Thứ Hai, 18 tháng 2, 2019

News on Youtube Feb 19 2019

California will 'imminently' challenge President Donald Trump's declaration of a national emergency to obtain funds for a U

S.-Mexico border wall, state Attorney General Xavier Becerra said on Sunday.'Definitely and imminently,' Becerra told ABC's 'This Week' program when asked whether and when California would sue the Trump administration in federal court

Other states controlled by Democrats are expected to join the effort.'We are prepared, we knew something like this might happen

And with our sister state partners, we are ready to go,' he said.Trump invoked the emergency powers on Friday under a 1976 law after Congress rebuffed his request for $5

7billion to help build the wall that was a signature 2016 campaign promise.The move is intended to allow him to redirect money to wall construction despite Congress appropriating it for other purposes

The White House says Trump will have access to about $8 billion.Nearly $1.4billion was allocated for border fencing under a spending measure approved by Congress last week, and Trump's emergency declaration is aimed at giving him another $6

7billion for the wall.Becerra cited Trump's own comment on Friday that he 'didn't need to do this' as evidence that the emergency declaration is legally vulnerable

'It's become clear that this is not an emergency, not only because no one believes it is but because Donald Trump himself has said it's not,' he said

Becerra and California Governor Gavin Newsom, both Democrats, have been expected to sue to block Trump's move

Becerra told ABC that California and other states are waiting to learn which federal programs will lose money to determine what kind of harm the states could face from the declaration

He said California may be harmed by less federal funding for emergency response services, the military and stopping drug trafficking

'We're confident there are at least 8 billion ways that we can prove harm,' Becerra said

Three Texas landowners and an environmental group filed the first lawsuit against Trump's move on Friday, saying it violates the Constitution and would infringe on their property rights

The legal challenges could at least slow down Trump's efforts to build the wall but would likely end up at the conservative-leaning U

S.Supreme Court.Congress never defined a national emergency in the National Emergencies Act of 1976, which has been invoked dozens of times without a single successful legal challenge

Democrats in Congress have vowed to challenge Trump's declaration and several Republican lawmakers have said they are not certain whether they would support the president

'I think many of us are concerned about this,' Republican Senator Ron Johnson of Wisconsin, who chairs the Senate Homeland Security Committee, told NBC's 'Meet the Press

' Trump could, however, veto any resolution of disapproval from Congress.White House senior adviser Stephen Miller told Fox News on Sunday that Trump's declaration would allow the administration to build 'hundreds of miles' of border wall by September 2020

'We have 120-odd miles that are already under construction or are already obligated plus the additional funds we have and then we´re going to outlay - we´re going to look at a few hundred miles

' Trump's proposed wall and wider immigration policies are likely to be a major campaign issue ahead of the next presidential election in November 2020, where he will seek a second four-year term

For more infomation >> California's AG says 4 other states will join him in 'imminently' suing Trump over border emergency - Duration: 5:48.

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States Expected To Sue Trump Over National Emergency - Duration: 1:42.

For more infomation >> States Expected To Sue Trump Over National Emergency - Duration: 1:42.

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James A Garfield - 20th President of the United States of America - Duration: 8:57.

James Abram Garfield (Final document)

20th President of the United States

James Abram Garfield was the last child born to Abraham and Eliza Garfield in Orange Township,

now Moreland Hills in Cuyahoga County, Ohio.

He was the last president to be born in a log cabin and the second to be assassinated

while in office.

James was only 18 months old in 1833 when his father died at home from fever and exhaustion

he acquired while fighting a wildfire that was threatening their home.

Garfields upbringing was then left to his mother and an uncle,

James was still very young when he had to start working the farm with the rest of the

family.

He learned the alphabet in a school on the corner of the Garfield farm and read the Noah

Webster spelling book at age four.

He didn't like being a farmer.

He wanted to be a sailor, so at sixteen he left home to work on the canal boats that

shuttled commerce between Cleveland and Pittsburgh.

He fell overboard fourteen times in the six weeks he worked on the boats.

He finally caught a fever, and had to go back home.

While he recovered, James decided it would probably be better for him to make his way

in the world using his brains instead of his brawn.

From 1851 to 1854, he attended the Western Reserve Eclectic Institute in Hiram, Ohio.

The name of that institution was later was changed to Hiram College.

He then transferred to Williams College in Williamstown, Massachusetts.

