Plus, Sri Lanka's political and economic chaos.
Democrats don't want Biden to run in 2024; Sri Lanka's turmoil worsens. Tonight's Sentences was written by Jariel Arvin. |
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Biden's approval sinks among Democrats |
Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images |
- Sixty-four percent of Democrats would like to see President Joe Biden replaced for the 2024 presidential election, according to polling the New York Times and Siena College conducted last week. [CNBC / Dan Mangan]
- One in 3 Democrats cited Biden's age as the reason they want someone new; a similar number cited dissatisfaction with his job performance. [The Hill / Olafimihan Oshin]
- Just 13 percent of registered voters think the country is going in the right direction. Concern about the future persisted across age, race, location, and political affiliation. [Axios / Ivana Saric]
- When asked about the country's most critical problem, 20 percent said jobs and the economy; 15 percent said the cost of living and inflation. Just 5 percent said it was abortion access. [New York Times / Shane Goldmacher]
- A possible silver lining: 44 percent of respondents said they'd support Biden in the general election compared to 41 percent for Donald Trump. That's in part because Democrats still overwhelmingly prefer Biden to his predecessor. [People / Kyler Alvord]
- For now, many potential Democratic challengers have said they won't run in 2024 and will support Biden's bid for reelection. [CNN / Edward-Isaac Dovere]
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Sri Lanka's turmoil boils over |
- Over the weekend, protesters in Sri Lanka stormed and occupied the residences of President Gotabaya Rajapaksa and Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe. [Associated Press / Krishan Francis]
- Since March, tensions have run high in the island country of 22 million people amid rising costs for food and medicine as well as rampant fuel and electricity shortages. [CNN / Heather Chen]
- Protestors say Rajapaksa and his family, who've led Sri Lanka for much of the past 17 years, poorly managed government spending, adding to the crisis. [NBC News / Dylan Butts]
- On Wednesday, Rajapaksa will resign, and Sri Lanka's parliament will elect a new leader on July 20. [Reuters / Uditha Jayasingh and Devjyot Ghoshal]
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- The House committee investigating January 6 will hold its next hearing, focusing on the role of extremists, on Tuesday at 1 pm ET. [CBS News / Caroline Linton]
- On Monday, Russia temporarily halted gas supply to Germany via the Nord Stream 1 pipeline for maintenance. Europe worries the pause could be long-term. [CNBC / Sam Meredith]
- The highly transmissible BA.5 omicron subvariant is increasing Covid-19 hospitalizations and reinfections. So far, there's no evidence it causes more severe illness. [NPR / Allison Aubrey and Rachel Treisman]
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"I plan to support [Biden] because of the danger that Donald Trump poses. I would certainly not do anything to weaken him, and I hope no one else will do anything to weaken him." |
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| Steve Bannon is still at war |
Sean Illing talks with Jennifer Senior, the Pulitzer-winning staff writer at the Atlantic, about her recent piece on Steve Bannon called "American Rasputin." Senior shows how Bannon is still an effective media manipulator through his popular "War Room" podcast. |
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