A pro-abortion access Miss America roils North Dakota House race with independent bid

A pro-abortion access Miss America roils North Dakota House race with independent bid
A pro-abortion access Miss America roils North Dakota House race with independent bid
Donald Kravitz/Getty Images

(BISMARCK, ND) — In November, there won’t be a Democrat running against incumbent GOP Rep. Kelly Armstrong for North Dakota’s sole congressional seat. The former nominee, Mark Haugen, announced earlier this month that he would drop out of the race due to what he called pressure from top members of his party to make room for Cara Mund, a 28-year-old former Republican congressional intern and 2018 Miss America who last week officially qualified for the race as a pro-abortion access independent.

The details of Mund’s late bid were surprising for political observers, especially when big-name North Dakota Democrats suggested their candidate leave the race as she jumped in.

But it’s her candidacy, some of those same state Democrats say, that reflects a more important reality: After the overturning of Roe v. Wade, the politics of abortion access have roiled races even in deeply conservative parts of the country — and abortion supporters appear increasingly galvanized while abortion opponents have seen some of their potential electoral victories, in Kansas and elsewhere, limited.

The big question is what will happen in November, when Democrats hope to protect their fragile majorities in the House and Senate from a resurgent GOP.

A victory for political newcomer Mund against the well-funded, two-term Armstrong — switching the seat from a Republican lawmaker to an independent — would be seen as a win, even as state Democrats insist they will have no role supporting her.

Armstrong, who opposes abortion, last won his seat with 69% of the vote.

“This cycle isn’t really the cycle for pro-life Democrats,” the state’s party chairman, Patrick Hart, told ABC News. “We had a long talk about viability, and in the end, Mark decided to drop out of the race.”

In early August, 59% of voters in historically Republican Kansas voted against an amendment that would strip abortion rights from the state constitution. And in Alaska, Mary Peltola — after also campaigning on abortion access — became the first Democrat in decades to win the state’s House seat over former governor and Republican vice-presidential nominee Sarah Palin.

Then, in another special election — this one for New York’s 19th District, a longtime swing seat — Democrat Pat Ryan won after largely campaigning on a pro-abortion rights message against Republican Marc Molinaro.

“Really, as we look what happened in Kansas and Alaska — there is a lot of energy for women’s health,” Hart said. “And we’ll see what happens in North Dakota at the ballot box this fall.”

On Sept. 3, two months ahead of November’s midterms, Haugen had a jarring Saturday morning breakfast meeting with Hart.

A few hours later, Haugen said that he received a call from North Dakota’s former Democratic Rep. Earl Pomeroy. Shortly after that, he said, he was contacted by the state’s former Democratic Sen. Kent Conrad.

According to Haugen, all three suggested that he should drop out of the race. Pomeroy later told the Forum of Fargo-Moorhead that he “didn’t lean on him [Haugen]” to drop out, but noted that in their conversation, he wanted to “maximize the contrast with the incumbent.” (Conrad’s office did not respond to a request for comment.)

Haugen announced the next day that he would quit. Last week, Mund qualified to appear on the November ballot against Armstrong.

“They want to give a clear shot for Cara Mund to be able to go up against Kelly Armstrong in the race,” Haugen said in an interview with ABC News. “I could have stayed in the race, but I just didn’t see a viable path to victory now with much of my base kind of not there.”

Mund, with a nominal war chest and no party backing, would need to earn a wild-card victory.

She told ABC News that she’s never been contacted by leading state Democrats like Conrad, Hart or Pomeroy, and she has no expectations of an endorsement or financial backing from the state party.

Hart said Democrats do not plan on supporting Mund and do not plan on putting up another candidate in the race.

Other North Dakota Democrats are watching Mund with interest — but not yet open arms.

“I’m saddened because there will not be a Democratic-NPL (North Dakota Democratic-Nonpartisan League Party) candidate on the ballot. If we are going to rebuild the two party system in Red States like North Dakota we need to run Democratic-NPL candidates. Plus, Mark has been a warrior for the Democratic-NPL brand and his willingness to take on a tough ‘red state’ race cannot be under appreciated,” former North Dakota Democratic Sen. Heidi Heitkamp, who has not endorsed Mund, said in a statement to ABC News.

But Heitkamp said that Mund “represents a new generation of leaders who do not want to be defined by allegiance to the two party system. This is ‘new generational energy” not only in North Dakota but nationwide.”

