Biden back in the battleground state of Wisconsin

President Biden was back Wednesday to the battleground state of Wisconsin, where he touted a $3.3 billion investment by Microsoft to build a new artificial intelligence data center in Racine, at the same site where Taiwanese manufacturer Foxconn once planned a giant manufacturing campus. While president, Donald Trump heralded that project, which never materialized, as the “Eighth Wonder of the World.” Biden noted that in his remarks.

Here’s what to know

  • Testimony is scheduled to resume Thursday in Trump’s trial in New York related to a hush money payment to adult-film actress Stormy Daniels. The court is not in session Wednesday.
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5:26 PM: Analysis: The 2020-was-stolen crew is here to stoke fears of noncitizen voters

microsoft, biden back in the battleground state of wisconsin

Biden back in the battleground state of Wisconsin

Last month, as he were fending off complaints from his conference’s fringe-right flank, House Speaker Mike Johnson (R-La.) traveled to Florida for an event with former president Donald Trump. The event’s focus was “election security,” a favorite topic of Trump’s, and Johnson got what he came for: photos with the former president and his blessing, however wobbly.

What Trump got was a public commitment that Congress would address votes cast by noncitizens. Such votes are already barred under federal law, but it’s an issue that, as I wrote at the time, blends two of Trump’s favorite strawmen: illegal voters and immigrants.

At a news conference outside the Capitol on Wednesday, Johnson was joined by other legislators and representatives of outside groups to announce legislation that would focus on blocking noncitizens from voting.

Read the full story

By: Philip Bump

5:19 PM: Biden says he doesn’t believe Trump will accept the results of the 2024 election

microsoft, biden back in the battleground state of wisconsin

President Biden recounted his belief at a campaign event Wednesday, saying he’d said it in a CNN interview scheduled to air later Wednesday.

RACINE, Wis. — President Biden said that he does not believe that Donald Trump will accept the 2024 election results, a scenario that could again cause large portions of the electorate to cast doubt on a core part of American democracy.

Speaking to voters here, Biden recounted an interview with CNN that he had just completed, saying he was asked whether Trump would accept the results. Biden said that he answered that Trump would not accept them.

“I really think democracy is at stake here,” Biden said. “Not a joke.”

He also warned that “Trump means what he says,” which would threaten Biden’s accomplishments.

The CNN interview is scheduled to air at 7 p.m. on Wednesday.

By: Matt Viser

5:01 PM: Poll finds Democratic incumbent Baldwin has double-digit lead in Wisconsin Senate race

microsoft, biden back in the battleground state of wisconsin

Sen. Tammy Baldwin (D-Wis.) left; Eric Hovde, candidate for the U.S. Senate, right.

New polling shows Sen. Tammy Baldwin (D-Wis.) has a double-digit lead in her reelection campaign — a race expected to help determine which party controls the chamber next year.

The Quinnipiac University poll, which came out Wednesday, found Baldwin had the support of 54 percent of registered voters, while Republican challenger Eric Hovde had 42 percent.

The survey was done from Thursday to Monday, and pollsters interviewed 1,457 self-identified registered Wisconsin voters. The margin of error was plus-or-minus 2.6 percentage points.

The GOP is targeting Baldwin’s seat as a potential flip opportunity as the party looks to capture the Senate majority this fall. Hovde, a businessman, has the backing of former president Donald Trump and the National Republican Senatorial Committee.

A Marquette Law School Poll released last month showed the race was closer, with Baldwin earning 52 percent among voters and Hovde 47 percent.

The Quinnipiac survey found that Baldwin remains much better known than Hovde, with half of voters saying they have not heard enough about the Republican candidate to have an opinion. Forty-nine percent of voters had a favorable view of Baldwin, while 35 percent had an unfavorable view. Twenty-three percent of voters rated Hovde favorably, while 25 percent rated him unfavorably.

By: Patrick Svitek

4:39 PM: Analysis from Sarah Ellison, Reporter covering media and its intersection with politics and technology

The Washington Post analyzed 14,101 of Donald Trump’s Truth Social posts from the day he announced his presidential campaign on Nov. 15, 2022, through March 15, 2024. That included 7,716 original text posts as well as reposts and image-only posts. He posted to Truth Social, where he now has 6.96 million followers, an average of 29 times a day over that period.

