logo
'Original Sin' sparked a new round of debate over Biden's cognitive decline. Good.

'Original Sin' sparked a new round of debate over Biden's cognitive decline. Good.

Yahoo23-05-2025
The recent release of a new book from CNN anchor Jake Tapper and Axios reporter Alex Thompson has sparked a fresh news cycle about how Joe Biden and the Democratic Party screwed up the 2024 election by denying his cognitive decline. That news cycle has, in turn, sparked a sizable online backlash, with left-of-center commentators, Democratic strategists and loads of social media users pushing back against the idea that new reporting on the subject is worth covering or paying attention to — and some contending that it is an outright harmful diversion at a time when President Donald Trump is tearing down our democracy.
I'm not convinced by the pushback. It's not just always possible to talk about multiple ideas at the same time as a society, it's necessary. And on a substantive level, it's healthy to reflect on the massive errors in judgment committed by Biden's inner circle, elected Democrats, liberal pro-Biden activists and members of the press in order to guard against such scenarios in the future. The shocking amount of time it took for the collective delusion over Biden's decline to be dispelled is a significant part of why we're in the current crisis. And while the next major predicament for the party is unlikely to take exactly the same form — an elderly, diminishing president surrounded by denialist allies — there are always dilemmas in which excessive party discipline can lead to catastrophic groupthink.
Tapper and Thompson's book, 'Original Sin: President Biden's Decline, Its Cover-Up, and His Disastrous Choice to Run Again,' is based on interviews with around 200 people, including Democratic lawmakers, high-level insiders in the Biden White House and campaign operatives. The book seeks to paint a more detailed picture of how Biden's ill-advised run for a second term unfolded and how it was enabled by people with varying degrees of closeness to him, especially his staunchly loyalist inner circle.
'Original Sin' has loads of damning details. Biden's aides reportedly labored to hide the speed of his decline by altering his schedule, reducing the length of his remarks, scripting his meetings with Cabinet officials, and even doctoring videos with 'slow motion to blur the reality of how slowly he actually walked.' Biden's physician argued with his aides about adding more rest time to his schedule. And Biden forgot the names of longtime aides, including at least one he had worked with for decades.
Outside Biden's inner circle, Democrats who didn't see him as often described shock at the shift in his physical appearance and temperament. Cabinet secretaries and senators questioned his ability to process policy and handle crises, and some Democrats perceived him as delegating decision-making in a way a president normally wouldn't. All along the way, there was no serious sustained effort within the party to question Biden's fitness for a second run. While some of this was broadly understood before, the new level of detail and texture is worthwhile stuff for the historical record.
'Original Sin' is not without serious limitations. The anonymous sourcing of the book allows many Democrats to point the finger at Biden and his inner circle and avoid accountability for their own complicity in declining to challenge Biden until it was too late.
The book's conceit of a 'cover up' is also worth questioning: Biden's inner circle did try to obscure his changes, but his age-related decline was evident to public observers even during his first presidential run, as I noted in my own commentary as far back as 2020 in which I described his perceivable decline as a serious problem. This was obvious to many voters as well. Throughout Biden's first term — and before the presidential debate that set in motion his decision to drop out of the race — polling indicated that voters, including many Democrats, believed Biden was too old to be president or serve for another term.
Finally, the focus on Biden's protective 'politburo' in the book conveniently allows for the press to get more of a free pass than it should, which is particularly notable as Tapper was once one of the most vociferous defenders of Biden's cognitive status in American media.
In my eyes, the reporting in the book and the necessary, generative critiques of it are worthwhile endeavors. The timing of the book is not an attempt to 'distract' from Trump's misdeeds, but simply a function of the time required to put together a lot of reporting for a book. If it's not your cup of tea, you can ignore the news coverage and discussion and read the roughly seven trillion other articles that come out about Trump every day. The expectation that a news cycle or round of debate on an issue or a book publishing schedule should conform to the cadences and objectives of a political comms operation is not only misguided, but it's also the same kind of mindset that helped Democrats get into this crisis. One can simultaneously focus on the challenges facing the country and the challenges facing one's own party.
Regardless of where one stands on who deserves the most blame, the Biden delusion was an extraordinary instance of groupthink that warrants widespread reflection from Democrats. In an ideal world, developing a more detailed understanding of what was happening at the White House should be salutary, particularly as the party continues to face a widespread age problem. And many Democrats' reluctance to put their names to criticisms of the president and his advisers underscores how vulnerable the party remains. Activists should take note and feel even more emboldened to pressure a party that hardly stands for anything except for moderate opposition to the right's positions. Parties need to be disciplined and work cooperatively with leaders in order to function, including rallying to their side when they make some mistakes. But unconditional loyalty is no virtue — and it can often pave the way for one's own downfall.
This article was originally published on MSNBC.com
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Scoop: Inside Thune's effort to keep N.C. in GOP's column
Scoop: Inside Thune's effort to keep N.C. in GOP's column

