Don Bolduc projected to win New Hampshire GOP Senate primary

Don Bolduc projected to win New Hampshire GOP Senate primary
Don Bolduc projected to win New Hampshire GOP Senate primary
Scott Eisen/Getty Images

(WASHINGTON) — ABC News reports that retired Army Brigadier Gen. Don Bolduc is projected to win the Republican nomination in New Hampshire’s Senate race, handing a victory to a controversial candidate in one the nation’s marquee midterm contests.

Bolduc defeated a field including state Senate President Chuck Morse. With 87% of the vote in, Bolduc led the field with 37% of the vote, compared with 36% for Morse.

Bolduc hailed his win, saying his victory helped put Republicans “one step closer towards defeating” first-term Democrat Maggie Hassan, one of the Senate’s most vulnerable incumbents.

Morse, meanwhile, tweeted overnight that “It’s been a long night & we’ve come up short” and said he “called and wished all the best” to Bolduc.

Bolduc’s primary win marks a defeat for establishment Republicans in New Hampshire and Washington, D.C., seeking to elevate Morse, whom they viewed as a more electable candidate to put up against Hassan.

Morse boasted that he’d look to work across the aisle while Bolduc sparked worries over a years-long reputation of courting controversy.

Among other things, Bolduc called popular Republican Gov. Chris Sununu a “Chinese Communist sympathizer,” said U.S. forces should “get in there on the ground” in Ukraine, advocated for the repeal of the 17th Amendment codifying direct popular election of U.S. senators and accused then-President Donald Trump of rigging the 2020 Senate primary that Bolduc lost by endorsing an opponent.

Neither Bolduc nor Morse has as beefy a war chest as Hassan, though Bolduc’s fundraising has been particularly anemic.

Amid rising concern over Bolduc’s polling lead late into the primary race, Republicans in Washington and Concord mobilized to blunt his momentum.

White Mountain PAC, a political group with reported ties to Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., dumped millions into an ad buy highlighting Bolduc’s “crazy ideas.” Sununu, who routinely wins reelection by yawning margins, also endorsed Morse, blasting Bolduc as a “conspiracy-theory type” candidate who would struggle to unseat Hassan.

Some Democrats, meanwhile, sought to undercut Morse, seemingly in the belief that elevating Bolduc would net them a more beatable foe. Senate Majority PAC, which has ties to Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., released an ad tying Morse to McConnell, who has drawn the ire of Trump and his diehard supporters in the grassroots.

Copyright © 2022, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

James Taylor celebrates Inflation Reduction Act’s passage at White House

James Taylor celebrates Inflation Reduction Act’s passage at White House
James Taylor celebrates Inflation Reduction Act’s passage at White House
MANDEL NGAN/AFP via Getty Images

James Taylor knows how sweet it is to perform at America’s most famous house — the White House — because that’s what he did on Tuesday to celebrate the passage of the Inflation Reduction Act.

The Grammy winner suited up for the event, even trading in his signature cap for a classy fedora. He cracked before jumping in to a performance of one of his biggest hits, “Fire & Rain,” that he’s “not used to needing sunblock to go on stage.” His wife, Kim Taylor, then joined him to assist with “You Can Close Your Eyes” and “America the Beautiful.”

Taylor supports the latest piece of legislation from the White House, calling it “important” and a “hopeful moment” for the nation. 

“This is a time where the world needs to cooperate more than ever before, more than anything since the second world war. The world needs to get together and respond to the climate crisis,” Taylor said. He advocated and encouraged people to see the bill “as an opportunity to come together to protect our home.”

The Rock and Roll Hall of Fame inductee is an outspoken advocate for climate change, and this initiative contains some green energy incentives. He has also served on the Natural Resources Defense Council for over three decades.

It should be noted former President Barack Obama awarded Taylor the nation’s highest civilian honor, the Presidential Medal of Freedom, in 2015.

Video of the celebration is now available to watch on YouTube.

