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Melania Trump frustrates pro-life movement with abortion support

Former first lady Melania Trump has stirred criticism from the pro-life movement after sharing her pro-abortion views in her upcoming memoir and in a video message on X.

In her self-titled memoir “Melania,” set to be released Oct. 8, one month before Election Day, the former first lady writes about her life, her family, her time in the White House, and briefly about her support for legal abortion. Some excerpts from the book were published by The Guardian on Wednesday evening.

“It is imperative to guarantee that women have autonomy in deciding their preference of having children, based on their own convictions, free from any intervention or pressure from the government,” Melania Trump, the second Catholic first lady in American history, wrote in the autobiographical book.

“Why should anyone other than the woman herself have the power to determine what she does with her own body?” Melania Trump added. “A woman’s fundamental right of individual liberty, to her own life, grants her the authority to terminate her pregnancy if she wishes.”

“Restricting a woman’s right to choose whether to terminate an unwanted pregnancy is the same as denying her control over her own body,” she wrote. “I have carried this belief with me throughout my entire adult life.”

On Thursday, Melania Trump doubled down on this position in a video posted on X, which advertised the memoir.

“Without a doubt, there is no room for compromise when it comes to this essential right that all women possess from birth: individual freedom,” she said. “What does ‘my body, my choice’ really mean?”

Former president Donald Trump, who faces Vice President Kamala Harris in his bid for a second nonconsecutive term in the White House, responded to his wife’s comments without endorsing them or disavowing them.

“We spoke about it and I said, ‘You have to write what you believe — I’m not going to tell you what to do,’” Donald Trump told Fox News reporter Bill Melugin.

“I said, ‘You have to stick with your heart,’” Donald Trump added. “I’ve said that to everybody: ‘You have to go with your heart.’ There are some people that are very, very far-right on the issue, meaning without exceptions. And then there are other people that view it a little bit differently than that.”

Pro-life movement responds to Melania Trump

Many leaders in the pro-life movement have expressed frustration over Melania Trump’s abortion comments. Some pro-life advocates are still focused on securing a Donald Trump victory over Harris, while others are expressing dismay over the campaign’s movement away from pro-life values.

Susan B. Anthony Pro-Life America president Marjorie Dannenfelser said in a statement provided to CNA that the organization’s top priority “is to defeat Kamala Harris and the Democrats’ push to nationally mandate no-limits abortion on demand funded by every taxpayer.”

However, Dannenfelser still took issue with Melania Trump’s comments, saying: “Women with unplanned pregnancies are crying out for more resources, not more abortions.” 

“We must have compassion for them and for babies in the womb who suffer from brutal abortions,” she added. “Tens of thousands of abortions a year are performed on children after the point when they can feel excruciating pain.”

Kristan Hawkins, the president of Students for Life Action, told CNA that “the bottom line is that it’s not just her body in that moment” when a woman is pregnant, adding: “Two people or maybe more are there.”

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“Melania Trump had a chance to inspire in her book but, instead, chose to push broken feminism that puts women at war with their own bodies,” Hawkins continued. “I won’t be buying a copy of the book.”

Some pro-life activists have offered harsher criticism of Donald Trump’s campaign after Melania Trump’s comments. 

Live Action President Lila Rose asserted in a post on X that Melania Trump and Harris have “functionally the same exact position on abortion.” In late August, Rose indicated she might not vote for Donald Trump because his campaign has not been pro-life enough.

Robert P. George, a legal scholar at Princeton University and a senior fellow at the American Enterprise Institute, said in a Facebook post that he shared with CNA that he believes Melania Trump’s abortion comments were prompted by Donald Trump’s campaign.

“The campaign sent her out to signal to pro-abortion voters that the ‘right to abortion’ would be fully protected in a second Trump administration,” George said. “Her message is that Donald, having thrown pro-life Americans under the bus, will keep us under the bus.”

“Her record has been one of saying little or nothing on political issues,” he continued. “Now, suddenly, she is releasing videos passionately claiming that the protection of abortion, even late-term abortion, must be given the highest priority. Things like that don’t just happen.”

George told CNA that he believes Harris is “even worse on abortion” and “appallingly awful” on the issue.

Where the candidates stand on abortion

Donald Trump appointed three of the six Supreme Court justices who voted to overturn Roe v. Wade, which allowed states to restrict abortion and pass pro-life laws. In his 2024 campaign, the former president has sought to moderate the Republican Party’s approach to abortion and has attempted the difficult task of maintaining support from the pro-life voting bloc without alienating independents and moderates.

