Sunday, November 03, 2024

Gender gap: How the US election is becoming a battle of the sexes

EXPLAINER

The 2024 US election is shaping up to be one marked by a significant gender divide: while Donald Trump holds a significant advantage with the male electorate, Kamala Harris commands a comparable lead among women. As both candidates seek to mobilise possible voters, the stakes for women have never been higher.


Issued on: 30/10/2024 
AFP
Supporters wait for the start of a Democratic campaign rally in Washington DC on October 29, 2024. © Kent Nishimura, Getty Images via AFP

Word of a grassroots campaign began to spread on social media late last month. Post-it notes encouraging voters to cast a ballot for Democratic candidate Kamala Harris were found stuck on the backs of toilet stalls, tampon boxes and diaper bags. Each message varied slightly, but most began with a conspiratorial appeal: “Woman to woman”, they read, before adding: “No one sees your vote at the polls” and then signing off with “Harris/Walz 2024”.

Now, ready-made sticky notes endorsing the Democratic ticket are even available for sale on Amazon.


While nobody knows who initiated the viral campaign, the Post-its are targeting women in Republican areas of the US, the so-called red states. It is part of a last-ditch effort to whisper to right-leaning female voters who fear reprisals from their husbands should they choose not to vote for Republican candidate Donald Trump.

Poll after poll has found a gaping gender gap in the 2024 US presidential election. Though more women supporting Democrats than Republicans is not a new phenomenon, the gender gap has grown over recent decades – especially among young voters.

With only one week to go until Election Day and an extremely tight race ahead, a whisper campaign could be enough to tip either candidate over the finish line.
Micro-targeting to fight the odds

“The margins are too small … So one or two points is huge. It does not sound huge, but it is,” said Ellen Kountz, author of “Vice Presidential Portraits: The Incredible Story of Kamala Harris” and dean of the finance department at the INSEEC business school.

Hence the Post-it campaign. Kountz explained that such “micro-targeting” – when Democrat or Republican campaigners zoom in on a specific group of electors they feel are on the fence – can be very efficient. “Joe Biden won with 11,000 votes in Georgia,” Kountz recalled of the 2020 election that saw the current Democratic president take over the White House.

Efforts to sway Republic women to vote for Harris were on full display when Republican former congresswoman Liz Cheney toured with the vice president, encouraging conservative suburban women to snub Trump.

“You can vote your conscience and not ever have to say a word to anybody,” Cheney told crowds on the second of three events in Michigan on October 21.

Read moreRepublican Liz Cheney rallies with Harris, urges voters to reject Trump's 'cruelty'

Quinnipiac University polling done throughout October in five key swing states showed Harris leading significantly among female voters while Trump held the same advantage among male voters.

“The women’s vote will be decisive this election,” Katherine Tate, a political science professor at Brown University, shared in a recent panel on what to expect on Election Day.

“If Harris wins, it will be because women elected her,” Tate added.

There is also the question of voter turnout. Women have consistently registered and voted at higher rates than men in every presidential election since 1980, according to the Center for American Women and Politics.

So far, women are outpacing men in early turnout. According to Politico and data from the University of Florida’s United States Election Project, there is so far a 10-point gender gap in early voting in Michigan, Pennsylvania, North Carolina and Georgia. And this holds true across the political spectrum: Republican women are also voting early.

The Harris camp has expressed optimism over the gender makeup of early voting and is now focusing on convincing moderate suburban women as well as non-college-educated White women in the final days of the campaign. The hope, it seems, is that these women will turn out en masse the way they did in the 2022 midterm elections.

“There are two gender gaps. One is related to presidential preferences, with women more likely to support the Democratic ticket and men more likely to support the Republican ticket. But then there is a huge gap in the last 20 years or so with women turning out in more consistent and higher rates [to vote],” said Susanne Schwarz, professor of political science at Swarthmore College.

“I think we will see a record turnout of women for this election. We have already seen a record number of young women registering to vote. The gender gap in turnout is probably going to widen in this election,” Schwarz added.
Widening divide among young voters

The gender divide across political lines in the US is particularly stark among young voters. It is a surprising trend, given that the majority of young people voted for Biden in the previous election – regardless of gender.