Copyright © 2022, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Billie Eilish recalls her surprise while meeting King Charles III and family: “I was, like, ready to curtsy”

Billie Eilish recalls her surprise while meeting King Charles III and family: “I was, like, ready to curtsy”
Billie Eilish recalls her surprise while meeting King Charles III and family: “I was, like, ready to curtsy”
EON Productions, Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Studios, and Universal Pictures

Last year, when the James Bond film No Time to Die premiered in London, Billie Eilish — who wrote the movie’s theme song — got the chance to meet some of the British royal family, including then-Prince, now King, Charles III and Prince William. She says what struck her the most was, well, how chill they all were.

Speaking to Australian radio hosts Fitzy and Wippa on the Nova Network, Billie recalled that she had been given a long list of rules to follow ahead of meeting the royals, which promptly went out the window.

“I had it all ready to go,” she said. “I was, like, studying what the etiquette was supposed to be. I was, like, ready to curtsy. I was ready to not shake a hand. I was ready to not ask questions and not speak unless I was spoken to. And I was so worried about it! I was like, ‘I’m not gonna know how to do it!’”

“And they all walked in,” Billie continued. “And they were like, ‘What’s up!? How are ya!? How’s it going!?'”

“They were just so nice and friendly and charming,” she laughed.

Billie also shared with Fitzy and Wippa that these days, when she’s on tour, she’ll actually leave her hotel room…sometimes.

“I used to go out and like walk around and do stuff. And I don’t do that as much. Because life is a little different,” she laughed. ”For the last couple of years, when I was on tour, I was scared to step outside ’cause I was just worried [about people recognizing me]. But I am more chill about it now, I’m more comfortable.”

Copyright © 2022, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Katy Perry has plans to make a new album “soon,” followed by a world tour

Katy Perry has plans to make a new album “soon,” followed by a world tour
Katy Perry has plans to make a new album “soon,” followed by a world tour
Courtesy ABC

Katy Perry always seems to be in the public eye, whether it’s judging American Idol or promoting her Las Vegas residency PLAY. One thing we haven’t seen her do in a while is an actual tour, but that might be about to change.

Appearing on The Drew Barrymore Show on Tuesday, Katy was asked about being “too much.” She explained that she has an onstage persona and “dials it up” when she’s doing her Vegas show. Then, she added, “I’ll probably go and make another record soon and write it and tour the world after this, which’ll be so great.”

Katy then pivoted back to the “too much” question, explaining, “I’m pretty, like, ‘even’ offstage. I’m more, like, businesswoman; I don’t talk a lot offstage…I’m very, kind of, an observer. I really save my energy for when I have to go and turn it on. ‘Cause when I turn it on, it’s up to 11, girl.”

Katy’s residency is scheduled to run through October 22; it’s not clear if she’ll announce any other dates. Her most recent record was 2020’s Smile. Her last tour, however, came in support of her 2017 album, Witness, and wrapped up in the summer of 2018.

Copyright © 2022, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Death of Queen Elizabeth II prompts debate about the monarchy’s legacy, future

Death of Queen Elizabeth II prompts debate about the monarchy’s legacy, future
Death of Queen Elizabeth II prompts debate about the monarchy’s legacy, future
Chris Jackson/Getty Images

(LONDON) — The death of Queen Elizabeth II after a 70-year reign and the ascension of King Charles III to the throne marks the end of an era.

With the passing of Britain’s longest-reigning sovereign during a period that saw tectonic shifts in geopolitics and social norms, as well as a royal family rocked by scandal, many are now left wondering: what’s next for the British monarchy?

Criticism, in particular, about the monarchy’s link to colonialism and the lasting injustices it perpetuated — and waning support among younger Britons, according to a YouGov poll — have reignited difficult questions about the future of the monarchy and its purpose in modern times.

“You cannot think of British nationalism, you have to think of British imperial nationalism. And in the center of that is the monarchy,” said Caroline Elkins, a professor at Harvard University and author of “Legacy of Violence: A History of the British Empire.”