Earlier this week, he said in a post on X he would veto any legislation that would prohibit abortion “because it is up to the states to decide, based on the will of their voters.” He asserted that Democrats support the “radical position of late-term abortion … in the seventh, eighth, or ninth month [of pregnancy].”

Harris supports a federal law that would legalize abortion nationwide — at least until the point of viability, which occurs around the 23rd or 24th week of pregnancy. She has not said whether she supports restrictions on late-term abortion.

Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz, Harris’ running mate, signed a bill that further solidifies the state’s abortion laws, which permit abortion throughout the entirety of pregnancy, including in the ninth month, for any reason. He signed another bill that scaled back legal protections in the case of an infant who is born alive after a failed abortion attempt.




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Bruce Springsteen Endorsed Harris—But Bill Murray Didn’t Endorse Trump

Just weeks after Vice President Kamala Harris received the endorsement of pop superstar, rock legend Bruce Springsteen threw his support behind her as well. In a video post on Instagram, the 75-year-old rocker—who is known simply as “The Boss”—suggested this is “one of the most consequential elections in our nation’s history.”

The “Born in the USA” singer further offered a critique of former President Donald Trump, while he lamented the fact that the nation is as “politically, spiritually and emotionally divided” as at any time since the American Civil War.

“It doesn’t have to be this way,” Springsteen added.

The endorsement wasn’t entirely surprising, as Springsteen has a long history of backing Democrats. He previously endorsed Barack Obama in 2008, and in the 2020 U.S. presidential election provided a narration for a Joe Biden campaign ad while the song “My Hometown” played in the background.

Whether Springsteen’s endorsement will move the needle in this year’s razor-close election isn’t clear, it likely could cost him some fans due to the deep political divide he warned about.

“Steve Van Zandt was quoted recently as saying Bruce’s political views had cost the band a lot of fans,” explained Bruce Barber, professional in residence at the University of New Haven and general manager of radio station WNHU. “He’s probably right—but that to me is what a true artist is all about, the ability to speak truths, in words and song, regardless of the consequences. Springsteen’s support for Kamala Harris is definitely not a surprise, but it’s another example of his undying commitment to being genuine in his art and his personal life.”

What About Bill?

Just as Springsteen released his endorsement of Harris, it was another celebrity that went viral on Thursday—namely, What About Bob? actor Bill Murray for his alleged backing of Trump.

Internet personality Bo Loudon posted a clip of Murray from 2016 “praising” some of the former president’s policies, and suggested “Who needs Taylor Swift when you have BILL MURRAY?”

The clip, which was seen nearly six million times, seemed to convince many that the Ghost Busters star had endorsed Trump. However, as of Friday afternoon, Bill Murray has been silent on the issue and hasn’t endorsed either candidate. According to Vanity Fair, Murray had campaigned for the Green Party’s Ralph Nader in the 2000 presidential race—but perhaps that was “lost in translation.”

Murray would just be the latest celebrity to see his/her/their endorsement of a candidate—even if it wasn’t made. Such endorsements might barely move the needle, but given how close this race is every single vote is going to matter.

“Celebrity endorsements are very important in today’s political world,” said Dr. Julianna Kirschner, lecturer at the Annenberg School for Communication and Journalism at the University of Southern California.

“Taylor Swift’s endorsement of Kamala Harris and Tim Walz has made notable political, cultural, and social waves. Likewise, other celebrities endorsing candidates can have a similar ripple effect,” added Kirschner.

Expect More Faux Endorsements

A video clip from eight years ago is hardly an endorsement, but it was enough for many to believe that Murray was a Trump supporter.

“Without any corroborating evidence, the comment’s validity appears dubious at best,” suggested Kirschner. “News organizations verify facts from several sources before broadcasting them, which is the likely reason for a lack of reporting on the subject. All we have right now is conjecture, a premise through which misinformation on social media thrives.”

These faux endorsements are just the latest form of misinformation that we’ve seen this election cycle. In this particular case, the video is just enough to make the story seem credible.

“Misinformation booms when information cannot be validated. In this case, Murray’s position is unclear,” added Kirschner. “Users may double down when presented with contrasting information is presented to them. There is plenty of research that would support the likelihood of such an outcome. Given the high chances of users doubling down, the possibility of celebrity endorsements moving the needle would be small but not insignificant. In the tight race we are in, everything, no matter how small, makes a difference.”

How Should Celebrities Respond?

The other side of this story is that Swift and Springsteen could receive some backlash from fans, but as Barber noted, the Boss likely knew it going in. In Murray’s case, he could face scrutiny for something he didn’t even do.