Some 66 percent of women ages 18 to 39 said they were likely to vote for Harris in an ABC/Ipsos poll published on October 27 compared to only 32 percent for Trump. But only 46 percent of men from the same age bracket planned to vote for Harris and 51 percent for Trump.

A gap of this size for young people did not exist a generation ago, let alone an election ago.

It is partly explained by a broader trend of young women becoming more progressive than their male counterparts, recent research has revealed. A recent Gallup poll found that young women in the United States have become significantly more liberal than young men since Trump was elected in 2016.

Read moreUS elections explainer: The seven battleground states to watch in 2024

Young women’s ideological shift to the left can be explained by a multitude of factors. The #MeToo movement in 2017 put a spotlight on sexual violence and harassment. Women became more galvanised politically over the years too, especially after Roe v Wade was overturned in June 2022, putting an end to women’s federal right to abortion. And their liberalism has also been reflected in their stances on the environment, unease with lax gun laws and race relations, according to Gallup.

“On average, we see women endorsing a little more community-oriented, social programme-oriented platforms and candidates who display that. Whereas Trump has been very good at tapping into this long tradition of individualism in the US, promising that he will lift you up,” Schwarz said.

On the other hand, young men “often feel like if they ask questions they are labelled as misogynist, homophobic or racist” and then they “get sucked into a 'bro-culture'” as a result, John Della Volpe, the director of polling at the Harvard Institute of Politics, told BBC News.

But what this could mean for this year’s election outcome is unclear, Schwarz said. “It depends on the turnout rate among young voters … They are the group who are least likely to turn out,” she noted.
Shifting gender roles and masculinity

Trump has cast himself as a vengeful protector ahead of the 2024 presidential election. “I am your warrior. I am your justice,” he declared at CPAC, the annual gathering for conservatives. At a late September campaign rally in Indiana, he told women, “I will be your protector,” adding that they will be “happy, healthy, confident and free” and, as a result, will “no longer be thinking about abortion”.

His goal, some say, is to appeal to men who feel that traditional masculinity is under threat. And it seems those efforts – notably backed by billionaire Elon Musk – are resonating with male voters. According to a CBS News poll result released on October 27, men are more inclined to say efforts to promote gender equality have gone too far in the US.

This may be even more the case with young men who are shifting to the right of the political spectrum. New York Times reporter Claire Cain Miller recently interviewed young voters for The Daily podcast and found that a core driver in young men was wanting to provide for a family, and that many felt this is not possible in the current economy. Though they may not have families yet, being a provider seemed to strike at the core of their identity.

“I feel like you’re not a man until you have to take care of other people. Being able to financially and emotionally support those around you makes you a man,” 20-year-old Ranger Erwin, based in Las Vegas, told Miller.



01:47

Meanwhile, Harris is appealing to an entirely different form of masculinity. In contrast to the image of a hyper-masculine protector, Tim Walz, the vice presidential candidate, perfectly embodies the image of a kind and caring American dad.

“There is a new kind of male persona that is being put forward,” Kountz remarked. “Kamala is surrounded by strong men, but not macho men. Like Tim Waltz. He is a gun-toting hunter, but he is also No. 2 to a woman,” she said.

“I would almost say those are new gender roles. And the Republicans are doing an exaggerated, toxic and hyper masculinity, which I don’t think in the end is helpful for them,” Kountz said.

Harris is breaking traditional gender stereotypes in her own way. “A great example is Kamala and her gun,” Kountz said, referring to when Harris revealed she was a gun owner during the presidential debate on September 10.

“I don’t think people think of Black ladies with guns … It breaks gender codes.”

“We are conditioned to want to hold on to these traditional roles and ideas of gender, but a lot has moved,” Kountz pointed out. “Kamala does not even speak about being a woman.”

With such a close race, it is difficult to say which strategy will bear the most fruit. For Democratic pollster Celinda Lake, who spoke to Vox in an interview on October 26, what is certain is that “the formula for victory is to win women by more than you lose men”.


Harris has spurred a gender gap among Asian American voters for the first time in polling history

Sakshi Venkatraman
Fri, November 1, 2024 

Asian woman voting booths in polling station office
 (Evgeniy Shkolenko / Getty Images)


Sumati Thomas, 42, has always leaned left, but struggling with fertility and requiring emergency reproductive care sealed the deal for her. The Mississippi resident and mother, who is Black and Indian American, will be voting for Vice President Kamala Harris next week.