Axios

time16 minutes ago

  • Axios

Scoop: Inside Thune's effort to keep N.C. in GOP's column

Senate Majority Leader John Thune is planning a fall visit to North Carolina to fundraise for Michael Whatley's upcoming Senate campaign, Axios has learned. Why it matters: Senior Republican officials think the North Carolina contest will be among the most expensive Senate races of 2026 — and that every dollar will matter. "It's always the most expensive race in U.S. history. It will be again," retiring North Carolina Sen. Thom Tillis said at an Axios Live event on Wednesday. Tillis, a Republican, announced he won't seek reelection after clashing with President Trump over the president's " big, beautiful bill." Behind closed doors: GOP leaders had given Lara Trump, Trump's daughter-in-law and a North Carolina native who had considered running, the right of first refusal. But during a phone call Thune had with Lara Trump and her husband, Eric Trump, this month, Lara Trump indicated she was leaning against entering the race. When it became clear Lara Trump would not run, Thune turned his attention to wooing Whatley, who was North Carolina GOP chair before Trump handpicked him to be the Republican National Committee chair last year. Thune called Whatley last week and encouraged him to run. Then, on July 16, Whatley attended a reception hosted by the Thune-aligned Senate Leadership Fund super PAC. During the gathering, which was attended by about 75 top donors and senators, the Republican leader introduced Whatley as the party's nominee for North Carolina Senate. The intrigue: Trump and Thune called Whatley on Monday and encouraged him to jump into the race quickly. During the call, Thune pledged the party machinery would consolidate around Whatley. The big picture: Whatley is expected to soon step down from his RNC role to enter the race and will have the full backing of Trump and Thune. It is anticipated he will face off against former Gov. Roy Cooper, who is preparing to launch his campaign next week. Between the lines: By lining up behind Whatley, Trump and Republican leaders are hoping to avoid a divisive primary.