As an A-lister, he likely won’t be impacted; yet, we could see the careers of up-and-comers affected—perhaps running afoul of a casting director, movie producer, publicist, etc.

“From the celebrity’s perspective, they should be concerned with how they are politically represented online. This can affect their reputation and potential support from fans, which inevitably allows them to continue to do their work,” Kirschner continued.

And the problem could get worse. Murray may have actually offered his past comments in an interview, but advances in deep fakes could soon put words into the mouths of celebrities—living and dead alike!

“As AI becomes more advanced, it is likely that comments, images, and videos of what appears to be celebrities endorsing a candidate may be outright false,” warned Kirschner. “As cases like Murray’s attributed comment come up in the future, it will become increasingly challenging to discern fact from fiction.”


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Bruce Springsteen endorses Harris, calls Trump “most dangerous candidate for president in my lifetime”

Washington — Bruce Springsteen endorsed Vice President Kamala Harris for president on Thursday, arguing the Democratic nominee supports a more unified and inclusive country while calling former President Donald Trump “the most dangerous candidate for president in my lifetime.” 

“Perhaps not since the Civil War has this great country felt as politically, spiritually and emotionally divided as it does than at this moment. It doesn’t have to be this way,” the rock star said in a short video shared on social media.

He said Harris and her running mate, Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz, “are committed to a vision of this country that respects and includes everyone, regardless of class, religion, race, your political point of view or sexual identity.”

Harris’ proposals, he said, would grow the economy for everyone, not just the wealthy. 

“That’s the vision of America I’ve been consistently writing about for 55 years,” Springsteen said. 

He offered a harsh condemnation of Trump, saying the Republican nominee “doesn’t understand the meaning of this country, its history or what it means to be deeply American.” 

“His disdain for the sanctity of our Constitution, the sanctity of democracy, the sanctity of the rule of law and the sanctity of the peaceful transfer of power should disqualify him from the office of president ever again,” he said. 

The endorsement from Springsteen was no surprise. He has endorsed Democratic presidential candidates for years and has long been critical of Trump. 

In a 2016 interview with Rolling Stone, Springsteen called Trump a “moron.” When Trump was running for reelection in 2020, Springsteen told The Atlantic he didn’t know “if our democracy could stand another four years of his custodianship.” 

It’s also unclear what impact major celebrity endorsements will have on the race. Taylor Swift drove more than 400,000 visits to vote.gov, a website with information about how to register to vote, in the 24 hours after she endorsed Harris. 

A number of other music stars have spoken out in this campaign, including some who support Trump.

Springsteen acknowledged that his “opinion is no more or less important than those of any of my fellow citizens.” 

“Like you, I’ve only got one vote and it’s one of the most precious possessions that I have,” he said. 




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‘Saturday Night Live’ Debuts Its New Cast of Political Characters

  • “Saturday Night Live” premiered its 50th season on NBC.
  • The cast portrayed leading political figures during the episode.
  • Maya Rudolph appeared as Vice President Kamala Harris, while Bowen Yang played Ohio Sen. JD Vance.

“Saturday Night Live” began its 50th season lampooning the upcoming US presidential election. There was a lot of material from which to draw.

The cameras were rolling live in 30 Rockefeller Plaza’s studio 8H as former and current cast members tackled the 2024 presidential race and two of the biggest scandals of the election season.

The sketch comedy series has long influenced American politics and has been a key stop on the campaign trail for many candidates, including Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders.

Research published in 2012 found that Tina Fey’s portrayal of former Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin may have even influenced the public’s perception of her before the 2008 presidential election, according to The Washington Post.

Fans of the show had wondered who its producer, Lorne Michaels, would tap to play some of the key political roles.

Here’s who’s playing who this year.




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This screenshot shows Ryan Wesley Routh at a rally, with his cheeks painted red, yellow and blue in support of Ukraine.

Who is Ryan Wesley Routh, the suspect in the Trump golf course incident? : NPR

This screenshot shows Ryan Wesley Routh speaking at a rally in April 2022 to urge foreign leaders and international organizations to help provide humanitarian corridors to evacuate Ukrainians from Mariupol.

AFPTV/AFP via Getty Images


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AFPTV/AFP via Getty Images

The man arrested in connection with what the FBI is calling an apparent attempted assassination of former President Donald Trump has a lengthy criminal record and recent fixation on global politics, particularly Russia’s war in Ukraine.

The suspect, whom local officials identified as Ryan Wesley Routh, was taken into custody on Sunday afternoon on Interstate 95 near West Palm Beach, Fla., after what authorities say was possibly an attempt on Trump’s life at his golf club — the second that Trump has survived in the last nine weeks.

