Governor's races test both parties and Minneapolis shooting's 'miracle' survivor: Morning RundownNew Foto - Governor's races test both parties and Minneapolis shooting's 'miracle' survivor: Morning Rundown

In today's newsletter:This year's gubernatorial races in New Jersey and Virginia test each party's political messaging ahead of next year's midterms.An earthquake in Afghanistan leaves at least 800 dead and more than 1,300 injured. Kristi Noem confirms the Trump administration's plans to expand ICE operations in other states after D.C. And meet the woman who has visited 100 Smithsonian exhibits and counting. Here's what to know today. 2025's only gubernatorial races are just two months away, providing one of the biggest tests for both parties since the last presidential election. Showdowns in New Jersey and Virginia will allow each side of the aisle to evaluate their messaging ahead of next year's midterms: Democrats are hoping to bank on anti-Trump enthusiasm, while Republicans seek to replicate his momentum. The GOP is feeling confident in the Garden State, which had one of the largest swings toward Trump in 2024. Republican candidate Jack Ciattarelli has aligned himself with the president and earned his endorsement, but has to balance also winning voters outside his party. The popularity of current Democratic Gov. Phil Murphy could also complicate matters. Meanwhile, New Jersey's blue candidate, congresswoman and former Navy pilot Mikie Sherrill, is positioning herself as a fighter willing to call out her own party. She's centering her campaign around affordability, a key topic for voters struggling with the state's high cost of living. In Virginia, Democrat Abigail Spanberger has seen success in the polls by blasting Republican Lt. Gov. Winsome Earle-Sears over Trump's massive tax cut, putting economic issues at the forefront of her message. Spanberger, a former congresswoman, also earned the endorsement of the largest police union in the state. Still, Earle-Sears is closing in after shaking up her staff and focusing on "common sense" issues. She's trying to closely tie herself to term-limited Republican Gov. Glenn Youngkin, who remains popular in the state. Read the full story here. Trump faces a hurdle in banning mail-in voting:His own party. A federal judgetemporarily blocked the deportationof a group of Guatemalan children who had crossed the border without their families. Former New York MayorRudy Giuliani was hospitalizedwith a spinal fracture after a car accident, according to his head of security. Labor Dayis officially here, which means the NBC Select team has foundtons of dealsup to 70% off on AirPods, sneakers and more. Plus,Amazon's Labor Day salehas discounts up to 50% off on brands like Apple, Shark and more. Sign up to The Selectionnewsletter for hands-on product reviews, expert shopping tips and a look at the best deals and sales each week. At least 800 people have been killed and more than 1,300 have been injured in Afghanistan after a powerful earthquake hit the country, Taliban officials said. The 6.0-magnitude earthquake struck 17 miles from the city of Jalalabad near the border with Pakistan around midnight local time, according to the U.S. Geological Survey. Because the earthquake hit a remote mountainous area, "it will take time to get the exact information about human losses and damage to the infrastructure," said Sharafat Zaman, a spokesperson for the Afghan Public Health Ministry. Read the full story here. Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem confirmed that the Trump administration plans to expand ICE operations in major cities, including Chicago. Noem did not share specifics or comment on whether National Guard troops would be mobilized as part of such an initiative. "We've already had ongoing operations with ICE in Chicago and throughout Illinois and other states, making sure that we're upholding our laws, but we do intend to add more resources to those operations," she said. Her remarks came a day after Chicago Mayor Brandon Johnsonsigned an executive orderto combat a surge of federal law enforcement in the city. During his announcement, he affirmed that local police would not collaborate with the military on immigration. Here's what else we know. Doctors discovered a bullet fragmentin the neck of a 10-year-old boywho went viral for recounting how his friend jumped on top of him to shield him during the mass shooting at Annunciation Catholic Church in Minneapolis. Weston Halsne, a fifth grade student, described running under a pew and covering his head during the attack and said his friend Victor was shot while shielding him. "I think I got, like, gunpowder on my neck," he said. But doctors later discovered it was a bullet fragment. Weston's father told NBC News that the fragment was just shy of his carotid artery, which a doctor described as a "miracle." Siblings Pablo and Pilar Maldonado are also young survivors of the attack, and are leaning on faith and community as they begin to heal. Pablo attended the church'sfirst mass since the shooting, saying it was good to "be with God" even though he's "a little traumatized by going to church."Read the full story here. In January, Kathryn Jones begana quest to visit every exhibit at the Smithsonian's museumsin D.C. and read every plaque. During the past eight months, she's visited 100 exhibits at 13 museums, spending a total of 73 hours inside the buildings and almost 51 hours reading signs. All of it is documented for her TikTok account. "A priority of mine is getting people in museums, getting people curious, reminding people that learning is fun," she said. Jones' mission has new urgency as the Trump administration takes aim at the Smithsonian. Last month, it announced it would begin a systematic review to "remove divisive or partisan narratives" ahead of the nation's 250th anniversary. An 11-year-old boy wasshot and killedwhile playing a game known as "doorbell ditch," Houston city officials said. A Wisconsin boater stumbled upon along-lost shipwreckin Lake Michigan. A man was found dead in a suspectedhomicide at the Burning Manfestival in the Nevada desert. The leaders of Russia, China and Indiamet at a key regional summitin the northern Chinese port city of Tianjin on Monday as they navigate tensions with the United States. Endless digital ink has been spilled over the past decade on how college students transformed campuses from centers of inquiry into places where only so-called woke ideas are welcome.Now high-tech tools are offering a solution, promising to make college students more open-minded — and nicer — when they argue. I looked into several new chat platforms that push students to practice disagreement. The creators told me they hope they'll set up campuses for healthy civil discourse. Among the most prominent is a program called Dialogues, created by entrepreneur Sal Khan, that allows high school students to debate peers on Zoom. Students then rate each other on how well they handle conflict, and share the results with colleges when they apply. Critics say that too many students will fake their way through it, and two prominent universities already backed out of accepting these transcripts. But Khan says it builds bridges and pushes people out of their bubbles, noting that 2,500 students have tried it out in the past five months. And buzz is only growing around the other options targeting current college students and promising to transform the way they disagree. –Tyler Kingkade, national reporter Thanks for reading today's Morning Rundown. Today's newsletter was curated for you by Kayla Hayempour. If you're a fan, please send a link to your family and friends. They can sign uphere.