“I had to use IVF to have my youngest and so the thought that that possibly cannot be an option for many families is really devastating,” she said. “I’m hoping that with a Harris presidency, she can help work with Congress to bring Roe back.”

Thomas is part of a growing cohort of Asian American women whose support for the vice president has skyrocketed, creating a gender gap between Asian voters for the first time in the history of polling the racial group. Before Harris took over the Democratic ticket, Asian men and women supported President Joe Biden at 46% and 47% respectively, according to a report from AAPI Data released last month.

After Harris became the nominee, support from Asian American women jumped to 72%. Support from Asian American men also increased, but not as drastically, sitting now at 59%.

“In prior years, gender has played a very small and insignificant role, but this year, it’s playing a bigger role,” said Karthick Ramakrishnan, founder of AAPI Data. “How we interpret the data is that it’s more about what attracts women to Harris.”

Those numbers track with that of the general population, in which women support Harris with a 14-point margin over men (55%-41%), according to an NBC News poll. But while significant gaps are common for white voters, they’re less common with minority communities, Ramakrishnan said.

He added that this kind of gender schism in support for a presidential candidate hasn’t been seen before in the Asian community.



There could be several reasons why Asian women are flocking to Harris in droves, he said. According to AAPI Data’s report, nearly half of them cited Harris’ being a woman as something important to them, which researchers didn’t expect.

“When we asked about what aspects of Harris’ identity are important to Asian American voters, we were surprised to see that her identity as an Indian or as a South Asian was not as high as her identity as a woman,” he said.

Though not nearly as strong as Harris’ pull on Asian women, there are factors that might be siphoning Asian men, Ramakrishnan said. Negative perceptions of the state of the economy are one possible factor, he said. Trump has made marginal gains among Asian men too, he said, but Harris’ draw on both groups far outweighs it.


Sumati Thomas, 42, from Mississippi.

“There has been no bigger advocate for the AAPI community than President Trump, as he created an environment where diversity, equal opportunity, and prosperity were afforded to everybody,” Trump campaign spokesperson Steven Cheung said in a statement. “The 2024 campaign is poised to build upon the strength and successes of Asian Americans during President Trump’s first term to propel him to a history second term victory.”

Reproductive care and Harris’ strong stances on securing it could also be major factors pulling in women, as abortion access is more important to Asian American women than men, experts said.

“AAPI women and South Asian women view abortion access as health care,” said Varun Nikore, executive director of the nonprofit AAPI Victory Alliance. “They see this as the fundamental right that they’ve always had in this country being taken away, and they don’t like it.”

Thomas said this issue is the main one driving her to the polls this year. In her home state of Mississippi, which has a near-total abortion ban punishable by jail time, she finds it all the more critical to vote for Harris.

“There’s health care that I was able to experience, that I feel like if I had those same medical emergencies trying to have kids now, I wouldn’t be able to experience the same quality health care in Mississippi that I did years ago now,” she said. “I feel like people miss the other side of the abortion talk when it comes to how it affects families who are trying to actively have kids.”


The Harris campaign declined to comment.

Thomas also feels connected to the vice president on an identity level, sharing a background as Black and Indian. Her family is multiracial, with members who are old, young, Indian, Black and white. But across the board, the women she’s close to are all more excited since the change in the Democratic ballot.

“For my kids to have a president that looks like them is amazing,” she said. “Seeing my family members, being able to have that representation is just really powerful.”

“I think they see themselves in Kamala Harris,” Nikore said.

COLD WAR 2.0

US envoy sees some 'concerning signals' in Russia-China military cooperation in Arctic


FILE PHOTO: A general view of snowcapped mountains and the Arctic Ocean on the coast o
f Svalbard near Longyearbyen, Norway,

By Gwladys Fouche

OSLO (Reuters) - The United States is watching growing cooperation between Russia and China in the Arctic closely and some of their recent military collaboration in the region sends "concerning signals", the U.S. Arctic ambassador said.

Russia and China have stepped up military cooperation in the Arctic while deepening overall ties in recent years that include China supplying Moscow with dual-use goods despite Western sanctions on Russia over the war in Ukraine.