Local authorities said a U.S. Secret Service agent who was stationed one hole ahead of Trump on the Trump International Golf Club West Palm Beach spotted an AK-style rifle sticking out of a fence. The suspect holding the rifle was hiding in the shrubbery some 300 to 500 yards away from the Republican presidential nominee.

It’s not clear whether Routh fired any shots, but the agent opened fire on him. He took off in a black Nissan, which authorities located on the highway a short while later, thanks to an eyewitness tip.

Routh has been charged with possession of a firearm as a felon and possession of a firearm with an obliterated serial number.

In his first appearance in a West Palm Beach federal courtroom Monday morning, Routh — wearing a navy blue prison jumpsuit and shackles — appeared subdued and respectful and in good spirits. He could be seen laughing at times with his federal public defender.

The judge told Routh he qualified for a federal public defender because “you have little or no assets.” Routh said he has zero funds and no savings, and he reported making an income of $3,000 a week but didn’t specify the source. He said he owns two trucks in Hawaii and helps support his 25-year-old son.

Routh will remain in custody until his arraignment on Sept. 30.

Public records, social media posts and previous interviews have painted a picture of the 58-year-old as a vocal supporter turned critic of Trump who was passionate about defending Ukraine in its war with Russia and even traveled to the front lines in the hopes of taking up the fight.

Here’s what we know about him so far.

He has a criminal record dating back decades

Routh spent most of his adulthood in North Carolina, before moving to Hawaii in recent years.

He graduated from North Carolina Agricultural and Technical State University with a mechanical engineering degree in 1998, according to his LinkedIn page.

Records from the North Carolina Department of Adult Correction reveal Routh’s long history of trouble with the law, including a 2002 conviction on a felony charge of possessing a weapon of mass destruction.

A December 2002 story in the Greensboro News & Record recounts an incident in which Routh was pulled over during a traffic stop on a Sunday night. He “put his hand on a firearm” and drove to his roofing business, where he barricaded himself inside for three hours. The weapon-of-mass-destruction charge pertained to a “fully automatic machine gun,” the newspaper reported.

Routh was charged with several other misdemeanors and felonies between 2001 and 2010, including a hit-and-run offense, carrying a concealed weapon and possessing stolen goods.

Separately, North Carolina judicial records list Routh as the defendant in over half a dozen court cases between 1991 and 2016, including tax delinquencies and bad checks.

Routh wrote on his LinkedIn page that he had “passed along any meager remnants of myself in North Carolina and relocated to Oahu.” He has lived and worked in Hawaii since 2018, according to the Honolulu Star-Advertiser.

Law enforcement sources told the newspaper that Honolulu police have records of four interactions with Routh: two in 2019 — including an incident where he and two others allegedly squatted on property — and another two in 2021, when Routh reported being assaulted by a resident whose home he was working on as a handyman.

Routh describes himself as the owner of Camp Box Honolulu, a company that builds portable storage units and tiny homes.

“We cannot sit idle, as some of our friends and neighbors around us struggle, when we ourselves are smart enough to create our own solutions to our own problems,” the company’s website reads. “Using common sense and American ingenuity and the resources that we have, together we can create our own happy places.”

He once supported Trump but recently donated to Democrats

North Carolina voting records list Routh as unaffiliated with any party, though they also show that he voted in person in the Democratic primary election in March 2024.

He is also listed as having voted in the general elections in 2008 and 2012, as well as municipal elections in 2009.

Routh has a history of donating to political causes, as Federal Election Commission records show. He donated to the Democratic fundraising platform ActBlue nearly 20 times — in amounts ranging from $1 to $25 — between September 2019 and March 2020.

Routh appears to have voted for Trump in 2016 but became a vocal critic of the former president in recent years, according to posts on his social media accounts, which have since been taken down.

CNN reports that he tweeted in 2020: “I and the world hoped that president Trump would be different and better than the candidate, but we all were greatly disappointment and it seems you are getting worse and devolving. I will be glad when you gone.”

Routh also weighed in after Trump survived an assassination attempt at a Pennsylvania rally in July, urging President Biden and Vice President Harris to visit those who had been injured as “Trump will never do anything for them.”

Routh also referenced his former support for Trump in his 2023 self-published book, in which he referred to the Jan. 6, 2021, Capitol insurrection as a “catastrophe … perpetrated by Donald Trump and his undemocratic posse.”