There he became a brother of Delta Upsilon and graduated in 1856 as an outstanding student.

After graduation he returned to the Eclectic Institute as an instructor.

During the 1856-1857 academic year he taught classical languages there and became the schools

principal from 1857 to 1860.

He married a former classmate Lucretia Rudolph, on November 11, 1858

They had seven children (five sons and two daughters): Eliza, Harry, James, Mary, Irvin,

Abram, and Edward.

Only five lived to adulthood.

Their first born, Eliza Arabella who they called "Trot" died in 1863 when she was just

three years old.

Edward died in 1876 when he was only two.

Garfield studied law in private, and became interested in politics before entering the

bar in 1860.

In 1856, after campaigning in Ohio for John C. Frémont, the presidential candidate of

the newly formed Republican Party, and before being admitted into the bar, Garfield threw

himself into state politics, becoming the youngest member of the Ohio legislature in

1859.

Garfield resigned his position at Hiram College in 1860 and joined the Union Army starting

as a lieutenant-colonel of the Forty-Second Ohio Volunteer Infantry which took part in

several civil war battles including Shiloh and Chickamauga.

Lincoln nominated him to be a Republican U.S. representative of Ohio in 1863 because he

wanted men in Congress who knew the Army.

Garfield ran and was elected in 1863.

After the election, at Lincolns urging, he reluctantly resigned his commission in the

United States Army on December 5, 1863, with the rank of major general.

Garfield served in congress until 1881.

His congressional career wasn't without problems.

For instance, he was accused in 1872 of ethics violations

when he was accused of accepting bribes in the Crédit Mobilier scandal.

A scandal that damaged the careers of several politicians of the time.

The accusations were never proven and later dropped.

He was appointed by the Ohio legislature to the United States Senate in January 1880.

He had to decline the appointment though because he was elected president a few months before

he was to claim his seat in the Senate.

James A. Garfield was President Of The United States from March 4, 1881 until his death

on September 19, 1881 his last 80 days were served incapacitated because of gunshot wounds

received from Charles J. Guiteau. at the Baltimore and Potomac Railroad Station in Washington,

D.C.

On July 2, 1881.

Guiteau learned of the trip while reading a discarded newspaper he picked up in a hotel

lobby and was waiting at the station.

When Garfield arrived, Guiteau stepped forward and shot him twice from behind, the first

grazing his shoulder, the second hitting him in the back.

Garfield was at the Railroad Station on that day on his way to Williams College, where

he was scheduled to deliver a speech before beginning his vacation.

He was looking forward to a vacation with his wife, Crete, who had been recovering from

malaria in Long Branch New Jersey

There was no Secret Service protection for presidents as it was designed by Abraham Lincoln

to protect the American currency from counterfeiting, not presidents.

When President William McKinley was assassinated in1901, his vice president, President Theodore

Roosevelt was the first president to have the protection.

Garfield accomplished little during his short time as president, but his death inspired

the United States Congress and his successor, President Chester A. Arthur, to reform the

public service system with the Pendleton Civil Service Reform Act in 1883, which would effectively

remove situations like the one that led to Garfields assassination.

Garfield lived for about 80 days before finally finding peace on September 19, 1881

Many modern physicians familiar with the case state that Garfield might have easily recovered

from his wounds with sterile medical care, which was uncommon in the United States until

a decade later.

Candice Millard in her 2012 award winning book Destiny of the Republic: A Tale of Madness,

Medicine and the Murder of a President, available at Amazon.com, argues that Garfield could

have survived Guiteau's bullet had his doctors simply left him alone.

I agree with that statement but I also realize that accepted medical practices of the time

were used.

Garfield was conscious but in shock when they carried him to an upstairs room at the Sixth

street station where doctors tried but failed to find the bullet and remove it.

He was then taken back to the White House and was expected to die before morning.

Which didn't happen.

As a matter of fact his vital signs showed improvement.

However his temperature went up and down constantly and he was unable to eat solid foods.

In order to escape the Washington heat Garfield was taken by train to Elberon, New Jersey

on the Jersey Shore.

It was hoped the the fresh sea air and quiet would aid him in his recovery.

He died thirteen days later from a ruptured splenic artery aneurysm.

On his return to Washington his body laid in state for two days in the capital rotunda

before he was taken to Cleveand, Ohio where he was buried on September 26th.

What caused Guiteau to assassinate Garfield?

