Katie Hobbs projected to beat Kari Lake for Ariz. governor, in Trump’s latest midterm loss

Katie Hobbs projected to beat Kari Lake for Ariz. governor, in Trump’s latest midterm loss
Katie Hobbs projected to beat Kari Lake for Ariz. governor, in Trump’s latest midterm loss
Christian Petersen/Getty Images

(PHOENIX) — Democrat Katie Hobbs is projected to win her race against Republican Kari Lake, ABC News reports, flipping the Arizona governor’s seat for the first time in more than a decade as voters across the nation appear to have delivered a stunning rejection of election deniers and extremists in midterm contests.

After her projected victory, Hobbs said in a statement, in part: “I want to thank the voters for entrusting me with this immense responsibility. It is truly an honor of a lifetime, and I will do everything in my power to make you proud. I want to thank my family, our volunteers, and campaign staff. Without all of your hard work, passion, and sacrifice this night would not be possible. Thank you from the bottom of my heart.”

“For the Arizonans who did not vote for me, I will work just as hard for you – because even in this moment of division, I believe there is so much more that connects us,” she said, adding, “Let’s get to work.”

Hobbs, the incumbent secretary of state, cast her matchup with Lake as a choice between sanity and “chaos.”

“Do we want to elect a governor whose entire platform boils down to being a sore loser — or a governor who’s going to get the job done for Arizona?” Hobbs said on the campaign trail, calling Lake her “election-denying, media-hating, conspiracy-loving, chaos-causing opponent.”

Hobbs served eight years in the Arizona Legislature before being elected secretary of state and gaining prominence in 2020 with her defense of Arizona’s voting system against a barrage of baseless fraud accusations that then-President Donald Trump and his allies thrust in the national spotlight. This heightened profile helped her sail through the Democratic primary, but polling had shown her statistically tied with — if not behind — Lake leading up to the election.

“It’s called ‘battleground’ for a reason,” Hobbs would say of their race.

Lake, among Trump’s favorite endorsees, left her job as a local TV news anchor last year, citing discontent with the media, and months later announced a bid for governor, saying God and Arizona voters called on her to run. Lake pitched herself as “ultra MAGA” and a “mama bear” fighting for the “Arizona First” movement, and she said her first act as governor would be to declare an invasion at the southern border.

“I welcome the attacks, and I welcome every bit of it with ultimate gladness,” Lake said on the heels of her primary win. “Because this fight before us proves to us that God is with us. He has chosen me, and he has chosen you.”

Lake embraced Trump’s attacks on the election he lost. On the stump, she often called President Joe Biden “illegitimate” and said she would not have fulfilled her legal duty to certify his win in 2020. If elected governor, she said she would sign legislation to eliminate electronic counting machines and move to “one-day voting” in the state where voting by mail is a popular option.

“When people tell me what’s the top issue in Arizona, I say, ‘OK, border’s big, the economy’s big, inflation is a problem, our election integrity’ — but what’s really going to get us to the polls, us mama bears and papa bears, is what they’re trying to do to our kids,” Lake said on election eve, leaning into social issues and attacks on “gender confusion.”

Given her embrace of election denialism, Lake is not widely seen as a candidate who will accept her defeat after all the votes are counted.

“We’re gonna win — and when we win, it’s going to be come to Jesus for elections in Arizona,” Lake said while voting in downtown Phoenix last Tuesday. “There’s going to be a come to Jesus.”

Asked last month if she would concede her race if she lost, Lake told ABC News Chief Washington Correspondent Jonathan Karl that she would — “if we have a fair, honest and transparent election.”

During the campaign, Lake repeatedly called on Hobbs to recuse herself as secretary of state, insisted she was “not losing to Katie Hobbs” and recently hired Republican National Committee attorney Harmeet Dhillon as her team continues to weigh legal challenges to the vote.

Lake had also suggested foul play in the primary election before she won. “We outvoted the fraud,” she declared at the time.

Hobbs is the third statewide Democrat whom ABC has projected will win their midterm race this year, after Sen. Mark Kelly and Adrian Fontes, who will succeed Hobbs as secretary of state. While the Republican ticket more often than not campaigned together, the Democrats regularly appeared separately, despite a coordinated campaign under Mission for Arizona, raising questions about unity on the ticket.

Hobbs faced criticism from pundits and voters alike for refusing to debate Lake, with Lake calling her a “coward,” but she maintained she wouldn’t engage with Lake and “make Arizona the subject of national ridicule.”