According to CNN, Routh wrote that he must take part of the blame for electing Trump as president, “but I am man enough to say that I misjudged and made a terrible mistake.”

Routh’s 291-page book, Ukraine’s Unwinnable War: The Fatal Flaw of Democracy, World Abandonment, and the Global Citizen—Taiwan, Afghanistan, North Korea, WWII and the End of Humanity, covers a topic that seems to have consumed Routh in recent years.

Routh is an avid supporter of Ukraine’s defense

Routh has expressed strong support for Ukraine in the aftermath of Russia’s full-fledged invasion in early 2022, and he seemed to be on a mission to get foreigners — himself included — to the front lines.

“I AM WILLING TO FLY TO KRAKOW AND GO TO THE BORDER OF UKRAINE TO VOLUNTEER AND FIGHT AND DIE…Can I be the example We must win,” Routh wrote on X in March 2022, per CNN.

Routh traveled to the Ukrainian capital of Kyiv that year but was told — given his age and lack of military experience — that he was “not an ideal candidate,” as he told Newsweek Romania in 2022.

“So plan B was to come here to Kyiv and promote getting more people here,” he said.

Since then, he has used social media to encourage and attempt to recruit foreigners to fight in Ukraine, and he has spoken about those efforts in several social media interviews.

Routh told The New York Times in March 2023 that he was seeking recruits among Afghan soldiers who fled the Taliban, aiming to purchase passports through Pakistan (“since it’s such a corrupt country”) and move them — in some cases illegally — into Ukraine from Pakistan and Iran. The Times described Routh as a “former construction worker from Greensboro, N.C. … who spent several months in Ukraine last year.”

That same month, he complained to Semafor about the Ukrainian government’s lack of support, saying it was being overly rigid about admitting foreign soldiers, especially from Afghanistan, over concerns that they might be Russian spies.

“I have had partners meeting with [Ukraine’s Ministry of Defense] every week and still have not been able to get them to agree to issue one single visa,” said Routh, who was identified by Semafor as the head of the International Volunteer Center in Ukraine — “a private organization which helps foreigners seeking to assist the war effort connect with military units and aid groups.”

A representative from Ukraine’s foreign legion told CNN that Routh had reached out to it several times online but “was never part of the legion and didn’t cooperate with us in any way.”

“The best way to describe his messages is — delusional ideas,” said Oleksandr Shaguri, an officer of the Foreigners Coordination Department of the Land Forces Command. “He was offering us large numbers of recruits from different countries, but it was obvious to us his offers were not realistic. We didn’t even answer — there was nothing to answer to.”

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy condemned the apparent assassination attempt against Trump in an X post on Monday, saying, “political violence has no place anywhere in the world.”

When asked about the incident on Monday, Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov said it shows that “playing with fire” has consequences — an apparent reference to U.S. support for Ukraine.

Routh’s family has defended him

One of Routh’s sons, Adam, told Reuters immediately after the incident that it was not something he believed his father would do.

Another, Oran, told CNN that it’s not like his father “to do anything crazy, much less violent.”

“I don’t have any comment beyond a character profile of him as a loving and caring father, and honest, hardworking man,” Oran Routh said in a statement.

He also told the Daily Mail that his dad hates Trump but stressed that his father is not a violent person and said he has never known this father to own a gun. The Daily Mail reported that Oran Routh hung up to find out what had happened and followed up later over text message.

“I hate this game every four years, and think that we all do, and if my father wants to be a martyr to how broken and disassociated the process has become from the real problems and practical solutions, then that’s his choice,” he wrote.


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Nicky Jam Endorses Donald Trump at Vegas Rally

Nicky Jam has now joined a cohort of reggaetoneros pledging their support for Donald Trump — even if the former president doesn’t seem to know who he is. On Friday night, the Puerto Rican musician joined Trump onstage in Las Vegas to endorse him, but the former president misgendered him in his introduction.

“Do you know Nicky? She’s hot. Where’s Nicky?” Trump said from the stage while looking offstage to find him. Jam then arrived at the podium as Trump corrected his mistake: “Oh, look, I’m glad he came up.”

The Puerto Rican singer joined Trump while wearing a red “Make America Great Again” hat as he made a short speech about his endorsement.

“It’s an honor to meet you, Mr. President. People that come from where I come from, they don’t meet the president. So I’m lucky,” said Jam. “We need you. We need you back, right? We need you to be the president.”

On Saturday morning, as the clip of Trump’s confusion went viral, Jam shared a meme on Instagram playing into the fact that the former president thought he was a woman: “Nicky jam la potra la bichota,” he joked, using the slang female reggaeton singers Ivy Queen and Karol G use to describe themselves.