Those messages were in turn shared by followers with wildly popular Twitter accounts, Facebook pages, podcasts and cable news shows, some of which reach tens of millions of people. The Post’s analysis focused on nearly 200 right-wing political influencers who have active accounts on Truth Social and other social media sites.

4:22 PM: In new ad, Democratic House candidate John Avlon focuses attention on Trump

Former CNN commentator and anchor John Avlon (D) is running to unseat Rep. Nick LaLota, a freshman Republican representing a suburban district on Long Island. But in this recent ad from Avlon, the only Republican who is mentioned is former president Donald Trump.

Avlon, the narrator says, “is stepping up to run for Congress, to take on Donald Trump, to save our democracy and stop a national abortion ban.”

As Trump’s name is mentioned viewers see Avlon talking on one side of the screen, like he’s on the set of a news show, and Trump on the other side.

The contest is one of a handful of competitive House races in New York and could help determine which party controls the House. Avlon’s work on CNN helped boost his visibility before entering the race. But Republicans are seen as holding an advantage in the district, and LaLota has raised nearly twice as much money as Avlon, according to recent campaign financial disclosure reports.

By: Azi Paybarah

3:52 PM: Poll: Biden leads Trump in Wisconsin, but race tightens with third-party candidates

microsoft, biden back in the battleground state of wisconsin

(Demetrius Freeman/The Washington Post; Jabin Botsford/The Washington Post)

President Biden leads former president Donald Trump in the battleground state of Wisconsin, but the matchup tightens to nearly a tie when third-party candidates are included, according to a new poll.

The Quinnipiac University survey, released Wednesday, found Biden receiving the support of 50 percent of voters and Trump getting 44 percent in a head-to-head matchup. Biden’s lead was just outside the margin of error.

The poll was conducted from Thursday to Monday and included 1,457 self-identified registered Wisconsin voters. The margin of error was plus-or-minus 2.6 percentage points.

With third-party candidates involved, Biden garnered 40 percent to 39 percent for Trump. Independent candidate Robert F. Kennedy Jr. got 12 percent, Green Party candidate Jill Stein received 4 percent and independent candidate Cornel West had 1 percent.

The survey showed that Kennedy siphoned off similar levels of support from the two major-party candidates. Eleven percent of voters who backed Biden in the head-to-head matchup shifted to Kennedy in the five-way race, while that figure was 10 percent for Trump supporters.

The poll was released the same day Biden visited Wisconsin and criticized Trump over an ill-fated manufacturing project there that Trump had touted in his first term. Trump won Wisconsin in 2016 but lost it to Biden four years later.

By: Patrick Svitek

3:16 PM: Analysis: Why conservative media is suddenly turning on Kristi Noem

microsoft, biden back in the battleground state of wisconsin

South Dakota Gov. Kristi L. Noem (R) speaks on Capitol Hill in Washington on March 20.

When South Dakota Gov. Kristi L. Noem (R) sat down with Fox News last week amid a growing tempest over her killing her dog, Sean Hannity gave her the softballs-in-a-storm treatment often reserved for Donald Trump.

Hannity mused that perhaps there wasn’t really a difference between Noem shooting her own dog and having someone else euthanize it. He whatabout-ed by pointing to President Biden’s dog Major biting Secret Service agents, and posited about aggressive dogs: “It’s a sad thing to do, but at some point, doesn’t it become the responsible thing to?”

Read the full story

By: Aaron Blake

2:50 PM: Top Republicans, led by Trump, refuse to commit to accept 2024 election results

microsoft, biden back in the battleground state of wisconsin

Former President Donald Trump speaks with Sen. Tim Scott (R-S.C.) and moderator Laura Ingraham during a Fox News town Hall held in Greenville, S.C., on Tuesday.

Top Republicans, led by former president Donald Trump, are refusing to commit to accept November’s election results with six months until voters head to the polls, raising concerns that the country could see a repeat of the violent aftermath of Trump’s loss four years ago.

The question has become something of a litmus test, particularly among the long list of possible running mates for Trump, whose relationship with his first vice president, Mike Pence, ruptured because Pence resisted Trump’s pressure to overturn the 2020 election.