Playbook PM: A spiraling crisis in Gaza
Playbook PM: A spiraling crisis in Gaza

Politico

time17 minutes ago

  • Politico

Playbook PM: A spiraling crisis in Gaza

Presented by THE CATCH-UP TRUMP AND THE WORLD: President Donald Trump is currently in the air en route to Scotland, where he'll head to one of his golf properties and inaugurate a new course honoring his late mother. But as Trump heads abroad — ostensibly for a short break from Washington — a growing list of global crises are vying for his attention. Chief among them: The spiraling humanitarian crisis in Gaza, where an untold number of Palestinians, aid workers and reporters are dying of starvation. The Gaza Humanitarian Foundation's aid centers are falling short of the levels of food needed and have 'practically become shooting galleries,' as the Atlantic's Hussein Ibish writes. 'I truly don't know what to do anymore,' a MercyCorps worker told ABC News' Mary Kekatos. Hundreds of organizations have called on Israel to stop its blockade of aid. But Trump today signaled that the fighting might only escalate: Israel may have to 'get rid of' Hamas, he said, echoing envoy Steve Witkoff's comments yesterday that Hamas does not want to end the war. 'I think they want to die, and it's very, very bad,' Trump said this morning. 'It got to be to a point where you're gonna have to finish the job.' Speaking to the humanitarian disaster, Trump said the U.S. has sent $60 million in aid to Gaza, and that he hopes further food aid gets there and doesn't get stolen, POLITICO's Irie Sentner writes. The eyes of the world: World leaders are rallying to avoid an even worse catastrophe in Gaza — though Australian PM Anthony Albanese said the crisis has already 'gone beyond the world's worst fears,' per NYT's Qasim Nauman. U.K. PM Keir Starmer said yesterday he'll hold an emergency call with France and Germany on the issue, per Reuters' Andrea Shalal and Andrew Macaskill. And while French President Emmanuel Macron has announced his nation's intent to recognize Palestinian statehood, Trump this morning said it didn't matter: 'It's not going to change anything,' he said, per CNN's Kevin Liptak. The pressure is building inside Congress, too. A group of Democratic senators led by Sen. Jack Reed (D-R.I.) are calling on Trump to directly appeal to Israeli PM Benjamin Netanyahu on the urgency of allowing humanitarian assistance to flow through the West Bank. Other pressing international issues are stacking up, too. On Iran's nuclear program: Talks between Iran and European officials began today, but are still at an impasse over Tehran's nuclear program, with more conversations to come, AP's Andrew Wilks and colleagues report from Istanbul. On Russia and Ukraine: Russian President Vladimir Putin is shutting down the possibility of meeting with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy for the time being, effectively throwing cold water on the prospect of progress on a peace deal anytime soon, WaPo's Robyn Dixon and Natalia Abbakumova write. On Thailand and Cambodia: The newest potential international headache is the outbreak of fighting between Thailand, a U.S. ally, and Cambodia, a Chinese ally. Roughly 16 people have died in the revival of a centuries-old border dispute that is growing more and more serious as heavier artillery gets involved, NBC's Mithil Aggarwal reports. Each side blames the other, and worries are mounting that it could explode into a war. Thailand is pushing for bilateral negotiations to resolve the conflict, preferring not to involve a third party like the U.S, Reuters' Panu Wongcha-um scooped. The big picture for Trump: World leaders have taken their leave during global crises before, but this time it's happening all at once, POLITICO's national security ace Eric-Bazail Eimil writes in to Playbook. 'There's also an optics question here. When President Joe Biden would go on vacation and situations would worsen, we'd barely see him,' Eric tells Playbook. 'That's not going to be the case this time. Trump will be visible. And it all creates an unusual split-screen; the president in Scotland opening a golf course as these issues rage. But it also means we could get a lot more information than usual in these situations about what the administration is considering.' On the home front, Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth met this morning with Estonian Defense Minister Hanno Pevkur, Latvian Defense Minister Andris Spruds and Lithuanian National Defense Minister Dovile Sakaliene at the Pentagon. First in Playbook — Coming up: All three foreign defense ministers will be interviewed by FOX News' Bret Baier on 'Special Report' at 6 p.m. to talk about their meeting with Hegseth, the war in Ukraine and more. It's a swelteringly hot Friday afternoon. Thanks for reading Playbook PM. As always, send me your tips and thoughts at abianco@ 8 THINGS YOU NEED TO KNOW 1. THE EPSTEIN CRISIS: Gaggling before he departed for Scotland this morning, Trump said he has no plans to pardon Ghislaine Maxwell, the convicted child sex trafficker and associate of Jeffrey Epstein. But he also didn't rule it out. 