Sunday, October 27, 2024


Harris struggles to combat Trump’s anti-trans closing argument

Brooke Migdon
Sun 27 October 2024 



Vice President Harris has struggled to combat former President Trump’s anti-transgender attacks, which are a major part of the former president’s closing argument.

The Trump campaign has flooded the airwaves with advertisements that paint Harris as extreme for her past support for trans-inclusive policies, including a response recorded on an ACLU candidate questionnaire during her 2019 presidential run that she would guarantee transgender people in prison and immigration detention have access to gender-affirming care.

The Supreme Court has held for nearly half a century that denying incarcerated people medically necessary health care is a violation of their constitutional rights, and federal prisons offered transition-related care, including surgery, under the Trump administration. The first person to receive gender-affirming surgery while in federal custody first sued for care in 2019, and a federal court granted her access in 2022.


The vice president has skirted explicit questions about transgender rights in recent interviews and has fallen short of offering a forceful rebuttal to the Trump campaign’s ads. On gender-affirming health care, Harris has said it is settled law that individuals should have access to medically necessary care, and treatment should be left to doctors and their patients.

“I’m not going to put myself in the position of a doctor,” Harris said this week in an interview with NBC’s Hallie Jackson.

Republicans see Harris’s responses as proof that the Trump campaign’s messaging is working, while some Democrats and LGBTQ advocates argue Harris’s caution on the topic is strategic.

“The Trump campaign understands that transgender care is not a top issue for voters – that’s not the point,” said one former Trump administration aide. “This is a stark reminder for the remaining undecided and low propensity voters in battleground states that Harris is no moderate.”

“Not only does this messaging fire up Trump’s base to maximize turnout on Election Day, it’s also a direct appeal to his main target in his closing arguments — young men — that a vote for Harris is a vote for a radical leftist agenda,” the source added.
Trying to define you

Transgender issues are among the least important issues driving voters to the ballot box, according to a recent Gallup poll, and Republicans’ similar focus on transgender athletes and health care in the 2022 midterms failed to render victories on election night. Most voters surveyed this month by the left-leaning polling firm Data for Progress said anti-trans ads aired this cycle are “mean-spirited” and have “gotten out of hand.”

NBC’s Jackson noted in her interview with Harris that Republicans are “trying to define you on this” issue and asked Harris for her message to LGBTQ Americans looking for a “full-throated backing” for the transgender community.

“I believe that all people should be treated with dignity and respect, period, and should not be vilified for who they are, and should not be bullied for who they are. And that is a true statement for me my entire career,” Harris said.

Asked if transgender Americans should have access to gender-affirming health care, Harris said, “I believe we should follow the law.”

Imara Jones, founder of TransLash Media, described Harris’s responses to Trump’s campaign ads as “contained” and “measured.”

“We know from modern campaigns that a key rule is that you don’t allow attacks to go unanswered for any length of time, and I think what’s interesting about this is that there hasn’t really been a response that matches the level of the attacks,” she said. “These attacks are something that the Harris campaign has had months to prepare for, and the broader Biden campaign longer than that, because this was predictable to happen.”

Harris’s relative silence is reflective of a broader issue among Democrats in communicating their support for the trans community, she said.

At this year’s Republican National Convention in Milwaukee, for example, Republicans leaned heavily into anti-transgender rhetoric, while at the Democratic convention the following month, trans issues were mentioned by just two speakers, neither of whom is trans.

“There seems to be an overall reticence to match the scale of the attacks on the Democratic side,” Jones said.

That could be intentional, she added, and Harris, who has long supported LGBTQ rights, may be being deliberately vague in a bid to win over moderate Republicans and keep further Trump attacks at bay.

“It is a strategy to try to minimize the possible attack vectors that your opponent can make, and that the more specific policies you put out there, the more you’re giving them an opportunity to pick them apart and to find the one sentence or the one bullet point that they can use to derive and undermine what you’re trying to say and what you’re trying to do,” Jones said. “That is a strategy — whether or not that’s the right strategy, I don’t know.”
Show some strength

Others, though, think that Harris needs to show more conviction on the issue while she has been criticized by some Democrats this week for relying too heavily on her stump speech in her recent interviews.

“If she truly believes in something like transgender rights, then say it. Show some damn strength already,” one Democratic political consultant said. “Voters respect candidates with guts. At the very least, they like candidates with guts who take a position, even if they disagree with you about the position.”

In an interview with Fox News’s Bret Baier last week, during which Fox played the Trump campaign ad referencing the 2019 ACLU questionnaire, Harris referred to a New York Times report that people in the federal prison system were offered gender-affirming care under the Trump administration.

“I will follow the law, and it’s a law that Donald Trump actually followed,” she said.

While Harris and her running mate, Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz, broadly support bodily autonomy, which includes gender-affirming care, that point is most often made in the context of reproductive rights.

Walz, the more vocal of the two on transgender rights, in a recent episode of the “We Can Do Hard Things” podcast said Trump’s closing arguments are intended “to demonize a group of people for being who they are.”

“They’re running millions of dollars of ads demonizing folks who are just trying to live their lives,” said Walz, who last year helped make Minnesota a refuge for gender-affirming care.

“Everybody wants to make sure that the presidential candidate is speaking to their issues,” said Sean Meloy, vice president of political programs at the LGBTQ+ Victory Fund. “Part of this is doing research; everything is not going to be handed out on a silver platter from a speech. We’ve got an amazing candidate when it comes to her record on LGBTQ rights.”

“The fact that Republicans are attacking her for that, is pretty telling,” he said.

Some Democratic strategists suggest that Harris stay focused on her own closing message, which is largely about arguing that Trump is a threat to democracy, rather than responding to attacks from her opponent.

“The closing arguments are transgender surgeries vs. Jan. 6; how each candidate responds to the message 12 days before the election is irrelevant. Could she do better? We can all do better, but so what? Focus on the finish line,” said Ivan Zapien, former Democratic National Committee official. “People aren’t consuming the whole attack or answer, it’s all shorthand and grunts.”

Meanwhile, The Trump team views the attacks on Harris as another way to paint her as too liberal in the final stretch.

“Harris would rather raise taxes to fund gender transition surgeries for illegal immigrants than extend the Trump tax cuts that put money back into the wallets of American families,” said Republican National Committee spokesperson Anna Kelly. “Kamala is for dangerously liberal spending, while President Trump is for you.”

Copyright 2024 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. 

























This Is What You Really Need To Know About Trans Health Care In Prisons

Lil Kalish
Sat 26 October 2024 

Donald Trump has repeatedly attacked his Democratic opponent, Vice President Kamala Harris, by claiming she supports “tax-payer unded transgender operations on illegal aliens in prison.” His presidential campaign’s most aired and most expensive ad stokes fears about transgender people and zeros in on Harris’ previous comments in which she signaled her support for incarcerated trans people to access gender-affirming surgeries.