Russia and the United States are among eight countries with territory in the resource-rich Arctic. China calls itself a "near-Arctic" state and wants to create a "Polar Silk Road" in the Arctic, a new shipping route as the polar ice sheet recedes with rising temperatures.

Michael Sfraga, the United States' first ambassador-at-large for Arctic affairs, said the "frequency and the complexity" of recent military cooperation between Moscow and Beijing in the region sent "concerning signals".

"The fact that they are working together in the Arctic has our attention," Sfraga, who was sworn in last month, told Reuters in a telephone interview from Alaska. "We are being both vigilant and diligent about this. We're watching very closely this evolution of their activity."

"It raises our radar, literally and figuratively," he added.



Sfraga cited a joint run by Russian and Chinese bomber planes off the coast of Alaska in July, and Chinese and Russian coast guard ships sailing together through the Bering Strait in October.

He said these activities had been conducted in international waters, in line with international law, but the fact that the bombers flew off the coast of Alaska had raised concerns for U.S. security.

"We do need to think about security, heighten our own alliances, our own mutual defences," Sfraga said. "Alaska, the North American Arctic, is NATO's western flank and so we need to think about the Arctic that way."

The activity was also a concern for U.S. allies as the Bering Strait and the Bering Sea give access to the North Pacific and South Pacific, he said.



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The Pentagon said in a report released in July that the growing alignment between Russia and China in the Arctic was "a concern".

China and Russia are trying to develop Arctic shipping routes as Moscow seeks to deliver more oil and gas to China amid Western sanctions. Beijing is seeking an alternative shipping route to reduce its dependence on the Strait of Malacca.

The Arctic also holds fossil fuels and minerals beneath the land and the seabed that could become more accessible with global warming.

(Reporting by Gwladys Fouche in Oslo, Editing by Timothy Heritage)



US and China in 'robust conversation' on North Korea sending troops to Russia: Blinken
South China Morning Post
Fri, November 1, 2024 at 3:30 AM MDT
5 min read
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US and China are engaged in high-level dialogue regarding North Korea sending troops to Russia as the Kremlin wages war on Ukraine, America's top diplomat said on Thursday.

US Secretary of State Antony Blinken described "a robust conversation" with China taking place this week about Moscow and Pyongyang's military cooperation in the Ukraine war.

Blinken urged Beijing to "do more" to curb "provocative" actions being taken by two of its closest partners.



Do you have questions about the biggest topics and trends from around the world? Get the answers with SCMP Knowledge, our new platform of curated content with explainers, FAQs, analyses and infographics brought to you by our award-winning team.

"I think they know well the concerns that we have and the expectations that, both in word and deed, they'll use the influence that they have to work to curb these activities. So we'll see if they take action," Blinken said of China after a meeting he and Defence Secretary Lloyd Austin held with their South Korean counterparts in Washington.


US Secretary of State Antony Blinken (right) with South Korean Foreign Minister Cho Tae-yul at the State Department in Washington on Thursday. Photo: Getty Images via AFP alt=US Secretary of State Antony Blinken (right) with South Korean Foreign Minister Cho Tae-yul at the State Department in Washington on Thursday. Photo: Getty Images via AFP>

His remarks came after a New York Times report on Thursday said his deputy, Kurt Campbell, and other State Department officials met Chinese diplomats "for several hours" in the residence of Xie Feng, Beijing's envoy to Washington, on Tuesday.



Asked about the meeting, the Chinese embassy in Washington told the Post that China and the US "have always maintained regular, routine and normal communication on China-US relations and international and regional issues".

"China's position on the Ukraine crisis is consistent and clear. China strives for peace talks and political settlement of the Ukraine crisis. This position remains unchanged. China will continue to play a constructive role to this end," said spokesperson Liu Pengyu.

The Sino-American engagement came amid Washington and Kyiv's latest assessments that North Korean troops could see combat against Ukraine "in the coming days".

North Korean troops were reported last week to be in eastern Russia in a major escalation of the armed conflict that began in February 2022.



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Blinken said at least 8,000 North Korean soldiers were now in Russia's Kursk region and receiving training in "artillery, UAVs, basic infantry operations, including trench clearing".

This activity, the envoy continued, indicated that Russians "fully intend to use these forces in frontline operations".

Blinken warned that once North Korean troops engage in combat against Ukraine they would become "legitimate" military targets. And the US would closely consult its allies on what "actions" to take in response, he added.