“Where I appreciate her position on reproductive health care, I will need to learn more about her position on Native American Rights, income and wealth disparity, health care and investment in education before I consider an endorsement.” Heitkamp said.

Haugen said his own conversations with some of North Dakota’s top Democrats featured mentions of Alaska and Kansas, where the party saw persuasive signs of how the issue of abortion was motivating voters even in deep-red states.

Haugen also said there was talk of Evan McMullin, a former GOP congressional staffer and supporter of abortion access running as an independent Senate candidate in Utah against Republican incumbent Mike Lee.

Utah Democrats have endorsed McMullin instead of putting up their own candidate.

In his conversations with others in his party, Haugen said, “They brought up the [Supreme Court’s] Dobbs decision, because I’m pro-life and what’s happened across the vote in Kansas recently.” Raising that issue surprised him, he said.

In July, the policy committee of the North Dakota Democratic-Nonpartisan League Party voted down a resolution calling for the party to pull support from Haugen’s candidacy over his anti-abortion stance.

“It failed and failed miserably. So I thought this was over,” Haugen said.

Hart, though, said the party kept hearing about abortion from residents.

In traveling as the party chair over the past few months, Hart told ABC News, many constituents brought up Haugen’s support of the Supreme Court overturning Roe and North Dakota’s resulting “trigger” law, which would ban nearly all abortions in the state. (It’s currently being challenged in court.)

“I’ve been hearing a lot of questions about Mark’s viewpoint and really about the state party being a part of that,” Hart acknowledged.

In deeply conservative North Dakota, where the GOP has held the at-large House seat since 2011, Mund told ABC she sees a certain legislative data point as an inroad for her potential victory: on the ballot in 2014 was a constitutional amendment on personhood, defining it as at the time of conception.

That proposal was defeated by 64% of voters.

“I think there’s the silent majority that just didn’t feel empowered, it didn’t feel like we’ll be represented,” Mund said. “It’s still an uphill battle. But it’s not an impossible battle. And especially after Kansas, after Alaska, don’t be surprised if there’s a big ‘Roe-vember.'”

“At this point in time, there has to be someone on the ballot who who identifies with a woman’s right to choose,” Mund said. “And especially after Dobbs, it just felt like there was really no hope, when you have both the Democratic candidate and the GOP candidate as pro-life.”

Mund said she remembers where she was when the Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization decision came out that reversed Roe after some five decades.

The Harvard Law School graduate — who met the 1,000-signature threshold for listing on the ballot on Sept. 8, two days after she turned in more than 2,600 signatures to the North Dakota secretary of state — was preparing for the bar exam at home in Bismarck.

“I think like a lot of us that were studying thought … now what happens on the bar exam when the Supreme Court has overturned precedent and everything we’ve studied for?” she said.

Mund took the North Dakota bar in July but said she had begun thinking about her bid for the House seat months earlier. Her aspirations of running for office began as she took a class in law school on campaigns and elections — but she never thought she’d jump in this cycle.

When the draft opinion of Dobbs was leaked in May, however, she started moving forward on her campaign.

Mund said she has identified as a Republican for most of her life. After attending Brown University as an undergraduate, she interned for GOP Sen. John Hoeven in 2016 — she said the longtime North Dakota Republican is still one of her political heroes. (Hoeven did not respond to a request for comment.)

Mund said she was mulling a staff job with Hoeven before she jumped into the Miss America pageant — another dream. She attended the 2018 State of the Union address as Hoeven’s guest, following her Miss America victory.

“Coming from a state like North Dakota that had never won, people were constantly underestimating me. And here we are in 2022 and they’re still underestimating me,” Mund said.

If elected, she’d be North Dakota’s first woman in the House.

When she entered the race, Mund said she’d initially thought she would caucus with Republicans. She now says that while she could still vote with the GOP, she isn’t sure she would be embraced by the party — referring to a state Republican rule which bars candidates who have run as independents from seeking the party’s endorsement for six years.

Mund also stressed that her abortion politics set her apart from Republicans.

“I worked for a Republican senator, I grew up with a lot of conservative values,” she said. “But being pro-choice, I knew that there was no way that the party would ever endorse me.”

But Mund’s opponent has hesitations about the independent’s sometimes cloudy ideological stances.

“Running as an independent is not the same as being moderate. The democratic leadership in North Dakota did not chase out their moderate candidate for a more moderate candidate,” Armstrong said in a statement to ABC News.