At the empire’s peak around 1921, the British colonized around a quarter of the land on Earth, leading to a description of the empire as one on which the sun never sets.

When Queen Elizabeth II became queen in 1952, Britain ruled over more than 70 territories – many of which Britain would lose or relinquish in struggles for independence, including in deadly conflicts.

One of the atrocities that scholars have detailed — and that critics have again highlighted in the wake of Queen Elizabeth II’s passing — was Kenya’s Mau Mau uprising for independence from British rule in the late 1950s.

Some historians estimate that there could have been up to 100,000 people killed in detention camps during the clashes between the Kenya Land and Freedom Army, known as the Mau Mau, and the British authorities, according to Elkin’s book, “Britain’s Gulag: The Brutal End of Empire in Kenya.”

According to a class action lawsuit against the U.K. government settled in 2013, thousands of Kenyans raised claims of torture, imprisonment and rape by British colonial forces in concentration camps during the uprising.

“The successive prime ministers – from Churchill on down – lied to Parliament, lied to the public, covered all this stuff up,” said Elkins, noting the monarchy likely had glimpses into the systematic torture under its imperialism.

“That said, what’s been the monarch’s role in perpetuating an image of imperial benevolence?” Elkins said. “Pretty huge.”

Many former colonies gained their independence from the British empire not in the distant past, but in the 20th century.

India gained its independence in 1947, Kenya in 1963 and Nigeria in 1960. Several countries experienced civil conflicts following their fight for independence due to British interference that reportedly led to thousands of deaths, according to historians.

“Europe came and divided Africa without taking into consideration the identity, the values, the differences and commonalities of different communities, ethnic entities, and so on,” said Mohamed S. Camara, professor of African Studies at Howard University. He also pointed to examples of this in India. “And we have repercussions of that today.”

For some people in those former colonies, Queen Elizabeth II’s rule is associated with oppression.

“Whether it’s in Africa, or in Southeast Asia … the people whose countries went through that will not forget and would like to see serious change happen,” Camara said.

“I don’t think there is any other form of violation of human rights in history that can equal to enslavement,” he added, “the transformation of a human being to the property of another man, let alone the transformation of an entire people into the property of another people or another state.”

Ahead of a trip by the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge to the Caribbean and Central America in March of this year to celebrate the queen, some Jamaican leaders demanded slavery reparations and local opposition in Belize forced them to cancel a trip.

Some of the countries that make up the Commonwealth have also signaled that they want to drop the monarchy as the head of state to achieve true independence from British rule, which Jamaica is moving toward.

They can still be a part of the Commonwealth without the British monarchy as the head.

“I want to say clearly, as I have said before, that each member’s constitutional arrangement, as republic or monarchy, is purely a matter for each member country to decide,” said then-Prince Charles during the 2022 Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting. “The benefit of long life brings me the experience that arrangements such as these can change, calmly and without rancour.”

Though there have been few apologies given from the royal family, the queen did often “extend a hand” to opponents of the monarchy, such as in Ireland, when the queen shook the hand of a former Irish Republican Army commander, Elkins said.

The IRA fought against British rule and was responsible for the death of the queen’s cousin, Lord Louis Mountbatten.

With King Charles III now on the throne, historians say there’s potential for the monarchy to make a fresh start in seeking atonement for past injustices and signal a new era for the royal family.

“There’s no question that [the monarchy has] benefited financially from the trade of enslaved people. And there’s no question that they as an institution benefited enormously from the prestige of the empire,” Elkins said.

“You are the monarch of a multicultural nation that must come to terms with the past,” she noted of the task facing King Charles III. “And if you really have a hope for the future of the monarchy, you must solve this.”

Myko Clelland, a royal expert and genealogist who worked closely with the Royal Household on the publication of their digitized records, says that even though King Charles III is entering at a vastly different time than his mother, the role of the monarchy remains an outwardly apolitical one.