Trump’s rhetoric shows no signs of going away ― even though new polling shows even many Republicans find it off-putting ― and the longer it floods the airwaves, the more it obscures the reality of what it’s like for trans people, especially those who are incarcerated, to try to receive gender-affirming care.

“There are hundreds of trans people that I work with every year who are seeking gender-affirming care,” said A.D. Lewis, an attorney at the Prison Law Office, a nonprofit law firm that focuses on constitutional protections for incarcerated people. “I think if people met and knew them, they would see how funny, witty, compassionate and caring these people are ― and that they should not be judged by one of their worst moments.”

“Unlike us, they can’t go out and get that care, can’t get a job or insurance to pay for that care,” added Lewis, who also founded the Trans Beyond Bars Project and has supported thousands of trans, nonbinary and intersex people in prisons and jails. “And some people are locked up for their entire lives, so if the government’s going to take away your liberty, can the government force you to live as a gender and sex that you’re not?”

A 1970s Supreme Court ruling found that states must provide adequate health care to incarcerated people, but it wasn’t until the 2010s that lower courts ruled these protections extended to gender-affirming treatments. Trans people in prisons are often subject to unsafe housing, verbal harassment and sexual assault, and face enormous barriers to accessing trans-inclusive medical care, let alone surgeries. In California, for example, only 20 out of 150 people who were approved for surgeries actually received them as of December 2022, according to a California Department of Corrections budget proposal.

Trump’s attack on Harris seems to refer to her tenure as attorney general of California. She was in office from 2010 to 2017, when incarcerated trans people were fighting primarily for access to gender-affirming hormones. Her office represented the state’s Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation, which blocked a trans woman, Michelle Norsworthy, from receiving surgery. At the time, there weren’t even structures in place for trans people to request surgery. Norsworthy later sued the state, with the help of the Transgender Law Center, and received a settlement in 2015. This suit cleared the way for the first trans woman in California to receive surgery behind bars in 2017, just as Harris was exiting office.



Unlike us, they can’t go out and get that care, can’t get a job or insurance to pay for that care.A.D. Lewis, Prison Law Office attorney

Both Trump and President Joe Biden have helped influence the Department of Justice’s provisions on the kinds of gender-affirming care offered by the Federal Bureau of Prisons. A small group of incarcerated trans people did receive gender-affirming treatments while Trump was president, but he significantly rolled back the types of care trans people could access inside federal prisons. Biden has worked to expand access to gender-affirming care in federal prisons, but under both administrations, access to that care has been an uphill battle.

HuffPost spoke with Lewis about what we should make of campaign rhetoric, what the experiences are of incarcerated trans people trying to access gender-affirming care and what either presidential candidate could mean for the future of trans health care in prisons.

This interview has been edited for length and clarity.

Trump is saying that Harris is supporting “taxpayer-funded transgender operations for illegal aliens in prison.” Can you unpack this? What does it actually look like when trans people try to access any kind of gender-affirming care ― not just surgery ― while incarcerated?

In general for people who are incarcerated in prisons, jails, detention centers and any other type of locked facility where people can’t leave, federal courts and the Supreme Court have held over and over again that if and when the government takes away your liberty, they actually have a duty of care to you to provide medically necessary care. What that looks like has changed over a number of years, but in general it means that prison officials cannot be deliberately indifferent to your medical needs. If someone has diabetes, prison officials have to ensure you get treatment for your diabetes. They can’t just deny treatment.

Dozensofmedicalassociations have determined that gender-affirming care can be medically “necessary” to treat gender dysphoria. What does that look like for trans folks behind bars? Do prison officials treat gender dysphoria and the need for gender-affirming care the same as they do for other health care needs?

It depends on which prison system or which jail system you’re in and where it is. In California, and more broadly the [U.S. Court of Appeals for the 9th Circuit] that we’re in, prison officials have to provide medically necessary care based on an individualized assessment of that person’s needs. This means that prison systems can’t have blanket bans where they say we don’t do X type of care for trans people.

In California, where Kamala Harris was attorney general, this was won through a couple of different lawsuits. One was called Norsworthy v. Beard and another Quine v. Beard, both in 2015. Both were brought by the Transgender Law Center, and those cases established the right of trans people to get access to not only gender-affirming hormones but also gender-affirming surgeries based on an individualized assessment of that person’s medical needs and the medical necessity of the surgery for that individual.

Other departments of corrections will apply different standards to gender-affirming care than they will to anything else. This is a common trope we see in prisons where they’ll have a group that decides what type of care trans people get, and then trans people are put through this entire other process that no one has to go through to get care. That’s the same in California as well ― approval for gender-affirming surgeries goes through an entirely different committee than anything else. Even when people have access to gender-affirming health care inside of prisons or jails, what’s very common is that there’s a different process by which those requests for medical care are treated and evaluated really differently than any other type of request for health care.

So can you walk me step by step through the process for someone who is trans and incarcerated and wanting to start any kind of gender-affirming care?

Like many things in prison, the first thing that anyone has to do is ask for it. They have to request an appointment, get an appointment and be able to attend that appointment, which sounds simple, but it’s a lot of steps inside and any one of those steps can go wrong and be delayed. Trans people are asking first and foremost for hormones. So trans women are asking for testosterone blockers and estrogen, and trans men are asking for testosterone.

Many departments of corrections have these kinds of snapshot-in-time policies, where if you weren’t on hormones when you came in the door, you couldn’t start hormones. Now, by and large, these policies have been successfully attacked. But even now to get access to hormones if you’ve never been on them is quite a feat.

Many of the people I’ve worked with over the years, and including in California, have reported that the level of hormones they receive is much lower than the presumptive ranges that various professional associations have (i.e., the Endocrine Society, or WPATH or the American Medical Association). We also sometimes see the opposite, where prison officials don’t really understand how to administer hormones.

The type of medical care that Trump is referring to in these ads is gender-affirming surgeries. For trans people, these can look like top surgeries or genital surgeries. But in general, very, very, very few trans people inside prisons and jails are ever accessing these types of surgeries.

Trump’s focus on this incredibly small group of people is extremely concerning to me because of how few people get it. But the underlying rhetoric about surgeries is that it’s so heinous-sounding on its face to people that he doesn’t even have to say it’s bad, it’s just understood as awful and bad and ridiculous.

I think a huge part of the rhetoric is about trans people being undeserving of this right ― they’re imprisoned, so they’re undeserving. Trump’s language around surgeries in particular traffics heavily in a logic of scarcity and austerity. The implied message is so strong… because his audience so clearly already hates all three groups of people: trans people, people who lack documents and people who are inside prisons. So this is really a trifecta for many of his most fervent supporters.

Do we have a sense of how many trans folks have been able to get gender-affirming surgery behind bars?