She said she admires outgoing Wyoming Rep. Liz Cheney’s courage to challenge former President Donald Trump because “he’s not above the law.”

Mund, who is her own campaign manager, lacks robust fundraising mechanisms. “It would have been so much easier to go with a party. But I did not want a party to tell me what’s best for our people,” she said.

Heitkamp, the former senator, applauded her ambition despite their other differences. “Cara Mund is taking on the ‘Good Old Boys’ political establishment in North Dakota,” Heitkamp said in her statement. “She has proven herself to be someone who will call out the unfairness of institutions, whether it is in the political system or the Miss America world. She is very smart and very consistent in her beliefs.”

Copyright © 2022, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Maddie & Tae explain how they plan to “level up” in second half of Through the Madness album

Maddie & Tae explain how they plan to “level up” in second half of Through the Madness album
Maddie & Tae explain how they plan to “level up” in second half of Through the Madness album
Danielle Del Valle/Getty Images

Maddie & Tae’s Through the Madness will finally be complete by the end of this month, as the second half of the project arrives — following the late-January release of Vol. 1 — on September 23.

In between release dates, the duo have lived a little more “madness,” as bandmate Taylor Kerr gave birth to baby girl Leighton early this year, about three months before her due date. Despite arriving early and spending some time in the NICU, Leighton is thriving — so much so that she’s out on tour with Maddie & Tae this fall.

Now, as they prepare to release Vol. 2 of their project, Taylor and her duo partner Maddie Font are looking forward to going deep.

“We divided up those songs and volume one is like an intro to it. And volume two, we take a deeper dive,” Maddie tells CMT. “We’re always diving deep, and always really getting into the nitty-gritty of life and emotions.”

They’re proud of the results, she goes on to say. “I feel like volume two is definitely a level up, lyrically. Not that volume one isn’t still great. We still love her.”

Through the Madness Vol. 2 arrives on September 23. In the meantime, Maddie & Tae are out on the 2022 CMT Next Women of Country Tour Presents: All Song No Static Tour through the end of the month.

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In new essay, Eminem reveals he’s lucky to be alive after years of drug addiction

In new essay, Eminem reveals he’s lucky to be alive after years of drug addiction
In new essay, Eminem reveals he’s lucky to be alive after years of drug addiction
Kevin C. Cox/Getty Images

After years of drug addiction, Eminem has been sober since 2009 and is enjoying one of the best years of his career, being inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, performing during the Super Bowl halftime show, and on September 3, winning his first Emmy Award.

But on Wednesday, the Grammy winner, born Marshall Mathers, took some time to reflect on the joy and pain of his life, including his addiction, in an essay he wrote for XXL.

“You went on tour and people were just giving you free drugs,” Slim Shady commented. “I managed it for a little while. And then, it just became, I like this s*** too much and I don’t know how to stop.”

“I’m coming off The Marshall Mathers LP and going into Encore when my addiction started to get bad,” he recalled. “I was taking Vicodin, Valium and alcohol. I kinda fell off the map a little bit and didn’t explain why I went away.”

Mathers remembered in 2006, “My drug use f***in’ skyrocketed. I had f***in’ 10 drug dealers at one time… Seventy-five to 80 Valiums a night, which is a lot. I don’t know how the f*** I’m still here.”

Now, Eminem’s goal is to “always try to be the best rapper.” He named four MCs that he admires.

“What I hyper-focus on is people like Kendrick Lamar, Joyner LucasJ. Cole and Big Sean,” Eminem said, “because they’re also focused on being the best rappers.”

Mathers concluded by advising artists to study the competition.

“The minute you sleep, someone’s coming to take your head off. That’s what I’ve always loved about rap,” he said. “It’s always evolving, and to succeed you need to be constantly aware of that and keep up with it.”

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Taye Diggs to host 40+ dating reality show ‘Back in the Groove’

Taye Diggs to host 40+ dating reality show ‘Back in the Groove’
Taye Diggs to host 40+ dating reality show ‘Back in the Groove’
Bruce Glikas/Getty Images

Taye Diggs will host an upcoming Hulu dating reality show called Back in the Groove, according to the streaming service. 

The show will see a trio of women in their 40s checking into the Groove Hotel in the Dominican Republic on a quest to “rediscover their youth, joy, and desire.”

The streamer adds, “The object of that desire? Men half their age.”

Diggs is a most appropriate host for the series, as he helped Angela Bassett‘s Stella get her titular groove back in the 1998 romantic comedy How Stella Got Her Groove Back, about a more mature woman’s attempt to get back in the game. 

