Trump beats Biden in every swing state, new poll shows

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A new Emerson College/The Hill swing state poll shows President Joe Biden behind in seven battleground states that could prove as decisive in the next general election as they did in 2020.

According to the poll, Biden trails former President Donald Trump by three points or more in Arizona, Georgia, Michigan, Nevada, North Carolina, Pennsylvania, and Wisconsin, and has gained very little ground over the last several months of campaigning, despite out-raising his Republican rival and managing to keep his schedule free of frequent court appearances.

“The state of the presidential election in swing states has remained relatively consistent since Emerson and The Hill started tracking them last November. The share of undecided voters has reduced and Biden gained ground in Georgia and Nevada, narrowing the gap, while Trump has maintained a slight edge on Biden in Pennsylvania and Wisconsin,” Spencer Kimball, executive director of Emerson College Polling, said with the poll’s release on Tuesday.

U.S. President Joe Biden discusses the reported death of Alexei Navalny in the Roosevelt Room at the White House in Washington, D.C., on Feb. 16, 2024. (Yuri Gripas/Abaca Press/TNS)

Biden won most of those states in 2020 — Trump took North Carolina — and with 94 votes between them, the electoral college math starts to look pretty grim for any candidate unable to win in at least 6 of the 7 states polled.

As if that weren’t bad enough news for the 46th President, the poll also shows third-party candidates only complicate matters for him in most of these important contests.

“When third-party candidates are included on the ballot, support is pulled away from Biden more than Trump in five states: Georgia, Nevada, North Carolina, Pennsylvania, and Wisconsin. Support is drawn evenly from each candidate in Arizona and Michigan,” pollsters wrote.

Survey participants were also asked about their thoughts on Trump’s criminal trials, which have kept him from campaigning over the last several weeks and acted as a drain on his cash reserves for months.

Despite the support he sees for reelection among polled voters, most see the ongoing trial in New York over his alleged affair with and subsequent cover-up payment to a porn star as a matter of justice, not politics.

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Trump, charged with 34 felony counts of falsifying his business records, has denied those allegations and pleaded not guilty to the charges, as he has for 54 other felony charges he faces in other jurisdictions.

“As the criminal trial is being held in New York, voters were asked which statement comes closer to their view: the trial is appropriate to hold Trump accountable, or the trial is a ‘witch hunt’. A plurality of voters in all swing states consider the trial appropriate to hold the former president accountable,” pollsters wrote.

Voters were almost equally divided on the impact a potential guilty verdict would have on their choices come November, with most saying it wouldn’t affect their decision at the ballot box one way or the other.

“A majority of Republicans say it would make them more likely to support Trump in 2024, while 15% of Pennsylvania Republicans say they are less likely to support Trump, along with 13% in Arizona, 11% in Wisconsin, 10% in Michigan, and 9% in Georgia, Nevada, and North Carolina,” pollsters wrote.

To stop fentanyl deaths in Philadelphia, knocking on doors and handing out overdose kits

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Nicole Leonard, WHYY | KFF Health News (TNS)

PHILADELPHIA — On a narrow street lined with row houses and an auto body shop in the Kensington neighborhood of North Philadelphia, Marsella Elie climbs a home’s front steps and knocks hard on the door.

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A middle-aged man appears with a wary look on his face.

“Hello, sir, how are you doing today?” asked Elie, wearing a royal-blue jacket embroidered with the city government’s Liberty Bell logo. “My name is Marsella. I’m working with the city. You heard about the overdoses that are going around in the neighborhood, right?”

The man gives a cautious nod.

Elie gestures to the pamphlets she’s holding about drug overdoses and addiction treatment programs. She holds up a box of Narcan, a brand of naloxone, which can reverse an opioid overdose.

“What we’re trying to do is get this in everybody’s household. Have you ever heard of this before?” Elie asked before handing the man a tote bag filled with more pamphlets, fentanyl test strips, and the box of Narcan.