There are several official or so called factual accounts out there.

Many more personal ones.

His families opinion was that he was insane.

My simple opinion based on reading stories of his history, is that his narcissistic feelings

were hurt when nobody but him believed he was responsible for Garfield winning the election.

He did however hold the initial responsibility for the death of the president.

Guiteau was tried

for the murder and found guilty on January 25, 1882.

He was then hanged on June 30, 1882.

For more infomation >> James A Garfield - 20th President of the United States of America - Duration: 8:57.

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Early voting states are focus for Democrats in 2020 contest - Duration: 1:40.

Early voting states are focus for Democrats in 2020 contest

Democratic presidential candidates are courting voters in states with influential early roles in the 2020 primary as the busy pace of campaigning over the holiday weekend shows that the contest to challenge President Donald Trump is fully underway.

The brisk pace of the candidates stops Sunday in New Hampshire, Iowa and Nevada points to the up for grabs state of the race in its early stages. And Congress Presidents Day recess gives the senators already running some extra time to promote their agendas.

Sen. Cory Booker of New Jersey is continuing his swing through New Hampshire. Sen. Amy Klobuchar of Minnesota is set to visit Iowa. And Sen. Elizabeth Warren of Massachusetts plans to be in Nevada, the first Western state to vote in the primary.

Booker told voters on Saturday there are a "lot of pathways" to achieving universal health coverage and that just lowering Medicare eligibility to age 55 would be "a step in the right direction." A backer of "Medicare for all", Booker said the ideas proponents are "going to have to find ways to advance the ball given the Congress that we have" as they work to win support.

Klobuchar, after appearances in Minnesota and Wisconsin, is taking her case for Midwestern neighborly appeal to the state that opens voting with its caucuses.

Warren heads to the West after campaigning in the South on Saturday. She met with an estimated 800 voters in Greenville, South Carolina, before heading to Georgia for an early appearance that signals Democratic hopes to make inroads in the South.

Sen. Kamala Harris of California is due in New Hampshire on Monday following a two day stop in South Carolina. At a town hall in West Columbia on Saturday, Harris said she believes this moment is a time "that we need fighters on stage who know how to fight — I do — and who have a proven desire to lead."

Three high profile potential candidates — former Vice President Joe Biden, Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders and former Texas Rep. Beto ORourke — remain on the sidelines for now.

Get the news you need to start your day

Get the news you need to start your day

2019, Philadelphia Media Network Digital , LLC /

2019, Philadelphia Media Network Digital , LLC /

For more infomation >> Early voting states are focus for Democrats in 2020 contest - Duration: 1:40.

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Early voting states are focus for Democrats in 2020 contest - Duration: 1:40.

Early voting states are focus for Democrats in 2020 contest

Democratic presidential candidates are courting voters in states with influential early roles in the 2020 primary as the busy pace of campaigning over the holiday weekend shows that the contest to challenge President Donald Trump is fully underway.

The brisk pace of the candidates stops Sunday in New Hampshire, Iowa and Nevada points to the up for grabs state of the race in its early stages. And Congress Presidents Day recess gives the senators already running some extra time to promote their agendas.

Sen. Cory Booker of New Jersey is continuing his swing through New Hampshire. Sen. Amy Klobuchar of Minnesota is set to visit Iowa. And Sen. Elizabeth Warren of Massachusetts plans to be in Nevada, the first Western state to vote in the primary.

Booker told voters on Saturday there are a "lot of pathways" to achieving universal health coverage and that just lowering Medicare eligibility to age 55 would be "a step in the right direction." A backer of "Medicare for all", Booker said the ideas proponents are "going to have to find ways to advance the ball given the Congress that we have" as they work to win support.

Klobuchar, after appearances in Minnesota and Wisconsin, is taking her case for Midwestern neighborly appeal to the state that opens voting with its caucuses.

Warren heads to the West after campaigning in the South on Saturday. She met with an estimated 800 voters in Greenville, South Carolina, before heading to Georgia for an early appearance that signals Democratic hopes to make inroads in the South.

Sen. Kamala Harris of California is due in New Hampshire on Monday following a two day stop in South Carolina. At a town hall in West Columbia on Saturday, Harris said she believes this moment is a time "that we need fighters on stage who know how to fight — I do — and who have a proven desire to lead."