There are around like 10,000 incarcerated trans and nonbinary people nationally, and even of that number we know that it’s an incredibly small percentage of people who have ever accessed surgical care inside of facilities. We know that Kamala Harris, and many other attorneys general, have released people rather than provide them with gender-affirming surgery. In 2015, the state of California released Michelle Norsworthy on parole rather than giving her access to gender-affirming care on the eve of her 9th Circuit case. We know that prison officials would rather release people than give them this care, so you can imagine how few people are actually getting it.

One of the things that seems to rile up Trump’s base is the “taxpayer-funded” aspect of this all.

The “taxpayer-funded surgery” rhetoric kind of exceptionalizes trans health care out of the other taxpayer-funded things that we’re doing, including incarcerating people, caging them, paying for correctional officers. This is all taxpayer-funded, but you would never say “taxpayer-funded incarceration.”

I think also for Republicans, this language is signaling to them that part of the fight around gender-affirming surgeries should be around taxpayer support, right? We can look at things like the fights around Medicare and Medicaid and all the public funding of trans health care that are going on through the Affordable Care Act. A lot of conservative states have tried to say that state funds cannot and should not be used for this type of health care. In my opinion, it’s really trying to privatize access to gender-affirming care to make sure that fewer people can get it, fewer poor people get it, and create conditions such that trans people, especially poor trans people, cannot get care.

When we peel back the layers of meaning, to me what’s undergirding it is not only this critique about prison spending, but it links up with other types of state-level attacks that we see on trans health care and the broader conservative agenda to privatize any type of social welfare and to get rid of it. At the end of the day, the federal government, as Trump would lead it, would want to minimize any possibility of trans people getting any type of health care because they would rather for trans people to not exist.

One of the groups that we’re talking about, which Trump has repeatedly pushed harmful rhetoric about, is undocumented people and people in immigration detention. Are you able to share what health care looks like for trans asylum seekers or those in detention?

Many people have to fight, just like they do in prisons, to get access to hormones. They have to request it, and submit grievances and appeal those grievances. They have to get outside supporters to help them because the threshold for getting access to gender-affirming care is quite high.

But trans people in detention are typically pending adjudication for usually a shorter amount of time — six months, maybe a year or two. In general, the medical care provided is not as intensive or as long-term as the medical care provided in prisons. In immigrant detention, someone can be removed at any time, so some of those systems are less willing to provide long-term care. What I hear from detention officials about some of these requests for surgery or gender-affirming care, separate from hormones, is that they don’t know if people are going to be here next month or year, so it’s hard to plan around such a major surgery.

What do you anticipate if Trump were to win?

If Trump is elected, he is giving the green light not only to the federal government and federal prison officials to deny any and all types of gender-affirming care to anyone inside custody, but he’s also giving the green light to every state that agrees with him. He’s sending a clear message that his administration will oppose expanding access to gender-affirming care and will also celebrate the minimization of it.

This is exactly what Project 2025 and some of the conservatives are leaning into: that there’s a lot of different ways they can make being trans harder. If you think they’re stopping with prisoners, you’re absolutely wrong. They’re coming for all of us. I think it’s incumbent upon not only all trans people and LGBTQ+ people but anyone who cares about medical self-determination and autonomy to stand arm in arm with advocates fighting to ensure that trans people can maintain access to care whether they’re youth, 





US union members door-knock in swing states for Harris: ‘It’s a no-brainer for us’

Michael Sainato
Sun 27 October 2024 
THE GUARDIAN

Tim Freeman, a member of Unite Here, canvasses for Kamala Harris in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
Photograph: Unite Here

As the US election nears, union members are knocking on millions of doors in swing states across America in a last-ditch attempt to swing the too-close-to-call election for Kamala Harris.

Joe Biden billed himself as the most pro-union president ever. Now his successor is hoping that the all-out support of organized labor can push her bid over the line. But in a divided America, the labor movement too is split.

Tim Freeman, a hotel worker and member of Unite Here in Philadelphia, has been knocking doors for Democrats since 2020 when he came out in support of the Biden campaign.


“It opened my eyes to seeing what’s important, not just about the voting, but the issues, and then connecting with the voters,” said Freeman.

Related: Can 0.03% of US votes really swing the presidential election?

Unite Here, the hospitality and food service workers union, is running the largest independent labor-led field program in the US in the 2024 election, with operations focused in swing states of Pennsylvania, Arizona Nevada, and seven other states.

Recent polls show Pennsylvania and Nevada as toss-up states, favoring Democrats by a slim margin, with Arizona currently leaning slightly in favor of Republicans.

Freeman argued Kamala Harris was the best candidate for union members as she backs and has fought for worker rights compared to Trump, who has opposed unions and efforts to bolster worker rights.

“Our union rights are definitely under attack, but not just union rights. All of our rights are under attack,” Freeman said. “We can’t let this man back in office.”

Speaking with voters in person, so that they don’t have to rely on television ads or campaign rhetoric, was important, he said.

“You can be able to see somebody right here in your space, at your door, sharing your story with them as well as seeing what we have in common,” added Freeman. “Strength is in numbers and the more you gather, collect, and give out information to people to let them know, this is what we’re here for and this is why we canvas. Some days are tougher than others but we’re out here putting that good foot forward and putting in that work.”

Ahead of the 2020 presidential election, Unite Here ran a similar door-knocking campaign. The union claimed it mobilized over 440,000 infrequent voters to vote for Biden in Nevada, Arizona and Pennsylvania, including 125,000 voters who had not voted in 2016. The union knocked on 3m doors during the 2020 election cycle.

The union has already knocked on over 3 million doors this election year, with a goal of 3.5m doors across 10 key election battleground states in support of the Democratic presidential candidate, Kamala Harris, Democratic Senate candidates and local elected officials.

“There’s so much noise in the election, getting a voter to engage at the door involves being able to make a quick connection with them, and I think our members are particularly positioned to do that,” said the Unite Here president, Gwen Mills, who designed the union’s Take Back 2020 campaign.

“We’re not tracking polls. We’re just focused on how many doors we can knock on and how many conversations we can have with a voter that may feel disaffected that their vote doesn’t matter, or who may still be struggling with issues and on the fence about where these two candidates are.”

Unite Here noted the number of these voters exceeded Biden’s margin of victory in Nevada and Arizona.

“Fundamentally it comes down to, are we going to be on offense, continuing to build the labor movement, or will be on defense, defending against a central attack,” added Mills. “We feel, without a doubt, that the volume of these conversations, the quality, can tip the outcome of the election.”

The union also engaged in significant voter turnout efforts in Georgia Senate runoff elections in 2021 and 2022, and in Virginia state senate and house elections in 2023.

According to Pew Research Center data from 2023, 59% of union members lean Democratic, with 39% leaning Republican – a large enough percentage to make a real difference in such a close election cycle.

The Teamsters, one of the largest US labor unions, declined to issue an endorsement this election cycle after its president, Sean O’Brien, became the first Teamsters president to address the Republican national convention this year. The union announced its “non-endorsement” with a poll of members that backed Trump.