Elie and other part-time city workers and volunteers are part of a large-scale, citywide door-to-door campaign in Philadelphia that aims to equip homes with naloxone and other drug overdose prevention supplies.

City officials hope that this proactive approach will normalize naloxone as an everyday item in the medicine cabinet, and prevent people from dying of overdoses, especially Black residents.

In Philadelphia in 2022, a record 1,413 people died from drug overdoses, according to city data. Among Black residents, deaths were up 20% from the year before, with many happening in private homes.

“The best thing we can do to make these things more accessible is to just give them to people,” said Keli McLoyd, deputy director of the city’s Opioid Response Unit, speaking about the tote bag with naloxone and other supplies. “We’re not asking you if you’re using drugs. The goal here is really to build sort of a collective responsibility. As Black and brown folks, as we saw during the covid epidemic, nobody’s coming to save us. For us, this is a tool that we can use to save ourselves.”

An opioid crisis resource kit contains Narcan, fentanyl test strips, and information on how to get addiction treatment and other harm reduction resources. (Kimberly Paynter/KFF Health News/TNS)

The canvassing initiative aims to take prevention supplies directly to people who might not otherwise seek it out themselves, and to spread awareness about overdoses beyond Kensington, the epicenter of the city’s addiction epidemic. Canvassers plan to knock on more than 100,000 doors in Philadelphia’s “hot spots” — ZIP codes with escalating rates of opioid overdoses, many in minority communities.

Widening racial disparities in overdose deaths are among the long-term consequences of the war on drugs, McLoyd said. Policies from that national anti-drug campaign led to decades of aggressive police tactics, racial profiling, and lengthy prison sentences, disproportionately affecting people of color and their communities.

Research shows that Black Americans still account for a disproportionate number of drug arrests and child protective services.

“Because of that, it’s very clear why Black or brown people might be hesitant to raise their hand and say, ‘I’m a person who uses drugs, I need those resources,’” McLoyd said.

Other communities have distributed naloxone and other supplies, albeit on a smaller scale than Philadelphia.

What Philadelphia is doing could become a model for other densely populated places, said Daliah Heller, vice president of drug use initiatives at Vital Strategies, a public health organization working with local governments in seven states to address the opioid epidemic.

“There’s something intensely personal about a human engagement,” Heller said. “And somebody knocking at your door to talk about drug use and overdose risk and that there’s something that can be done, I think is really powerful.”

Mitchell Bormack (left) and Marsella Elie, canvassers for the community organization Philly Counts, use an app to determine where to hand out opioid crisis kits in North Philadelphia. The city of Philadelphia is trying to place harm reduction resources into homes in neighborhoods that have been deeply affected by the opioid crisis. (Kimberly Paynter/KFF Health News/TNS)

Over the years, naloxone has become more accessible than ever before, Heller pointed out. It can now be ordered online and through the mail, it’s available in specialized vending machines, and some drugstores now sell Narcan nasal spray over the counter.

But tens of thousands of Americans are still dying from opioid overdoses every year. That means prevention efforts and messaging about the crisis are still not reaching some people, Heller said. And to her, reaching people means meeting them where they are. “That means physically, that means in terms of what they know about something, what their perception is of something, and their beliefs,” she said. “We need to think like that when we think about naloxone distribution.”

The Philadelphia canvassing project is funded in part by the city’s share of settlement payouts from national lawsuits against opioid manufacturers and distributors. The city is set to receive about $200 million over roughly 18 years from settlements with AmerisourceBergen, Cardinal Health, McKesson, and Johnson & Johnson.

The initiative is staffed by many of the same people who initially started canvassing as part of the 2020 census count.

