Seven presidential hopefuls will gather this evening at Loyola Marymount University in Los Angeles for the sixth Democratic debate, and a senior advisor to Sen. Bernie Sanders told Cheddar he does not expect Donald Trump's impeachment to change the rhetoric of the field tonight.
"I think there will be a question about it because it's so fresh and we're coming off the heels of this big day that happened in Washington, DC, but people here at this debate, especially Senator Bernie Sanders are going to stay focused on his core issues… We're going to talk about the brick and mortar issues that have propelled Bernie Sanders to the top in the California polls," Chuck Rocha said.
Sanders surged in a California poll last week. California, which votes on Super Tuesday, promises almost 500 delegates, yielding influence over the presidential primary's ultimate result. In 2016, Sanders trailed in California to Hillary Clinton, who later claimed the Democratic nomination.
California's decision to move its primary up for the 2020 race this year from June to March makes its outcome even more significant. The Golden State has a more diverse population than Iowa and New Hampshire, which vote in February, and will have the largest number of delegates at next summer's Democratic convention.
Rocha thinks the Vermont senator's appeal to young, diverse voters will help propel him to the nomination. "We have such huge support among young people of color," he said. Only one non-white candidate, entrepreneur Andrew Yang, will be on the stage tonight and recent Quinnipiac polls put Yang fourth in the demographic group under 35, which Sanders leads.
"It's time for the working families of this country to have a voice… that's what we stand for and that's what Senator Sanders will continue to stand for," Rocha said.
Cheddar Politics breaks down the seismic shift in White House rhetoric surrounding Russia's war on Ukraine. President Biden began calling the alleged war crimes committed by Russian soldiers in the Kyiv region "genocide." Foreign policy and national security analyst A. Ari Aramesh joins Cheddar News to discuss what constitutes genocide and whether the developments in Ukraine qualify.
President Joe Biden said he is considering forgiving some federal student debt, a step that would help him fulfill a campaign promise and provide relief to borrowers who took out thousands of dollars in loans to finance their higher education.
Catching you up on what you need to know on April 28, 2022, with Elon Musk mocking Twitter's top legal exec Vijaya Gadde on the platform itself, a probe in George Floyd's death finding discrimination within the Minneapolis police force, the latest California drought leading to new water restrictions, and more.
Tech giant Microsoft won a military contract for the production of its IVAS (integrated visual augmentation system) combat goggles, based on its HoloLens ARG tech, worth up to $21.9 billion over 10 years. However, the Pentagon is now saying that the device "has not yet demonstrated the capability to serve as a fighting goggle," and that the Army made mistakes in the program's initial stages by not clearly describing minimum performance standards. While testing continues, concerns have grown outside of the Defense Department to Congress and even within Microsoft itself. Cheddar's Ken Buffa takes a deeper look at the possible boondoggle.
U.S. stocks fell sharply to close Tuesday's session, with the Nasdaq dropping 3.95% and hitting a new one-year low. Frances Newton Stacy, Director of Strategy for Optimal Capital, joins Cheddar News to discuss her reaction to how markets closed the session, and to break down Q3 2022 earnings from Microsoft. "Netflix was sort of the big warning, and I think Big Tech was down today in anticipation of these earnings," she says.
Florida Governor Ron DeSantis has signed into law a bill that strips Disney World of its special self-governing status. This came after Disney spoke out against Florida's so-called “Don’t Say Gay” bill, some saying in retaliation of that. Ben Means, Professor of Law and the John T. Campbell Chair in Business and Professional Ethics at the University of South Carolina School of Law, breaks down how the new law might impact Disney’s business moving forward.
Catching you up on what you need to know on April 27, 2022, with Tesla stocks absorbing an initial hit following Elon Musk's purchase of Twitter, Russia pausing its natural gas supplies to Poland and Bulgaria, NASA's SpaceX Crew-4 mission taking off, and more.
Russia and the United States have exchanged prisoners. Russia released a Marine veteran jailed in Moscow while the U.S. released a convicted Russian drug trafficker serving a prison sentence in Connecticut.