED ARIZONA BORDER VISIT AS IMMIGRATION REMAINS TOP ISSUE

Rep, Gonzalez called the data “beyond disturbing” and said “it should be a wake-up call for the Biden-Harris administration and cities across the country that hide behind sanctuary policies.”

“It’s time for Washington to move past rhetoric and toward results. Americans deserve to feel safe in their communities. As an appropriator, I will do everything in my power to ensure ICE has the resources necessary to deport noncitizens with a criminal record. This must be a priority,” Gonzalez said in a statement. 

“The Biden-Harris administration also plays a part in cleaning up the mess their failed policies have created. They have the ear of sanctuary city mayors. It’s time to encourage them to reverse course and put the safety of American citizens first.”

Homeland Security Committee Chairman Mark Green said the release of illegal immigrants into the U.S. “defies all common sense.”

“This is madness. It is something no civilized, well-functioning society should tolerate,” he said.

In the letter to Gonzalez, ICE took aim at so-called “sanctuary” cities that refuse to cooperate with federal law enforcement in deporting illegal immigrant criminals.

“ICE recognizes that some jurisdictions are concerned that cooperating with federal immigration officials will erode trust with immigrant communities and make it harder for local law enforcement to serve those populations. However, ‘sanctuary’ policies can end up shielding dangerous criminals, who often victimize those same communities,” it said.

It also stressed DHS’s efforts to remove illegal immigrants.

“From mid-May 2023 through the end of July 2024, DHS removed or returned more than 893,600 individuals, including more than 138,300 individuals in family units. The majority of all individuals encountered at the Southwest Border over the past three years have been removed, returned or expelled.”

CLICK HERE FOR MORE COVERAGE OF THE BORDER SECURITY CRISIS

The Biden administration has prioritized the removal of public safety and national security threats in narrowed priorities it released in 2021, but critics have linked those priorities with a drop in ICE removals.

Republicans have blamed the border crisis on the policies of the administration, including rolling back Trump policies that limited “catch and release.”

The administration has said it needs more funding and reforms from Congress, including via a bipartisan Senate bill introduced this year. That bill would increase the number of ICE detention beds, but critics of the administration have pointed to numbers showing not all beds are being filled currently.

Asked about the increase in the non-detained docket this summer, a White House spokesperson pointed to that bill.

“Congressional Republicans had an opportunity to support the fairest and toughest set of reforms in decades, and they chose to put partisan political interests ahead of fixing our immigration system and securing our borders,” the spokesperson said. 

“Congressional Republicans have proven that they do not care about securing our border because, frankly, if they did, they would have supported the bipartisan agreement.”

The data’s release comes as Harris visits the southern border in Arizona and seeks to present herself as tougher on the border than former President Trump, who she blames for the border bill not passing.

“Donald Trump tanked a bill to improve border security — just so he can win this election,” she said Friday. “As I have shown throughout my career, I won’t back down from my plan to make our border more secure.”

Fox News’ Bill Melugin contributed to this report.

Trump blames Harris amid data showing tens of thousands criminal migrants in US: ‘Deliberately erased’ border

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Former President Trump called the U.S. a “dumping ground” Friday, hours after newly released data revealed that tens of thousands of illegal immigrants with sex offenses and homicide convictions are roaming American streets. 

The data from U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) says that, among those not in detention, there are 425,431 convicted criminals and 222,141 with pending criminal charges.

The figures include 62,231 people convicted of assault, 14,301 convicted of burglary, 56,533 with drug convictions and 13,099 convicted of homicide. An additional 2,521 have kidnapping convictions and 15,811 have sexual assault convictions. 

ICE NON-DETAINED DOCKET EXPLODES TO 7.4M CASES

“We’re like a dumping ground,” Trump told supporters during a campaign event in Walker, Michigan, on the same day Vice President Harris was scheduled to visit the southern border. “Non-citizens, convicted criminals from all over the world are right now at-large in the United States of America.”

ICE blamed the figures on “sanctuary” cities, which refuse to cooperate with federal law enforcement in deporting illegal immigrant criminals.

“ICE recognizes that some jurisdictions are concerned that cooperating with federal immigration officials will erode trust with immigrant communities and make it harder for local law enforcement to serve those populations. However, ‘sanctuary’ policies can end up shielding dangerous criminals, who often victimize those same communities,” the agency said.

‘POLITICAL STUNT’: CRITICS DISMISS HARRIS’ EXPECTED ARIZONA BORDER VISIT AS IMMIGRATION REMAINS TOP ISSUE

The Biden administration has come under fire for releasing many migrants into the U.S. interior, resulting in a sharp drop in deportations. 

Trump blamed Harris, who Republicans argue is weak on border security and who was slated to visit the southern border in Arizona on Friday, saying she ignored the problem despite migrant crime becoming a top issue among voters. 

“It’s a killing machine, and they’re killing people all over our country. And Kamala said, she said, ‘oh, well, those people really don’t kill like our criminals,'” Trump said. “No, no. These people make our criminals look like nice people. And I’ve been saying this from the beginning of the Harris Biden disaster.”

“Four years ago, Kamala Harris inherited the most secure border in U.S. history,” he added. “And as borders are, she then set the all-time record for illegal immigration into our country. Every single year. And many of these people were stone-cold criminals and murderers. She willfully and deliberately erased her own nation’s borders.”

The Harris campaign did not immediately respond to Fox News Digital’s request for comment. 

The Man In Black: Johnny Cash statue unveiled in the Capitol

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Statues of Presidents – ranging from George Washington to Ronald Reagan – stand in the U.S. Capitol Rotunda.

The walls of the Capitol complex are lined with inventors such as Thomas Edison of Ohio and Utah’s Philo Farnsworth – who is credited with helping create television.