“The constitutional role of the monarchy is separate from politics,” Clelland said.

King Charles III pointed to the changing times in his first speech as king: “When The Queen came to the throne, Britain and the world were still coping with the privations and aftermath of the Second World War, and still living by the conventions of earlier times.”

He continued, “In the course of the last 70 years we have seen our society become one of many cultures and many faiths. The institutions of the State have changed in turn.”

King Charles III has been outspoken about politics in a way that past leaders of the monarchy have not. He’s made comments through the years taking stances against climate injustice, strict immigration policy, enslavement and more.

However, Clelland predicts King Charles III may not necessarily change the monarch’s role as a figurehead intended to be “the heart and the soul of Britain, not the apparatus, not the machinery or the levers of power.”

“People worry that he might try to meddle in government, but that royal prerogative says that those powers have slipped into history, and that keeping the monarchy above politics is a way that keeps their survival,” Clelland said.

Copyright © 2022, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Anthony Michael Hall says ‘The Class’ is ‘The Breakfast Club’ for a new generation

Anthony Michael Hall says ‘The Class’ is ‘The Breakfast Club’ for a new generation
Anthony Michael Hall says ‘The Class’ is ‘The Breakfast Club’ for a new generation

Anthony Michael Hall is no stranger to coming-of-age films.

He starred in several of John Hughes’ classics back in the ’80s, everything from Pretty in Pink to Weird Science, but who could forget about his iconic role in The Breakfast Club? Hall reflected on its legacy as he told ABC Audio about The Class, a new movie he hopes will capture the resonance of his 1985 smash-hit.

“It’s a reimagining, if you will, of The Breakfast Club,” Hall said. “In this case, it’s six kids instead of five. Some of them are dealing with alcoholism. One of the kids is dealing with issues of sexuality and coming out. One of them is dealing with violence at home.”

The Class is a direct homage to The Breakfast Club: it centers on a group of students who are stuck together at school on a Saturday as they retake an exam. Hall plays the school’s assistant principal, working alongside another ’80s icon, Debbie Gibson, who plays the teacher administrating the exam.

“She’s wonderful,” Hall said. “I think audiences will be really surprised, pleasantly surprised when they see her work, because she’s really great. Just real. She’s got a realness to her which cuts through in her role.”

And while it’s hard to believe it’s been 37 years since The Breakfast Club was in theaters, Hall says he’s had a long time to think about the effect of the film and why it’s remained relevant.

“I think, in large part, it’s like group therapy for people,” Hall said. “We hope the same kind of connectivity happens. We want this film to reach young audiences. And I think it’s a very healthy transition to take the structure with The Breakfast Club and reapply it to a new generation.”

Copyright © 2022, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Mother relives car crash involving former NFL coach that left her daughter critically injured

Mother relives car crash involving former NFL coach that left her daughter critically injured
Mother relives car crash involving former NFL coach that left her daughter critically injured
ABC News

(NEW YORK) — It was a mother’s worst nightmare.

On a night in February 2021, Felicia Miller had pulled over on the side of the road to help her cousin, whose car had broken down, as her 5-year-old daughter waited in the backseat. As both cars were stopped on the shoulder, a pickup truck slammed into both vehicles.

Behind the wheel was Britt Reid, the son of Kansas City Chiefs head coach Andy Reid and, at the time, the assistant coach for the team.

Miller spoke exclusively to ABC News on Good Morning America days after Reid pleaded guilty to driving while under the influence as part of a plea deal for a reduced sentence.

The night of the crash, Miller said she found her daughter Ariel trapped beneath the crush of the seats. She had been critically injured with a traumatic brain injury.

“I was just freaking out and then finally, we find her, because she’s buried under the seats,” said Miller. “When I got her outta the car, she was stiff … she was just stiff like a board.”

