Trump Melts Down In Michigan Over Beyonce Rally With Kamala Harris

Trump started over his event in Michigan by having a meltdown over Kamala Harris’s massive rally with Beyonce in Houston.

Trump said:

Last night my opponent had one of these and they bussed in people like Beyonce. Beyonce spoke for a couple of minutes and then left. The place went crazy. They booed the hell out of everybody. They thought she was going to perform.

My opponent got up and started speaking. They booed the hell out of her. It is crazy. They had to use people and they send buses. We don’t use buses. We are just going to make America great again. I thought I would tell you that story because you will never hear it from the fake news. They don’t talk about it. They would not tell you stories like that.

Video:

Trump starts off his Michigan rally with a fake story about Kamala Harris crowd being bussed in for the Beyonce rally, and the crowd booing Harris after Beyonce didn’t perform. Trump claims the media won’t talk about it, which they won’t because it never happened. pic.twitter.com/Ffj5wLGJDa

— Sarah Reese Jones (@PoliticusSarah) October 26, 2024

Everything Trump

said never happened.

Here was the reaction Kamala Harris got in Houston:

This ovation for Kamala Harris in Houston is insane. Harris opens, “We are fighting for freedom.” pic.twitter.com/jCakrZLXC8

— Sarah Reese Jones (@PoliticusSarah) October 26, 2024

There was no booing. People weren’t leaving.

Do you know where people were leaving?

Trump’s scheduled rally in Traverse City, MI last night after he was three and a half hours late and kept his supporters waiting in the cold.

Donald Trump is clearly rattled by what he was in Houston, so he is trying to downplay it and make up a fictional version of the rally.

Trump is sounding increasingly desperate. He has never faced an opponent that can draw the kind of crowds that come out for Kamala Harris, and the stress is showing on Trump.

To comment on this story, join us on Reddit.

Jason is the managing editor. He is also a White House Press Pool and a Congressional correspondent for PoliticusUSA. Jason has a Bachelor’s Degree in Political Science. His graduate work focused on public policy, with a specialization in social reform movements.

Awards and  Professional Memberships

Member of the Society of Professional Journalists and The American Political Science Association

Jason EasleyLatest posts by Jason Easley (see all)

Watch Tom Holland Transfer Photographer Out Of Her Path

Tom Holland recently made a way for his bae, Zendaya –literally. The ‘Spider-Man’ actor and ‘Euphoria’ actress stepped out in New York City’s streets for his newly launched drink brand. And let’s say he wasn’t playing behind his girlfriend!

The Hollywood stars have been romantically linked since 2021 after press photos showed them kissing in a car. But they first met on the set of ‘Spider-Man’ in 2016.

Tom Checks Photographer Over Zendaya

While out and about on Oct. 24, the paparazzi couldn’t seem to get enough of the celebrity couple. Tom wasn’t with anyone blocking his lady’s pathway! In a circulating video, he didn’t hesitate to clear a photographer out of the way as they walked hand-in-hand.

In The Shade Room’s slowed clip of the moment, a casually dressed photographer is seen edging toward the moving couple and snapping photos. At one point, the cameraman blocked Zendaya’s path while she and Tom Holland still held hands. It’s unclear if Holland exchanged any words with the press person, but he used his free hand to shove the man over a few feet to make way for his girlfriend.

At that point, another man walking alongside the couple seemingly said something to the cameraman. Meanwhile, Zendaya rocked a lil’ polite smile, and her man kept it moving! Watch the moment below.

Roommates React To Holland Protecting His Actress

Meanwhile, in The Shade Room’s comment section, the roomies are lovin’ how Tom Holland took up for Zendaya. According to E! News, the couple was outside for his non-alcoholic beer beverage BERO.

“Y’all know Peter Parker don’t play about Mary Jane,” @d7nte wrote.

“I know he said excuse me about 5 times before taking excusing the man into his own hands,” @foreignluxe added.

“Y’all better stop playing with Tomithy. That shove was personal okay,” @ittybittymel said.