Governor's races test both parties and Minneapolis shooting's 'miracle' survivor: Morning Rundown

Governor's races test both parties and Minneapolis shooting's 'miracle' survivor: Morning Rundown In today's newsletter:...
More than 800 people killed by powerful quake in eastern AfghanistanNew Foto - More than 800 people killed by powerful quake in eastern Afghanistan

Kabul, Afghanistan— A strong earthquake in far easternAfghanistankilled more than 800 people and left at least 2,500 wounded as it destroyed numerous villages, a spokesman for the country's Taliban government said Monday. Spokesman Zabihullah Mujahid told journalists in Kabul that the vast majority of the casualties were in Kunar province, but that 12 people were killed and 255 injured in neighboring Nangarhar. The quake struck several towns in Kunar province late on Sunday evening, near the city of Jalalabad in neighboring Nangahar province. The 6.0 magnitude quake struck at 11:47 p.m. local time (3:17 p.m. Eastern) and was centered 17 miles east-northeast of Jalalabad, the U.S. Geological Survey said. It was just five miles deep. Shallower earthquakes tend to cause more damage. Several aftershocks rattled the region throughout the night, including a powerful, shallow 5.2-magnitude temblor just after 4 a.m., USGS data show. The first quake shook buildings from Kabul to Islamabad, the Pakistani capital some 230 miles away, for several seconds, journalists with the French news agency AFP said. Video from Nangarhar showed people frantically digging through rubble with their hands, searching for loved ones in the dead of night, and injured people being taken out of collapsed buildings on stretchers and into helicopters. Villagers in Kunar gave interviews outside their wrecked homes. Muhammad Jalal, 40, a resident of Ghaziabad village in northern Kunar, told CBS News' Sami Yousafzai in a telephone interview that he was jolted awake by the tremors and managed to escape moments before his room collapsed. "I was lucky, but at least two members of my family died and four were injured," he said. "We spent the whole night looking for help, but we were helpless and hopeless." Jalal recalled hearing his uncle crying for help from under the rubble for two hours before his voice fell silent. Video shared on social media showed a white-bearded man in an undershirt emerging from the ruins, consoling grieving women who had lost relatives. "This was the will of God. What can we do?" he told them. Dr. Sharafat Zaman, a spokesman for the Taliban government's Health Ministry, said the toll was likely to rise as search and rescue work continued, noting that "several villages have been completely destroyed." Rescue operations were still underway Monday and medical teams from Kunar, Nangarhar and the capital Kabul have arrived in the area, said Zaman. The U.N.said on Xthat it had rescue teams on the ground "delivering emergency assistance & lifesaving support." The Afghan Red Crescentposted on Xthat officials from the agency and "medical teams rushed to the affected areas and are currently providing emergency assistance to impacted families." For Homa Nadir, the Deputy Head of the Red Crescent in Afghanistan, it seemed like "yet another disaster, hitting at the wrong time." Nadir said the emergency health organization's information suggested at least three villages in Kunar had "been completely leveled" by the quake. The disaster comes over four years after theTaliban retook control of the countryin the immediate wake of achaotic American withdrawal. But much of the Western world, including the U.S., has severed ties with the Taliban regime and halted financial assistance, so the country remains gripped by a humanitarian crisis and is one of the poorest nation's in the world. Nadir told CBS News correspondent Holly Williams that the U.S. aid cuts ushered in under President Trump will hamper the relief effort. "We're always expecting these disasters to happen, but it feels like in Afghanistan, people really don't get a chance to just breathe," she said. Jalalabad is a bustling trade city due to its proximity with neighboring Pakistan and a key border crossing between the countries. Although it has a population of about 300,000 according to the municipality, it's metropolitan area is thought to be far larger. Most of its buildings are low-rise constructions, mostly of concrete and brick, and its outlying areas include homes built of mud bricks and wood. Many are of poorly built. Jalalabad also has considerable agriculture and farming, including citrus fruit and rice, with the Kabul River flowing through the city. Afghanistan is located near the junction of the Eurasian and Indian tectonic plates and it is often struck with earthquakes. A magnitude 6.3 temblorrocked Afghanistan on Oct. 7, 2023, along with strong aftershocks. The Taliban government estimated that at least 4,000 perished. The U.N. gave a far lower figure of about 1,500. It was the deadliest natural disaster to strike Afghanistan in recent memory. More than 90% of those killed werewomen and children, UNICEF said. InJune 2022, a 5.9 magnitude earthquake struck parts of eastern Afghanistan, killing more than 1,000 people and injuring more than 1,500 others. "Portrait of a person who's not there": Documenting the bedrooms of school shooting victims The Long Island home renovation that uncovered a hidden story Passage: In memoriam

More than 800 people killed by powerful quake in eastern Afghanistan

More than 800 people killed by powerful quake in eastern Afghanistan Kabul, Afghanistan— A strong earthquake in far easternAfghanistankilled...
China's 'Victory Day' parade to start at 9 a.m. local time on September 3, Xinhua saysNew Foto - China's 'Victory Day' parade to start at 9 a.m. local time on September 3, Xinhua says

BEIJING (Reuters) -Commemorative activities marking the end of World War Two will commence at 9 a.m. (0100 GMT) in Beijing on September 3, the official Xinhua news agency reported on Monday. President Xi Jinping would deliver a speech and inspect the troops, Xinhua said. Russian President Vladimir Putin and North Korea's Kim Jong-Un are among the leaders expected to attend the military parade in central Beijing. (Reporting by Xiuhao Chen and Ryan Woo; Editing by Alex Richardson)