Ariel was rushed to the hospital where she would spend nearly two weeks in a coma. When Ariel woke up, Miller said she was relieved, but knew her daughter was still hurting.

“She didn’t know who I was, so as I’m trying to touch my baby, like, ‘Hey, baby,’ she was, you know, moving away. And … she didn’t recognize me,” said Miller.

According to a search warrant application obtained by ABC News, an officer on the scene reported smelling “a moderate odor of alcoholic beverages emanating from [Reid].” Reid reportedly told the officer that he’d had “2-3 drinks” and was on the prescription drug “Adderall.”

Miller said her daughter does not remember the crash, but due to her injuries, has had to re-learn many of her favorite things — including dance.

“She didn’t remember the wreck or anything, so she just woke up seeing her pictures and a whole bunch of videos from before [and she compares those to] now, like, ‘Why am I like this?’ is how she thinks,” said Miller.

Reid, who has faced prior legal trouble — including pleading guilty to driving under the influence in 2008 — will be sentenced in late October. He can be sentenced to a maximum of four years in prison.

“I think the family is upset, because they perceive a different system of justice for those who have privilege and those who don’t, those who have privilege and those people from the victim’s community,” said Tom Porto, the family’s attorney.

In part of a statement to ABC News, Reid’s attorney, J.R. Hobbs, told ABC News that Reid “has accepted responsibility for his conduct,” and added that, “[Reid] continues to be remorseful and has apologized to all affected.”

Details about Ariel’s condition remain limited because of a legal agreement with the Chiefs, who have worked out a payment plan for her medical care.

Ariel, who is now 7, has returned to school. Miller said her “Ariel Strong” shirt serves as a reminder that her daughter is improving every day, but still has a long way to go.

“She’s been strong through the whole last almost two years,” she said. “So my family, we all wear the ‘Ariel Strong’ shirts.”

Copyright © 2022, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

‘The Handmaid’s Tale’ star Elisabeth Moss dishes on season 5

‘The Handmaid’s Tale’ star Elisabeth Moss dishes on season 5
‘The Handmaid’s Tale’ star Elisabeth Moss dishes on season 5
Hulu

(NOTE LANGUAGE) We return to Gilead Wednesday with a new season of The Handmaid’s Tale on Hulu.

After that big death at the end of last season, star and director of several of this season’s episodes, Elisabeth Moss, tells ABC Audio that her character June is spiraling.

“I think she thought that she was going to feel better after killing Fred. I think she thought that that was going to be, bring her some relief or bring her some peace. And it doesn’t because violence is not the answer,” she explains.

“Killing this one person might have made her feel good for an hour, but it doesn’t actually solve anything and it doesn’t bring Gilead down,” the Emmy award winning actress continues. “It doesn’t get her daughter back. And that’s a horrible realization.”

Speaking of Gilead, some are comparing the repressive republic to the U.S., following the overturning of Roe v. Wade earlier this year. Executive producer Warren Littlefield would agree.

“I think after the Supreme Court made their Roe v Wade decision, you know, we are closer to Gilead than ever before, and that scares the s*** out of us,” he says.

Moss adds that everyone was “devastated” and shares, “At the same time, we also feel, I think, proud that we’re doing something and providing a voice or a safe space for people, that we feel like we’re on the right side here. And I think there’s pride in that.”

As for what fans can expect from season 5, show runner Bruce Miller says, “One of the biggest themes of the season is trying to get clean after trauma…the impossibility of getting clean is really one of the themes of the season that you kind of move on with the scars you have. You don’t leave them behind.”

Copyright © 2022, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

What’s at stake in Supreme Court battle over controversial legal theory about who controls elections

What’s at stake in Supreme Court battle over controversial legal theory about who controls elections
What’s at stake in Supreme Court battle over controversial legal theory about who controls elections
Grant Faint/Getty Images

(WASHINGTON) — The U.S. Supreme Court is set to hear arguments in its coming term on the legitimacy of a controversial legal theory about who oversees elections and whether that authority has limits.

