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Last month, during a meeting of Democrats in rural southwestern Iowa, a man raised his hand. What are three noncontroversial issues that Democrats should be talking about right now? he asked the evenings speaker, Rob Sand, Iowas state auditor and a minor state celebrity.

I watched from the side of the room as Sand answered quickly. The first two issues Democrats should talk about are new state laws dealing with democracy and education, he told the man. And then they should talk about their support for abortion rights. People in the Iowa Republican Party and their activist base want to criminalize abortion, Sand said.

I registered this response with a surprised blink. Noncontroversial? Democrats in competitive states, and especially committed centrists like Sand, arent usually so eager to foreground abortion on the campaign trail. This seemed new.

Read: The most dangerous Democrat in Iowa

Ascribing a narrative to some elections is easy. The past two midterm cycles are a case in point. The Democrats 2018 blue wave, for example, will go down as a woman-led backlash to a grab-em-by-the-groin president. In 2022, Democrats performed better than expected, according to many analysts, because abortion rights were on the ballot. Now, a year after the Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade, Democrats want to do it again.

Theyre betting that they can re-create and even supercharge their successes last year by centering abortion rights in their platform once again in the lead-up to 2024. They want all of their elected officialseven state auditorstalking about the issue. If we can do all that, were gonna be telling the same story in December 2024 that we told in 2022, Yasmin Radjy, the executive director of the progressive political group Swing Left, told me.

But this time, Republicans might be better prepared for the fight.

After the leaked draft opinion before the Dobbs decision last May, many in Washington assumed that abortion would fade from voters minds by the time November rolled around. As we get further away from the shock of that event, of Roe being overturned, you dont think that people will sort of lose interest? CNNs Don Lemon asked the Democratic political strategist Tom Bonier in September 2022. People did not. Two months later, Democrats celebrated better-than-expected resultsavoiding not only the kind of shellacking that Barack Obamas party had suffered in 2010, but the widely predicted red wave. The Democrats narrowly lost the House but retained control of the Senate, flipping Pennsylvania in the process. Abortion-rights campaigners won ballot measures in six states.

The lesson has been well learned, Bonier told me last week. This is an issue that is incredibly effective, both for mobilizing voters but also for winning over swing voters.

Read: Is Gen Z coming for the GOP?

The latest polling suggests that the issue is very much alive. A record-high number of registered U.S. voters say that abortion is the most important factor in their decision about whom to vote for, and most of those voters support abortion rights, according to Gallup. Rather than growing less salient over time, abortion may even have gained potency: Roughly a quarter of Americans say that recent state efforts to block abortion access have made them more supportive of abortion rights, not less, according to a USA Today poll last week. Not only that, but recent data suggest that demand for abortion has not been much deterred, despite post-Dobbs efforts to restrict it.

Americans have watched as Republicans in 20 states restricted or banned abortion outright, and activists took aim at interstate travel for abortions and the pill mifepristone. Stories about pregnant women at risk of bleeding out or becoming septic after being denied abortions have lit up the internet for months. All of this attention and sentiment seem unlikely to dissipate by November 2024.

Republicans ran races on this issue for decades, the Democratic strategist Lis Smith told me. Youre gonna see Democrats run on this issue for decades to come as well.

Already, Democratic activists plan to engage swing voters by forcing the issue in as many states as possible. So far, legislators in New York and Maryland have introduced abortion-related ballot measures for 2024. Similar efforts are under way in other states, including Florida, Arizona, Missouri, South Dakota, and Iowa.

Smith and her fellow party operatives are confident that theyve landed on a message that worksespecially in purple states where candidates need to win over at least a few moderates and independents. The most successful Democrats last year anchored their abortion messages around the concept of personal liberty, Swing Lefts Radjy told me, because it was the single issue that is equally popular among far left, far right, center left, and center right. Radjy shared with me a research report that concluded: With limited attention and resources, [candidates should] lead with the freedom to decide. Freedom is resonating with the base and conflicted supporters, as well as Soft Biden and Soft Trump women.