China's 'Victory Day' parade to start at 9 a.m. local time on September 3, Xinhua says

China's 'Victory Day' parade to start at 9 a.m. local time on September 3, Xinhua says BEIJING (Reuters) -Commemorative activiti...
The Brazilian judge defying Trump is testing peers' patienceNew Foto - The Brazilian judge defying Trump is testing peers' patience

By Ricardo Brito, Luciana Magalhaes and Manuela Andreoni BRASILIA (Reuters) -Brazil's Supreme Court goes into final deliberations in its trial of former President Jair Bolsonaro this week in a case that has incurred the wrath of U.S. President Donald Trump. No man has felt the force of that fury, or dismissed it as scornfully, as Alexandre de Moraes, the judge who put Bolsonaro under house arrest, jailed hundreds of his backers for invading government buildings and cowed Elon Musk over social media content. His pursuit of Bolsonaro has led Trump to impose a 50% trade tariff on Brazil, visa restrictions and individual financial sanctions. Moraes, 56, whose stern bald visage has come to define the court he joined eight years ago, insists he won't back down. But behind his implacable facade, he faces a growing backlash from lawmakers seeking his impeachment and public opinion tiring of his hardline tactics. Even within the high court, which has upheld his decisions and presented a largely united front, tensions are rising. Two court sources said his fellow justices worry the Bolsonaro case may draw even stronger blowback from Trump, who has demanded that Brazil drop the trial that the U.S. president calls a "witch hunt." Some Supreme Court justices are preparing to publicly question elements of decisions by Moraes, who is running the case, to show their independence, the court sources said. Moraes told Reuters in an interview in August that he had not heard any concerns from peers about how he has run the Bolsonaro case. "If anyone did complain, they complained to the press," he said. "Whoever put this in the press, I'll say here that it's a lie." In July, the U.S. government stripped visas from eight high court justices, sparing three judges who had clearly diverged with Moraes in prior cases. That has fed speculation among the local press that the Trump administration is trying to sow division on the court. In response to questions from Reuters, a senior U.S. State Department official did not address that speculation but said the visa restrictions targeted Moraes. President Trump "has taken decisive action through the imposition of Global Magnitsky Sanctions against Justice Moraes and his allies," the official said, referring to a law that allows the U.S. to impose economic penalties against foreigners it considers to have a record of corruption or human rights abuses. Supreme Court Justice Andre Mendonca, whom Bolsonaro appointed in 2021, has hinted increasingly in public about divergences on the court. "A good judge must be respected, not feared," he said in a recent speech, which some in the court took as thinly veiled criticism of Moraes, who would address the same event in Rio de Janeiro later in the day. "Their rulings should bring social peace, not chaos, uncertainty, or insecurity." Mendonca did not respond to a Reuters request for comment. Bolsonaro is still widely expected to be convicted of plotting a coup to overturn the 2022 election, which he lost to President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva, and sentenced to prison by the five-judge panel convened from Tuesday through next week. Bolsonaro has denied any wrongdoing and called Moraes a "dictator." FRAGILE DEMOCRACY Alexandre de Moraes was born on December 13th, 1968, at one of the darkest moments of Brazil's recent history. That was the day the military dictatorship then ruling the country gave itself the power to close Congress and suspend political