Where Schultz and Sanford stand on 2020 runs
Howard Schultz announced Friday that he would not run for president as an independent.
“My belief in the need to reform our two-party system has not wavered, but I have concluded that an independent campaign for the White House is not how I can best serve our country at this time,” he wrote in a statement.
Schultz added that the money he planned to spend on his campaign—a figure he previously put at $100 million—would be used “to invest in people, organizations and ideas that promote honesty, civility and results in our politics, and that move the country beyond two-party gridlock.”
Mark Sanford, who was expected to announce his presidential decision around Labor Day, deferred any statement until after Hurricane Dorian has passed.
He said in an interview with Fox News, "It would be something of a David and Goliath story. I mean it's impossible at many different levels. It'd be a very steep climb. But you know that going in."
2020 Democrats talk climate change for 7 hours
Ten candidates participated in a climate change town hall event spanning seven hours on CNN Wednesday evening: Joe Biden, Cory Booker, Pete Buttigieg, Julián Castro, Kamala Harris, Amy Klobuchar, Beto O'Rourke, Bernie Sanders, Elizabeth Warren, and Andrew Yang.
Most issued new climate change proposals in advance:
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Booker released a $3 trillion climate change platform, which would include investments to advance environmental justice, a transition to a carbon-neutral economy by no later than 2045, the elimination of fossil fuel subsidies, and a $400 billion investment to create a clean energy workforce.
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Buttigieg proposed three pillars in his $1.1 trillion climate change proposal: building a clean economy, investing in disaster relief and prevention, and promoting America’s international role in combating climate change.
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Castro wrote in his “People and Planet First” environmental plan, “Together, we will direct $10 trillion in federal, state, local, and private investments over the next decade to create ten million good paying jobs, transition away from fossil fuels, build a 100 percent clean-energy economy, and lead the world in the 21st century.”
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Harris’ $10 trillion climate plan included promoting environmental justice, ending subsidies for the fossil fuel industry, implementing a progressive fee on carbon pollution, and creating a clean energy economy by 2045.
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Klobuchar’s climate plan included the goals of 100% net zero emissions by 2050, participating in the Paris Climate Agreement, and restoring the Clean Power Plan.
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Warren announced that she was endorsing and adopting Jay Inslee’s climate plan. Her climate proposal would also commit an additional $1 trillion over 10 years to subsidize the transition to a clean energy economy.
Mark your calendars for the fall debates
The third Democratic primary debate is Thursday, Sept. 12. Joe Biden and Elizabeth Warren will share the debate stage for the first time, along with Cory Booker, Pete Buttigieg, Julián Castro, Kamala Harris, Amy Klobuchar, Beto O'Rourke, Bernie Sanders, and Andrew Yang.
The Democratic National also announced that the fourth Democratic presidential primary debate will be held Oct. 15-16, 2019, in Ohio.
Since the criteria for the third and fourth debate are the same, the September debaters have already qualified.
Among the rest of the Democratic field, Tulsi Gabbard, Tom Steyer, and Marianne Williamson are the closest to qualifying, having already passed the fundraising threshold of 130,000 unique donors. Steyer needs one more eligible poll showing 2 percent support, Gabbard two, and Williamson three by Oct. 1.
Bill de Blasio said he could drop out of the presidential race if he did not qualify for the fourth debate.
AZ, KS, NV, and SC Republican primaries may be canceled
The Republican parties in Arizona, Kansas, Nevada, and South Carolina are expected to cancel their presidential primaries this weekend.
Pro-cancellation party members, including Donald Trump campaign officials, say that it’s not uncommon when an incumbent president is seeking reelection and that it reduces costs.
Joe Walsh responded, “It’s wrong, the RNC should be ashamed of itself, and I think it does show that Trump is afraid of a serious primary challenge because he knows his support is very soft.”
Bill Weld also criticized the planned cancellations, saying, “We don’t elect presidents by acclamation in America. Donald Trump is doing his best to make the Republican Party his own personal club. Republicans deserve better.”
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Poll Spotlight
Staff Spotlight
Each Friday, we highlight a presidential candidate's key campaign staffer.

Erin Wilson is a Democratic staffer with extensive experience in Pennsylvania politics. Wilson graduated from the University of Pennsylvania with a degree in political science and government in 2005.
Previous campaign work:
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2016 Hillary Clinton presidential campaign, Pennsylvania deputy state director
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2008 Bob Roggio (D-Penn.) U.S. House campaign, senior advisor
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2006 Bob Casey (D-Penn.) U.S. Senate campaign, deputy political director
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2004 Joe Hoeffel (D-Penn.) U.S. Senate campaign, political coordinator
Other experience:
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2017-2019: Office of Sen. Bob Casey, state director
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2014-2016: Democratic National Committee, Northeast political director
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2007-2014: Office of Sen. Bob Casey
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2011-2014: Deputy state director
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2009-2011: Director of outreach and special projects
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2007-2009: Regional representative
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2005-2006: Office of Gov. Rod Blagojevich (D-Ill.), assistant to the first lady
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2002-2004: Rock the Vote, Philadelphia street team leader
What We’re Reading
Flashback: September 3-6, 2015
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September 3, 2015: Donald Trump signed a pledge to support the eventual Republican nominee. Jeb Bush said he would support Trump if he became the Republican nominee.
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September 4, 2015: Hillary Clinton apologized for her private email server use in her third nationally televised interview as a 2016 presidential candidate.
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September 5, 2015: NBC News reported on the Draft Biden initiative’s efforts in Iowa.
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September 6, 2015: After reaching a $1 million crowdfunding goal, Harvard Law professor Larry Lessig said that he was running for president.
Trivia