Laurie Roberts, a columnist for The Arizona Republic, called Hobbs’ refusal to debate Lake “a new level of political malpractice.”

“This is two candidates, each asking to govern a state of more than seven million people for the next four years. Voters have a right to see them, side by side,” Roberts wrote. But that opportunity never materialized.

Lake also highlighted accusations of racism and sexism against Hobbs, citing a winning lawsuit filed by Talonya Adams, a former staffer in Hobbs’ state Senate office who was fired. Hobbs said last year, about Adams, “I can say with certainty on my part, my decision in the termination was not based on race or gender. There were other factors.”

‘Not a Trump state’

Hobbs chose to run a largely low-key campaign when compared to Lake’s rallies and moderated Q&A events, which turned out hundreds. Like Trump, Lake also embraced — and often sparred with — the press.

Republicans flocked to Arizona to fuel the enthusiasm for Lake, including Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, Virginia Gov. Glenn Youngkin, South Dakota Gov. Kristi Noem and Steve Bannon.

But Trump also drew massive crowds in the Grand Canyon State — and, notably, lost in 2020 to Biden by more than 10,000 votes.

And there were prominent names that campaigned against Lake. Outgoing Rep. Liz Cheney invested in TV ads in Arizona, clipping Cheney saying during a Q&A at the McCain Institute at Arizona State University, “I don’t know that I have ever voted for a Democrat — but if I lived in Arizona now, I absolutely would. And for governor and for secretary of state.”

Former President Barack Obama weighed in too, saying that being governor “is about more than snappy lines and good lighting.”

“Katie, she may not be flashy,” Obama said at a rally with Democrats earlier this month in Phoenix. “She could have been. She just chooses not to be, because she’s serious about her work.”

Barrett Marson, a GOP strategist in Arizona, tweeted Friday after Kelly defeated Republican Blake Masters, “Arizona is a conservative state but not a Trump state. And voters keep telling us that.”

Marson predicted Hobbs would win in a state where a third of registered voters are independents because moderate GOP and right-leaning independents “couldn’t stomach” Lake, he said. “And of course, they listened to Lake who proudly said she was driving a stake in the heart of McCain republicans. Looks like the foot’s on the other shoe.”

Lake narrowly won her primary against real estate developer Karrin Taylor Robson, seen as the more establishment candidate endorsed by former Vice President Mike Pence and outgoing Republican Gov. Doug Ducey.

Ducey had said that Lake was “putting on an act,” calling her “Fake Lake,” but he ultimately supported her bid after her primary win.

Lake made border security her top issue, alongside election integrity. She repeated lines from Trump’s winning 2016 presidential race, calling migrants who come across the border “known terrorists … murderers and rapists” while often tying herself to his thinking. “I know President Trump said that many, many years ago. That’s a fact,” she said at a “Faith and Family” festival.

While she struggled to articulate her own plan for the border, Hobbs blamed inaction from both parties in Washington and warned that Lake’s plan at the southern border would “bring untold levels of chaos into our state.” The top issues on her stump included public education, water management and housing affordability.

Hobbs ran TV ads promising to establish a state-level child tax credit and to cut the sales tax on feminine hygiene products, diapers, baby formula and over-the-counter medicines.

Her campaign picked up momentum in September, when a pre-statehood, near-total ban on abortion took effect in the wake of the Supreme Court overturning Roe v. Wade. Hobbs and state attorney general candidate Kris Mayes hit the trail together to say they would not enforce any bans on abortion in Arizona, unlike their opponents.

Asked by ABC News last month if she would support legislation that protected abortion until viability, following the guidelines of Roe, Hobbs said she didn’t want to “talk about hypotheticals.”

“The reality is right now that Arizonans are living under an extreme ban at 15 weeks or the possibility of an entire ban, and we need to focus on making sure that Arizonans have access to safe legal abortion,” she said. “And that’s what I’ll do.”

Lake was rumored to be a potential 2024 vice-presidential pick if Trump were to win the Republican nomination, but it’s unclear what her political future holds with her projected loss in the governor’s race.

Because Arizona is one of five states without a governor’s mansion, Hobbs will likely continue to reside in the greater Phoenix area, with her husband, Pat, two children and their dog, Harley.

Copyright © 2022, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Biden administration to renew fight for more COVID funding with $10 billion request

Biden administration to renew fight for more COVID funding with  billion request
Biden administration to renew fight for more COVID funding with  billion request
Rudy Sulgan/Getty Images

(WASHINGTON) — The White House will return for another round of the fight for COVID-19 funding.