But the Chinese foreign ministry last week said it was unaware whether North Korea had deployed troops to Russia.



When asked about what role it would play if there were escalations in Ukraine and the Korean peninsula as a result of Pyongyang's troop deployment, Beijing called for all parties to de-escalate tensions.

The ministry stated that China was always committed to peace on the peninsula and a political solution to the Ukraine conflict.

Since last year, Russia and North Korea have moved to bolster their military ties, with Pyongyang reportedly sending tens of millions of munitions to support the Kremlin's invasion of Ukraine.

In exchange, Pyongyang has received Moscow's technological support for its tactical weapons.



China has largely refrained from commenting on Russia and North Korea's apparently growing closeness, saying it is an internal matter for the two countries.

Some analysts see their unprecedented level of direct military cooperation as putting Beijing in an awkward position.


Russian President Vladimir Putin (left) and North Korean leader Kim Jong-un toast during a reception in Pyongyang on June 19, 2024. Photo: Sputnik/AFP/Getty Images alt=Russian President Vladimir Putin (left) and North Korean leader Kim Jong-un toast during a reception in Pyongyang on June 19, 2024. Photo: Sputnik/AFP/Getty Images>

Aside from the stigma of being grouped with Russia and North Korea, China's ties with the West have frayed over its alleged support of dual-use goods to the Kremlin.



Duyeon Kim of the Centre for a New American Security, a Washington-based think tank, said Beijing did not want regional tensions to escalate such that Moscow and Pyongyang's actions could trigger a response by the US.

"I do not expect China to overtly make some sort of public announcement or ... pressure North Korea and Russia publicly, although I would suspect it might do some of this pressuring quietly, discreetly, especially considering its strategic competition with the United States, its relationship with Russia," Kim said last week.

South Korean Defence Minister Kim Yong-hyun on Thursday said Seoul believed Beijing could "intervene" if the two countries' military cooperation deepened.

"I think a more clear assessment is China is watching and waiting and if the situation worsens ... China either as a mediator or in any other role may be intervening," he said.

Austin urged China to ask Russia "some hard questions" as to whether it sought to escalate the Ukraine conflict when Beijing has professed it is "serious about its desire for de-escalation".

On Monday, Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi and Russian Deputy Foreign Minister Andrey Rudenko discussed the Ukraine conflict in Beijing.

The two countries reaffirmed their ties, calling them "not subject to interference", a week after President Xi Jinping and his Russian counterpart Vladimir Putin delivered the same message during the Brics summit in Kazan.

 Copyright © 2024 South China Morning Post Publishers Ltd. All rights reserved.

U$A

Soda is making a comeback


Nathaniel Meyersohn, CNN
Fri, November 1, 2024

Consumers are turning away from pricier Starbucks coffee, McDonald’s Big Mac meals, Doritos chips, Monster energy drinks and Heineken beer. But they can’t stop guzzling Coke and Dr Pepper.

Both Coca-Cola and Dr Pepper said last week on quarterly earnings calls that they sold more soda cases last quarter. During the third quarter of this year, total soft drink volumes grew 1.3% from a year ago, according to data from Evercore ISI.


It’s a comeback for soda, which was in decline for two decades over the health effects of sugary drinks. Frequently drinking sugar-sweetened beverages like soda is associated with a range of chronic health problems, including weight gain, obesity, type 2 diabetes and heart disease, according to the Centers for Disease Control.

“This is so different than five, ten years ago,” said Robert Ottenstein, an analyst at Evercore ISI. “There’s been a huge change in attitude. These products were declining 4% a year for a long time.”

The World Health Organization also said last year for the first time that aspartame, a popular artificial sweetener found in diet sodas, should be categorized as “possibly carcinogenic to humans.”

But consumers right now seem willing to brush off health concerns. They view sugary Coke and Dr Pepper, or newer sugar-free sodas like Coke Zero, as a more affordable treat than other choices like an energy drink, flavored tea, a bag of chips or a candy bar.

The average price of 16 ounces of potato chips in September was $6.46, while a 2-liter soft drink was $2.00, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics.
Cans of Dr Pepper soda are displayed on June 3, 2024 in San Anselmo, California. - Justin Sullivan/Getty Images

New marketing and renewed interest from younger consumers are also boosting soda brands.