The “independent state legislature” theory, backed by a group of conservative advocates, contends that state lawmakers have the ultimate power to regulate federal elections. That power of elected representatives, the theory’s supporters argue, isn’t subject to the traditional restrictions provided by state constitutions, state courts and governors’ vetoes.

But the theory, if embraced by the justices in its most extreme application, could have a dramatic impact on how congressional maps are drawn, voting rules are written and more, according to election experts who spoke with ABC News.

The theory could undermine how American democracy works now, these experts said, raising concerns about what it could mean for how the 2024 presidential race and other contests are run.

The concept is at the center of Moore v. Harper, a redistricting case out of North Carolina, and concerns how two key clauses in the U.S. Constitution should be interpreted.

The Elec­tions Clause states that “the Times, Places and Manner of hold­ing Elec­tions for Senat­ors and Repres­ent­at­ives, shall be prescribed in each State by the Legis­lature thereof; but the Congress may at any time by Law make or alter such Regu­la­tions.”

And the Pres­id­en­tial Elect­ors Clause reads: “Each State shall appoint, in such Manner as the Legis­lature thereof may direct, a Number of Elect­ors.”

Jason Snead, the executive director of the Honest Elections Project, a conservative-aligned group which filed an outside amicus brief in Moore v. Harper supporting the theory, said in an interview in August that the issue gets to “the very core of what it is to have a free election.”

“If the Supreme Court comes down with a ruling that says, in fact, the word ‘legislature’ means legislature, I think that’s a win for voters who want fair rules. I would define ‘fair’ as rules written by the people that they elect to write the law,” Snead told ABC News in a separate interview.

But critics of this view say that overstates the intended dominance of one branch of government.

The theory “fixates on the word ‘legislature’ and makes the leap that because the Constitution uses that word, it means to allow a legislature to regulate federal elections absent all those ordinary checks and balances,” said Ethan Herenstein, counsel with the democracy program at the Brennan Center for Justice, an advocacy group and think tank focused on the “values of democracy” and “the rule of law.”

The Supreme Court’s justices rejected aspects of the “independent state legislature” theory as recently as 2019, when they found that state courts and constitutions could be a check on gerrymandering. But since then, a key number of them have indicated they’re open to exploring the issue again — though it’s unclear if their underlying opinions have changed.

Justice Samuel Alito wrote in an opinion in March that “we will have to resolve this question sooner or later, and the sooner we do so, the better.”

“It takes four justices to decide to take a case, so there are at least four justices interested in resolving whether the independent state legislature theory is an appropriate reading of the Constitution, but that doesn’t mean that the court is prepared to adopt this idea,” said Eliza Sweren-Becker, counsel in the Brennan Center’s Voting Rights and Elections Program.

At the heart of the dispute in Moore are Republican lawmakers in North Carolina who want to resurrect a congressional map that the state Supreme Court struck down as unconstitutional for violating free speech, free assembly and equal protection provisions of the state constitution. A map approved by a state court was instead put in place for this year’s midterm elections.

Here’s a breakdown of the possible changes voters and election administrators might experience if the theory were put into practice:

What voters can expect if it’s affirmed

Much of what voters deal with when they go to the polls is determined by state and local lawmakers, and most state election laws generally apply to both federal and state elections. States generally have one voter registration system, for example.

But the “independent state legislatures” theory, if sanctioned by the Supreme Court, would allow state lawmakers to rewrite the rules for federal races, including those for president, according to the experts who spoke with ABC News. Any election provision included in the state constitution — some of which have been adopted through citizen ballot initiatives — also could be restricted or eliminated completely for federal races.

Mail voting, same-day voter registration, ranked-choice voting systems, secret ballots and other statutes for federal races could be threatened, experts said.

“I think what voters can expect is reduced access to the ballot, more partisan manipulation of maps and more opportunities for partisan interference in elections,” said Helen White, a counsel at the nonpartisan group Protect Democracy.