Katherine Camacho, a North Philadelphia resident, eagerly accepted a box of Narcan from an opioid crisis outreach team. “I will carry this with me,” she says, adding that perhaps she could save a life. (Kimberly Paynter/KFF Health News/TNS)

Not everyone answers the door for the canvassers. Some aren’t home when they come around. In those cases, workers hang a flyer on the door handle that offers information about overdose risks and contacts for further resources. The teams of canvassers, often with language interpreters, later make a second sweep through a neighborhood to reach people they missed the first time.

On a recent Thursday, Philadelphia canvassers were knocking on doors in the Franklinville and Hunting Park neighborhoods. In this ZIP code, about 85 people died of drug overdoses in 2022, according to city data. That’s fewer than the 193 people who died of overdoses in Kensington in 2022, but much higher than the few deaths seen in the city’s most affluent neighborhoods.

The canvassers approached a resident, Katherine Camacho, on the sidewalk, as she came out of her garage. Camacho told the teams she was aware of the overdose problem in her community and then eagerly accepted a box of Narcan.

“I will carry this with me, because, like I said, sometimes you’re in the street driving somewhere and you could save a life,” Camacho told them. “And if you don’t have these things, it’s harder to do so, right?”

Camacho said she’s seen how the opioid crisis has caused suffering in her neighborhood and across the city. As for Philadelphia’s canvassing effort, she said she believes that “God is putting these people to help.”

As she headed into her house carrying the box of Narcan, Camacho said she wanted to do her part to help, too.

(KFF Health News is a national newsroom that produces in-depth journalism about health issues and is one of the core operating programs of KFF — the independent source for health policy research, polling and journalism.)

©2024 KFF Health News. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

Gophers men’s basketball: Cam Christie enters NCAA transfer portal after declaring for NBA draft

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Cam Christie gave himself more options Wednesday, and in the process, the Gophers men’s basketball program appears to be a less likely landing spot.

The Gophers’ all-Big Ten freshman team player entered the NCAA transfer portal on Wednesday, the last day the database is open, according to ESPN.

On April 12, Christie said he would declare for the NBA draft, while still maintaining his collegiate eligibility. With Wednesday’s development, Christie just opened up more places he could go if he does return to the college ranks.

Christie’s entry in the portal comes with a “do not contact” label, per ESPN, as the Arlington Heights, Ill., native focuses on preparing for the draft.

Christie was one of 195 players to be named an early entry draft candidate and he can withdraw from the process and play in the NCAA without issue if he does so before May 29. Christie’s draft stock varies from a potential first round pick to un-drafted, according to a handful of mock drafts.

If Christie leaves, the Gophers will be down three key pieces from last year’s starting lineup. Center Pharrel Payne has committed to Texas A&M, while point guard Elijah Hawkins has pledged to Texas Tech.

Christie was second on the team, averaging 11.3 points per game last season.

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‘The Idea of You’ director Michael Showalter can’t help but go for the occasional laugh

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It’s a line that sticks with you, Anne Hathaway’s character in “The Idea of You” being told, only somewhat sarcastically, that people don’t like happy women.

“Women who live their lives out loud, who are proud of who they are, going for whatever it is they want, whether that’s career or romance or anything — I think society tends to react negatively to that,” says the film’s director and co-writer, Michael Showalter says during phone interview less than a week before the film’s debut May 2 on Prime Video. “There’s something threatening about it — about a woman who is unapologetic about pursuing her own desire.”

Adapted from the novel by Robinne Lee and co-written by Jennifer Westfeldt (“Kissing Jessica Stein”), “The Idea of You” tells the story of Hathaway’s Solène Marchand, a divorced single mom and successful art gallery director who, having just turned 40, does her best not to fall for Nicholas Galitzine’s Hayes Campbell, a 24-year-old singer in a popular boy band who gives her the full-court press.

It is the latest film from Showalter, once a cast member of the cult-fave MTV sketch-comedy show “The State” who’s gone on to enjoy an increasingly varied filmmaking career. His directorial credits include 2015’s “Hello, My Name Is Doris”; 2017 critical darling “The Big Sick”; the hilarious 2020 romp “The Lovebirds,” which, like “The Big Sick,” co-starred Kumail Nanjiani; 2021’s “The Eyes of Tammy Faye, for which star Jessica Chastain won the Academy Award for Best Actress; and the well-received 2022 drama “Spoiler Alert.”