After multiple failed attempts this past winter and spring to secure more money to address the pandemic, the White House plans on requesting $10 billion during the lame-duck session of Congress before newly elected lawmakers begin in January, sources familiar with the discussions confirmed to ABC News.

It could potentially be one of the last chances for Democrats to receive additional COVID funding if there is a divided government next year, but it also comes at one of the lowest points of public concern over the entire pandemic. In a recent poll from Quinnipiac University that asked voters about the most urgent issues ahead of the midterms, only 1% said the pandemic.

The Washington Post first reported the impending request.

People familiar with the budget discussions told ABC News that that $10 billion request would go toward the “research and development of next-generation vaccines and therapeutics” — which has been a major priority for the administration — as well as research into long COVID and global efforts to combat the virus.

There would also be some money set aside for combating other infectious diseases, these people said.

“While COVID-19 is no longer the disruptive force it once was, we face new subvariants in the U.S. and around the world that have the potential to cause a surge of infections, hospitalizations, and deaths—particularly as we head into the winter months, a time when viruses like COVID spread more quickly,” one person familiar with the discussions said in a statement.

“That means an urgent need for additional COVID-19 funding remains to help us stay on our front foot against an unpredictable virus with the tools we know work to protect the American people against COVID-19,” the source continued.

The push for more COVID funding first began in March, when the White House requested $22.5 billion from Congress and said it was running out of money to buy tests, treatments and vaccines.

But Republicans stonewalled the effort, skeptical of how Democrats had spent the billions in COVID aid that had already been allotted. Texas Sen. John Cornyn and others linked such efforts to high inflation.

“The problem is they want to keep spending more money and throw more gasoline on the inflation fire,” he said in September. “I think that’s a bad idea.”

Some in the GOP also pointed to Biden’s remark in a TV interview that the pandemic was “over.”

“The president saying the pandemic is over is … just kind of mind-boggling,” Louisiana Sen. Bill Cassidy, who previously worked as a doctor, said in September. “He wants tens of billions for COVID and he says the pandemic is over?”

Republican Sens. Mitt Romney and Richard Burr, some of the only conservative allies in Congress on the COVID funding cause, worked on a deal that would’ve given the administration $10 billion by pulling from other programs, but that eventually fell apart. In June, the White House took matters into its own hands and moved $10 billion of already-allocated money away from certain COVID efforts so that the government could purchase new bivalent boosters — the latest shots, which target the BA.4/5 subvariants — and Paxlovid, an oral treatment that significantly reduces hospitalization and death.This $10 billion, if granted, wouldn’t necessarily be a replacement of those lost funds.

Instead, the White House would aim to fund new research and treatments that could keep the country ahead of the virus even as it mutates and changes.

Copyright © 2022, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

R.E.M. among nominees to be inducted into Songwriters Hall of Fame

R.E.M. among nominees to be inducted into Songwriters Hall of Fame
R.E.M. among nominees to be inducted into Songwriters Hall of Fame
Shirlaine Forrest/WireImage

R.E.M. is among the nominees to be inducted into the Songwriters Hall of Fame in 2023.

All four members of the now-defunct band — frontman Michael Stipe, guitarist Peter Buck, bassist Mike Mills and drummer Bill Berry — would be enshrined if chosen for induction.

“All four members shared songwriting credit, though Stipe generally wrote lyrics and melodies, Buck pointed the musical direction, and Mills and Berry smoothed out the edges,” reads a Songwriters HoF press release. “The influential, pioneering politically correct band actively raised funds for environmental, feminist and human rights causes and their lyrics expressed their support and concerns.”

Other nominees include Patti Smith, Blondie‘s Debbie Harry, Chris Stein and Clem Burke, Heart‘s Ann and Nancy Wilson, ELO‘s Jeff Lyne and Snoop Dogg.

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Nickelback getting inducted into Canadian Music Hall of Fame

Nickelback getting inducted into Canadian Music Hall of Fame
Nickelback getting inducted into Canadian Music Hall of Fame
Gabe Ginsberg/FilmMagic

Nickelback is getting inducted into the Canadian Music Hall of Fame.

The “Photograph” rockers, who hail from Hanna, Alberta, will officially receive the honor during the 2023 Juno Awards, the Canadian equivalent of the Grammys. The ceremony takes place March 13 in Edmonton, Alberta.

“Returning home to Alberta, where everything started for us, is truly a full circle, milestone moment for the band,” says frontman Chad Kroeger. “We take so much pride in our Canadian roots and are extremely humbled by this honor.”