Three high profile potential candidates — former Vice President Joe Biden, Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders and former Texas Rep. Beto ORourke — remain on the sidelines for now.

Get the news you need to start your day

Get the news you need to start your day

2019, Philadelphia Media Network Digital , LLC /

2019, Philadelphia Media Network Digital , LLC /

For more infomation >> Early voting states are focus for Democrats in 2020 contest - Duration: 1:40.

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Californias AG says 4 other states will join him in imminently suing Trump over border emergency D - Duration: 5:49.

Californias AG says 4 other states will join him in imminently suing Trump over border emergency D

California will imminently challenge President Donald Trumps declaration of a national emergency to obtain funds for a U.S. Mexico border wall, state Attorney General Xavier Becerra said on Sunday.

Definitely and imminently, Becerra told ABCs This Week program when asked whether and when California would sue the Trump administration in federal court. Other states controlled by Democrats are expected to join the effort.

We are prepared, we knew something like this might happen. And with our sister state partners, we are ready to go, he said.

Trump invoked the emergency powers on Friday under a 1976 law after Congress rebuffed his request for dollar 5.7 billion to help build the wall that was a signature 2016 campaign promise.

The move is intended to allow him to redirect money to wall construction despite Congress appropriating it for other purposes .

California Attorney General Xavier Becerra said Sunday that his state and four others will imminently sue President Donald Trump to stop him from using afederal emergency declaration to expand a wall along the U.S. Mexico border

President Trump greeted guests on the tarmac at West Palm Beach International Airport on Friday night, hours after declaring a border national emergency and announcing his plan to redirect dollar 6.5 billion in government dollars to the expansion of a U.S. Mexico border wall

The White House says Trump will have access to about dollar 8 billion. Nearly dollar 1.4 billion was allocated for border fencing under a spending measure approved by Congress last week, and Trumps emergency declaration is aimed at giving him another dollar 6.7 billion for the wall.

Becerra cited Trumps own comment on Friday that he didnt need to do this as evidence that the emergency declaration is legally vulnerable.

Its become clear that this is not an emergency, not only because no one believes it is but because Donald Trump himself has said its not, he said.

Becerra and California Governor Gavin Newsom, both Democrats, have been expected to sue to block Trumps move.

Becerra is leading a group of five Democratic attorneys general who plan to sue in the Ninth Circuit, traditionally Americas most liberal group of courts and judges; the case is ultimately expected to be decided in the U.S. Supreme Court

A Border Patrol unit patrols near a section of reinforced US Mexico border fence seen from Tijuana, Baja California state, Mexico, on February 14

Becerra told ABC that California and other states are waiting to learn which federal programs will lose money to determine what kind of harm the states could face from the declaration.

He said California may be harmed by less federal funding for emergency response services, the military and stopping drug trafficking.

Were confident there are at least 8 billion ways that we can prove harm, Becerra said.

Three Texas landowners and an environmental group filed the first lawsuit against Trumps move on Friday, saying it violates the Constitution and would infringe on their property rights.

The legal challenges could at least slow down Trumps efforts to build the wall but would likely end up at the conservative leaning U.S. Supreme Court.

Congress never defined a national emergency in the National Emergencies Act of 1976, which has been invoked dozens of times without a single successful legal challenge.

Democrats in Congress have vowed to challenge Trumps declaration and several Republican lawmakers have said they are not certain whether they would support the president.

I think many of us are concerned about this, Republican Senator Ron Johnson of Wisconsin, who chairs the Senate Homeland Security Committee, told NBCs Meet the Press.

Trump could, however, veto any resolution of disapproval from Congress.

White House senior adviser Stephen Miller told Fox News on Sunday that Trumps declaration would allow the administration to build hundreds of miles of border wall by September 2020.

We have 120 odd miles that are already under construction or are already obligated plus the additional funds we have and then we´re going to outlay we´re going to look at a few hundred miles.

Trumps proposed wall and wider immigration policies are likely to be a major campaign issue ahead of the next presidential election in November 2020, where he will seek a second four year term.

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For more infomation >> Californias AG says 4 other states will join him in imminently suing Trump over border emergency D - Duration: 5:49.

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Early voting states are focus for Booker and Democrats in 2020 contest nj.com - Duration: 1:48.

Early voting states are focus for Booker and Democrats in 2020 contest nj.com

is continuing his swing through New Hampshire. Sen. Amy Klobuchar of Minnesota is set to visit Iowa. And Sen. Elizabeth Warren of Massachusetts plans to be in Nevada, the first Western state to vote in the primary.