rights, unleashing an era of repression that included the torture of thousands and killing of hundreds of Brazilians. Moraes and his supporters say his aggressive approach to Bolsonaro and his allies has always been aimed at defending Brazilian democracy and avoiding a repeat of that dark day. His critics argue the opposite, accusing him of censorship and illegal overreach in orders to remove social media posts from Bolsonaro supporters, seize the phones of businessmen discussing the virtues of a coup and jail a lawmaker who made threats against the court. The senior State Department official said, "Brazil's dark reality is a stark reminder of where political weaponization of a government, such as the one conducted under the Biden administration, ultimately leads." Trump has accused Democratic former President Joe Biden of "weaponizing" the U.S. legal system and has accused him and former President Barack Obama, without providing evidence, of an effort to falsely tie him to Russia and undermine Trump's 2016 presidential campaign. Still, if the Supreme Court convicts Bolsonaro, a former army captain, and generals who allegedly plotted with him, it would be the first time in Brazil's coup-spotted history that military officers are punished for threatening democracy. "The history of Brazil and the world teaches that impunity, omissions and cowardice can, at first, look like the fastest way to solve problems," Moraes told the audience in Rio. "Impunity never worked in history for any country in the world." Many Brazilians are ready to see Bolsonaro punished. In an August survey by pollster Quaest, 55% of respondents said his house arrest was justified. Brazil's conservative business elite has also cheered the idea of Sao Paulo Governor Tarcisio Freitas, who served in Bolsonaro's cabinet, running for president next year as a more moderate standard-bearer of his right-wing coalition. However, those hopes have not translated into widespread approval for Moraes, whose scorched-earth jurisprudence is wearing thin with many Brazilians. Quaest found in August that 46% of Brazilians want him impeached. Bolsonaro's allies say they have lined up more than 41 senators eager to remove Moraes from office, still shy of the 54 needed for impeachment. Senate President Davi Alcolumbre has refused to allow a vote on the matter, which is likely to become a battle cry among right-wing parties looking to add Senate seats in the 2026 general election. STEEL IN ADVERSITY Moraes was starting a vacation in Paris in January 2023 when hundreds of Bolsonaro's supporters rioted in Brasilia, rampaging through government buildings in an attempt to trigger a military intervention that could reverse the electoral results. The judge's longtime friend Floriano Azevedo, a member of Brazil's electoral court, recalls his astonishment when Moraes told him he was getting on the next plane back to Brazil. "There is a rebellion of those proportions, of which he was a target, and he decided to go back to the epicenter of the thing," he said. Azevedo said adversity only steels Moraes. "Sometimes people assume others will behave the way they do," Moraes told Reuters in the August interview from his office in Brasilia. "So maybe they would back down like cowards if they were threatened. Obviously, the Supreme Court would never cower in the face of threats." His resolve has earned him a measure of deference in recent years, when many on the high court worried the institution was under threat. But that tough resolve may now be backfiring. "He is polite and kind," said former Justice Marco Aurelio Mello, who served on the court with Moraes for four years. "But I wouldn't want to be tried by him." (Reporting by Ricardo Brito in Brasilia and Luciana Magalhaes and Manuela Andreoni Sao PauloEditing by Brad Haynes and Rosalba O'Brien)