Nickelback will also be performing during the show. The group’s new album, Get Rollin, drops this Friday, November 18.

The Canadian Music Hall of Fame was established in 1978, and honors “Canadian individuals and groups who have attained commercial success while having an artistic impact on the music scene at home and/or around the world.”

Previous inductees include Rush, Joni Mitchell, Neil Young, Alanis Morissette and The Tragically Hip.

In other Nickelback news, Kroeger and company are confirmed to headline Canada’s Boots and Hearts festival, taking place August 10-13 in Oro-Medonte, Ontario. The mostly country festival will also feature Keith Urban and Tim McGraw.

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Music notes: Taylor Swift, Justin Bieber, Adele, Nick Jonas, Katy Perry, Harry Styles and more

Music notes: Taylor Swift, Justin Bieber, Adele, Nick Jonas, Katy Perry, Harry Styles and more
Music notes: Taylor Swift, Justin Bieber, Adele, Nick Jonas, Katy Perry, Harry Styles and more

Taylor Swift’s “Anti-Hero” holds steady on the Billboard Hot 100, topping the chart for a third straight week. The song was streamed 31.1 million times and sold 327,000 copies — thanks to seven new remixes — over the past week.

If you’re ever feeling insecure about your acne, take a page from Justin BieberGQ reports the singer let everyone know he had a breakout when he decided to wear two star-shaped pimple patches — one on his forehead and one on his chin — out in public.

Adele was hit by a bizarre rumor — The Mirror reports the singer has sunk roughly $500,000 into a backstage breathing “bubble” to protect her voice during her residency. Apparently the concern is about how Las Vegas’ hot and humid climate might affect the British singer’s voice. 

Nick Jonas revealed the four signs he exhibited prior to being diagnosed with Type 1 diabetes, which were weight loss, irritability, excessive thirst and frequent urination. He hopes his Instagram video will increase awareness.

Katy Perry has reached the lunch-making stage of motherhood. She told Extra that after doing her PLAY residency shows she will make daughter Daisy Dove‘s lunches. “I feel so much pride in cutting off the ends of the sandwiches with a full face of, like, sweaty makeup in my robe,” she said. “It’s such a science.”

Harry Styles helped a fan with a gender reveal at his Los Angeles concert. People reports that he helped a fan, who is four months pregnant, find out if she’s painting the nursery blue or pink. “It’s a …,” Harry said while backed by suspenseful drums, “GIRL!” Prior to the reveal he teased the crowd, “I know something you don’t know!”

Ingrid Michaelson teamed up with Keane for a duet of his 2009 smash “Somewhere Only We Know.” You can catch it on Instagram.

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Music notes: Cyndi Lauper, Taylor Swift, Harry Styles, Adele, Nick Jonas, Katy Perry and more

Music notes: Cyndi Lauper, Taylor Swift, Harry Styles, Adele, Nick Jonas, Katy Perry and more
Music notes: Cyndi Lauper, Taylor Swift, Harry Styles, Adele, Nick Jonas, Katy Perry and more

Cyndi Lauper will be on hand to help announce the new class of Grammy nominees on Tuesday. The two-time Grammy winner, along with country duo Dan + Shay, will perform during the livestream, which starts 12 p.m. ET.

Taylor Swift’s “Anti-Hero” holds steady on the Billboard Hot 100, topping the chart for a third straight week. The song was streamed 31.1 million times and sold 327,000 copies — thanks to seven new remixes — over the past week.

Harry Styles helped a fan, who is four months pregnant, with a gender reveal at his Los Angeles concert. People reports he teased the crowd by singing, “I know something you don’t know” before using a dramatic drumroll to reveal, “It’s a … GIRL!”

Adele was hit by a bizarre rumor — The Mirror reports the singer sank roughly $500,000 into a backstage breathing “bubble” to protect her voice during her residency. Apparently the concern is how Las Vegas’ hot and humid climate could affect her voice.

Nick Jonas revealed the four signs he exhibited prior to being diagnosed with Type 1 diabetes: weight loss, irritability, excessive thirst and frequent urination. He hopes his Instagram video will increase awareness.

Katy Perry reached the lunch-making stage of motherhood. She told Extra that after her PLAY residency shows she makes daughter Daisy Dove‘s lunches. “I feel so much pride in cutting off the ends of the sandwiches with a full face of, like, sweaty makeup in my robe,” she said. “It’s such a science.”

If you’re ever feeling insecure about your acne, take a page from Justin BieberGQ reports the singer had a breakout and wore two star-shaped pimple patches — one on his forehead and another on his chin — in public.