Trump has had less success with the United Auto Workers president, Shawn Fain, who has come out for Harris, a move that led Trump to insult Fain and autoworkers. The former president has continued to court support from UAW members in Michigan with promises to increase auto jobs.

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The UAW released a poll last week revealing members in key battleground states support Harris over Trump by 22 percentage points. The union has been running a door-knocking campaign in support of Harris and noted that support for her increased to 29% among members who had been contacted by the union about the election.

Fain will make a final appeal to members on Tuesday: “This election, the question for UAW members, and every member of the working class, is simple: Which side are you on? If you’re with the working class, it’s time to Stand Up. If you’re sick of the endless greed of corporate America, it’s time to Speak Up,” he wrote on X.

In the meantime, the door-knocking continues. On 19 October the Service Employees International Union, National Education Association, American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees, and American Federation of Teachers began a joint, multi-state voter outreach program to include a series of rallies and statewide canvassing efforts in key swing states.

The unions have a combined membership of over 8 million.

“We’re going to have our members and leaders on the ground in every battleground state from now until election day, ensuring every voice is heard and every vote is counted,” said April Verrett, president of SEIU.

David Bonilla, 21, works as an airport service worker in Phoenix, Arizona. He began canvassing this year and is excited as it will be the first presidential election he has been old enough to vote in.

He began working about two years ago in the midst of a contract fight with his employer that was only recently resolved after three separate strike actions.

Bonilla explained he got involved with the door-knocking campaign in Arizona because he noticed there was a lot more work to be done for workers and to ensure public officials are elected who support unions.

“The Biden administration really helped out with giving unions as a whole a lot more power to ask for more, demand more from our employers, and I think Kamala Harris wants to continue that. It’s a no-brainer for us. We have to knock on doors for her and get her into office just to get working people more of a say in their life,” said Bonilla.

“Especially for our union, who are service and hospitality workers, we are the backbone of our economy and these are the jobs that low propensity voters, the people who we are reaching out to at the doors, are working in.”

For the US labor movement, the differences between Harris and Trump are stark. Harris has strongly backed labor unions and is backed by a majority of labor unions, while Trump has castigated unions and workers. Under the Trump administration, his appointees scaled back worker protections and rules aimed at encouraging organizing at the US Department of Labor.

“It’s important that I’m out door-knocking and canvassing because Kamala, she supports a lot of the things that I’m faced with, that a lot of American people are faced with, like ending price gouging, supporting the right to make a decision for your own body, and the tips,” said Morlaina Bruce, a guest room attendant at Circus Circus in Las Vegas, Nevada and member of the Culinary Union for seven years. “I’m concerned about the hatred that Trump has put out there, the division, and the lies that he tells.”





No Deal Yet: SAG-AFTRA Remains On Strike Against Major Video Game Developers As Parties Look To Schedule More Talks

Katie Campione
Sat 26 October 2024 


SAG-AFTRA will remain on strike against the major video game companies, as talks on a new deal have been extended once again.

Negotiations on a new Interactive Media Agreement resumed on Wednesday, marking the first official bargaining dates between the two parties since SAG-AFTRA called a strike in July. Bargaining has continued off-and-on, but the sides have been operating without a contract since November 2022.

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So far, no new dates have been announced, and the strike remains in effect until a new deal is made.

Artificial intelligence has been and continues to be the big sticking point in these negotiations. The contract covers voice and performance-capture talent on video games, and the union has repeatedly sounded the alarm on how AI could negatively impact these professions.

Throughout the past three months, SAG-AFTRA has held intermittent pickets at several of the video game companies’ Los Angeles offices, including WB Games and Disney Character Voices. The union hasn’t announced any further pickets, with the last one occurring last week, just before talks resumed.

In another blow to the major companies, the union has been inking deals with more than 100 other video game companies and developers, which have agreed to the terms that SAG-AFTRA claims to also be proposing to this 10-member bargaining unit of the majors.

The gamer companies being struck are Activision Productions, Blindlight, Disney Character Voices, Electronic Arts Productions, Formosa Interactive, Insomniac Games, Llama Productions, Take 2 Productions and WB Games.

In its most recent statement to Deadline, a spokesperson for the video game companies pushed back on SAG-AFTRA’s characterization of the talks, saying the companies “have worked hard to deliver proposals with reasonable terms that protect the rights of performers while ensuring we can continue to use the most advanced technology to create great entertainment experiences for fans.”

Video Game Actors Strike Continues as SAG-AFTRA Extends Contract Negotiations

Jennifer Maas
VARIETY
Sat 26 October 2024 


SAG-AFTRA’s strike against major video game publishers will continue, as the actors union has extended contract negotiations with the employers. This comes after an inability to resolve the ongoing dispute over its Interactive Media Agreement after three days of scheduled talks concluded this week.

Per SAG-AFTRA, the new dates for returning to the table with the video game companies’ bargaining committee will be announced as soon as they are confirmed.

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Prior to returning to the table with the corporate gaming side Wednesday, SAG-AFTRA announced more than 120 video game titles had signed either SAG-AFTRA’s proposed Interim Media Agreement or the indie developer-focused Tiered-Budget Independent Interactive Agreement, as the strike is largely handled on a title by title basis rather than studio by studio.

According to the union, “The SAG-AFTRA strike against all signatories to the Interactive Media Agreement began in July and remains in effect. No further comment is available at this time.”

Companies included in the video game companies’ bargaining committee are Activision Productions, Blindlight, Disney Character Voices, Electronic Arts Productions, Formosa Interactive, Insomniac Games, Llama Productions, Take 2 Productions and WB Games.

The ongoing sticking point between SAG-AFTRA and the companies, which have reached agreement on 24 items in a 25-item proposal, surrounds uses of generative A.I. in games, particularly in regard to motion and performance capture.

SAG-AFTRA executive director Duncan Crabtree-Ireland previously told Variety that the reasoning given by video game publishers as to why they cannot agree to the A.I. language regarding motion and performance capture is unfounded. Publishers argue that motion capture work is largely used as an amalgamation of actors’ performances in video games and not something producers are capable of accounting for when it comes to compensation.

At that time, Crabtree-Ireland also said that while a holiday season boycott of the gaming companies has not been called, that option is “a tool that’s in our toolkit” for the SAG-AFTRA side as the strike continues.

Variety






SAG-AFTRA Video Game Negotiations Extended Amid Strike

Katie Kilkenny
Sat 26 October 2024 


SAG-AFTRA and a coalition of video game companies have extended negotiations after returning to talks for three days but failing to reach a deal.

The union announced the decision on Saturday, adding that dates were not yet set and would later be announced. Meanwhile, the union’s strike against employers signed to its Interactive Media Agreement -— which is nearing its 100-day mark — continues.