@_meanass tried to guess what Zendaya was thinking about Tom’s deed. She wrote, “Look at her face like yeaaa bae.” 

“That was such a respectful push. Like not too much, not too lite lol like I’m sure the camera man knew why he was pushed out the way lol,” @bigfridaythedon wrote.

“Exactly how you’re supposed to move about your woman,” @tierrablunt said.

RELATED: That’s His Queen! Russell Wilson Didn’t Hold Back In His Birthday Message For Ciara (VIDEO)

What Do You Think Roomies?

Volkswagen’s Scout Motors reveals first EVs, plans for plug-in hybrids

Scout Terra pickup truck and Scout Traveler SUV concepts

Scout

NASHVILLE, Tenn. — Volkswagen-backed Scout Motors revealed its first electric vehicles Thursday and announced plans for the brand to expand its lineup to include an emerging type of plug-in hybrid electric vehicle in addition to EV models.

Scout, a former American vehicle brand from 1961 to 1980, was expected to exclusively offer EVs in a bid for the German automaker to expand its presence in the U.S. However, slower-than-expected adoption of EVs and higher costs have led it to change course and include extended-range electric vehicles, or EREVs.

“Being a startup that moves quickly, we can pivot,” Scout CEO Scott Keogh, a longtime auto executive who previously led VW’s operations in the U.S., told CNBC. “The pivot that we made a number of months ago into offering range extender definitely was a smart play.”

EREVs are basically a type of plug-in hybrid electric vehicle. They include EV motors and battery cells, as well as a traditional internal combustion engine to power the vehicle’s electric components when the battery loses its energy. The engine essentially acts as a generator to power the EV components when needed.

Scout Terra pickup truck concept

Keogh said Scout added EREVs to better protect the brand from any market volatility amid less-than-expected consumer demand for EVs.

“We think electrification is the future. Range extender sets it up as an EV car, so it introduces people to electrification, yet it has a super smart, let’s say, ‘backup plan,'” he said during an interview Thursday. “It will drive like an EV.”

He said Scout has no plans to offer a traditional, non-electric vehicle with only an internal combustion engine.

The company’s first vehicles — a full-size pickup truck and large SUV — will cover about 40% of the highly profitable U.S. sales market.

Keogh said the company targets to be profitable on an operational basis within the first full calendar year after initial production of the vehicles, which will be built at a $2 billion plant that’s under construction in South Carolina.

“If you look at these profit pools, these two areas, from this size pickup truck to this sized SUV … these are the largest profit pools in the world,” Keogh said.

Scout Traveler SUV concept 

Scout

Being profitable during that timeframe would be quite a success, as current EV startups such as Rivian Automotive and Lucid Group lose tens of thousands of dollars on each vehicle they produce after several years.

Meanwhile, Keogh said an announced software deal between VW and Rivian will not impact Scout’s operations. He described the $5 billion software deal, which includes the establishment of a joint venture, as an “exciting opportunity” for Scout.

“It’s good for scaling. It’s good for technology. It’s good for everything,” Keogh said.

Scout’s South Carolina plant is planned to have a production capacity of 200,000 vehicles. Scout expects to use batteries — the most expensive part of an electric vehicle — from VW’s joint venture battery cell manufacturer in Canada.

The company opened reservations for the vehicles Thursday night on its website. Scout plans to sell the vehicles directly to consumers instead of through a traditional franchised dealer network like VW does in the U.S.

New SUV, truck

Scout’s first two vehicles will be the Traveler SUV and Terra pickup truck, scheduled to arrive in 2027.

The company revealed “production-intent concept vehicles” — which means they are largely expected to be the same vehicles that go on sale — Thursday outside of Nashville, Tennessee.

Interior of Scout Traveler SUV concept

Scout

Both the Traveler and Terra are expected to start between $50,000 and $60,000 with available incentives, according to Scout. Keogh said pricing for the EREVs is expected to be in that range as well. He declined to say if they will cost more or less than the all-electric models.

The Traveler SUV is expected to account for two-thirds of the company’s initial sales, Keogh said.