Smith echoed this reframing. Republican politicians want to insert themselves into womens personal medical decisions, she said, by way of exemplifying the message. They want to take away this critical freedom from you. In her view, that gives Democratic candidates a decisive advantage: They dont even have to say the word abortion; they only have to use the language of freedom for people to be receptive.

Joe Biden has never been the most comfortable or natural messenger on abortion. But even he is giving the so-called freedom framework a try. Freedom is the first word in the presidents reelection-announcement ad. Republicans, he says in a voice-over, are dictating what health-care decisions women can make; they are banning books, and telling people who they can love.

Read: The new pro-life movement has a plan to end abortion

Its helpful, Democratic strategists told me, that the Republicans jockeying for the presidential nomination have been murky at best on the issue. Former South Carolina Governor Nikki Haley held a press conference in April to explain that she sees a federal role in restricting abortion, but wouldnt say what. Senator Tim Scott of South Carolina was foggy on his own commitments in interviews before appearing to support a 15-week national ban. Florida Governor Ron DeSantis, who recently signed a six-week limit on abortion, talks about that ban selectively. The leader of the primary pack, Donald Trump, has said that abortion laws should be left to the states, but told a reporter recently that he, too, is looking at a 15-week restriction.

Trump clearly wants to appease the primary base while keeping some room to maneuver in the general election. But if hes the nominee, Democrats say, hell have to answer for the end of Roe, as well as the anti-abortion positions advocated by other Republicans. When I worked for Obama in 2012, as rapid-response director, we tied Mitt Romney to the most extreme positions in his party, Smith told me. If Trump is the abortion-banning GOPs nominee, they will hang that around his neck like a millstone.

I found it difficult to locate Republican strategists willing to talk with me about abortion, and even fewer who see it as a winning issue for their party. One exception was the Republican pollster and former Trump adviser Kellyanne Conway, who says that Republicans can be successful in campaigning on abortionif they talk about it the right way. At a press conference celebrating the anniversary of the Dobbs decision, hosted by the anti-abortion group Susan B. Anthony List, Conway seemed to take a swipe at the former presidentand the rest of the wishy-washy primary field. If youre running to be president of the United States, it should be easy to have a 15-minimum-week standard, she said.

To win on abortion is to frame your opponent as more extreme, and Democrats have made that easy, says Conway, who also acts as an adviser to the Republican National Committee. Broad federal legislatio put forward by Democratic lawmakers last year, in response to the Dobbs leak, would prevent states from banning abortion after fetal viability for reasons of the mothers life or health. Republicans claim that this means that Democrats support termination at all stages of pregnancy. Voters may not like outright bans on abortion, but they also generally dont support abortion without limits. Conway advises Republican candidates to explain to voters whether they support exceptions for rape, incest, and the life of the mother, and get that out of the wayand then demand that their Democratic opponents define the time limits they favor. Id ask each and every one of them, What are your exceptions? Ive shown you mine, Conway told me.

Read: The abortion absolutist

Conways bullishness is belied by what some of her political allies are up to. While Democrats are pushing for ballot measures that will enshrine abortion rights into law, Republicans are trying to make it harder to pass state constitutional amendments. For example, after it became clear that a ballot measure could result in new abortion protections being added to the Ohio Constitution, state Republicans proposed their own ballot measure asking voters in a special election later this summer to raise the threshold for passing constitutional amendments.

This scheme does not demonstrate faith that a majority of voters are with them. But it does set up Ohio as the first practical test of abortions salience as a political issue in 2024. If Democrats can get their voters to show up this August in the name of abortion rights, maybe they can do it next year too.

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Cincinnati freshman lineman dies; no cause given

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Cincinnati freshman lineman dies; no cause given

Cincinnati freshman football player Jeremiah Kelly, an early enrollee who went through spring practice with the team, died unexpectedly Tuesday morning at his residence.

The school didn’t disclose a cause of death.

