Headline News from The Associated Press
AP Headline News - Mar 13 2024 05:00 (EDT)
This is AP News. I'm Rita Falle. There's no doubt now, say the pundits. It'll be Biden vs. Trump in November. The APs Ben Thomas has this. The Republican and Democratic parties now have their presumptive nominees for the 2024 presidential election. President Biden and former President Trump each secured enough delegates in Tuesday's primaries to ensure their nominations at their party's national conventions this summer. Biden reached that point with a victory in Georgia while Trump wins in Georgia, Mississippi and Washington put him over the top. The results in those states were never in doubt as neither Biden nor Trump faced major opposition. Now any doubt the fall election will feature a rematch between the two flawed and unpopular presidents have been eliminated. Ben Thomas, Washington. President Putin says Russia is ready to use nuclear weapons if there's a threat to its statehood, sovereignty or independence. He says he hopes the U.S. would not do anything that could trigger a nuclear conflict. In Washington, special counsel Robert Herr testified for hours before the House Judiciary Committee yesterday about his report on President Biden's handling of classified documents after he left the vice presidency years ago. Why did the special counsel not recommend criminal charges? We did not, however, identify evidence that rose to the level of proof beyond a reasonable doubt. Because the evidence fell short of that standard, I declined to recommend criminal charges against Mr. Biden. A transcript of interviews shows President Biden told the special counsel he never meant to keep classified information after he left the vice presidency. It could pass the House today, a bill that would force TikTok's parent company based in China to sell or face a ban in the United States. New artificial intelligence tools are helping doctors communicate with their patients, some by answering messages, others by taking notes during exams. This is AP News. The labor troubles in Hollywood may not be over. Coming off the Academy Awards and months after the settlement of two big strikes, major labor struggles may be on the way in Hollywood. Oscars host Jimmy Kimmel devoted part of his opening monologue to the strikes by writers and actors. This very strange town of ours has pretentious and superficial as it can be. At its heart is a union town. Kimmel thanked the workers in Hollywood now embroiled in the labor fight of their own, bringing truck drivers, lighting workers, gaffers, grips and others onto the stage. In your upcoming negotiation, we will stand with you too. Also a strike is possible in the next four to six weeks by video game actors, voice performers, stunt performers. The reason? The fear of being replaced by artificial intelligence and talks will resume soon with the international alliance of theatrical stage employees. I'm Ed Donahue. The Dow gained 235 points yesterday. I'm Rita Foley, AP News. It's Buck Saxon along with Clay Travis talking about Dan capitalist law. Buck Dan's the son of a police officer. And a guy who finished law school and aimed high to build a world-class firm for the people where everyone, regardless of background, gets top-notch treatment. Dan capitalist law lives that mission, scoring record verdicts for folks from all walks of life and they don't care about your wallet. Righteous cases are taken on a percentage fee basis. Need help? Visit dancapitalistlaw.com. That's Dan, C-A-P-L-I-S Law.com. Thanks for watching, and I'll see you in the next video. I'll see you in the next video. I'll see you in the next video. I'll see you in the next video. I'll see you in the next video. I'll see you in the next video. I'll see you in the next video. I'll see you in the next video. I'll see you in the next video. Fargo, the new virtual assistant from Wells Fargo, makes banking faster and easier. Like this. Fargo, what's my checking account routing number? And this. Fargo, turn off my debit card. And this. Fargo, what did I spend on groceries last month? And that's just the beginning. Do you, Fargo? You can. In the Wells Fargo mobile app, learn more at Wells Fargo.com/Get Fargo. Terms and conditions apply. Get ahead of the postage rate increases this year with Stamps.com. It's like your own personal post office. Sign up with promo code "Program" for a four-week trial. Plus free postage and free digital scale. No long-term commitments or contracts. That's Stamps.com code "Program".