Democratic presidential candidates are courting voters in states with influential early roles in the 2020 primary as the busy pace of campaigning over the holiday weekend shows that the contest to challenge President Donald Trump is fully underway.

The brisk pace of the candidates stops Sunday in New Hampshire, Iowa and Nevada points to the up for grabs state of the race in its early stages. And Congress Presidents Day recess gives the senators already running some extra time to promote their agendas.

Booker told voters on Saturday there are a lot of pathways would be a step in the right direction.

A backer of Medicare for all, Booker said the ideas proponents are going to have to find ways to advance the ball given the Congress that we have as they work to win support.

Klobuchar, after appearances in Minnesota and Wisconsin, is taking her case for Midwestern neighborly appeal to the state that opens voting with its caucuses.

Warren heads to the West after campaigning in the South on Saturday. She met with an estimated 800 voters in Greenville, South Carolina, before heading to Georgia for an early appearance that signals Democratic hopes to make inroads in the South.

Sen. Kamala Harris of California is due in New Hampshire on Monday following a two day stop in South Carolina. At a town hall in West Columbia on Saturday, Harris said she believes this moment is a time that we need fighters on stage who know how to fight — I do — and who have a proven desire to lead.

Three high profile potential candidates — former Vice President Joe Biden, Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders and former Texas Rep. Beto ORourke — remain on the sidelines for now.

Have a tip? Tell us.

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For more infomation >> Early voting states are focus for Booker and Democrats in 2020 contest nj.com - Duration: 1:48.

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California's AG says 4 other states will join him in 'imminently' suing Trump over border emergency - Duration: 5:46.

California will 'imminently' challenge President Donald Trump's declaration of a national emergency to obtain funds for a U

S.-Mexico border wall, state Attorney General Xavier Becerra said on Sunday.'Definitely and imminently,' Becerra told ABC's 'This Week' program when asked whether and when California would sue the Trump administration in federal court

Other states controlled by Democrats are expected to join the effort.'We are prepared, we knew something like this might happen

And with our sister state partners, we are ready to go,' he said.Trump invoked the emergency powers on Friday under a 1976 law after Congress rebuffed his request for $5

7billion to help build the wall that was a signature 2016 campaign promise.The move is intended to allow him to redirect money to wall construction despite Congress appropriating it for other purposes

The White House says Trump will have access to about $8 billion.Nearly $1.4billion was allocated for border fencing under a spending measure approved by Congress last week, and Trump's emergency declaration is aimed at giving him another $6

7billion for the wall.Becerra cited Trump's own comment on Friday that he 'didn't need to do this' as evidence that the emergency declaration is legally vulnerable

'It's become clear that this is not an emergency, not only because no one believes it is but because Donald Trump himself has said it's not,' he said

Becerra and California Governor Gavin Newsom, both Democrats, have been expected to sue to block Trump's move

Becerra told ABC that California and other states are waiting to learn which federal programs will lose money to determine what kind of harm the states could face from the declaration

He said California may be harmed by less federal funding for emergency response services, the military and stopping drug trafficking

'We're confident there are at least 8 billion ways that we can prove harm,' Becerra said

Three Texas landowners and an environmental group filed the first lawsuit against Trump's move on Friday, saying it violates the Constitution and would infringe on their property rights

The legal challenges could at least slow down Trump's efforts to build the wall but would likely end up at the conservative-leaning U

S.Supreme Court.Congress never defined a national emergency in the National Emergencies Act of 1976, which has been invoked dozens of times without a single successful legal challenge

Democrats in Congress have vowed to challenge Trump's declaration and several Republican lawmakers have said they are not certain whether they would support the president

'I think many of us are concerned about this,' Republican Senator Ron Johnson of Wisconsin, who chairs the Senate Homeland Security Committee, told NBC's 'Meet the Press

' Trump could, however, veto any resolution of disapproval from Congress.White House senior adviser Stephen Miller told Fox News on Sunday that Trump's declaration would allow the administration to build 'hundreds of miles' of border wall by September 2020

'We have 120-odd miles that are already under construction or are already obligated plus the additional funds we have and then we´re going to outlay - we´re going to look at a few hundred miles

' Trump's proposed wall and wider immigration policies are likely to be a major campaign issue ahead of the next presidential election in November 2020, where he will seek a second four-year term

For more infomation >> California's AG says 4 other states will join him in 'imminently' suing Trump over border emergency - Duration: 5:46.