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“With tentative agreements on 24 out of 25 proposals, we are optimistic about reaching a final agreement soon as negotiations continue,” a representative for the companies told The Hollywood Reporter.

The union’s performers have been striking Activision Productions Inc., Disney Character Voices Inc., Electronic Arts Productions Inc., Insomniac Games Inc., Take 2 Productions Inc., WB Games Inc., Blindlight LLC, Formosa Interactive LLC and Llama Productions LLC since July 26 as the labor group has clashed with the employers over AI provisions in its contract.

The two sides returned to the negotiations table in person on Oct. 23 in an attempt to reach a deal. In the meantime, the union announced the day prior that more than 120 games from 49 companies had signed interim agreements or tiered-budget agreements with the union, essentially agreeing to the union’s AI asks. Union performers can work under titles that are signatory to those contracts during the work stoppage.

During the strike, SAG-AFTRA has called an additional work stoppage against marquee title League of Legends after claiming that producer Formosa Interactive “tried to subvert” the strike on an unnamed game by attempting to hire nonunion performers through a shell company. Formosa Group has said it “fully reject[s]” the allegations. An unfair labor practice charge filed with the National Labor Relations Board has not yet been resolved.

SAG-AFTRA’s chief contracts officer Ray Rodriguez is heading up negotiations for the union, while Kauff McGuire & Margolis managing partner William E. Zuckerman is representing the employers.

SAG-AFTRA Documentary in the Works From ‘This Changes Everything’ Filmmakers (Exclusive)

Katie Kilkenny
Fri 25 October 2024 


The filmmakers behind prominent documentaries on casting directors and the #MeToo movement have set their sights on another Hollywood subject: the evolution of the performers’ union SAG-AFTRA.

Director-producer Tom Donahue and producer Ilan Arboleda are working on a film about the transformation of the labor organization union between 2008, when the Writers Guild of America struck film and television studios and the Screen Actors Guild considered (but ultimately did not realize) their own work stoppage, and 2024, in the aftermath of the union’s landmark 118-day actors’ strike. The film will represent the culmination of interviews that have spanned a decade conducted by the filmmakers, whose project will additionally cover the union’s history and its longtime fight to create a middle class of actors, they shared with The Hollywood Reporter.

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With two previous projects under their CreativeChaos vmg banner, the filmmaking team has leveraged Hollywood narratives to tell larger stories about social issues in America: 2018’s This Changes Everything explored gender inequality in the workplace, while 2012’s Casting By tackled a female-dominated field that wasn’t as celebrated as other crafts. With this upcoming film, the filmmakers want to use SAG-AFTRA as a means to discuss “the destruction of the middle class in America because of the destruction of the unions in America,” says Donahue.

The filmmakers got to work on the subject in 2011, after the Screen Actors Guild overhauled its leadership in the wake of a failed strike authorization attempt by former president Alan Rosenberg. Arboleda and Donahue began filming interviews with Rosenberg and the leaders of the political faction he was associated with, Membership First, followed by interviews with its rival group, Unite for Strength. The team then “captured the merger as it happened” between the Screen Actors Guild and the American Federation of Radio and Television Artists in 2012, says Arboleda.

The filmmakers put the project on the shelf as they pursued other films, but picked it up again after the 2023 actors’ strike. They plan on documenting how multiple contract negotiation cycles set the stage for the ultimate 118-day work stoppage and the impact that president Fran Drescher had on the union. They also plan on showing how the rise of “new media” (streaming entertainment) changed rates and residuals for performers. Says Arboleda of resuming the project after so many years, “Time is on our side with this, and the amount of time it took was actually almost necessary to be able to see this long-view lens of the problem.”

Drescher and current national executive director Duncan Crabtree-Ireland have agreed to sit for interviews with the filmmakers. Says Drescher in a statement, “SAG-AFTRA’s ‘Hot Labor Summer’ of 2023 is one of the most important chapters in entertainment industry history. This is a critical story that needs to be told.” Adds Crabtree-Ireland, “Our fight for our members inspired workers everywhere and is a story that deserves to be told and amplified in the decades ahead.”

The filmmakers previously logged interviews with former labor leaders Ken Howard, Roberta Reardon and Ed Asner as well as union insiders and observers like Martin Sheen, Amy Aquino, David White, Rebecca Damon, Matthew Kimbrough, David Prindle and former Hollywood Reporter journalist Jonathan Handel, among others. The filmmakers are currently aiming to finish the film in mid-2026.


The Hollywood Reporter

Exclusive-France's Danone cuts out Brazilian soy ahead of tough new EU rules

International Agriculture Fair (Salon International de l'Agriculture)
 at the Porte de Versailles exhibition centre, in Paris · Reuters


Fri, October 25, 2024
By Richa Naidu

LONDON (Reuters) - French dairy giant Danone has stopped sourcing soy from Brazil and now buys from countries in Asia, its finance chief told Reuters, ahead of a European Union rule requiring companies to prove they are not sourcing from deforested land.

Companies from Nestle to Unilever have been gearing up in recent years to meet the new regulation before they face potential fines of up to 20% of turnover.


The European Union Deforestation Regulation (EUDR), covering imports of commodities like cocoa, coffee and soy, was scheduled to come into effect on Dec. 30, though the EU Commission this month proposed a 12-month delay.

In a 2023 report, Danone said it used 262,000 tonnes of soy-based products to feed its cows and 53,000 tonnes of soy beans directly in the manufacture of its Alpro and Silk soymilk and soy yoghurt products. It sourced soy from Brazil indirectly for its animal feed only and had placed it under review.

"We don't (source soy from Brazil anymore)," Jurgen Esser said on Thursday, saying the company was now "absolutely" importing soy from Asia instead.

"We have really a very complete tracking, so we make sure that we only take sustainable ingredients on our side," he said.

He did not give further details on when specifically the company made the shift and which countries in Asia it now buys from.

Danone is not as exposed to deforestation as many of its rivals, Esser said.


Soy is used in about 5% of Danone's dairy cows' feed as its cows are mostly fed on grass or grain, the company said in its 2023 forest report.

It sources soybeans for its Alpro products from Canada, France, the United States and Italy, it said at the time.

The last time Danone broke down soy sourcing for animal feed by percentage was in 2021 when it said Brazil accounted for 18% of soybean meal volumes.

Brazil is forecast to produce a record 170 million metric tons of soy in its next harvest, compared to 125 million metric tons grown in the United States, which it surpassed in 2020. The agricultural powerhouse is the world's top producer of soy and as Europe cuts its imports, shipments to China have grown to an average of over a million tons a week.

In 2019, Danone's peer Nestle stopped buying Brazilian soy from commodities giant Cargill. Rival Unilever, which uses soybean oil in its Hellmann’s condiments and Knorr products, still sources soy from Brazil and says its supplier, CJ Selecta, complies with strict zero-deforestation requirements.