Read the full story

By: Patrick Svitek

2:27 PM: Analysis from Azi Paybarah, National reporter covering campaigns and breaking politics news.

President Biden is heading to the West Coast this week for several campaign events, the White House announced Wednesday.

Biden will head to San Francisco on Thursday before participating in two campaign receptions in the Bay Area on Friday He will then travel to Seattle for campaign events on Friday and Saturday.

2:09 PM: How Trump’s allies amplify his Truth Social messages to the wider world

microsoft, biden back in the battleground state of wisconsin

The Truth Social account for former president Donald Trump on a mobile device in New York on March 20.

On the second day of his civil fraud trial in New York last fall, Donald Trump posted a photo of a young woman, Allison Greenfield, standing next to New York Sen. Charles E. Schumer. Trump claimed falsely that she was “Schumer’s girlfriend” and was “running this case against me.”

Trump’s post about Greenfield, the principal law clerk for New York Supreme Court Justice Arthur Engoron, received only around 1,400 shares, modest activity for a former president whose Twitter account once had nearly 90 million followers.

Read the full story

By: Sarah Ellison and Clara Ence Morse

1:50 PM: Biden highlights Trump’s connection to a failed Foxconn deal in Wisconsin

President Biden on Wednesday highlighted the plan for a Foxconn manufacturing facility in Wisconsin that was touted by former president Donald Trump but that ultimately failed to generate the thousands of promised jobs.

“Foxconn turned out to be just that: A con,” Biden said during a speech in Racine, Wis., where he heralded Microsoft’s $3.3 billion investment to build a data center on the site that had been set aside for Foxconn.

Instead of Foxconn creating 13,000 jobs in Racine in four years during the Trump administration, 1,000 jobs left the area during that time, Biden said. After noting that a Foxconn deal was promoted by Republicans, including Sen. Ron Johnson (Wis.), Biden added: “They dug a hole with those golden shovels, and then they fell into it.”

Microsoft’s investment is expected to create 2,000 permanent jobs and 2,300 temporary union construction jobs.

Critics of Trump’s earlier arrangement with Foxconn say it was never meant to become reality. Trump and the GOP were looking for a quick political win, while Foxconn was hoping to placate the Trump administration to prevent it from hiking import tariffs on the iPhones the firm assembles in China, said Gordon Hintz, a Democrat and former minority leader in the Wisconsin State Assembly.

“You had a swing state President Trump needed to win,” Hintz said. “For Foxconn, it was always about evading tariffs.”

Both Biden and Trump see Wisconsin as key to their campaigns. Trump won the state in 2016 but lost it to Biden in 2020.

By: Azi Paybarah

1:27 PM: Analysis: For all the complaints, Trump isn’t campaigning much on trial off-days

microsoft, biden back in the battleground state of wisconsin

Former president Donald Trump speaks at a campaign rally on Wednesday in Waukesh, Wis.

As Donald Trump’s New York trial was going through the process of selecting jurors, the former president offered a familiar criticism of the situation.

“They want to keep me off the campaign trail,” he insisted, referring to his perceived oppressors. The trial wasn’t a function of alleged illegality that a grand jury determined should result in an indictment. It was instead, as Trump baselessly asserts, a top-down push by national Democrats to keep Trump from running for president.

Read the full story

By: Philip Bump

1:07 PM: RFK Jr. says he had parasitic brain worm and undisclosed memory loss

microsoft, biden back in the battleground state of wisconsin

Democratic presidential candidate Robert F. Kennedy Jr. testifies before the House select subcommittee on the weaponization of the federal government on Thursday. (Jabin Botsford/The Washington Post)

Robert F. Kennedy Jr., the independent presidential candidate who has marketed himself to voters as a younger, healthier alternative to the two major contenders, contracted a parasitic worm that got into his brain years ago and ate a portion of it before dying, his campaign confirmed Wednesday.

The 70-year-old scion of the powerful political family revealed in a 2012 deposition during divorce proceedings from his second wife, which the New York Times obtained and first reported Wednesday, that he had short- and long-term memory loss and described himself as having “cognitive problems, clearly.”