Kelly, an 18-year-old offensive lineman from Avon, Ohio, helped his high school team to a 16-0 record and a state championship last fall.

“The Bearcats football family is heartbroken by the sudden loss of this outstanding young man,” Cincinnati coach Scott Satterfield said in a statement. “In the short time Jeremiah has spent with our team, he has made a real impact, both on the field and in our locker room. My prayers are with the Kelly family and those who had the pleasure of knowing Jeremiah.”

Cincinnati completed its spring practice session last week.

“We’ve suffered a heartbreaking loss today,” Cincinnati athletic director John Cunningham said in a statement. “All of us at UC send our love and prayers to the Kelly family and we will do everything that we can to support them and our Bearcats student-athletes in the difficult days and weeks ahead.”

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UCLA’s Foster goes with ‘gut’ in getting Iamaleava

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UCLA's Foster goes with 'gut' in getting Iamaleava

LOS ANGELES — UCLA coach DeShaun Foster said Tuesday that the Bruins just couldn’t pass up the opportunity to get “the No. 1 player in the portal” in former Tennessee quarterback Nico Iamaleava.

In his first comments since Iamaleava’s tumultuous transfer was announced Sunday, Foster said he and the rest of his staff were able to sift through the noise surrounding Iamaleava’s exit from Tennessee, which included reports of increased financial demands from his representation and missed practices.

“You just have to go with your gut and with the people that you trust,” Foster said. “You can’t just read everything on social media and come to a conclusion from that. You have to do a little bit more homework. So I think we did a good job in vetting and figuring out what we wanted to do, and we were able to execute and now we’re here.”

Iamaleava, a five-star prospect from Long Beach, California, was recruited by UCLA out of high school. He entered the portal last Wednesday, and Foster said the familiarity between the two parties helped facilitate the process.

“If it wasn’t a local kid, it would’ve been a little bit more difficult,” Foster said. “But being able to see him play in high school and evaluating that film at Tennessee wasn’t hard to do. A lot of the kids on the team know him and have played with him.”

Foster said Iamaleava won’t be able to join the Bruins until this summer.

Iamaleava was earning $2.4 million with the Vols under the contract he signed with Spyre Sports Group, the Tennessee-based collective, when he was still in high school. The deal would have paid him in the $10 million range altogether had he stayed four years at Tennessee.

Sources told ESPN’s Chris Low that Iamaleava’s representatives wanted a deal in the $4 million range for him to stay at Tennessee for a third season.

When asked to characterize Iamaleava’s NIL deal with UCLA, Foster simply called it “successful” and added that he did not think money played a role in any player staying or going.

“I don’t know what he was looking for or whatnot,” Foster said of Iamaleava’s NIL package. “I know that he accepted our contract and he wants to be a Bruin, so that’s all I’m focused on. He wants to be here, and we’re excited.”

Foster said that once the commitment was secured, he informed quarterback Joey Aguilar, who had transferred to Westwood from App State and was seemingly in line to take over as the Bruins’ starting quarterback this season. According to Foster, Aguilar’s NIL package was not needed to fulfill Iamaleava’s own deal, and he provided Aguilar with the opportunity to stay and compete for the starting job.

Aguilar entered the transfer portal Monday and, according to ESPN sources, is set to transfer to Tennessee.

“When I was in the NFL, they drafted a running back every year,” Foster said. “Every year I was [at UCLA] as a running back, they recruited more running backs to come here. So, this is a competition sport for coaches, players, everybody.”

As college football begins to more resemble the NFL model, Foster said he expects multiyear deals between players and programs to become an eventual reality. For now, he credited the program’s main collective “Bruins for Life” for allowing UCLA to be in conversations with players they could not be in before.

“I haven’t lost anybody this portal to money. We’ve been able to actually offer people the same amount or even more than what other people have offered them,” Foster said. “You want to be in conversations, you want to play big-time ball, you want to have haters, you want all of this stuff because that means that you’re trending in the right direction.”

