Beto O'Rourke hosting private fundraiser in New York

Rep. Beto O’RourkeBeto O’RourkeBiden will help close out Texas Democrats’ virtual convention: report O’Rourke on Texas reopening: ‘Dangerous, dumb and weak’ Parties gear up for battle over Texas state House MORE (D-Texas) is hosting a private fundraising event in New York on Wednesday as he campaigns to unseat Texas Sen. Ted CruzRafael (Ted) Edward CruzSenate advances public lands bill in late-night vote The Hill’s Morning Report – Trump’s public standing sags after Floyd protests GOP senators introduce resolution opposing calls to defund the police MORE (R) in November.

According to the event invitation, first obtained by CNBC, the campaign fundraiser will take place at the Cutting Room, a concert venue in Manhattan. Andy Cohen, host of the Bravo’s late night show “Watch What Happens,” will also be in attendance. 

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The fundraiser comes as O’Rourke’s senate race against Cruz tightens. A CBS Dallas-Fort Worth/Dixie Strategies poll from Wednesday shows Cruz’s margin at 46 percent to 42 percent, with 11 percent undecided and a margin of error of 4.3 percentage points. 

The candidates are also in a dead heat when it comes to fundraising, as O’Rourke has raised $23.36 million to Cruz’s $23.33 million through July, according to the Center for Responsive Politics.

O’Rourke has become popular among progressives, especially after a video in which he defended NFL players who kneel went viral.

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For Wednesday’s event, tickets will start at $500 and go up to $1,000.

The O’Rourke campaign did not immediately respond to a request for comment from The Hill. 

In Single Tweet, Bernie Sanders Debunks Trump's Lies About Social Security and Medicare

Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) turned to Twitter Friday evening to call out President Donald Trump’s latest lies that he is “going to protect your Social Security” and Republicans are “saving Medicare” from Democrats’ supposed efforts to “destroy” the social safety net programs—which actually have been consistently targeted by the Trump administration and GOP lawmakers.

Debunking Trump’s remarks from two events this week, Sanders—known as a champion of Medicare for All and legislation that aims to improve the lives of low-income people—shared screenshots of several news articles detailing the Trump administration and Republican politicians’ ongoing efforts to dismantle programs which provide benefits to older and impoverished Americans.

“Trump’s budget cuts Medicare, Medicaid, and Social Security, breaking core campaign promise,” declares a ThinkProgress headline from February, while the title of a November Los Angeles Times article reads, “Sen. Rubio tells a secret: After giving a tax cut to the rich, GOP will cut Social Security and Medicare.”

At a Thursday night campaign rally in Montana for GOP Senate candidate Matt Rosendale, according to the New York Times, Trump claimed that Democratic elected officials are

The Times noted that the president also had said on Wednesday:

Contrary to Trump’s public comments this week, his administration and Republicans in Congress—who gave rich Americans and corporations $1.5 trillion in tax cuts last year—diligently have worked to undermine the nation’s already inadequate social safety net programs.

In February, as Common Dreams reported, “the White House unveiled its 2019 budget (pdf) blueprint that calls for $1.7 trillion in cuts to crucial safety net programs over the next decade—including $237 billion in cuts to Medicare alone.”

A “scathing” United Nations report published earlier this summer outlined how Trump and Republican lawmakers are waging, in the words of the report’s author, “a systematic attack on America’s welfare program that is undermining the social safety net for those who can’t cope on their own,” all while crafting legislation to benefit the richest Americans at the expense of the poorest.

In July, the Trump administration proclaimed that the “War on Poverty” was “largely over,” despite millions of Americans still living in poverty. Anti-poverty advocates and experts quickly rebuked the administration’s claim, charging that it came as “part of a carefully calculated strategy to reinforce myths about the people these programs help…in order to make them easier to cut.”

Sanders and many Democrats, meanwhile, are working to save and even dramatically overhaul and expand such programs. In an op-ed published this week, Sanders and Rep. Ro Khanna (D-Calif.) asserted, “The government has a moral responsibility to provide for the vulnerable—the children, the elderly, the sick, and the disabled.”

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“At a time of massive income and wealth inequality, and when millions of our fellow Americans are working at starvation wages,” they concluded, “we must create an economy that works for all—not just the people on top.”

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