If the theory is affirmed by the court, gerrymandering is also a top concern for the election experts.

The theory, the experts said, would grant authority to state lawmakers to disregard any oversight by state courts — and gerrymandering could go unchecked.

Snead, whose group is supporting Moore, called such concerns “overblown and overplayed.” State legislatures, he said, would still need to be checked by federal law and Congress.

What election officials can expect

“It would create a two-tiered system where one set of laws applies to federal elections and another set of laws applies to state elections, which were becoming incredibly difficult to administer and be very hard for election officials let alone voters to understand what is required of them,” said election attorney Sweren-Becker.

Another likely side effect of the theory being embraced, experts said, would be federal courts becoming inundated with lawsuits about federal election rules because state courts would no longer have a role to play in such issues.

“If anything, the [theory] will promote unending election litigation, bringing uncertainty and disruption,” Carolyn Shapiro, a founder and co-director of Chicago-Kent’s Institute on the Supreme Court of the United States, told House members in a congressional hearing in late July.

Experts warn elections staff could be overwhelmed and overburdened as a result and congressional maps could become more partisan than ever if state legislatures are allowed to operate with limited constraints — all of which would disenfranchise and devalue the voice of the voter.

ABC News has reached out to North Carolina House Speaker Tim Moore, who is leading Republicans in the case, for comment but did not receive a response.

In their petition seeking the Supreme Court’s review, the attorneys for Moore and the state Republicans wrote that clarity was urgently needed at a local level. They argued that the lawmakers’ authority was unduly usurped over concerns about protecting elections.

“The question presented in this case, concerning whether or to what extent a State’s courts may seize on vague and abstract state constitutional language requiring ‘free’ or ‘fair’ elections to essentially create their own election code, could scarcely be more significant,” the petitioners wrote.

What about presidential electors?

The 2020 election, when some conservatives wanted to create slates of false electors pledged to Donald Trump in states that he had actually lost to Joe Biden, drew national attention to local lawmakers’ ability to try and interfere in election results after voting had ended.

The “independent state legislature” theory could bolster future attempts, experts warned.

“This has the potential to change the rules of the game in far-reaching ways in time for the next presidential election,” ABC News Political Director Rick Klein said. “Depending on how far the Supreme Court goes, it could virtually invite Republican-controlled legislatures to rewrite centuries-old laws ensuring that the candidate who gets the most votes in a state gets its electoral votes — and it even could free legislatures to pick electors on their own.”

Snead acknowledged that if the theory is embraced, state lawmakers could decide to pass a law before Election Day that says the legislature is going to set electors rather than the voters.

But experts — Snead included — agreed that the theory doesn’t allow a legislature to retroactively change the rules if they don’t like the outcome of the election. The lawmakers would have to still have to enact such changes before the election.

“The independent state legislature is not a license to coup,” Sweren-Becker said.

Federal law, she said, prohibits state legislatures from overturning the results of elections.

Copyright © 2022, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Cardi B gifts $100K to her former Bronx middle school

Cardi B gifts 0K to her former Bronx middle school
Cardi B gifts 0K to her former Bronx middle school
ABC

Cardi B is giving back to her old middle school, gifting the establishment $100,000 after making a surprise visit on Tuesday.

In a video shared to Twitter, the “Up” rapper is treated to cheers from the students at I.S. 232 in the Bronx, as she walks through the auditorium. She later shared words of wisdom with the younger generation, encouraging them to work hard in school to achieve their dreams.

“We are thrilled to welcome Cardi B back home to I.S. 232 in the Bronx, and we are so grateful for her generous contribution to her alma mater,” New York City Schools Chancellor David Banks said, according to WABC.

“Cardi B’s commitment of $100,000 for the arts will help the school’s kids soar to their highest heights. Thank you, Cardi,” Banks added.

Cardi’s visit was part of New York’s Community Capacity Development organization.

Copyright © 2022, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.