Ingrid Michaelson teamed up with Keane for a duet of his 2009 smash “Somewhere Only We Know.” You can catch it on Instagram.

Copyright © 2022, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

‘Yellowstone”s fifth season premiere lassos record ratings

‘Yellowstone”s fifth season premiere lassos record ratings
‘Yellowstone”s fifth season premiere lassos record ratings
Paramount Network

The Dutton clan really knows how to gather a herd. Yellowstone‘s double-shot fifth season premiere on Sunday lassoed some 12.1 million viewers when you count both live viewing across Paramount+, Paramount Network, TV Land, CMT and Pop, and those who streamed it the same day.

The numbers for the Kevin Costner-led show were up 52% in the 18-34 demographic from the previous season and up 22% among those 18-49, Paramount Network announced, touting Nielsen numbers.

The premiere of the show saw Costner’s John Dutton being sworn in as governor of Montana and featured a shocking death.

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Snoop Dogg nominated for Songwriters Hall of Fame induction

Snoop Dogg nominated for Songwriters Hall of Fame induction
Snoop Dogg nominated for Songwriters Hall of Fame induction
Johnny Nunez/Getty Images for MTV/Paramount Global

Snoop Dogg is in the running for an induction into the 2023 Songwriters Hall of Fame.

According to the SHOF website, the institution aims to “celebrate and honor the contributions and legacies of songwriters of all genres of music,” but recognition doesn’t go to just anyone. Songwriters become eligible for induction 20 years after the first significant commercial release of a song, and they have to have a notable discography.

Snoop is one of 12 nominated in the performing songwriters category, along with Sade [shah-DAY] AduGloria EstefanPatti SmithR.E.M.Bryan Adams and Steve Winwood; another 12 are nominated in the nonperforming songwriters category.

The 54th annual Induction & Awards Gala will take place June 15, 2023, in New York City. 

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The late Harry Nilsson’s songbook acquired by BMG

The late Harry Nilsson’s songbook acquired by BMG
The late Harry Nilsson’s songbook acquired by BMG

Artists like Bruce Springsteen and Bob Dylan have sold the rights to their catalogs in recent years, and the latest catalog that’s been snapped up is that of the late Harry Nilsson.

The Grammy Award winner’s song publishing catalog has been acquired by BMG in a deal with his estate that also includes artist and writer revenue streams of his classic tunes. The company also plans to team up with Nilsson’s family on possible future projects in areas of film, television, books and more.

Nilsson, who passed away in 1994, had a two-decade-long career and is best known for such songs as “Without You”; “Everybody’s Talkin’” from the soundtrack to 1969’s Midnight Cowboy; and “One,” which was recorded by Three Dog Night, as well as such albums as Nilsson Schmilsson and Son of Schmilsson. He also collaborated with several big names, including co-writing “Mucho Mungo/Mt. Elga” and “Old Dirt Road” with John Lennon and “How Long Can Disco On” with Ringo Starr.

“We are delighted to have found a partner that shares our love and reverence for Harry’s legacy,” Nilsson’s family shares in a statement. “We look forward to a long relationship with BMG, working together to celebrate this true genius of pop music.”

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Margot Robbie says her female-led ‘Pirates of the Caribbean’ spin-off has been sunk

Margot Robbie says her female-led ‘Pirates of the Caribbean’ spin-off has been sunk
Margot Robbie says her female-led ‘Pirates of the Caribbean’ spin-off has been sunk
ABC

Margot Robbie‘s planned Pirates of the Caribbean movie has been sunk by ABC News’ parent company, Disney, according to the Oscar-nominated actress. 

The spin-off would have been an attempt to resurrect the billions-grossing franchise after Disney dropped star Johnny Depp when accusations of domestic abuse were leveled against him by his ex Amber Heard.

“We had an idea and we were developing it for a while, ages ago, to have more of a female-led — not totally female-led, but just a different kind of story — which we thought would’ve been really cool,” Robbie explains of the swashbuckling adventure to Vanity Fair.

With a “but,” she added of Disney, “I guess they don’t want to do it.”

Time will tell if that means the studio is opening the door for a possible return of Jack Sparrow himself, following Depp’s win in his headline-grabbing U.S. defamation case against Heard’s 2018 op-ed, in which she said she had been abused.

However, during the course of the trial, Depp was revealed to have said he’d never reprise the role because of how quickly Disney torpedoed a sixth Pirates movie over Heard’s piece — even for “$300 million and a million alpacas,” to quote the court testimony.

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