Nicholas Galitzine and Anne Hathaway share a scene in “The Idea of You.” (Courtesy of Amazon Content Services)

In a conversation edited for length and clarity, Showalter discusses the new movie and more.

Q In the spirit of “The Idea of You” being a romance, how did you and this movie get together?

A (Laughs) That’s a very good question. I was sent a script — I had not heard of the book yet — and Anne Hathaway was attached. I loved the premise of the characters, and I love Anne and I was a lover of this genre, the romantic genre. I thought, “Wow, these are two characters and a story I haven’t really seen before, and I’d love to try to tell this story.”

Q That was a script by Jennifer Westfeldt, with whom you then collaborated?

A Exactly. I had a little bit of a different idea about it, and so we kind of worked together from a draft that she started,

‘The Idea of You’ review: Boy band-flavored romance fails to keep the beat

Q How much of the draw of the project was that, like other films you’ve made, it’s different from what you’ve already done?

A Yeah, I mean, it’s a sexier movie.

You know, it’s not as quirky. It’s not really a quirky romantic comedy. … It is a drama.

Every movie I do is a little different, and so, in a sense, every movie has its own character. It’s like playing a character, whether it’s “The Big Sick” or “Tammy Faye” or this or “Doris,” what have you. Each movie has its own flavor, and I kind of try to take on that tone in my directing. I tend to change a little bit, I morph a little bit, for each project.

Ella Rubin, left, and Anne Hathaway portray daughter and mother in “The Idea of You.” (Courtesy of Amazon Content Services)

Q You have a comedy background, though. I assume you’re always leaning on that to a degree or perhaps sometimes fighting against it?

A I definitely like trying to incorporate humor into (movies). What I like most is to find humor sometimes in situations that aren’t funny or (where) you’re dealing with characters who have very complicated inner lives, who like all of us are dealing with pain and just the general struggles of being a human being and living in the world. And to try to find ways to explore the human condition with humor rather than necessarily a straightforward comedy — although those are great. too. But, you know, these characters have a sense of humor, They are able to laugh at themselves, They’re able to laugh at the world around them. And I like that as an audience member, I like to mix it up, so something serious happens and then maybe you break that tension with a joke.

Q You said Anne Hathaway already had been cast when you came aboard the movie, so how did you land on Galitzine for Hayes?

A We looked at a lot of auditions, and we saw guys from all over the world and whittled it down to a small group of about 10 guys who came to New York for a long weekend. We did a lot of chemistry reads in person with them and Anne — hearing them, seeing them reading scenes together, singing songs, improvising, just getting to know them, seeing how they were with notes and different tones and stuff. Nick just really stood out and combined all of the qualities in the Hayes character that we were looking for. He’s funny. He’s charming, He’s relatable. He’s incredibly talented as a musician. He’s a great-looking guy. He checked every box. And then, more than anything, when he and Anne worked together, there was a real charm there and a real spark.

Nicholas Galitzine portrays a singer in Aug. Moon, a popular boy band, in “The Idea of You.” (Courtesy of Amazon Content Services)

Q As we’ve discussed, you’ve made some different types of movies. What’s still on the directorial wish list? Do you want to do a superhero movie? Are you trying to get a meeting with the “Star Wars” folks?

A (laughs) I mean, sure.

“I like character stories, so I’m not sure about the superhero movie, although if a great script came along, I would absolutely be excited about it. I’ll make a movie in any genre if I like the genre, so I’d love to do a horror movie or a science fiction movie or a Western. I love them all.

Q Lastly, what do we have to do to get a sequel to “The Lovebirds” off the ground? That movie’s hilarious.

A Uh, you write the script — write it up.