The EREV vehicles will feature more than 500 miles of range, according to the company, compared with 300 miles of range for the all-electric models.

The designs of the Traveler and Terra are modernized versions of former Scout vehicles. They feature similar design characteristics but in smoother, more stylish exteriors. The interiors of the vehicles feature large horizontal screens and soft-touch materials.

VW acquired the Scout trademark and name following the global conglomerate’s $3.7 billion acquisition of Navistar, a successor of Scout’s original owner International Harvester, in 2021.

Scout Traveler SUV concept 

Fully electric Scout vehicles are targeted to climb 100% grades and accelerate 0-60 mph in as quick as 3.5 seconds and offer nearly 1,000 lb.-ft. of torque, the company said.

Scout said the vehicles will use the North American Charging Standard, an 800-volt architecture with up to 350-kilowatt charging capability, and will be capable of bi-directional charging that will allow the vehicle to act as a generator.

Tough market, competition

The SUV is expected to be a competitor to traditional off-road SUVs from Jeep as well as the Ford Bronco and Toyota Land Cruiser. It’s larger than Jeep’s well-known Wrangler, which is currently available as a plug-in hybrid electric vehicle.

The truck is a full-size pickup — a segment currently dominated by Ford, General Motors and Stellantis’ Ram brand. But the electric pickup market where Scout will compete remains a developing market.

Automakers such as GM and Ford rushed to release all-electric pickup trucks early in this decade to compete against several EV startups, many of which never materialized, as well as Tesla. Stellantis is expected to release all-electric and EREV full-size pickups by next year.

Scout Traveler SUV concept 

But after rushing the vehicles to market, sales slowed. Much like the overall EV industry, the large vehicles went from commanding significant price premiums to being highly incentivized.

Overall, this electric “truck” market, including the SUVs, accounted for nearly 58,000 vehicles sold during the first half of this year, according to estimates from Motor Intelligence. That’s less than 1% of the roughly 7.9 million light-duty new vehicles sold during that time in the U.S., but a 35% quarterly increase from the first to the second quarter, according to the data.

Keogh believes Scout can differentiate itself in the market with its products, lower pricing and brand appeal. Additional Scout products are expected to follow in the years ahead, Keogh said.

“Can we consider some point in the future sizing down? Absolutely,” he said. “You want to throw the dart at the best place first. And I think we’ve done that between these two vehicles.”

Danaher returns bioprocessing to progress. We’re elevating our score again to a purchase

In this photo illustration, a Danaher Corporation logo seen displayed on a tablet. 

Igor Golovnov | SOPA Images | Lightrocket | Getty Images

Danaher shares declined Tuesday despite the life sciences company returning its key bioprocessing business to growth in the third quarter.

McDonald’s shares fall after CDC says E. coli outbreak linked to Quarter Pounders

A McDonald’s located on Route 66 in Azusa, California, on April 1, 2024.

Robert Gauthier | Los Angeles Times | Getty Images

McDonald’s shares dropped in extended trading Tuesday after the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said an E. coli outbreak linked to McDonald’s Quarter Pounder burgers has led to 10 hospitalizations and one death.

The agency said 49 cases have been reported in 10 states from Sept. 27 to Oct. 11, with most of the illnesses in Colorado and Nebraska. “Most” sick people reported eating a McDonald’s Quarter Pounder, the CDC added.

One of the patients developed hemolytic uremic syndrome, which is a serious condition that can cause kidney failure. An older adult in Colorado died. 

McDonald’s shares dropped about 7% in after-hours trading Tuesday.

In a statement Tuesday, McDonald’s said it is taking “swift and decisive action” following the E. Coli outbreak in certain states.

The company said initial findings from the ongoing investigation show that some of the illnesses may be linked to slivered onions — or fresh onions sliced into thin shapes — that are used in the Quarter Pounder and sourced by a single supplier that serves three distribution centers. McDonald’s has instructed all local restaurants to remove slivered onions from their supply and has paused the distribution of that ingredient in the impacted area.

Zoom In IconArrows pointing outwards

This map shows where the 49 people in this E. coli outbreak live.