Brazil leads the world in rainforest destruction, even after President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva took office in 2023 and deforestation rates in the country's portion of the Amazon jungle fell by more than half.

While major traders have vowed to stop sourcing soybeans from newly cleared land in the Amazon rainforest, soy farming continues to be a major driver of deforestation in the nearby Cerrado savanna.

Around 10% of global emissions come from deforestation.

Industries and governments have said the new EU rules will disrupt supply chains, exclude poor, small-scale farmers from the EU market, and drive up the cost of basic foodstuffs because many farmers and suppliers were not ready to comply.

(Reporting by Richa Naidu; Additional reporting by Brad Haynes and Jake Spring; Editing by Josephine Mason and Elaine Hardcastle)
Opinion
Trump Issues First Call to Arms Over Election Fraud Conspiracies

Ellie Quinlan Houghtaling
Fri, October 25, 2024


Donald Trump and his allies have suggested for months that the 2024 election will be “stolen,” much like they did in the 2020 cycle, prepping unfounded claims ahead of time that the election will be undermined by “noncitizen” voters, overseas ballot programs, and mail-in voting.

But on Friday, Trump officially called it, writing a “cease and desist” on Truth Social that effectively announced the Republican presidential nominee already believes that the November election is rigged—mere days into early voting.

“CEASE & DESIST: I, together with many Attorneys and Legal Scholars, am watching the Sanctity of the 2024 Presidential Election very closely because I know, better than most, the rampant Cheating and Skullduggery that has taken place by the Democrats in the 2020 Presidential Election,” Trump posted. “It was a Disgrace to our Nation!”



Trump fleetingly acknowledged in September that he did, factually, lose the 2020 election. But his insistence on Friday that he would definitely win the 2024 race came with a threat: that anyone working for the other side of the aisle—from attorneys to election officials and donors—will face consequences when he does.

“Therefore, the 2024 Election, where Votes have just started being cast, will be under the closest professional scrutiny and, WHEN I WIN, those people that CHEATED will be prosecuted to the fullest extent of the Law, which will include long term prison sentences so that this Depravity of Justice does not happen again,” Trump wrote. “We cannot let our Country further devolve into a Third World Nation, AND WE WON’T! Please beware that this legal exposure extends to Lawyers, Political Operatives, Donors, Illegal Voters, & Corrupt Election Officials. Those involved in unscrupulous behavior will be sought out, caught, and prosecuted at levels, unfortunately, never seen before in our Country.”

Trump’s allies have concretely worked to skew election results in battleground states. In Georgia, a pro-Trump state election board issued prohibitive regulations that would have made it significantly more difficult for the state to find people willing to volunteer for the increasingly arduous job.

Trump praised the MAGA members of Georgia’s board days before the August move, describing Dr. Janice Johnston, Rick Jeffares, and Janelle King as “pit bulls fighting for victory.”

Those regulations included mandating that poll workers hand-count ballots after they were electronically filed, and granting local election officials the authority to refuse to certify the results. Both of those rules were thrown out by a judge earlier this month.

Meanwhile, some of the most powerful conservatives in the federal legislature, including House Speaker Mike Johnson and Republican vice presidential nominee JD Vance, have refused to state on the record that they will unequivocally accept the 2024 presidential election results. In an interview with NBC News’s Meet the Press earlier this month, Johnson wavered on whether he would do his job to certify the results regardless of who won, insisting that he would only do so “if the election is free and fair and legal.

“I think Donald J. Trump is your next president, and that can’t happen soon enough,” Johnson said at the time.

Biden rolls out another student debt relief plan, this time targeting borrowers at risk of default









Jordan Weissmann
Updated Fri, October 25, 2024 

The Biden administration released its latest proposal to cancel student loans for millions of Americans on Friday, pushing ahead with the effort even as its other major attempts at debt relief remain tied up in the courts.

The new plan is aimed at helping borrowers who face financial hardships that would make it difficult for them to ever fully pay back their loans. Up to 8 million individuals could see part or all of their debt wiped away at a cost of about $112 billion, according to the Department of Education’s estimates.

The initiative would create two new paths to forgiveness. First, the government would automatically discharge loans for borrowers if it determines, based on a formula, that they have an at least 80% chance of defaulting within the next two years. The Department of Education would make those predictions using its own internal data, and not require individuals to apply for the one-time program.

Borrowers who do not qualify for automatic forgiveness would be able to apply for a second program, in which the government would make a “holistic” assessment of whether they face financial hardship using a long list of factors, including their household income, debt levels, disability status, and where they went to school.

Administration officials suggested the new plans were designed to cancel debts in cases where attempting to collect might no longer be worthwhile to the government because the borrowers would have so much trouble ever repaying their balances.

“Remember, servicing and collecting on defaulted loans — it's not free,” Education Secretary Miguel Cardona said in a press call. “It costs taxpayer dollars, and it can harm borrowers.”

The new plans were proposed as the first step of a formal rulemaking process under the Higher Education Act that could take months to complete, leaving open the question of whether a potential Trump administration would follow through with them.

Nonetheless, the move earned praise from student borrower advocates, who’ve long argued that the president has broad power to forgive debts, particularly for troubled borrowers.

Read more: Do I qualify for student loan forgiveness?

U.S. Secretary of Education Miguel Cardona, speaking at the White House in September. (AP Photo/Rod Lamkey, Jr.) 

“It’s good, it’s necessary, it’s overdue,” said Mike Pierce, executive director of the Student Borrower Protection Center. “This is a power the education secretary has had for half a century and has been used in fits and starts. But there’s never been a holistic articulation of how you should use it and who it should help.”

The move arrives in the middle of a long and tangled legal battle over student debt forgiveness, in which the Biden administration has repeatedly seen its efforts to relieve debts stymied thanks to lawsuits brought by Republican-led states.

The Supreme Court struck down President Biden’s first, sweeping attempt to offer broad-based student loan forgiveness in 2023, finding that the administration had overstepped its authority under the federal statute it had relied on.

The administration announced a new plan under a different legal authority in April of this year aimed at helping almost 30 million distressed borrowers. A group of Republican state attorneys general sued to stop the proposal before it could be finalized, and a federal judge hit a temporary pause on it earlier this month. Administration officials emphasized that the new plans announced Friday were legally separate from those rules, even though both rely on the same statute.

The Biden administration’s generous new student loan repayment plan, known as SAVE, is also currently frozen in court. As a result, about 8 million borrowers who had signed up for the program currently have their loans on pause.

Kevin Carey, education policy program director at New America, said he was skeptical that the new program would survive a court challenge. But even if it did, he said it would be a daunting logistical challenge to “holistically” evaluate potentially millions of forgiveness applications.

“I think this is either very naive or very cynical,” he said. “The cynical interpretation is that the department has no intention to ever do this because they’re counting on the judiciary to stop them.”

Jordan Weissmann is a senior reporter at Yahoo Finance.

