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Headline News from The Associated Press

AP Headline News - Jun 28 2024 16:00 (EDT)

Duration:
2m
Broadcast on:
28 Jun 2024
Audio Format:
mp3

AP News, I'm Ed Donahue, former President Barack Obama is backing up his former Vice President Joe Biden. Posting on ex-bad debate nights happen, President Biden is trying to shrug off his showing last night in Atlanta with former President Donald Trump, the President stopped in Raleigh, North Carolina. I know I'm not a young man, state the obvious. Biden says when you get knocked down, you get back up. I don't walk as easy as I used to. I don't speak as smoothly as I used to. I don't debate as well as I used to. But I know what I do know. I know how to tell the truth. How Speaker Mike Johnson says the choice after last night is clear. On every metric of performance, President Trump obviously did much better. He was right on the issues. He showed the temperament, the stamina, the mental acuity that is necessary to do this really important job at this really important time. Former President Trump is campaigning in Virginia. Former Missouri prison guards have been charged with murder and a fifth within voluntary manslaughter in the death in December of a black man who died after the officers pepper sprayed him and covered his face while in custody at a correctional facility. The Iowa Supreme Court has ruled the state's strict new abortion law is legal. The Supreme Court made it harder to charge capital riot defendants with obstruction. It's a charge used in hundreds of prosecutions and also is faced by former President Donald Trump. The MPs Mark Sherman is at the Supreme Court. The justices ordered lower courts to review individual cases to see whether the charge of obstructing an official proceeding, which was first enacted 20 years ago in the wake of the financial scandal that brought down Enron Corporation, can be used against the January 6th defendants. California Governor Gavin Newsom says a Supreme Court ruling cities can enforce bans on people sleeping outdoors in the West Coast will give local officials more freedom to address the crisis. This is AP News. Ever feel exhausted swiping through dating apps? It might be burnout. Here's the AP's Wyatt Grantham Phillips. Plenty of happy couples can trace their meet cute moment to an online dating app today. But others find the never-ending process of likes, swipes, taps, and awkward DMs that go nowhere to be exhausting. That has led to a phenomenon known as dating app burnout. One clinical psychologist found that about 3 out of every 4 people she works with have used dating apps, and anywhere between 80-90% have expressed feeling fatigue or burnt out at some point. That's due in part because success has never promised with online dating, regardless of if you're looking for a lifelong partner or casual fling. Making burnout probably as old as the apps themselves. But these days, burnout may be intensified by the fact that there is an app for just about every part of our daily lives. And that constant connectivity can be too much. Wyatt Grantham Phillips, New York. And I'm Ed Donahue, AP News.