'I'm allowed to do it, but it's something I have not thought about,' Trump told reporters. He also said that he 'never went' to Epstein's notorious island, while alleging that former President Bill Clinton had. The latest: Deputy AG Todd Blanche has wrapped his interview with Maxwell in Tallahassee. Sowing division in MAGA: The DNC is planning to launch Epstein-focused ads in a dozen GOP-held House districts at the start of August recess, Axios' Tal Axelrod scooped. 'The ads will run before videos on right-wing YouTube and Meta channels like those of Fox News, Charlie Kirk and Ben Shapiro — target-rich audiences for the voters fixated on Epstein.' 2. ON THE HILL: There's growing consternation on both sides of the aisle about a possible second rescissions package coming from the White House, WaPo's Theodoric Meyer reports. 'A number of [Republicans] do not like this process, they were unhappy with having to go through it the first time, and I urge them to reject it if it comes at them again,' top Senate Appropriations Dem Patty Murray (D-Wash.) said. … Meanwhile, in a letter to CMS Administrator Mehmet Oz, Senate Democrats accused Republicans of doling out the megabill's opaque $50 billion fund for rural hospitals to effectively win over GOP members, Axios' Stephen Neukam scooped. 3. 2026 WATCH: Wisconsin Lt. Gov. Sara Rodriguez is running for governor in Wisconsin, the first Democrat to enter the race to succeed retiring Gov. Tony Evers, POLITICO's Elena Schneider reports. … Rep. Ralph Norman is entering the race for South Carolina governor and will file his candidacy papers today, AP's Meg Kinnard reports, joining a crowded GOP field. … Georgia Republican Rep. Mike Collins will launch his Senate bid early next week, thwarting Gov. Brian Kemp's wishes in doing so, Fox News' Paul Steinhauser and Alex Miller scooped. … And in North Carolina, ahead of former Gov. Roy Cooper's formal announcement next week that he'll run for U.S. Senate, Democrats already in the race are starting to explore other options, Semafor's Eleanor Mueller and Burgess Everett scoop. The GOP megalaw hits the trail: The Ways and Means Committee is in Nevada touting the passage of 'no tax on tips' — though the megalaw's provision on the matter is quite a bit more complicated than that slogan suggests — with Chair Jason Smith (R-Mo.) telling predicting Punchbowl's Laura Weiss that the provision will prove popular with voters next year, despite some negative polling. Meanwhile, the GOP is split over how to handle the Obamacare tax credits that expire at the end of the year, as NBC's Sahil Kapur reports. From the wilderness: California Gov. Gavin Newsom is meeting with California and Texas lawmakers today as he mulls a mid-cycle redistricting plan, per FOX L.A.'s Elex Michaelson. A chronically online read: 'Are the Democrats Getting Better at the Internet?,' by the New Yorker's Jon Allsop 4. THE ECONOMY, STUPID: Trump said this morning that Fed Chair Jerome Powell is a 'very good man' and praised their meeting yesterday. He signaled the Fed may soon cut interest rates, though it is largely expected to extend the current rates at their meeting next week, Reuters' Steve Holland and Nandita Bose report. That's likely to anger Trump, but Powell is singing a song of resistance, telling associates that there's no chance he resigns, CNN's Adam Cancryn writes. Let's make a deal: The White House is in the process of sending out more letters to foreign trading partners, Trump said this morning. He suggested there's a 'a 50-50 chance, maybe less than that,' that the U.S. makes a deal with the European Union ahead of the Aug. 1 deadline, POLITICO's Doug Palmer reports. (He'll meet with European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen on Sunday to talk trade.) Trump gives Canada even steeper odds: 'I think Canada could be one where they'll just pay tariffs, not really a negotiation,' Trump said. Meanwhile, he said that the U.S. and China have the 'confines of a deal,' but didn't elaborate. More from Bloomberg's Akayla Gardner 5. IMMIGRATION FILES: This morning, Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis visited the new immigration detention facility known as 'Alligator Alcatraz' and announced that deportation flights from the Everglades center have begun, per the AP. About 100 immigrants have left the country, with DeSantis previewing that 'you're going to see the numbers go up dramatically.' A look inside the facility from CNN's Priscilla Alvarez The growing crackdown: ICE is using part of its newly appropriated billions to rapidly increase their ranks with the aim of hitting Trump's goal of 10,000 new ICE agents. But in the recruitment rush, standards for who joins are likely to drop, the Bulwark's Adrian Carrasquillo reports. The economic fallout: A Penn Wharton Budget Model analysis