Read the full story

By: Meryl Kornfield

12:53 PM: Analysis from Cat Zakrzewski, National technology policy reporter

The White House is pitching President Biden’s appearance in Wisconsin as part of his “Investing in America” strategy, seeking to draw a sharp contrast with the president’s predecessor, Donald Trump, who spent Tuesday posting angry messages on social media about his criminal trial for allegedly falsifying business records to conceal hush money payments to adult-film actress Stormy Daniels.

12:24 PM: Analysis: What we’re watching on Biden’s trip

microsoft, biden back in the battleground state of wisconsin

President Biden speaks with reporters during a walk to Marine One on the South Lawn of the White House on April 25.

President Biden is heading to Racine, Wis., to announce that Microsoft will spend $3.3 billion to build an artificial intelligence data center.

Expect Biden to contrast the investment with Donald Trump’s announcement while he was president that the Taiwanese manufacturer Foxconn would create 13,000 jobs in the same community. Foxconn ended up hiring only about 1,000 people there.

Biden will later make a campaign stop to talk with Black voters before heading to Chicago for a fundraiser.

He will also do a rare sit-down interview with CNN’s Erin Burnett, which will air Wednesday night.

By: Leigh Ann Caldwell and Theodoric Meyer

11:59 AM: Analysis: Trump’s classified documents trial blown apart by Cannon

microsoft, biden back in the battleground state of wisconsin

This image, contained in a federal indictment against former president Donald Trump, shows boxes of records being stored on a stage at Trump’s Mar-a-Lago estate in Palm Beach, Fla.

The facts of the case do not favor former president Donald Trump.

When he reluctantly left the White House in January 2021, it was rushed. His weeks-long insistence that he had not lost the presidential election meant that his team had less time to transition out of the building. He departed Jan. 20, taking boxes of souvenirs and documents with him to Florida. Other boxes went to a transition office in Virginia before being shipped to him at Mar-a-Lago.

Read the full story

By: Philip Bump

11:37 AM: Georgia court to hear Trump appeal seeking to disqualify Fani Willis

microsoft, biden back in the battleground state of wisconsin

Fulton County District Attorney Fani T. Willis attends a hearing on the Georgia election interference case on March 1.

ATLANTA — A Georgia appellate court agreed Wednesday to hear Donald Trump’s appeal of a state court ruling allowing Fulton County District Attorney Fani T. Willis (D) to continue prosecuting the election interference case against the former president and several allies.

In a brief notice, the Georgia Court of Appeals said it had “granted” the request for appeal and ordered Trump and his co-defendants to file a “notice of appeal” within 10 days.

Read the full story

By: Holly Bailey

11:18 AM: In new ad, Tester aligns himself with Republicans

microsoft, biden back in the battleground state of wisconsin

Sen. Jon Tester (D-Mont.) on Capitol Hill in Washington on Jan. 28, 2020.

Sen. Jon Tester (D-Mont.), whose reelection bid could determine which party controls the Senate, has a new ad aligning himself with Republicans and against the leader of his own party, President Biden, on the issue of border security and immigration.

“Senator Jon Tester, calling out Biden. What’s happening on our southern border is unacceptable,” a woman off-camera says, as viewers see a segment from Fox News about Tester’s position. Later, a narrator says, “Jon Tester is working with Republicans to do whatever it takes to finally secure the border.”

In the ad, Tester says, “I want that border secure”; “the president absolutely could do more” and “should have secured it a long time ago.”

Republicans have sought to make border security the top issue in elections. Former president Donald Trump polls better than Biden on the issue, though Trump’s specific policies are less popular, The Washington Post’s Catherine Rampell noted recently.

Tester is facing a challenge from Republican Tim Sheehy, a former Navy SEAL and wealthy founder of an aerial firefighting company.

Sheehy has faced scrutiny for discrepancies in describing an injury to his arm that he initially claimed took place while he was in the military. At one point, he told a national park ranger that the injury was the result of accidentally discharging his firearm while inside a park.