US Navy apologizes for the 1882 obliteration of a Tlingit village in Alaska

It was Oct. 26, 1882, in Angoon, a Tlingit village of about 420 people in the southeastern Alaska panhandle. Now, 142 years later, the perpetrator of the bombardment — the U.S. Navy —has apologized.

MARK THIESSEN
Updated Sat, October 26, 2024 

In this photo provided by the U.S. Navy, Commander of Navy Region Northwest Rear Adm. Mark Sucato is gifted a canoe paddle by Leonard John, Raven Clan, Native Village of Angoon, following the One People Canoe Society's welcoming ceremony to kick off the annual Juneau Maritime Festival on May 4, 2024, in Juneau, Alaska.
 (Chief Mass Communication Spc. Gretchen Albrecht/U.S. Navy via AP)

ANCHORAGE, Alaska (AP) — Shells fell on the Alaska Native village as winter approached, and then sailors landed and burned what was left of homes, food caches and canoes. Conditions grew so dire in the following months that elders sacrificed their own lives to spare food for surviving children.

It was Oct. 26, 1882, in Angoon, a Tlingit village of about 420 people in the southeastern Alaska panhandle. Now, 142 years later, the perpetrator of the bombardment — the U.S. Navy —has apologized.

Rear Adm. Mark Sucato, the commander of the Navy's northwest region, issued the apology during an at-times emotional ceremony Saturday, the anniversary of the atrocity.

“The Navy recognizes the pain and suffering inflicted upon the Tlingit people, and we acknowledge these wrongful actions resulted in the loss of life, the loss of resources, the loss of culture, and created and inflicted intergenerational trauma on these clans,” he said during the ceremony, which was livestreamed from Angoon. “The Navy takes the significance of this action very, very seriously and knows an apology is long overdue.”

While the rebuilt Angoon received $90,000 in a settlement with the Department of Interior in 1973, village leaders have for decades sought an apology as well, beginning each yearly remembrance by asking three times, “Is there anyone here from the Navy to apologize?"

“You can imagine the generations of people that have died since 1882 that have wondered what had happened, why it happened, and wanted an apology of some sort, because in our minds, we didn’t do anything wrong,” said Daniel Johnson Jr., a tribal head in Angoon.

The attack was one of a series of conflicts between the American military and Alaska Natives in the years after the U.S. bought the territory from Russia in 1867. The U.S. Navy issued an apology last month for destroying the nearby village of Kake in 1869, and the Army has indicated that it plans to apologize for shelling Wrangell, also in southeast Alaska, that year, though no date has been set.

The Navy acknowledges the actions it undertook or ordered in Angoon and Kake caused deaths, a loss of resources and multigenerational trauma, Navy civilian spokesperson Julianne Leinenveber said in an email prior to the event.

“An apology is not only warranted, but long overdue,” she said.

Today, Angoon remains a quaint village of about 420 people, with colorful old homes and totem poles clustered on the west side of Admiralty Island, accessible by ferry or float plane, in the Tongass National Forest, the nation's largest. The residents are vastly outnumbered by brown bears, and the village in recent years has strived to foster its ecotourism industry. Bald eagles and humpback whales abound, and the salmon and halibut fishing is excellent.

Accounts vary as to what prompted its destruction, but they generally begin with the accidental death of a Tlingit shaman, Tith Klane. Klane was killed when a harpoon gun exploded on a whaling ship owned by his employer, the North West Trading Co.

The Navy's version says tribal members forced the vessel to shore, possibly took hostages and, in accordance with their customs, demanded 200 blankets in compensation.

The company declined to provide the blankets and ordered the Tlingits to return to work. Instead, in sorrow, they painted their faces with coal tar and tallow — something the company’s employees took as a precursor to an insurrection. The company’s superintendent then sought help from Naval Cmdr. E.C. Merriman, the top U.S. official in Alaska, saying a Tlingit uprising threatened the lives and property of white residents.

The Tlingit version contends the boat's crew, which included Tlingit members, likely remained with the vessel out of respect, planning to attend the funeral, and that no hostages were taken. Johnson said the tribe never would have demanded compensation so soon after the death.

Merriman arrived on Oct. 25 and insisted the tribe provide 400 blankets by noon the next day as punishment for disobedience. When the Tlingits turned over just 81, Merriman attacked, destroying 12 clan houses, smaller homes, canoes and the village’s food stores.

Six children died in the attack, and "there’s untold numbers of elderly and infants who died that winter of both cold, exposure and hunger,” Johnson said.

Billy Jones, Tith Klane’s nephew, was 13 when Angoon was destroyed. Around 1950, he recorded two interviews, and his account was later included in a booklet prepared for the 100th anniversary of the bombing in 1982.

“They left us homeless on the beach,” Jones said.

Rosita Worl, the president of Sealaska Heritage Institute in Juneau, described how some elders that winter “walked into the forest” — meaning they died, sacrificing themselves so the younger people would have more food.

Even though the Navy’s written history conflicts with the Tlingit oral tradition, the Navy defers to the tribe’s account “out of respect for the long-lasting impacts these tragic incidents had on the affected clans,” said Leinenveber, the Navy spokesperson.

Tlingit leaders were so stunned when Navy officials told them, during a Zoom call in May, that the apology would finally be forthcoming that no one spoke for five minutes, Johnson said.

Eunice James, of Juneau, a descendant of Tith Klane, said she hopes the apology helps her family and the entire community heal. She expects his presence at the ceremony.

HISTORIC APOLOGY; ABOUT TIME

Biden apologizes to Native Americans for 150 years of abusive government-funded boarding schools

Michael Williams, CNN
Fri, October 25, 2024 

President Joe Biden speaks at the Gila River Crossing School in the Gila River Indian Community, in Laveen Village, near Phoenix, Arizona, on October 25.

President Joe Biden on Friday formally apologized to Native Americans for what he described as “one of the most horrific chapters in American history,” government-funded boarding schools that abused indigenous children and forced them to assimilate over a 150-year period.

“Quite frankly, there is no excuse that this apology took 150 years to make,” Biden said in Laveen, Arizona, after calling for a moment of silence to “remember those lost and the generations living with that trauma.”

At least 18,000 children were taken from their families and forced to attend more than 400 boarding schools across 37 states or then-territories between 1819 and 1969. Three years ago, Interior Secretary Deb Haaland, the first Native American to serve as a Cabinet secretary, commissioned the Federal Indian Boarding School Initiative to review the schools’ impacts on Native Americans.

Their final report, issued this summer, found at least 973 Native American children died while attending these federal boarding schools.

“As president,” Biden said on Friday, “I believe it is important that we do know there were generations of native children stolen, taken away to places they didn’t know, with people they never met, who spoke a language they had never heard.”

“Native communities silenced – their children’s laughter and play were gone,” he added. “… Children abused emotionally, physically and sexually abused, forced into hard labor, some put up for adoption without the consent of their birth parents, some left for dead and unmarked graves.”