By Sunday evening, Nicky had deleted the post — which received support from numerous Latin musicians, including Justin Quiles, Randy from Jowell y Randy, Sech, and J Balvin, who commented, “Champion” — from his Instagram.

Mexican rock band Maná issued a statement Sunday morning saying that the band “didn’t work with racists” as they decided to pull their song with Nicky Jam over his endorsement of Trump.

Some fans of Jam shared their discontent with the reggaeton star since he voiced his support for DACA recipients in 2018 after Trump threatened to pull the executive action that protected folks who came to the U.S. without papers as minors. “They are hard-working people who bring so much to the table for this country. They deserve so much,” he said in a video with Spotify at the time.

“I’m in the video below where I shared w/ @NickyJamPR the fears that thousands of #DREAMers w/ #DACA like myself had about our protections taken away by Trump,” wrote Adrian Escárate of the National Immigration Law Center on X. “Fast forward to now where it seems Nicky Jam used me to promote his music + sellout our community. Thanks for nothing.”

The “X” musician’s endorsement of Trump comes just days after Puerto Rican stars Anuel AA and Justin Quiles joined the former president in Pennsylvania, offering their support for the MAGA cause. Again, it was clear Trump had no clue who they were.

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 “Do you know who the hell they are? Come up here fast, fellas, come on, because I don’t think these people know who the hell you are,” Trump said on stage. “But it’s good for the Puerto Rican vote. Every Puerto Rican is going to vote for Trump right now. We’ll take it.”

This story was updated on Sept. 15 at 11:35 p.m. ET to mention that Jam deleted his post about Trump from his Instagram after Maná pulled their collaboration together from streaming services.




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Trump Media shares plunge after Harris debate

Former US President and Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump walks away during a commercial break as US Vice President and Democratic presidential candidate Kamala Harris take notes during a presidential debate at the National Constitution Center in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, on September 10, 2024. 

Saul Loeb | Afp | Getty Images

The share price of Trump Media plunged more than 10% on Wednesday, a day after majority shareholder Donald Trump gave a widely panned presidential debate performance against Vice President Kamala Harris.

The company’s stock price closed at its lowest level since the Truth Social app owner began publicly trading as DJT on the Nasdaq in late March.

Investing in Trump Media stock is often seen as a way to bet on the political fortunes of Trump, the former president and current Republican nominee.

Trump Media has said its business hinges at least partly on Trump’s popularity, and analysts say the company’s value will rise or fall based on his electoral prospects.

Stock Chart IconStock chart icon

Trump Media (DJT) Share Price

The stock drop Wednesday could signal that some Trump’s supporters were not pleased with what they saw at Tuesday night’s debate in Philadelphia.

Liberal and conservative political commentators said Harris appeared more prepared, articulate and even-keeled than Trump, who repeatedly bit on bait that she tossed to throw him off topic.

Harris’ team, projecting confidence, challenged Trump to another debate right after the first one ended.

Trump said he may not agree to that. In a Truth Social post Wednesday, he repeated his claim that Harris only wanted another debate because she was “beaten badly.”

“Why would I do a Rematch?” he wrote in the post.

Trump Media had surged as much as 10% during trading Tuesday, possibly indicating optimism about how Trump would fare in the debate.

The company’s gains on Monday and Tuesday were a respite from a weekslong rout that saw the stock price sink as much as 75% from its intraday high in late March, when then-privately held Trump Media merged with a blank-check firm.

Read more CNBC politics coverage

The slump coincided with President Joe Biden dropping out of the presidential race and endorsing Harris to replace him at the top of the Democratic ticket.

It also came in the run-up to the date when Trump and other company insiders can start selling their shares.

Trump owns nearly 57% of the company’s stock. That stake at Wednesday’s closing price was worth about $1.9 billion.

It is unclear if Trump plans to start selling off his stake when a lock-up agreement lifts on Sept. 19.

Correction: Donald Trump owns nearly 57% of Trump Media’s stock. An earlier version misstated the percentage.

Don’t miss these insights from CNBC PRO


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Donald Trump Stock Market Sentiment Indicator Signals He Lost The Presidential Debate

Shares of Truth Social-parent Trump Media & Technology (DJT) cratered Wednesday following Tuesday’s presidential debate between former President Donald Trump and Vice President Kamala Harris. That signals investor sentiment that Trump underperformed in the televised contest between the two candidates. DJT stock continued to decline Thursday.