By: Azi Paybarah

11:01 AM: Analysis: No, posting is not better political activism than talking to voters

microsoft, biden back in the battleground state of wisconsin

Daecorion Robinson, a 19-year-old volunteer with BLOC (Black Leaders Organizing Communities) community outreach group, goes door-to-door in October 2022 to talk to voters in Milwaukee. (Alex Wroblewski for The Washington Post)

Matt Yglesias is one of the more popular voices on the pro-Biden internet. That’s his framing, not mine; his newsletter “Slow Boring” is targeted to centrist Democrats interested in the nuances of how policy can address the country’s problems or at least people who like to think that they are. To use another metric to establish his bona fides, Yglesias is at the level of a commentator who gets profiled in The Washington Post.

Because he has that influence, his offering Tuesday morning deserves a response. Not because it is too generous or insufficiently generous to President Biden as it attempts to explain to readers how they can best aid Biden’s reelection. Instead, it is because it offers a notably bad assessment of the relative values of posting stuff on the internet vs. talking to actual voters.

Read the full story

By: Philip Bump

10:39 AM: New Biden campaign ad targets Trump’s efforts to repeal Obamacare

The Biden campaign has released a new television ad targeting former president Donald Trump’s efforts to repeal the Affordable Care Act.

The ad, which is part of a $14 million buy, will air on television and online across battleground states. In it, audio of Trump calling the ACA a “disaster” and saying he wants to “terminate it” is interspersed with audio from President Biden saying that doing so would cause more than 100 million Americans to lose protections for preexisting conditions.

In a statement, Biden campaign manager Julie Chavez Rodriguez said that every time Trump “promises to gut the Affordable Care Act, rip away health care and protections for preexisting conditions, and jack up costs, he reminds the American people that health care is on the ballot this November for tens of millions of Americans.”

“It’s a threat that we have to take seriously because every time he’s had the chance, Trump has gone after Americans’ hard-earned health care,” she said.

By: Mariana Alfaro

10:16 AM: In Arizona, election workers trained with deepfakes to prepare for 2024

microsoft, biden back in the battleground state of wisconsin

Voters at a polling station in Guadalupe, Ariz., in 2022.

The video message from Arizona Secretary of State Adrian Fontes warmly greeted the scores of election workers who had gathered at a Phoenix area hotel in December for a first-of-its-kind drill: “We are very excited that all of you are here,” Fontes, a Democrat, began. “You are on the front lines, and this exercise is a prime opportunity for you to hone your skills by experiencing new challenges as a team.” He wished them luck.

Over two days, the election workers from around the state maneuvered through a training exercise involving the kinds of attacks generated by artificial intelligence that they might face in this politically competitive state during the coming election cycle. They tackled situations that plunged them into AI-generated scenarios ranging from law enforcement operations to attempts to infiltrate technology systems.

Read the full story

By: Sarah Ellison and Yvonne Wingett Sanchez

9:51 AM: Biden to tout new Microsoft AI center on site of Trump’s failed Foxconn deal

microsoft, biden back in the battleground state of wisconsin

President Biden in the Oval Office at the White House on Tuesday.

President Biden will champion a new Microsoft artificial intelligence investment in Wisconsin on Wednesday — showcasing the failed economic commitments of his political rival Donald Trump, whose promises for a key Foxconn plant in the battleground state never materialized.

The president will appear in Racine, Wis., at the site of the failed Foxconn manufacturing campus, to announce Microsoft’s $3.3 billion investment in data centers to fuel its ambitions to build powerful AI systems, according to the White House.

Read the full story

By: Cat Zakrzewski

9:39 AM: Analysis from Mariana Alfaro, Reporter on the breaking political news team

Vice President Harris plans to appear at a reproductive rights event in Montgomery County, Pa., on Wednesday alongside actress Sheryl Lee Ralph. After that, she is scheduled to headline EMILYs List’s annual “We Are EMILY Gala” in Washington. She is scheduled to be introduced at the event by Amanda Zurawski, a Texas woman who nearly died after being denied an abortion in the state.

9:17 AM: Race to replace Virginia Rep. Wexton accelerates with start of early voting

A cow bell clanged inside the Rust Library in Northern Virginia, and the 12 Democrats vying for a chance to replace U.S. Rep. Jennifer Wexton (D-Va.) each moved to a different cluster of voters, hoping to win them over during a “speed dating” candidates forum.