Source: CDC

Quarter Pounder hamburgers will be temporarily unavailable in several Western states, including Colorado, Kansas, Utah and Wyoming, and portions of other states, McDonald’s said. It added that it was working with suppliers to replenish ingredients.

Quarter Pounder hamburgers are a core menu item for McDonald’s, raking in billions of dollars each year. In 2018, McDonald’s launched fresh beef for its Quarter Pounders across most of its U.S. stores.

The CDC said the number of people affected by the outbreak is “likely much higher” than what has been reported so far. The agency said that’s because many people recover from an E. coli infection without testing for it or receiving medical care. It also typically takes three to four weeks to determine if a sick patient is part of an outbreak, the CDC added. 

E. coli refers to a group of bacteria found in the gut of nearly all people and animals. But some strains of the bacteria can cause mild to severe illness if a person eats contaminated food or drinks polluted water.

Symptoms, including stomach cramps, diarrhea and vomiting, usually start three to four days after swallowing the bacteria, according to the CDC. Most people recover without treatment after five to seven days.

There have been several past reported cases of E. coli at McDonald’s restaurants.

In 2022, at least six children developed symptoms consistent with E. coli poisoning after eating McDonald’s’ Chicken McNuggets Happy Meals in Ashland, Alabama. Four of the six children were admitted to a hospital after experiencing severe adverse effects.

Don’t miss these insights from CNBC PRO

2025 tax brackets and federal earnings charges

Rockaa | E+ | Getty Images

Federal tax brackets for 2025

Federal income tax brackets show how much you owe on each part of your “taxable income,” which you calculate by subtracting the greater of the standard or itemized deductions from your adjusted gross income.

  • 37% for individual single taxpayers with incomes greater than $626,350 ($751,600 for married couples filing jointly)
  • 35% for incomes over $250,525 ($501,050 for married couples filing jointly)
  • 32% for incomes over $197,300 ($394,600 for married couples filing jointly)
  • 24% for incomes over $103,350 ($206,700 for married couples filing jointly)
  • 22% for incomes over $48,475 ($96,950 for married couples filing jointly)
  • 12% for incomes over $11,925 ($23,850 for married couples filing jointly)
  • 10% for incomes of $11,925 or less ($23,850 or less for married couples filing jointly)

After 2025, lower taxes enacted by former President Donald Trump will sunset without action from Congress. If the provision expires, the tax brackets will revert to 2017 levels, shifting to 10%, 15%, 25%, 28%, 33%, 35% and 39.6%.

Higher standard deduction

The standard deduction will also increase in 2025, rising to $30,000 for married couples filing jointly, up from $29,200 in 2024. Starting in 2025, single filers can claim $15,000, a bump from $14,600.

Trump’s tax cuts also included higher standard deductions, which will sunset after 2025 if Congress doesn’t extend that tax break. 

Small companies get extra bullish amid rate of interest cuts: CNBC survey

Small business owners are collectively breathing a sigh of relief at the Federal Reserve’s widely-anticipated decision to cut interest rates last week, and new data show owners expect to put that increased capital to work.

CNBC and SurveyMonkey’s Small Business Survey for Q3 found that owners said lower interest rates will lead them to increase investments, expand their business or increase inventory. The poll was taken September 3-9, before the Fed meeting where a rate cut was expected, among a national sample of 2,276 self-identified small business owners ages 18 and up online.

Main Street has been closely monitoring interest rates. Data from the National Federation of Independent Business, a small business lobbying group, found interest rates on short maturity loans stood at 9.5 percent in August of this year, up from 7.6 percent in January of 2023. In addition, 60 percent of owners said they were not interested in borrowing right now, due in part to high rates.

Lower rates can free up resources for owners to allocate to other areas of their business, including remaining competitive on hiring, according to Holly Wade, director of the NFIB’s Research Center.

“That would be a great benefit for them to see if they can’t be more competitive in that space on wages and benefits and ease up some of those cost pressures that they’ve been dealing with for the last three or so years,” Wade told CNBC in an interview.