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Harris-Trump Debate: 4 Takeways For Investors



Pundit consensus gave the edge in the ABC-hosted presidential debate to Harris and the downward move by Trump stock DJT Wednesday appears to support that sentiment. The Trump-Harris debate Tuesday didn’t cover tax policy, perhaps the issue of most importance to financial markets.

The Donald Trump stock sank 10.5% to 16.68, falling as low as 15.30, Wednesday, hitting a new post-SPAC low. Trump Media shares on Thursday added to their slide, dropping 4.6% to 16.08 during market action.

The Trump stock often trades as a sentiment indicator toward the former president and his current candidacy.

Prior to the presidential debate Tuesday night, DJT shares gained nearly 9% this week, closing on Tuesday at 18.63.

The Donald Trump brand and the value of DJT stock are closely related, as Truth Social launched after then-Twitter shut down Trump’s account following the Jan. 6, 2021, riot at the U.S. Capitol.

The former president holds a 65% stake in Trump Media, worth several billion dollars based on the current stock price.

The company reported in August another quarter of sub-$1 million revenue. Meanwhile, Trump also made his return to X, formerly Twitter, on Aug. 12 with a conversation with Elon Musk. Prior To Wednesday action, DJT shares tumbled 25% since then as Trump has repeatedly posted on the social media site since then. The former president had previously sworn he would not return to X and would remain on Truth Social.

Donald Trump Stock On The Decline

Trump Media jumped more than 16% on March 26, its first day trading under the DJT ticker, hitting a high of 79.38 intraday. This followed Digital World Acquisition becoming Trump Media & Technology Group after successfully merging with Trump’s tech and social-media platform on March 22. The special purpose acquisition company stock had rallied 35% on the day before the change to “DJT.”

DWAC took Trump Media and Technology Group, or TMTG, public in a reverse merger. After a prolonged battle, DWAC stockholders voted in favor of the special purpose acquisition company’s merger with TMTG. Trump Media is the parent of the conservative social-media platform Truth Social.

DJT shares have now dropped about 70% since their conversion. In 2024, DJT/DWAC has declined around 4%.

DJT shares hit a short-term high of 46.27 on July 15 following the Trump assassination attempt. Trump’s lead in the polls peaked soon after, with President Joe Biden dropping out of the 2024 race.

Since hitting that high on July 15, the Trump stock has fallen 64%.

Please follow Kit Norton on X @KitNorton for more coverage.

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That photo of people wearing “Nebraska Walz’s for Trump” shirts? They’re distant cousins.

A sister of Democratic vice presidential nominee Tim Walz says she doesn’t recognize the people wearing “Nebraska Walz’s for Trump” T-shirts in a photo that is making the rounds on social media. It turns out they are distant cousins.

The photo shows eight smiling people wearing navy pro-Trump shirts, underneath a “Trump 2024 — Take America Back” sign. The photo was eventually reposted by former President Donald Trump, who wrote on his Truth Social platform: “It is a Great Honor to have your Endorsement. I look forward to meeting you soon!”

The photo was first posted on X by Charles Herbster, a former candidate for governor in Nebraska who had Trump’s endorsement in the 2022 campaign. Herbster’s spokesperson, Rod Edwards, said the people in the photo are cousins to the Minnesota governor, who is now Kamala Harris’ running mate.

“The family in the picture are the descendants of Francis Walz, who was brother to Tim Walz’s grandfather,” Edwards said. “They’re all Walzes and spouses.”

The descendants of Francis Walz confirmed their relationship to Tim Walz in a text message to The Associated Press.

“Shortly after Governor Tim Walz was named the Democrat Party Vice Presidential nominee, our family had a get-together. We had t-shirts made to show support for President Trump and J.D. Vance and took a group picture. That photo was shared with friends, and when we were asked for permission to post the picture, we agreed,” the written statement said.

“The picture is real. The shirts are real. We are the Nebraska Walz family and we are related to Gov. Tim Walz, our grandfathers were brothers. The message on the shirts speaks for itself, “Nebraska Walzs for Trump.”

Walz’s sister, Sandy Dietrich, of Alliance, Nebraska, said she suspected it might be people from that branch of the family. Dietrich and Walz’s father, James Walz, died of lung cancer in 1984 when the future congressman and Minnesota governor was just a teenager. His father had been the school superintendent in Valentine, Nebraska.

“We weren’t close with them. We didn’t know them,” she said.

Dietrich declined to comment on their distant cousins’ opposition to her brother and referred to herself and her family as “Democrats for Tim.”

“I know who I’m voting for. That’s all I can control,” she said.

But Tim Walz’s other surviving sibling is not behind his candidacy.