A few days later, three of the four Republicans running in their party’s primary in Wexton’s 10th Congressional District stood before Loudoun County retirees and tried to outflank each other on issues like border security and inflation.

Read the full story

By: Antonio Olivo

8:59 AM: Fact Checker: RFK Jr.’s ‘history lesson’ on Russia’s invasion of Ukraine flunks the fact test

microsoft, biden back in the battleground state of wisconsin

Independent presidential candidate Robert F. Kennedy Jr. speaks at a news conference in New York on Wednesday.

A reader asked us to fact-check a four-minute “history lesson” posted by presidential candidate Robert F. Kennedy Jr. on YouTube. International events — and the causes of war — are often open to interpretation.

But Kennedy’s lecture, about how the United States allegedly provoked the Ukraine war, was filled with so much misinformation and Russian talking points that it seems worthy of a detailed look.

Read the full story

By: Glenn Kessler

8:40 AM: Haley receives nearly 22 percent of Indiana vote

microsoft, biden back in the battleground state of wisconsin

Nikki Haley speaks to staff and supporters announcing that she’ll be suspending her presidential campaign on Daniel Island near Charleston, S.C., on Wednesday.

Former U.N. ambassador Nikki Haley received nearly 22 percent of the vote in the Indiana Republican presidential primary — despite ending her White House bid months ago.

While former president Donald Trump received about 78 percent of the vote, Haley’s haul is a sign that a portion of the GOP is not enthusiastic about having Trump at the top of the party’s ticket once again.

In April, Haley also received a little over 16 percent of the vote in the GOP presidential primary in Pennsylvania — a swing state that could be crucial in deciding the results of the November election.

When ending her presidential bid in early March, Haley did not endorse Trump, but instead said she hoped he would “earn the votes” of her supporters.

“At its best, politics is about bringing people into your cause, not turning them away. And our conservative cause badly needs more people. This is now his time for choosing,” Haley said then.

Trump has not made any concerted public efforts to reach out to Haley voters.

By: Mariana Alfaro

8:20 AM: A stark split screen in the race for president

microsoft, biden back in the battleground state of wisconsin

President Biden speaks at a Holocaust Days of Remembrance ceremony on Capitol Hill on Tuesday.

President Biden was in the Map Room at the White House, going line by line over a speech he would soon deliver commemorating the Holocaust, when, a few hundred miles to the north, a prosecutor stood in court and declared, “The people call Stormy Daniels.”

Biden would soon visit Capitol Hill to join some of the country’s top elected officials in memorializing an atrocity that killed 6 million Jews and to pledge repeatedly, “Never again.”

Read the full story

By: Matt Viser

8:03 AM: Former House speaker Paul Ryan says he won’t vote for Trump

microsoft, biden back in the battleground state of wisconsin

Former House speaker Paul D. Ryan (R-Wis.) speaks during the unveiling of his portrait in Statuary Hall on Capitol Hill on May 17, 2023.

Former House speaker Paul D. Ryan said in an interview Tuesday that he will not vote for former president Donald Trump in November, adding that he plans to write in another Republican candidate instead.

“Character is too important for me,” Ryan, a former Wisconsin congressman who was Mitt Romney’s 2012 vice-presidential pick, told Yahoo Finance at the Milken Institute Global Conference in Los Angeles. He added that the presidency “is a job that requires the kind of character [Trump] doesn’t have.”

Ryan, who had a reputation in Congress as a fiscal conservative, left the House in 2019.

Ryan told The Washington Post in February that he is now “in the minority” of the Republican Party.

“I think you can safely argue … that Trump is the establishment and Trump populism is the establishment,” the former speaker added. “And that Trump populism is this more isolationist strain that I think is wrong and dangerous, and I don’t support. But that does represent a large swath of Republican voters. And so, you will see opinions representing that majority, that … current day establishment.”

By: Maegan Vazquez

7:43 AM: Analysis from Mariana Alfaro, Reporter on the breaking political news team

Rep. Bennie G. Thompson (D-Miss.), the former chairman of the now-defunct House select committee tasked with investigating the Jan. 6, 2021, insurrection, said the “potential for another Jan. 6 is there.”

In an interview Tuesday night with CBS News, Thompson said the “majority of the people who orchestrated Jan. 6 are now saying, in so many words: ‘I’m not certain that I will accept the findings of the 2024 election.’”