Hulu’s announcement notes, “As the saying goes, you can’t fall in love with someone else until you fall in love with yourself!”

To that end, 41-year-old Steph from Miami, 42-year-old Brooke from Los Angeles and 43-year-old Sparkle from Atlanta will “break through the double standards older women face every day” in finding a possible connection with a younger love. 

A debut date is still unknown.

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Unreleased recordings of Taylor Hawkins playing with Ozzy Osbourne to be “used for another thing”

Unreleased recordings of Taylor Hawkins playing with Ozzy Osbourne to be “used for another thing”
Unreleased recordings of Taylor Hawkins playing with Ozzy Osbourne to be “used for another thing”
Steve Jennings/WireImage

Late Foo Fighters drummer Taylor Hawkins posthumously appears on Ozzy Osbourne‘s new album Patient Number 9, and according to producer Andrew Watt, there’s more where that came from.

Watt tells Rolling Stone that Hawkins collaborated with Ozzy on several other recordings that didn’t make the final Patient Number 9 track list and hints that they will eventually see the light of day.

“There’s a bunch of other stuff with Ozzy and Taylor, as well, that’s going to be used for another thing,” Watt shares.

Along with Hawkins, Patient Number 9 includes contributions from Eric Clapton, Jeff Beck, Black Sabbath‘s Tony Iommi, Pearl Jam‘s Mike McCready, Black Label Society‘s Zakk Wylde, Duff McKagan of Guns N’ Roses, Chad Smith of Red Hot Chili Peppers and Metallica‘s Robert Trujillo. The album is out now.

Earlier this month, Foo Fighters held the first of two all-star tribute concerts in honor of Hawkins in London. The second show takes place in Los Angeles on September 27.

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Harry Connick Jr. and Lauren Daigle unveil plans for their holiday tours

Harry Connick Jr. and Lauren Daigle unveil plans for their holiday tours
Harry Connick Jr. and Lauren Daigle unveil plans for their holiday tours
fotograzia/Getty

Like it or not, the holidays are around the corner and both Harry Connick Jr. and Lauren Daigle are gearing up for their very own Christmas tours.

Harry invited fans to spend the holidays with him on his recently unveiled A Holiday Celebration 2022 Tour. The outing, which he announced Thursday, kicks off in Hershey, Pennsylvania on November 18 and runs through Christmas Eve, with a December 24 stint in San Francisco.

The crooner will also hit up New York City, Philadelphia, Tucson, Los Angeles, Seattle, Denver and more. Tickets as well as a complete rundown of the tour can be found on his official website

Of course, Harry will be sure to sing all your holiday favorites and his original classics “(It Must’ve Been Ol’) Santa Claus” and “When My Heart Finds Christmas” while he’s on stage.

“You Say” singer Lauren Daigle is also getting ready to show off her holiday cheer with the Behold: A Christmas Tour. The five-stop trek will take Lauren to Nashville’s Ryman Auditorium and New Orleans’ Saenger Theatre between December 6 and December 11. 

The two-time Grammy winner is excited to restart her annual holiday tradition, where she and fans can sing their favorite Christmas songs.

“Music has always been a huge part of my family’s holiday celebration,” she said in a statement. “So for me, being able to do these shows every year, to share these songs with others, brings joy to my heart.”

Tickets can be purchased on Lauren’s official website.

And for those who’re counting down the days until Santa comes down the chimney: Friday marks 100 days until Christmas.

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Sublime biopic in development with ’Catching Fire’ director & ’Ozark’ writer

Sublime biopic in development with ’Catching Fire’ director & ’Ozark’ writer
Sublime biopic in development with ’Catching Fire’ director & ’Ozark’ writer
Steve Eichner/Getty Images

The Sublime biopic is officially in the works.

The upcoming film will be directed by Francis Lawrence, who helmed the Hunger Games movies Catching Fire and the two-part Mockingjay, and written by Ozark scribe and producer Chris Mundy.

Surviving Sublime members Bud Gaugh and Eric Wilson will serve as executive producers along with late frontman Bradley Nowell‘s son, Jakob, and widow, Troy.

In a joint statement, Gaugh, Wilson and the Nowells say, “Wow — we can’t believe this is finally happening and we couldn’t be more honored and excited to have the great Francis Lawrence and Chris Mundy telling our story.”

“We know Bradley’s talent and spirit will be part of this incredible journey,” they add.