In recent days, the New York Post has reported on Facebook comments from the governor’s older brother, Jeff Walz of Freeport, Florida, in which he said of his younger sibling: “The stories I could tell. Not the type of character you want making decisions about your future.” The 67-year-old also wrote that he was “100% opposed to all his ideology” and had thought about endorsing Trump, the Post reported.

In comments published Wednesday by NewsNation, Jeff Walz said that he was still irked he learned on the radio that his brother would be Harris’ running mate, but that he didn’t intend to influence the political debate and doesn’t want to be involved with anybody’s campaign.

Jeff Walz told NewsNation that he and the 60-year-old governor have not spoken since the funeral of their younger brother, Craig Walz, in 2016, aside from a brief phone call last month through their mother. He told NewsNation that what he was referring to in his post by “stories” were from their childhood.

“Nobody wanted to sit with him, because he had car sickness and would always throw up on us, that sort of thing,” Jeff Walz said. “There’s really nothing else hidden behind there. People are assuming something else. There’s other stories like that, but I think that probably gives you the gist of it.”

He also told NewsNation that he would make no further statements on the subject. He did not immediately return messages left Wednesday by the AP.


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Does Tim Walz’s Family Back Trump? Trump Claims Jeff Walz Endorsed Him

Topline

Former President Donald Trump claimed Wednesday the estranged brother of Democratic vice presidential candidate Tim Walz endorsed him, despite Jeff Walz saying hours earlier he didn’t plan to publicly back the ex-president—claims Trump bolstered with an unverified viral image purporting to show Walz family members wearing pro-Trump T-shirts.

Key Facts

Trump thanked “Jeff” for his endorsement in a Truth Social post on Wednesday and said they planned to meet “soon,” including in the post a photo of eight people wearing T-shirts printed with the slogan “Walz’s [sic] for Trump.”

The photo was initially shared on X Wednesday by Charles Herbster, the chairman of Rural Americans for Trump and a former Nebraska GOP gubernatorial candidate, and later made the rounds among pro-Trump social media users.

The family members pictured are descendants of Francis Walz, the brother of Tim Walz’s grandfather, Herbster’s spokesperson Rod Edwards told Forbes, adding that a friend of the Walz family provided Herbster’s team with the photo and one of the individuals verified the image’s legitimacy to Edwards directly.

Edwards didn’t specify the family members’ names, but said the Minnesota governor’s older brother Jeff Walz—the subject of Trump’s post—was not in the image.

Trump’s claim that Jeff Walz endorsed him came hours after the older Walz—who donated $20 to Trump’s 2016 campaign—told NewsNation he “thought long and hard” about endorsing Trump, but doesn’t want to “put something out there to influence the general public.”

Jeff Walz’s political views first made waves after The New York Post unearthed a series of Facebook posts he made last week denouncing his brother’s politics and warning he is not the “type of character you want making decisions about your future,” cryptically citing “stories [he] could tell” (he later told NewsNation the “stories” were innocuous accounts of growing up together, like Tim Walz’s tendency to become car sick).

Forbes has reached out to Trump and Harris’s campaigns for comment.

Key Background

Jeff Walz wrote on Facebook and later told NewsNation his family wasn’t given any warning that his brother had been tapped as Vice President Kamala Harris’ running mate. He told NewsNation he wrote the posts to explain his political views to his friends and acquaintances, and acknowledged Facebook “wasn’t the right platform to do that for.” Jeff Walz said he and his brother have not spoken since the funeral of their younger brother, Craig, in 2016, aside from a brief conversation when he asked his older brother for tax information sought by Harris’s vetting team, which Jeff Walz said he declined to provide.

Tangent

Walz, who was tapped as Harris’ VP pick early last month, is in his second term as Minnesota governor and previously represented a rural Minnesota House district for 12 years. He is a retired high school teacher and football coach who spent 24 years serving in the National Guard. Walz grew up in Nebraska before moving to Minnesota with his wife, Gwen, in the 1990s.

Big Number

36%. That’s the share of U.S. adults who view Walz favorably, according to an Associated Press/NORC poll that found 25% view him unfavorably. Republican VP candidate, Sen. JD Vance’s, has a 27% favorability rating, while 44% of respondents view him unfavorably.

Further Reading

Everything You Need To Know About Tim Walz Ahead Of DNC Speech (Forbes)

Kamala Harris Picks Tim Walz As Running Mate: Here’s What To Know About Him (Forbes)

Tim Walz-JD Vance Polls: Walz More Popular Than Vance In Early Surveys (Forbes)


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