math? plus, a palestinian american student says she s lost more than 100 members of her family to israeli air strikes. other relatives, american citizens, she says, are still trying to leave gaza. she s here to share her story before speaking today at what organizers say will be the largest march for gaza in the u.s. since the start of the war. and some migrant families in new york will have to move out of their temporary housing this week. i ll speak to the city council s immigration committee chair about why she says the mayor is causing harm to vulnerable people. i m victor blackwell. let s start the show. the first voting of 2024 happens on monday, so we will finally start to learn where republican voters stand in this consequential election year. but not at a place that s representative of america. iowa is around 90% white, according to census data, so it s no surprise that they re the majority of voters participating in the caucuses. but there are also black peopl
caucuses, 2% of iowans were hispanic, less than 1% were black. same in 2012, same in 2008. less than 1% black caucused for republicans. however, when it came to the general election, one in five black voters voted for donald trump, a third of latino voters voted for donald trump. so is there anything that explains the disparity between the caucus process and going out and supporting a republican and in the general where minorities do support republicans in iowa? great question. one of the things that the brown and black forums of america are going to begin working on is polling. we see polling every day, we hear all the time that republicans are increasing the amount of minorities who are supporting them. that s been going up since 2024 i mean 2016. we are saying we need to do polling from a minority
the border so you can report to us. second time for you going down to the border this year alone. why are you going? i had the opportunity today to join leader mccarthy, elise stefanik and half a dozen other republicans we are going to be going to eagle pass. one of the ports of entry there along the southwest border. we are going to be meeting with frontline customs and border patrol agents. we are actually going to be meeting with the chief of the border patrol. we are going to be meeting with community officials, with elected officials. with ranchers, with farmers to see firsthand the impact that this border crisis is having on everyone who calls this great state home. we saw last month 221,000 illegal immigrants enter this country and with the son to be less than a month as title 42 expires. we expect the criticize along our u.s. border to continue to grey. apes apes list is growing support republicans that don t want title 42 to end.
this, like, about five times already. you know, i think that s right. another point that jamelle makes is similar leaders all over the world, new zealand, uk, canada, many other countries, have ratings that are as low or lower than biden. a lot of it is, you know, a reaction to both sort of macro economic conditions and the continuation of the pandemic. i think the difference is that when you have a party that is radicalized against democracy, the normal oscillations of power, the normal oscillations between the two parties, become the stakes are just much higher. because when republicans get into power, what they do is they change the rules to make it harder to dislodge them when the voters change their mind. and so in the future, it s not going to matter probably if the voters decide that they no longer, you know, support republicans for congress. right now, polls show that more
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