shows the administration's immigration crackdown will 'shrink most worker paychecks, erode gross domestic product (GDP) and spike the already-massive federal government budget deficit,' CNN's Matt Egan scooped. Big read: 'His Former Company Got Caught Employing Undocumented Workers. Now He's Profiting Off an Immigrant Detention Camp,' by ProPublica's Avi Asher-Schapiro and Jeff Ernsthausen 6. SCHOOL TIES: Columbia University's choice to settle with the Trump administration took acting university president Claire Shipman back and forth from New York to Washington as she negotiated with Education Secretary Linda McMahon before acceding to the White House's position that the school had an antisemitism problem, NYT's Sharon Otterman reports in a timeline of the negotiations. The new blueprint: Now, the White House is turning its attention to levying fines against other universities that haven't played their negotiations the same way as Columbia, WSJ's Natalie Andrews and colleagues scooped. The administration is in talks with Cornell, Duke, Northwestern and Brown, but the big fish they're still hoping to catch is Harvard, with 'a deal that would make Columbia's $200 million payment look like peanuts.' Bleeding crimson: 'The quiet academic leading Harvard's fight against Trump,' by WaPo's Joanna Slater and Susan Svrluga 7. COURT OF PUBLIC OPINION: Roughly one-third of Americans have 'hardly any confidence at all' in the Supreme Court, according to the latest AP-NORC poll — an improvement from three years ago after the Dobbs decision, when lack of confidence was at 43 percent. But there's growing concerns of another kind, with four in 10 U.S. adults saying the court has 'too much' power. Another opinion to watch: Lower courts are getting frustrated at the amount of unsigned emergency SCOTUS rulings — from so-called 'shadow docket cases' — with massive implications on the law. 'You're reading an abbreviated opinion from the Supreme Court like it's a Rosetta Stone,' one lower court judge told Bloomberg's Zoe Tillman. 8. CUTTING DEEP: ''A more vulnerable nation': FEMA memos lay out risks of plan to cut $1B in disaster and security grants,' by CNN's Gabe Cohen: 'The Federal Emergency Management Agency has proposed cutting nearly $1 billion in grant funding for communities and first responders nationwide to better prepare for disasters and to bolster security for possible terror or cyberattacks. … The loss of one program that helps communities plan and train for disasters would 'leave state and local governments more vulnerable to catastrophic incidents,' one memo states. Ending another that bolsters transportation infrastructure and terrorism protections would 'contradict the administration's commitment to a safer and more secure country,' the memo says.' TALK OF THE TOWN STAY INDOORS: Massive heat advisory today in the district. It'll feel like 105-109 degrees outside, per Capital Weather Gang. Prepare for a scorching weekend, too. Donald Trump, asked about the new 'South Park' episode mocking him, said today that 'I never watch South Park. I don't know anything about South Park.' SPOTTED: former Trump national security adviser Robert O'Brien leaving the St. Regis yesterday. MEDIA MOVES — David Andelman is now president of The Deadline Club, the largest chapter of the Society of Professional Journalists. OUT AND ABOUT — at Washingtonian's 'Best Of Washington' party last night at the National Building Museum. SPOTTED: Rep. Nicole Malliotakis (R-N.Y.), Rep. Ryan Zinke (R-Mont.), Todd Newman, Kevin Keane, Hamad Al Muftah, Michael Kennedy, Theresa Fariello, Christina Sevilla, Yemeni Amb. Abdulwahab Alhajjri, Robert Costa, Yamiche Alcinder, Josh Dawsey, Cathy Merrill, Anna Palmer, Meredith McGraw, Heather Podesta, Gary Shapiro, Aileen Fuchs, Kathleen Biden Buhle, Carl Hulse, Fred Humphries, Daniel Heider, Franklin Davis and Anthea Hartig. — SMI hosted its summer reception yesterday at The Salt Line. SPOTTED: Bill McCann, Molly Carpenter, Steph Penn, Sean Duggan, Kevin Lefeber, Phil Breuder, Bo Peard, Blake Souter, Nathan Flagg, Ryan Pettit, Jaylene Kennedy, JJ Villalvazo, Jesse Von Stein, Katie Sutton, Celia Morté and Bryan Maxwell. — North Star Policy Initiative had their launch event yesterday at Engage Foundation's DC offices. SPOTTED: Madinah Wilson-Anton, Mohsin Syed, Brenda Abdelall, Wa'el Alzayat, Andrew Miller, Maher Bitar, Adham Sahloul, Mohamed Elsanousi, Habiba Ahmed, Omer Rafiq, Mohammed Soliman, Daniel Schneiderman, Iman Awad, Haris Tarin, Yousra Fazili, Laura Kupe, Diana Rayes, Jafer Ahmed, Fritz Lodge, Christopher Shell, Deema Homsi, Anas Alqaed, Akbar Shahid Ahmed, Adam Koussih, Caroline Rose, Adina Vogel Ayalon, Nezar Jamal, Simone Williams, Lalitha Adury, Ameer Alsamman, Sam Green and Minna Jaffery-Lindemulder. Send Playbookers tips to playbook@ or text us on Signal here. Playbook couldn't happen without our editor Zack Stanton, deputy editor Garrett Ross and Playbook Podcast producer Callan Tansill-Suddath.