There are statues of American heroes, ranging from Helen Keller to Amelia Earhart to astronaut Jack Swigart.

IN CONGRESS – LIKE BASEBALL – THERE’S ALWAYS NEXT YEAR

Religious figures pop up, including Junipero Sera from California and Father Damien of Hawaii.

Civil rights figures such as Martin Luther King Jr. and Rosa Parks are well represented.

There are even writers. Will Rogers of Oklahoma and Willa Cather of Nebraska.

But there were no musicians.

Until now.

He’s known simply as the Man in Black.

“Johnny Cash walked the line. It wasn’t a straight line. Much more like the Arkansas River. Jagged. But always moving forward,” said Gov. Sarah Huckabee Sanders, R-Ark., at a recent dedication ceremony.

Perhaps this is an example of Congress moving forward, stretching out into the arts and pop culture.

“Some may ask the question, ‘Why would a musician have a statue here in the halls of the great American republic?’” queried House Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La. “And the answer is actually pretty simple. America is about more than law and politics.”

Cash’s statue is the latest addition to the Capitol collection. Each state receives two statutes on Capitol Hill. Individual states determine who should represent them. The Arkansas state legislature voted in 2019 to swap out both of its statues. Earlier this year, officials removed the statue of Uriah Rose. He was a Confederate sympathizer and founder of the Rose Law Firm in Little Rock – associated with Hillary Clinton and other Clinton Administration figures. In exchange, they installed a statue of civil rights activist Daisy Bates. Johnny Cash’s statue takes the place of the late Sen. James Clarke, D-Ark., a segregationist.

The bronze statue practically greets you with the singer’s golden-throated, signature introduction: “Hello. I’m Johnny Cash.”

The statue features the singer clasping a Bible in his left hand. A Martin D-35 acoustic guitar is slung across Cash’s back, the neck pointed downward. He’s attired in a tuxedo shirt with ruffles. A box-back coat hangs around him like a cape. And, of course, there are cowboy boots.

Moments after they yanked the cloth off the statue to reveal Cash, his sister, Joanne Cash, approached it. Now blind, Joanne spent several moments touching and feeling the contours of the bronzed version of her brother – now memorialized for the ages.

SHOW VOTE: REPUBLICANS MAKE POLITICAL STATEMENT IN GOING AGAINST SPEAKER JOHNSON

The statue epitomized the dichotomy of Cash. A Zen-like quality. Yin and yang. Light and dark.

“He was open about straddling the border between clean cut Johnny and beaten down Cash,” said Sanders. “Johnny is the nice one. Cash causes all the trouble.”

The governor referenced Cash recording his albums at Folsom State Prison and San Quentin.

“It’s not hard to imagine that he, too, looked out at that prison crowd and saw a version of himself staring back,” said Sanders.

She added that Cash “wrote that he felt like a walking vision of death.”

Johnson observed that besides Cash, “no one else would be singing at Folsom Prison.”

Johnny Cash sang about farmers washed out by floodwaters in “Five Feet High and Rising.” Those songs seemed to be the most important in his repertoire, as he focused on the “forgotten men and women,” said Johnson.

Those were some of the most important songs in Cash’s repertoire.

Besides his “Man in Black” stage persona, darkness perpetually cloaked Johnny Cash. That rendered ruinous lyrics which would have bordered on hyperbole had they not been so resonant.

“I taught the weeping willow how to cry,” wrote Cash in Big River.

“I will let you down. I will make you hurt,” concedes Cash in Hurt.

“I fell into a burning ring of fire,” sings Cash in one of his best-known songs. “And it burns, burns, burns.”

SENATE TO SWEAR IN MENENDEZ SUCCESSOR FOLLOWING NJ LAWMAKER’S CONVICTION, RESIGNATION

Simple.

Yet mercilessly true.

“He was a Shakespeare of the South,” said Cash’s daughter and singer Rosanne Cash. “Reams and reams of poetry spilled from him. He was a flawed but profoundly humble, kind and compassionate man with a magnificent generosity of spirit.”

His daughter said that Cash “loved those who failed and made terrible mistakes, but who admitted to their God and themselves their failings because he himself knew the darkness he wrestled with his whole life.”

But despite his internal demons, Cash’s daughter said she learned a special lesson from her father.

“He said to us children many times in moments of conflict or anger, ‘Children, you can choose love or hate. I choose love,’” said Rosanne.

In fact, those words are inscribed on the concrete base of the statue for all to read.

House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries, D-N.Y., said Cash inspired generations of artists. He said that long before Jay-Z dropped the Black Album or Black Sabbath practically created the heavy metal genre, the Man in Black seized ownership of the hue for his own.

“Snoop Doggy Dogg put it a different way. He called Johnny Cash ‘a real American gangster,’” said Jeffries, drawing laughter. “That’s a compliment from Snoop Doggy Dogg.”

Even lawmakers recite Cash’s lyrics.

“’I can actually see the gravel in his gut and the spit in his eye,’” said Rep. Steve Womack, R-Ark., referencing Cash’s country hit A Boy Named Sue. “I loved that song. I loved it so much that I committed to memory its lyrics.”

And while many people who visit Congress have never heard of some of the people honored with Capitol statues, everyone has heard Johnny Cash.

“You’ll hear Johnny Cash on classic country. You’ll hear Johnny Cash on classic rock. You’ll hear Johnny Cash on gospel,” said Rep. Rick Crawford, R-Ark. “It’s just a testament to his ability to transcend those musical genres.”

As Johnny Cash crooned, “I’ve been everywhere.”

Now he’s been to the U.S. Capitol.

But here he’ll stay.

In permanent residence.