The release date and title for the film have yet to be announced.

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Cardi B pleads guilty to misdemeanor charges; agrees to perform community service

Cardi B pleads guilty to misdemeanor charges; agrees to perform community service
Cardi B pleads guilty to misdemeanor charges; agrees to perform community service
YUKI IWAMURA/AFP via Getty Images

Cardi B accepted a plea agreement on Thursday from the Queens County district attorney’s office in New York City after being charged with assault in a 2018 strip club incident.

The original indictment included 12 charges, including two felonies. She has pled guilty to two misdemeanor charges and has agreed to perform community service. The remaining 10 charges were all dismissed.

In 2018, Cardi was involved in a brawl, during which she and nine members of her entourage were accused of throwing bottles, chairs and a hookah pipe inside the Angels Strip Club, injuring two of the bartenders. It is rumored that the Hustlers star suspected one of the bartenders was intimately involved with her husband, Offset.

“Part of growing up and maturing is being accountable for your actions. As a mother, it’s a practice that I am trying to instill in my children, but the example starts with me,” the 29-year-old entertainer said in a statement after accepting the plea agreement.

“I’ve made some bad decisions in my past that I am not afraid to face and own up to. These moments don’t define me and they are not reflective of who I am now,” Cardi continued. “I’m looking forward to moving past this situation with my family and friends and getting back to the things I love the most–the music and my fans.

The “WAP” originally rejected an offer to plead guilty to a third-degree assault in exchange for a conditional discharge.

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Luke Combs will be ESPN’s College GameDay guest picker: “I wouldn’t miss it for the world”

Luke Combs will be ESPN’s College GameDay guest picker: “I wouldn’t miss it for the world”
Luke Combs will be ESPN’s College GameDay guest picker: “I wouldn’t miss it for the world”
ABC/Connie Chornuk

In between a hectic touring schedule, Luke Combs is making a stop in his home state to be the guest picker for ESPN’s College GameDay this weekend.

The star announced the news on social media, and he made it pretty clear what one of his picks is going to be: his alma mater, Appalachian State.

“Don’t even ask me who I’m picking. You know who I’m picking, baby,” Luke said in his video announcement, pointing to the App State ball cap on his head.

Luke also said that making sure he could be there for College GameDay was tough to orchestrate, as he’s currently out on his Middle of Somewhere Tour.

“You know your boy has a show in Green Bay Friday night. Unfortunately he has a show on Saturday night, as well,” Luke said. “But, the logistics were very, very difficult, but we got it put together, and I wouldn’t miss it for the world.”

Tune in to ESPN on Saturday around 11:30 a.m. ET to watch Luke make his picks.

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Anne Heche’s new memoir, ‘Call Me Anne’, set for posthumous release in January

Anne Heche’s new memoir, ‘Call Me Anne’, set for posthumous release in January
Anne Heche’s new memoir, ‘Call Me Anne’, set for posthumous release in January
Axelle/Bauer-Griffin/FilmMagic

Anne Heche‘s new memoir, Call Me Anne, will be released in January, about five months after she died following a fiery car accident in Los Angeles.

Publisher’s Weekly reports Heche had presented a manuscript to Start Publishing in May, and the book will be released by its Viva Editions imprint.

Start President Jarred Weisfeld explained the company is working with Heche’s estate to finish the book, saying, “Anne was an inspiration to the LGBTQ+ community and beyond. This book deserves to be read by all of her fans.”

He added, “We are grateful to have the opportunity to share her message with the world. While we are very sad that Anne isn’t here to see the book be published we know it’s what she would have wanted.”

Heche’s previous memoir, Call Me Crazy, was a 2001 bestseller in which she detailed her struggles with mental health and overcoming sexual abuse in her family. The book has been out of print, but interest in it grew after her death at 53.

Call Me Anne is being billed as a sequel to the former book, containing “personal anecdotes of her rise to fame: how Harrison Ford became her on-set mentor, her relationship with Ellen Degeneres, her encounter with Harvey Weinstein, her history of childhood sexual abuse, her relationship with God [and] her journey to love herself.”

Heche’s partner on the Better Together with Ann and Heather podcast, Heather Duffy, reportedly wrote an epilogue to the new book, explaining, “[Heche’s] wish was that this book could help others get to the other side of pain and learn about her philosophy, which allowed her to remain in a life where she woke up each day looking for opportunities to find joy and spread kindness.”

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