Leaving the Dogs, Leaving the Cats: The Pets Detained Migrants Can't Take
Leaving the Dogs, Leaving the Cats: The Pets Detained Migrants Can't Take

Newsweek

time17 minutes ago

  • Newsweek

Leaving the Dogs, Leaving the Cats: The Pets Detained Migrants Can't Take

Based on facts, either observed and verified firsthand by the reporter, or reported and verified from knowledgeable sources. Newsweek AI is in beta. Translations may contain inaccuracies—please refer to the original content. Los Angeles animal shelters have reported an uptick in new arrivals, while locals are taking matters into their own hands after thousands of immigrants have been swept up in the Trump administration's raids across the city. The Los Angeles County Department of Animal Care and Control (DACC) told Newsweek that its shelters had taken in 19 pets from families caught up in Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) efforts since June 10. "We understand that surrendering a pet can be an incredibly emotional decision, and we are here to assist anyone who finds themselves in need of help at any of the County's seven animal care centers," Christopher A Valles, animal control manager with DACC, told Newsweek via email. Gods left behind by their immigrant families following ICE raids in Los Angeles, California. Gods left behind by their immigrant families following ICE raids in Los Angeles, California. Matthew Rudolph L.A. has been a focal point for federal agencies cracking down on illegal immigration in recent weeks, sparking protests and pushback from the city's largely Democratic leaders, who have warned that communities will be devastated by the loss of illegal immigrants who have built lives in southern California. While the administration's hard-line immigration efforts had been broadly popular at the start of Trump's second term, public opinion has fallen sharply this summer, as images of masked ICE agents detaining people at court hearings, at work, church, school, in traffic and elsewhere have rocketed across the media. A Gallup poll this month showed support for reducing immigration levels dropped from 55 percent last year to 30 percent, with 79 percent of Americans now viewing immigration as a positive force for the country. As ICE raids took place across L.A., mirroring similar enforcement actions seen across the country in recent months, immigrants facing detention and deportation have been forced in some cases to give up a beloved member of their family — their pets. L.A. County DACC, which operates seven animal care centers, has taken in four cats and 15 dogs as families either self-deported or were swept up by federal agents. The agency's data gives a snapshot into a growing concern in places where people are being arrested off the street, detained indefinitely or immediately deported. Animals cannot go where their arrested or deported owners have gone, leaving them in need of a new home. Matthew Rudolph, a dog trainer and owner of Happy Heart Pet Care, has been trying to locate and rescue the animals left behind in Los Angeles. He told Newsweek that it takes time to find some animals because the only people who know of their existence are the ones who are working one minute and in ICE custody the next. "I got involved out of the futility of trying to track down and document ICE arrests and being completely defeated as the siege began," Rudolph said. "As dog trainers for 15 years, we immediately turned our attention to the welfare of the animals that surely were being left to die in some or many cases." Working with his partner Anna Marie, Rudolph has been "slowly but surely" figuring out how best to rescue the dogs whose owners have left. One method has been to network with immigration attorneys who can notify them when arrests have taken place, along with speaking to shelters across the city. Photos depict people taken by ICE during a protest art installation outside a federal building on July 17, 2025 in Los Angeles, California. Photos depict people taken by ICE during a protest art installation outside a federal building on July 17, 2025 in Los Angeles, acknowledged the sensitivity of his role, saying that as a white man, he is aware of how his presence may be perceived when approaching immigrant families in vulnerable situations. He expressed concern that his efforts to help could be misinterpreted, especially when it involves the potential consequences of deportation. Rudolph voiced frustration over what he sees as the dehumanization of immigrants by the Trump administration. "Cruelty is the point," Rudolph said, adding that the political climate has left little room for compassion from the government, particularly when it comes to migrant families affected by the sweeping immigration raids. Rudolph explained that even attempting to reunite a pet with an owner deported across the border to Mexico is an expensive and laborious process. It involves navigating both U.S. and Mexican customs regulations, along with meeting various travel and health documentation requirements, costing thousands of dollars in some cases. "In terms of re-homing, we've discussed it, we've thought it through but we can't—that's such a luxury. We'd love to be able to have fundraisers for that," Rudolph said. While the fate of their owners may remain unknown, some pets have already found new homes, Valles said. "We are pleased to report that during this time, eight of the dogs have already found permanent homes, highlighting the community's willingness to support these animals in need," Valles said. "DACC will continue to provide resources and care for pets affected by these circumstances, ensuring they receive the love and attention they deserve while we work to find them new families." As so-called "sanctuary cities" like L.A. have seen the most ICE enforcement operations, communities are forming rapid response networks to help those vulnerable. "I've never been more proud of Los Angeles in my entire life," Rudolph said.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store