‘Breach of Protocol’: WH Press Officials Consulted Biden Before Improperly Changing Official Transcript of His ‘Garbage’ Remark

After consulting with President Joe Biden, White House press officials altered the official transcript of his Tuesday call in which he referred to former president Donald Trump’s supporters as “garbage,” a move the stenographer’s office supervisor labeled a total “breach of protocol and spoliation of transcript integrity,” the Associated Press reported. According to the original

Colorado’s Top Election Official Says Employee Responsible for Posting Voting Passwords Is Gone

The employee, described as a ‘civil servant,’ now ‘no longer works’ in the office, the secretary of state said. Colorado Secretary of State Jena Griswold said that the worker who was responsible for a voting security breach that allowed passwords to be posted online is gone and that the incident shouldn’t shake residents’ confidence in

US Economy Added Just 12,000 Jobs in October, Well Below Expectations, Final Pre-Election Jobs Report Shows

The U.S. economy added just 12,000 jobs in October, falling well below economists’ expectations, the Labor Department’s final pre-election jobs report shows. The figure, released Friday, marks a sharp drop from the 223,000 jobs added in September. Economists surveyed by the Wall Street Journal had anticipated a gain of 100,000, factoring in the impact of

Georgia Secretary of State Says Video Alleging Voter Fraud Is Fake, Targeted Disinformation

The video appears to show a Haitian immigrant with multiple Georgia IDs claiming to have illegally voted for Vice President Kamala Harris numerous times. Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger said on Oct. 31 that a video allegedly showing a Haitian immigrant claiming to have carried out voter fraud in the U.S. presidential election is

New York’s Top Court Upholds Law on Disputed Mail-In Ballots

The provision meets the constitutional requirement of having equal representation of Republicans and Democrats on the election board, the court ruled. A New York law requiring the counting of mail-in ballots even if there’s some doubt as to their validity is constitutional, the state’s top court ruled on Oct. 31. “We hold that the statute

Supreme Court Denies West’s Bid to Inform Pennsylvania Voters That He’s a Write-In Option

The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit rejected Cornel West’s appeal of a previous ruling in a one-sentence order. The U.S. Supreme Court on Oct. 31 rejected independent presidential candidate Cornel West’s request to require swing state Pennsylvania officials to advise voters they could write him in as a candidate. A lower court

Harris Makes Final Push to Engage Latino Voters in Arizona, Nevada

As the second-fastest growing voting bloc, Latinos may prove critical in deciding presidential race in key swing states. Vice President Kamala Harris held campaign events on Oct. 31 in Arizona and Nevada, two key battlegrounds with large Latino communities. Harris kicked off her campaign with a stop in Phoenix, Arizona, before continuing to events in