Soda’s growth comes as consumers are closely watching their purchases and passing up anything they don’t perceive as a good deal. Companies have hiked prices by as much as 40% since the pandemic began in 2020, and consumers are walking away from brands whose prices they feel have gotten out of control. They’re also eating out less, making quicker trips to the store — rather than loading up their carts with expensive grocery hauls — and buying stores’ cheaper private-label brands.


“The carbonated soft drinks category is outperforming our expectations,” Timothy Cofer, the CEO of Dr Pepper parent company Keurig Dr Pepper, said on an earnings call. Soft drinks’ low prices position them to appeal to “value-seeking consumers,” he said.

It’s a reversal of years of declining soda sales.

In 2015, US per-capita consumption of soft drinks fell to its lowest level since 1986. Coca-Cola and Pepsi bought up flavored water, energy drink and other beverage lines to fuel growth, giving consumers more drink choices than ever.


But soda sales grew during the pandemic as consumers loaded up at grocery stores and returned to old favorites with restaurants closed. More recently, soft drink sales have been aided by lower- and middle-income consumers seeking inexpensive indulgences, companies and analysts say.

In some cases, consumers may be switching from more expensive energy drinks to a cheaper can of soda to get their caffeine rush. “Middle and lower-income consumers that are frequent users of energy drinks are moving into soft drinks,” said Duane Stanford, the editor of Beverage Digest, a trade publication.

A view of Coke Zero Sugar at the New York City Wine & Food Festival on October 14, 2021. - Noam Galai/Getty Images for NYCWFF


Coke Zero and Dr Pepper Creamy Coconut

Soda’s comeback has also been bolstered by the rapid growth of sugarless sodas like Coke Zero Sugar. Coke Zero’s volume increased 11% last quarter, the company said. Regular Coke’s volumes were flat, while Diet Coke grew.

Zero-sugar sodas have been the biggest growth areas for the industry, said Stanford. Coke started the trend in 2005, and gave Coke Zero a makeover in 2021 to make it taste and look more like regular Coke.

Although companies market no-sugar or diet sodas as better alternatives to full-sugar versions, they should not be considered healthier because they contain artificial sweeteners. Artificial sweeteners have been shown to have harmful effects on the gut and, counterproductively, can increase weight gain, said Laura Schmidt, a professor of health policy at the University of California at San Francisco’s medical school who studies the impact of sugar and the soda industry.

“Switching from one ingredient that causes harm to a different ingredient that causes harm isn’t a solution,” she said.

New marketing is also helping soda brands. Dr Pepper’s “Creamy Coconut” limited-time version boosted sales, and its new Canada Dry “Fruit Splash” flavor was its “most significant launch in years,” CEO Cofer said. The company also redesigned 7Up cans for the first time in a decade.

Dr Pepper last year surpassed Pepsi as the second biggest soda brand in America behind Coke. Dr Pepper has invested heavily in marketing during college football games and come up with novel flavors like strawberries and cream to entice soda drinkers.

While consumers are drinking more Coke, Coke Zero, Dr Pepper and Canada Dry, Pepsi’s soda sales are struggling.

PepsiCo Inc.'s FritoLay branded products at a supermarket in Latham, New York on Friday, February 2, 2024. - Angus Mordant/Bloomberg/Getty Images

PepsiCo has focused on marketing and investing in snack brands in the United States at the expense of sugary soda brands, analysts say. Food has grown to make up 59% of PepsiCo’s sales.

Unlike Coca-Cola and Keurig Dr Pepper, Pepsi has a massive food business — its sprawling portfolio includes Quaker, Frito-Lay and more. When it comes to drinks, it seems to be focused on investing in its zero-sugar lines of Gatorade and other brands over regular Pepsi, analysts say.
‘Diet Coke Break’

“Dirty soda,” a popular TikTok trend that combines soda with syrup and cream, has also driven interest in soda brands among younger consumers interested in creating their own soda concoctions.

“Dirty soda” has become popular in Mormon culture, where the faith prohibits consuming coffee and alcohol. But thanks to Mormon influencers on TikTok and the Netflix show “The Secret Lives of Mormon Wives, the sugary drinks are becoming more and more mainstream. Dr Pepper launched its “Creamy Coconut” drink over the summer to capitalize on the dirty soda trend.