Closely tied to interest rates is inflation. One in three small business owners in CNBC and SurveyMonkey’s survey believe that inflation has peaked, up 9 points from last quarter’s 24 percent reading. But two-thirds still believe it will continue to rise despite optimism for inflation relief hitting its highest level since CNBC and SurveyMonkey began asking that question, and the highest reading this year. Still, owners are cautious, as 38 percent say inflation is the biggest risk to their business, nearly three times higher than the next biggest risks, consumer demand and interest rates.

In addition, overall confidence increased in the quarterly CNBC/SurveyMonkey poll to 51 out of 100. That’s up four points from last quarter and nine points from the same quarter last year, and the first time during the Biden presidency that it has risen above 50, a “net confident” reading.

Fed Chair Powell: We're not declaring victory over inflation with 50 bps rate cut

Liam Payne’s Ex Danielle Peazer Posts Private Message After His Demise

“I am absolutely devastated about the passing of my amazing friend, Liam,” Niall wrote in a lengthy Instagram statement. “It just doesn’t feel real. Liam had an energy for life and a passion for work that was infectious. He was the brightest in every room and always made everyone feel happy and secure.”

The “Slow Hands” singer continued to reminisce on his time singing alongside Liam in One Direction. 

“All the laughs we had over the years, sometimes about the simplest of things, keep coming to my mind through the sadness,” Niall added. “We got to live out our wildest dreams together and I will cherish every moment we had forever. The bond and friendship we had doesn’t happen often in a lifetime.”

Niall, who had Liam and his girlfriend Kate Cassidy as guests at his recent concert in Buenos Aires, also detailed what it was like seeing his friend for the final time. 

“I feel so fortunate that I got to see him recently,” Niall wrote. “I sadly didn’t know that after saying goodbye and hugging him that evening, I would be saying goodbye forever. It’s heartbreaking. My love and condolences go out to Geoff, Karen, Ruth, Nicola and of course his son Bear. Thank you for everything, Payno. Love you brother.”

CVS replaces CEO Karen Lynch with exec David Joyner

Longtime CVS Health executive David Joyner has succeeded Karen Lynch as CEO, as the company struggles to drive higher profits and stock performance, CVS announced Friday.

The move, effective Thursday, the day before the announcement, comes as CVS shares have fallen nearly 20% this year. The stock closed around 5% lower on Friday.

CVS has faced challenges as higher medical costs weigh on its insurance unit, Aetna, and a retail pharmacy business pressured by softer consumer spending and reimbursement headwinds for prescription drugs. In August, the company slashed its full-year profit guidance for the third consecutive quarter and said it would cut $2 billion in costs over the next several years.

In its release Friday, CVS also said it expects adjusted earnings of between $1.05 and $1.10 per share for its third quarter. It anticipates higher medical costs than previously expected.

“In light of continued elevated medical cost pressures in the Health Care Benefits segment, investors should no longer rely on the Company’s previous guidance provided on its second quarter 2024 earnings call on August 7, 2024,” CVS said in the release.

The company is set to report third-quarter earnings on Nov. 6.

Last month, major CVS shareholder Glenview Capital began a significant push for changes at the company, CNBC previously reported.

In a statement on Friday, Glenview Capital said it respects and supports Lynch’s departure from the company and looks forward to engaging with Joyner. The firm called for CVS to refresh its board of directors.

“We believe the Company’s culture, governance and leadership should be strengthened by those with both appropriate industry experience as well as fresh perspectives and that the Company would be best served through prompt Board evolution,” Glenview said.

CNBC also reported last month that CVS’ board had engaged strategic advisors to weigh its options, including the potential of a breakup of its insurance and retail businesses. But CVS will now move forward intact, a company spokesperson told CNBC on Friday.

Joyner most recently oversaw the company’s pharmacy services business as president of CVS’ major pharmacy benefits manager, Caremark, a similar position to the one Lynch held before she assumed the top job in February 2021. He retired from CVS in 2019 before returning to helm Caremark at the beginning of last year.