UCLA is coming off a 5-7 season in which its offense struggled. The Bruins finished 14th in scoring offense and 12th in total offense in Big Ten play. At Tennessee, Iamaleava threw for 2,619 yards and 19 touchdowns last season and helped lead the Volunteers to a spot in the College Football Playoff.

“This is a good buzz for us,” Foster said. “Keeping the local kids here — a big-time recruit — letting them know that you don’t have to go to certain conferences to be successful and make it to the NFL. You can do it right here in California.”

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Tesla short sellers have made $11.5 billion from this year’s selloff

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Tesla short sellers have made .5 billion from this year's selloff

It’s been a brutal year for Tesla shareholders so far, and a hugely profitable one for short sellers, who bet on a decline in the company’s stock price.

Tesla shorts have generated $11.5 billion in mark-to-market profits in 2025, according to data from S3 Partners. The data reflected Monday’s closing price of $227.50, at which point Tesla shares were down 44% for the year.

The stock rallied about 4% on Tuesday, along with gains in the broader market, heading into Tesla’s first-quarter earnings report after the close of trading. Tesla didn’t immediately respond to a request for comment.

The electric vehicle maker is expected to report a slight decline in year-over-year revenue weeks after announcing a 13% drop in vehicle deliveries for the quarter. With CEO Elon Musk playing a central role in President Donald Trump’s administration, responsible for dramatically cutting the size and capacity of the federal government, Tesla has faced widespread protests in the U.S. and Europe, where Musk has actively supported Germany’s far-right AfD party.

Tesla shares plummeted 36% in the first quarter, their worst performance for any period since 2022, and have continued to drop in April, largely on concerns that President Trump’s sweeping tariffs on top trade partners will increase the cost of parts and materials crucial for EV production, including manufacturing equipment, automotive glass, printed circuit boards and battery cells.

The company is also struggling to keep pace with lower-cost competitors in China, and is a laggard in the robotaxi market, which is currently dominated in the U.S. by Alphabet’s Waymo. Tesla has promised to launch its first driverless ride-hailing offering in Austin, Texas, in June.

Tesla has been the biggest stock decliner among tech megacaps this year, followed by Nvidia, which was down about 28% as of Monday’s close. The chipmaker has been the second-best profit generator for short sellers, generating returns of $9.4 billion, according to S3.

Nvidia is currently the most-shorted stock in terms of value, with $24.6 billion worth sold short, S3 said. Apple is second at $22.2 billion, and Tesla is third at $17.6 billion.

Musk has a long and antagonistic history with short sellers, who have made plenty of money at times during Tesla’s 15 years on the stock market, but have also been burned badly for extended stretches.

In 2020, Tesla publicly mocked short sellers, promoting red satin shorts for sale.

“Limited edition shorts now available at Tesla.com/shortshorts” Musk wrote in a social media post in July of that year, as the stock was in the midst of a steep rally.

Two years earlier, hedge fund manager David Einhorn of Greenlight Capital posted a tweet that he received the pairs of short shorts that Musk had promised him.

“I want to thank @elonmusk for the shorts. He is a man of his word!” Einhorn wrote. Einhorn had previously disclosed that his firm’s bet against Tesla “was our second biggest loser” in the most recent quarter.

In February 2022, after reports surfaced that the Department of Justice was investigating two investors who had shorted Tesla’s stock, Musk told CNBC that he was “greatly encouraged” by the action and said “hedge funds have used short selling and complex derivatives to take advantage of small investors.”

PlainSite founder Aaron Greenspan, a former Tesla short seller and outspoken critic of Musk, sued the Tesla CEO alleging he engaged in stock price manipulation for years through a variety of schemes.

The case was removed to federal court last year. In 2023, Musk’s social network X banned Greenspan and PlainSite, which publishes legal and other public and company records, from the platform.

— CNBC’s Tom Rotunno contributed to this report.

WATCH: Here’s what to watch for in Tesla’s earnings report

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