TikTok has also recently become filled with “Dirty Diet Coke,” “Crispy Diet Coke” and “DietCokeBreak” recipe videos where people leave cans of Diet Coke in the fridge for weeks and then pour them into a glass, sometimes with citrus powder, to get the most fizziness.

Singer Dua Lipa gave Coke its latest viral hit this month when she posted a video sharing her Diet Coke recipe, which combines Diet Coke, pickle juice and jalapeño sauce. It has 10 million views on TikTok and sparked responses from celebrities like Gordon Ramsay, who spit out the drink and warned the recipe would “ruin your vocal cords.”

“I don’t want to say I started the Diet Coke break, but I think I sort of did,” Kristen Hollingshaus, a social media influencer known as the “Diet Coke Girl,” told CNN.

In 2021, she began posting videos of herself on TikTok taking a pause during the day to drink Diet Coke. But it wasn’t just any can of Diet Coke. She “made it special” by pouring out the Diet Coke into a glass, adding ice and True Lime powder. Her posts gained traction online, with some racking up more than two million views, and she began a paid partnership with Diet Coke over the summer.

“This was mindfulness for me,” she said of her Diet Coke breaks. “It was taking a mindful five minutes out of my day to enjoy something.”

She typically drinks a Diet Coke a day and does not worry about the health impact.

“I think there are vices out there that are so much worse than a Diet Coke,” she said.

CNN’s Ramishah Maruf contributed to this article.

EXPLAINER

Social media star Peanut the Squirrel has been euthanized after being seized from NY home

Greta Cross, USA TODAY

Updated Sat, November 2, 2024 



Two days after he was seized from his home in New York, Peanut the Squirrel has been euthanized.

The New York State Department of Environmental Conservation and Chemung County Department of Health announced through a statement on Friday afternoon that both a squirrel and raccoon confiscated from a residence on Wednesday had been euthanized to test for rabies. The statement said a person involved in the confiscation investigation was bitten by the squirrel.

Peanut the Squirrel, who boasted 534,000 followers on Instagram, was taken from his home in Pine City, New York, by the New York Department of Environmental Conservation on Wednesday morning. Peanut, also known as PNUT, was the beloved pet of content creator Mark Longo. In more than 1,400 posts shared to Instagram, Peanut can be seen munching on waffles, jumping through hula-hoops, and greeting Longo home from work.

According to DEC and health department statement, rabies have been found in raccoons in New York's Southern Tier, which includes Pine City, for more than 30 years.

Over the past several days, Longo has shared several statements on Peanut's Instagram account, keeping fans updated, in hopes that Peanut may return home. At the time of publication, Longo had not posted in regards to the recent news.

"It has been a terrible nightmare for me," Longo said in his most recent video, posted Friday morning.

Peanut the Squirrel euthanized: Social media users weigh in on Peanut the Squirrel being euthanized: 'This can’t be real'

In response to Peanut's seizure, a Change.org petition and GoFundMe campaign were created to "return him (Peanut)" to his family. As of Friday afternoon, the petition had 28,025 signatures, and the GoFundMe has raised $7,875.

Why do animals have to be euthanized to test for rabies?

According to the Centers of Disease Control and Prevention, animals showing signs of rabies must be euthanized for the submission of specimen to a qualified rabies laboratory for testing. This is because a rabies test includes a "full cross-section of tissue from both the brain stem and cerebellum." There are no approved methods for testing rabies in animals ante-mortem.

The New York State Department of Environmental Conservation and Chemung County Department of Health advised that anyone who has been in contact with the seized squirrel or raccoon consult a physician.

Who was Peanut the Squirrel?

Peanut was a rescue squirrel who had lived under Longo's care for seven years.

Longo first connected with Peanut when he saw the squirrel's mom get hit by a car, per previous USA TODAY reporting. Unfortunately, the mother passed, leaving Peanut an orphan. Longo was unsuccessful in finding a shelter that would take him in. Longo ended up feeding baby Peanut for about eight months before attempting to release him back into the wild.

"I released him in the backyard, and a day and a half later, I found him sitting on my porch, missing half his tail. So here I am, bawling my eyes out, like, I failed you as your human," Longo told USA TODAY in 2022. "And I kind of opened the door, he ran inside and that was the last of Peanut's wildlife career."