The Brazilian judge defying Trump is testing peers' patience

The Brazilian judge defying Trump is testing peers' patience By Ricardo Brito, Luciana Magalhaes and Manuela Andreoni BRASILIA (Reuters)...
North Korean leader Kim Jong Un has left for military parade in China, Yonhap reportsNew Foto - North Korean leader Kim Jong Un has left for military parade in China, Yonhap reports

SEOUL (Reuters) -North Korean leader Kim Jong Un left Pyongyang by train on Monday afternoon to attend a military parade in China, South Korea's Yonhap News Agency said. This marks a rare trip out of the isolated state for his first attendance at a major multilateral diplomatic event. Kim is expected to arrive in Beijing on Tuesday, Yonhap said. At the invitation of Chinese President Xi Jinping, the North Korean leader is due to attend the military parade in Beijing on Wednesday to celebrate the formal surrender of Japan in World War Two, state media said. Russian President Vladimir Putin, who has cultivate a close relationship with Kim, will also be at the parade. (Reporting by Hyunjoo Jin and Joyce Lee; Editing by Alex Richardson)

North Korean leader Kim Jong Un has left for military parade in China, Yonhap reports

North Korean leader Kim Jong Un has left for military parade in China, Yonhap reports SEOUL (Reuters) -North Korean leader Kim Jong Un left ...

 

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