-------------------------------------------

Early voting states are focus for Democrats in 2020 contest - Duration: 1:46.

Early voting states are focus for Democrats in 2020 contest

Democratic presidential candidates are courting voters in states with influential early roles in the 2020 primary as the busy pace of campaigning over the holiday weekend shows that the contest to challenge President Donald Trump is fully underway.

The brisk pace of the candidates stops Sunday in New Hampshire, Iowa and Nevada points to the up for grabs state of the race in its early stages. And Congress Presidents Day recess gives the senators already running some extra time to promote their agendas.

Sen. Cory Booker of New Jersey is continuing his swing through New Hampshire. Sen. Amy Klobuchar of Minnesota is set to visit Iowa. And Sen. Elizabeth Warren of Massachusetts plans to be in Nevada, the first Western state to vote in the primary.

Booker told voters on Saturday there are a "lot of pathways" to achieving universal health coverage and that just lowering Medicare eligibility to age 55 would be "a step in the right direction." A backer of "Medicare for all", Booker said the ideas proponents are "going to have to find ways to advance the ball given the Congress that we have" as they work to win support.

Klobuchar, after appearances in Minnesota and Wisconsin, is taking her case for Midwestern neighborly appeal to the state that opens voting with its caucuses.

Warren heads to the West after campaigning in the South on Saturday. She met with an estimated 800 voters in Greenville, South Carolina, before heading to Georgia for an early appearance that signals Democratic hopes to make inroads in the South.

Sen. Kamala Harris of California is due in New Hampshire on Monday following a two day stop in South Carolina. At a town hall in West Columbia on Saturday, Harris said she believes this moment is a time "that we need fighters on stage who know how to fight — I do — and who have a proven desire to lead."

Three high profile potential candidates — former Vice President Joe Biden, Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders and former Texas Rep. Beto ORourke — remain on the sidelines for now.

Get the news you need to start your day

Get the news you need to start your day

2019, Philadelphia Media Network Digital , LLC /

2019, Philadelphia Media Network Digital , LLC /

For more infomation >> Early voting states are focus for Democrats in 2020 contest - Duration: 1:46.

-------------------------------------------

Early voting states are focus for Democrats in 2020 contest - Duration: 2:13.

Early voting states are focus for Democrats in 2020 contest

Democratic presidential candidates are courting voters in states with influential early roles in the 2020 primary as the busy pace of campaigning over the holiday weekend shows that the contest to challenge President Donald Trump is fully underway.

The brisk pace of the candidates stops Sunday in New Hampshire, Iowa and Nevada points to the up for grabs state of the race in its early stages. And Congress Presidents Day recess gives the senators already running some extra time to promote their agendas.

Sen. Cory Booker of New Jersey is continuing his swing through New Hampshire. Sen. Amy Klobuchar of Minnesota is set to visit Iowa. And Sen. Elizabeth Warren of Massachusetts plans to be in Nevada, the first Western state to vote in the primary.

Booker told voters on Saturday there are a "lot of pathways" to achieving universal health coverage and that just lowering Medicare eligibility to age 55 would be "a step in the right direction." A backer of "Medicare for all", Booker said the ideas proponents are "going to have to find ways to advance the ball given the Congress that we have" as they work to win support.

Klobuchar, after appearances in Minnesota and Wisconsin, is taking her case for Midwestern neighborly appeal to the state that opens voting with its caucuses.

Warren heads to the West after campaigning in the South on Saturday. She met with an estimated 800 voters in Greenville, South Carolina, before heading to Georgia for an early appearance that signals Democratic hopes to make inroads in the South.

Sen. Kamala Harris of California is due in New Hampshire on Monday following a two day stop in South Carolina. At a town hall in West Columbia on Saturday, Harris said she believes this moment is a time "that we need fighters on stage who know how to fight — I do — and who have a proven desire to lead."

Three high profile potential candidates — former Vice President Joe Biden, Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders and former Texas Rep. Beto ORourke — remain on the sidelines for now.

Get the news you need to start your day

Get the news you need to start your day

2019, Philadelphia Media Network Digital , LLC /

2019, Philadelphia Media Network Digital , LLC /

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