For the first five years, Longo, Peanut, and Longo's cat, Chloe, lived together in harmony.

Last year, Longo established P'Nuts Freedom Farm Animal Sanctuary in Pine City. The nonprofit serves as a "haven where neglected and homeless animals receive a second chance at life," according to its website. To date, 18 horses, one mini horse, four cows, three alpacas, one parrot, one pig and two geese call the sanctuary home, according to its website.

USA TODAY contacted Longo but was unsuccessful in connecting with him for an interview.

Is it legal for squirrels to be kept as pets in NY?

The New York Department of Environmental Conservation states that it is illegal for young wildlife to be kept as pets.

"Inappropriate care given to young wildlife often results in abnormal attachment to humans," the Department of Environmental Conservation states. "After release, some return to places where people live, only to be attacked by domestic animals or to be hit by cars. Some become nuisances getting into stored food, trash cans or dwellings. And some may be thrust as unwelcome intruders into the home range of another member of their species."

If an individual finds a young wild animal that is injured or orphaned, the department recommends making a call to a wildlife rehabilitator, who "are the only people legally allowed to receive and treat distressed wildlife." The goal of rehabilitators is to safely release the animal, when healthy, back into the wild.

This story has been updated to correct a grammatical error and spelling error of the word "raccoon."

Greta Cross is a national trending reporter at USA TODAY. Follow her on X and Instagram @gretalcross. Story idea? Email her at gcross@gannett.com.


A robot retrieves the first melted fuel from Fukushima nuclear reactor

MARI YAMAGUCHI
Sat, November 2, 2024

A device to remove debris from a reactor at the damaged Fukushima Nuclear power plant demonstrates to pinch a stone, as revealed in Kobe, western Japan, May 28, 2024. 
(Kyodo News via AP, File)

FILE - Tokyo Electric Power Company Holdings, also known as TEPCO, the operator of Japan's wrecked Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant, reveals a robot to be used to retrieve debris at the power plant in Kobe, western Japan, May 28, 2024. 
(Kyodo News via AP, File)

TOKYO (AP) — A remote-controlled robot has safely returned with a tiny piece of melted fuel it collected from inside one of three damaged reactors at the tsunami-hit Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant for the first time since the 2011 meltdown.

The Tokyo Electric Power Company Holdings, which manages the plant, said Saturday that the extendable fishing rod-like robot successfully clipped a gravel as big as 5 millimeters (2 inches), the size of a tiny granola bit, from the top surface of a mound of molten fuel debris that sits on the bottom of the No. 2 reactor’s primary containment vessel.

The “telesco” robot, with its frontal tongs still holding the melted fuel bit, returned to the enclosed container for safe storage after workers in full hazmat gear pulled it out of the containment vessel earlier Saturday.

The sample return marks the first time the melted fuel is retrieved out of the containment vessel. But the mission is not over until it's certain that the sample's radioactivity is below a set standard and safely placed into a container.

If the radioactivity exceeds the limit, the robot must go back inside the reactor to find another piece. TEPCO officials said they expect the piece is small enough to meet the requirement.

The mission initially started in August for what was supposed to be a two-week round trip but had been suspended twice due to mishaps.

First one was the procedural mistake at the beginning that held up the work for nearly three weeks, then the robot’s two cameras designed to transmit views of the target areas for its operators in the remote control room failed. The camera problem required the robot to be pulled out all the way for replacement before the mission resumed Monday.

Fukushima Daiichi lost its key cooling systems during the 2011 earthquake and tsunami, causing meltdowns in its three reactors. An estimated 880 tons of fatally radioactive molten fuel remains in them, and TEPCO has carried out a number of robotic probes to figure out how to decommission the plant.

Telesco on Wednesday successfully clipped a piece presumably measuring less than 3 grams (0.1 ounce) from the planned area right underneath the Unit 2 reactor core, from which large amounts of melted fuel fell during the meltdown 13 years ago, TEPCO said.

Plant chief Akira Ono said only the tiny spec can provide key data to plan decommissioning strategy, develop necessary technology and robots and retroactively learn how the accident had developed.

The government and TEPCO have set a 30-to-40-year target for the cleanup, which experts say is overly optimistic and should be updated.

No specific plans for the full removal of the fuel debris or its final disposal have been decided.