“That speaks volumes,” he said.

7:20 AM: Biden’s trip to Wisconsin is his fourth to the battleground state this year

microsoft, biden back in the battleground state of wisconsin

President Biden walks on the South Lawn of the White House on Monday.

President Biden is heading to Wisconsin on Wednesday to announce a new data center and meet with Black voters, the latest stop in a battleground state as he and Vice President Harris step up some of their travel.

Biden is traveling to Racine, Wis., in his fourth trip to the key state so far this year. He plans to hold an official event there as well as make a campaign stop, according to White House and campaign officials.

He is planning to announce a $3.3 billion investment by Microsoft to build a new artificial intelligence data center in Racine, which the White House says will create 2,300 union construction jobs and 2,000 permanent jobs. The center will be built on the same site where Taiwanese manufacturer Foxconn had once planned a giant manufacturing campus with 13,000 high-tech jobs.

The plant was once touted by Donald Trump — who appeared at a groundbreaking and called the project the “Eighth Wonder of the World” — but it became a symbol of failed promises.

After his remarks, Biden plans to make a campaign stop to speak to Black voters, according to Garren Randolph, the campaign manager for the Wisconsin Democratic Coordinated Campaign. Randolph said the party has 46 offices around the state and has hired more than 80 full-time staffers as part of its coordinated efforts.

Biden’s trip also includes a fundraiser in Chicago.

By: Matt Viser

7:00 AM: Analysis from Patrick Svitek

Sen. Mike Braun (R-Ind.) is the projected winner of the Republican gubernatorial primary in Indiana that also featured Lt. Gov. Suzanne Crouch. The current governor, Republican Eric Holcomb, is term-limited.

6:40 AM: Ukrainian-born Spartz, criticized for Ukraine votes, wins primary fight

microsoft, biden back in the battleground state of wisconsin

Rep. Victoria Spartz (R-Ind.), a native of Ukraine, at a news conference in Washington last year.

Rep. Victoria Spartz (R-Ind.) is projected to win a hard-fought primary for reelection that centered on her record of support for her native Ukraine, according to the Associated Press.

Spartz — the first Ukrainian-born member of Congress — was facing a crowded field of challengers after she reversed her decision to not seek another term and reentered the race this year. Indiana state Rep. Chuck Goodrich stood out, self-funding his campaign with at least $4.6 million and attacking Spartz as a flip-flopper — first on her reelection plans and then on Ukraine aid.

Read the full story

By: Patrick Svitek

6:30 AM: Stormy Daniels testifies, Trump curses in an angry day in court

microsoft, biden back in the battleground state of wisconsin

Former president Donald Trump arrives to speak to members of the media outside Manhattan criminal court on Tuesday.

NEW YORK — Stormy Daniels, the adult-film actress at the center of Donald Trump’s hush money trial, testified Tuesday about a disturbing sexual encounter she says she had with him, leading to angry, profane muttering from the former president that alarmed the judge.

New York Supreme Court Justice Juan Merchan called Trump’s lawyer Todd Blanche to a sidebar during a midday break to say that Trump was “cursing audibly” and possibly intimidating Daniels, who had begun testifying, according to a trial transcript.

Read the full story

By: Devlin Barrett, Tom Jackman, Shayna Jacobs and Marianne LeVine

6:15 AM: Judge indefinitely delays Trump’s classified documents trial in Florida

microsoft, biden back in the battleground state of wisconsin

This image, contained in the indictment against former president Donald Trump, shows boxes of records stored in a bathroom and shower in the Lake Room at Trump’s Mar-a-Lago estate in Palm Beach, Fla.

Donald Trump’s Florida trial for allegedly mishandling classified documents and obstructing government efforts to retrieve them has been pushed back indefinitely, U.S. District Judge Aileen M. Cannon ruled Tuesday, increasing the chance that the former president’s ongoing New York criminal trial may be the only one to happen before the November election.

The judge had originally set the Florida trial date for late May, but that has seemed unlikely for months, with Cannon still needing to make decisions on a number of key legal issues before a jury can hear the case.

Read the full story

By: Perry Stein and Devlin Barrett

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