“I came back to CVS Health in 2023 because I believed I could give more to the company, and I take this opportunity today for the same reason,” Joyner said in a statement.

He began his career at Aetna in pharmacy benefit services and previously held the role of executive vice president of sales and marketing at CVS Health.

Joyner also had a roughly eight-year stint at Caremark before CVS acquired it in 2007. Caremark is one of the nation’s three largest so-called PBMs, which sit at the center of the U.S. drug supply chain. PBMs negotiate drug rebates with manufacturers on behalf of insurers, create lists of preferred medications covered by health plans and reimburse pharmacies for prescriptions. 

“We believe David and his deep understanding of our integrated business can help us more directly address the challenges our industry faces, more rapidly advance the operational improvements our company requires, and fully realize the value we can uniquely create,” Chairman Roger Farah said in a statement.

Lynch also stepped down from the company’s board of directors this week, the company said Friday. Joyner will take a seat on the board, and Farah will assume the role of executive chairman.

As CEO of CVS, Joyner will grapple with the Biden administration and lawmakers’ increased scrutiny of Caremark and other PBMs, which will likely continue regardless of which party holds the White House after the U.S. election. The Federal Trade Commission last month sued Caremark and two other large PBMs, arguing that they use practices that boost their profits while inflating insulin costs for patients.

He’ll also need to navigate higher medical costs from Medicare Advantage patients, which have jumped over the last year for insurers as more seniors return to hospitals to undergo procedures they had delayed during the Covid-19 pandemic. Medicare Advantage is a privately run health insurance plan contracted by Medicare.

The company is hoping to achieve its target of 100 to 200 basis points margin improvement in its Medicare Advantage business next year, CVS executives said in August. 

Next month, CVS will report that medical costs were still elevated in the third quarter.

The company expects its insurance unit’s medical benefit ratio — a measure of total medical expenses paid relative to premiums collected — to be around 95.2% for the quarter, up from 85.7% during the year-earlier period. A lower ratio typically indicates that a company collected more in premiums than it paid out in benefits, resulting in higher profitability.

— CNBC’s Sara Salinas and Rohan Goswami contributed to this report.

Jack Smith’s 1/6 Proof Towards Trump Will Be Launched Tomorrow

Judge Chutkan ruled against Trump’s motion for a delay and ordered that a redacted version of Jack Smith’s 1/6 evidence against Trump will be released tomorrow.

MSNBC legal analyst Kristy Greenberg posted:

Judge Chutkan DENIED Trump’s delay request and will order the redacted exhibits to Jack Smith’s brief be made public tomorrow. And that’s not all. She took Trump

to school with an important lesson on the meaning of election interference:

“If the court withheld information that the public otherwise had a right to access solely because of the potential political consequences of releasing it, that withholding could itself constitute – or appear to be – election interference. The court will therefore continue to keep political considerations out of its decision-making, rather than incorporating them as Defendant requests. Any argument about what needs to happen before or shouldn’t happen before the election is not relevant here.”

Trump has been desperately trying to prevent the release of Jack Smith’s 1/6 evidence against him, even in redacted form, before the election. Trump already got a dose of how powerful the 1/6 issue is when he visibly turned off voters at the Univision town hall by calling 1/6 a day of love.

The reason why Trump and his party have been trying to rewrite the history of their attempt to overthrow the government on 1/6/2021 is that they know how power the 1/6 issue is with voters.

Donald Trump doesn’t want the country to see the Special Counsel’s evidence of the alleged crimes that the former president committed.

The evidence that Trump doesn’t want voters to see is about to be made public in redacted form as votes are being cast to choose the next president.

To comment on this story, join us on Reddit.

Jason is the managing editor. He is also a White House Press Pool and a Congressional correspondent for PoliticusUSA. Jason has a Bachelor’s Degree in Political Science. His graduate work focused on public policy, with a specialization in social reform movements.

Awards and  Professional Memberships

Member of the Society of Professional Journalists and The American Political Science Association

Jason EasleyLatest posts by Jason Easley (see all)