Children who returned home, the president added, were “wounded in body and spirit.”

Biden’s remarks were made at the Gila Crossing Community School outside of Phoenix. It’s the first time he has visited Indian Country as president and the first time in 10 years a sitting president has visited tribal lands. Then-President Barack Obama paid a visit to the Standing Rock Sioux Indian Reservation in 2014.

Biden acknowledged that “no apology can or will make up for what was lost during the darkness of the federal boarding school policy.”

But, the president added, “we’re finally moving forward into the light.”

The president was briefly interrupted during his remarks by two pro-Palestine protesters. He paused his speech to say that the killing of people in Gaza “has to stop.”

CNN’s Arlette Saenz contributed to this report.



Biden apology for Indian boarding schools interrupted by Gaza war protester

Gabriella Borter and Kanishka Singh
Fri, October 25, 2024 

U.S. President Joe Biden delivers remarks in Gila River Indian Community

U.S. President Joe Biden delivers remarks in Gila River Indian Community

U.S. President Joe Biden delivers remarks in Gila River Indian Community

U.S. President Joe Biden delivers remarks in Gila River Indian Community


LAVEEN VILLAGE, Arizona (Reuters) - President Joe Biden formally apologized on Friday for the U.S. government's role in running abusive Native American boarding schools for more than 150 years, and was heckled at the event over his support for Israel's war in Gaza.

"This to me is one of the most consequential things I've ever had an opportunity to do in my whole career," Biden said in his apology at an outdoor football and track field in Laveen Village, Arizona, near Phoenix.

"It's a sin on our soul. ... I formally apologize."

Several hundred people attended, many of them in traditional tribal dress. They cheered as Biden apologized for the generational trauma faced by the Native American community due to the boarding schools across the country.

Biden faced a brief interruption when a pro-Palestinian protester shouted: "How can you apologize for a genocide while committing a genocide in Palestine?"

The president replied, "There is a lot of innocent people being killed and it has to stop."

U.S. support for Israel's wars in Gaza and Lebanon after the Oct. 7, 2023, Hamas attack on Israel has led to months of demonstrations across the United States. Rights advocates have demanded an arms embargo against Israel as tens of thousands of civilians have been killed in the region, and Palestinians in the Gaza Strip have grappled with hunger and disease.


Israel and Washington deny genocide allegations brought against Israel at the World Court in relation to Gaza, and Washington has maintained its support for its ally.

Friday's trip marked Biden's first time visiting Indian Country while in office and is part of his effort to cement his legacy in his final months in the White House.

Arizona is also one of the seven battleground states in a tight race for the Nov. 5 U.S. election in which Democratic Vice President Kamala Harris faces Republican former President Donald Trump.

U.S. Interior Secretary Deb Haaland, the first Native American to be a cabinet secretary, had launched an investigation to recognize the troubled legacy of federal Native American boarding school policies.

An Interior Department investigative report released in July found that at least 973 children died in these schools. Haaland's family members were among the children forced into the boarding schools.

From 1819 through the 1970s, the United States implemented policies establishing and supporting hundreds of American Indian boarding schools across the U.S. Their purpose was to culturally assimilate Native Americans by forcibly removing them from their families, communities, religions and cultural beliefs.

Like the United States, Australia, New Zealand and Canada have in recent years reviewed past abuse toward Indigenous communities, including children in schools.

(Reporting by Gabriella Borter in Laveen Village, Arizona, and Kanishka Singh in Washington; editing by Jonathan Oatis)



Biden formally apologizes to Native Americans

Washington Post
Fri, October 25, 2024 


President Joe Biden is the first president to formally apologizes for the U.S. government’s role in running hundreds of Indian boarding schools for a 150-year period that stripped Native American children of their language and culture in a systematic effort to force them to assimilate into White society, at Gila Crossing Community School on the Gila River Indian Community outside Phoenix on October 25, 2024, in Laveen, AZ.


Biden apologizes for Native American boarding school policy he calls ‘blot’ on US history

Andrew Feinberg
Fri, October 25, 2024

President Joe Biden speaks at the Gila Crossing Community School, Friday, Oct. 25, 2024, in Laveen, Ariz. (AP Photo/Rick Scuteri) (Associated Press)


President Joe Biden formally apologized to Native Americans for the US government’s attempt to erase tribal culture via a system of boarding schools that separated native children from their parents for decades, calling the long-discarded policy “a sin on our soul.”

Speaking at the Gila Crossing Community School on the Gila River Indian Community Reservation in Laveen Village, Arizona, Biden said there was “no excuse” that it took a full half-century for the government to offer contrition for the system.

“I formally apologize as president of the United States of America for what we did,” he said on Friday.

The federal boarding school system routinely took Native American children from their families and forcibly re-educated them to stamp out native culture. The policy was in place from 1819 through the 1970s.

“The Federal Indian boarding school policy — the pain it has caused will only be a significant mark of shame, a blot on American history. For too long, this all happened with virtually no public attention, not written about in our history books, not taught in our schools.”

Biden also called the boarding school system “one of the most horrific chapters” in the nearly 250-year-old American story — even as it remains untold in most history books.


Biden’s interior secretary, Deb Haaland, is the first Native American cabinet member in US history (Copyright 2024 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.)

“As President, I believe it is important that we do know now generations of native children stolen, taken away to places they didn't know, with people they never met who spoke a language they had never heard,” he said, as he described how the children would arrive at schools to have their native clothes taken, their hair cut, and their names replaced with an English-language name.


Some children, he said, were “abused ... emotionally, physically and sexually,” with some “put up for adoption without the consent of their birth parents” and a number even “left for dead in unmarked graves.”

Roughly 1,000 Native American children are known to have died in the federally-run boarding schools, though Biden said the “real number” of deaths is “likely to be much, much higher” as he spoke of “lost generations” and the loss of “culture and language” as well as trust between native tribes and the federal government.

“I have a solemn responsibility to be the first president to formally apologize to the native peoples, Native Americans, Native Hawaiians, Native Alaskans and federal Indian boarding schools. It's long, long, long overdue,” he said.

Biden added that while the policy may have been “too shameful to acknowledge” for some Americans, bringing the true history into the light is part of America’s responsibility as a “great nation.”


“We must know the good, the bad, the truth of who we are as a nation. That's what great nations do ... we do not erase history. We make history, we learn from history, and we remember so we can heal as a nation,” he said.

Biden’s visit comes as his onetime running-mate and potential successor, Vice President Kamala Harris, is in the final days of campaigning against former president Donald Trump.

In the key swing state of Arizona, Native Americans are an important voting bloc, and Democrats are hopeful that Biden’s visit to the Gila River reservation will provide a boost in voter turnout among the tribal nations.

Four years ago, Biden became the first Democrat to carry Arizona’s electoral votes in decades when he won the popular vote there by just over 10,000 votes.