Month: October 2019

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The Selecao boss appears to be treating Tuesday’s Brasil Global Tour Superclasico de las Americas as serious as any competitive fixture



Following World Cup 2018, Brazil have embarked on a process of renovation.

Having split the next four years into three distinct phases, this year’s Brasil Global Tour dates in September, October and November formed the first phase in which a number of new players would be trialled ahead of next year’s Copa America.

Three games in to this six-game period, a host of debuts have been handed out, with no less than nine new faces having been given their international bows (Neto, Felipe, Eder Militao, Andreas Pereira, Arthur, Lucas Paqueta, Richarlison, Everton and Pablo).

And after relatively routine victories over USA, El Salvador and Saudi Arabia, on Tuesday Tite and his team face their first big test since Russia as they meet Argentina in the Brasil Global Tour Superclasico de las Americas.

Tite was keen to point out on Friday that this would be “no friendly”. In Washington last month prior to their 5-0 win over El Salvador, Tite let it slip that he would be fielding his strongest possible team. 

The coach invariably presents his first XI to the media during a training session two days before the match, before officially confirming his line-up on the eve of the contest.

That he took the decision not to display his first XI during Sunday’s training session in Jeddah is another example of the seriousness with which he is preparing for Argentina on Tueday.

The core of the team, however, appears to be set. In all three matches since the World Cup, Brazil have lined up with the spine of the team that will lead them to Qatar, with Marquinhos, Casemiro, Coutinho and Neymar all ever-presents.

Alisson, too, appears one only five guaranteed first-team players right now – though the Liverpool goalkeeper made way against Saudi Arabia in order to give Ederson just his second cap.

On Sunday, veteran defender Miranda and right-back Danilo were selected to speak to the media in the day’s official press conference, leaving them strong candidates to start. 

In addition, Roberto Firmino and Filipe Luis are also tipped to make the XI. 

Tite has tasted defeat just twice as Brazil coach. One arrived at the hands of Belgium during the World Cup; his only other loss came one year ago on the Brasil Global Tour of June 2017 – against Argentina.

The “hermanos” are missing Lionel Messi and have a temporary coach in charge as they look to initiate an almost complete overhaul of their aging World Cup squad.

Brazil meet Argentina at King Abdullah Sports City in Jedah on Tuesday.

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The Brazilian star and Kylian Mbappe have both been tipped to win the big prize but the coach insists he is focusing on his team, not individuals

Thomas Tuchel dismissed the notion of the Ballon d’Or being a distraction for a Paris Saint-Germain side that is set to be without Neymar this weekend.

Brazil star Neymar will be rested for the Ligue 1 match against Amiens following a taxing international window spent representing his country in Saudi Arabia.

Reports in Spain this week have linked the 26-year-old with a return to Barcelona, which the Catalan side’s vice-president denied, but Tuchel was in no mood to indulge the speculation beyond insisting it was not necessary to hold talks with the attacker.

The German was more forthcoming with his views on whether Ballon d’Or dreams warped his team’s motivations.

PSG goalkeeper Gianluigi Buffon is the latest big name to have endorsed Kylian Mbappe’s claims for an award that Neymar has long coveted, his departure from Barca in 2017 said to have been partly fuelled by a desire to end Lionel Messi and Cristiano Ronaldo’s duopoly.

Tuchel denied suggestions the intense debate over which player merits the accolade had a negative impact on his team’s morale.

“For me there’s no problem because it’s an individual prize and I coach a team,” he said.

“When both Neymar and Mbappe play exceptionally against Lyon we talk about it as if it’s a problem for Edinson [Cavani]. If Edi plays an exceptional match, we’ll say it’s a problem for the other two.

“It’s always like that, but it’s not a problem. All players want to win the Ballon d’Or and for that they have to be at a top level all year round. That means playing with the team.

“We have some of the best players in Europe, players that can win the Ballon d’Or every year, that’s the way it is.”

Defenders Marquinhos and Thomas Meunier will join Neymar in sitting out Saturday’s fixture at Parc des Princes, while Alphonse Areola has been given the nod to start ahead of Buffon.

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The Argentina legend has no cartilage left in his knees and will need to undergo surgery to relieve the discomfort

A surgeon has called for Diego Maradona to go under the knife to ease the discomfort in his knees, with the Argentine legend having no cartilage left in that area of his body.

The Napoli icon is struggling with severe osteoarthritis, and a video has captured him walking with great difficulty due to the pain he is in.

And his surgeon German Ochoa has now revealed that the legendary former striker must make a decision on whether he wants to undergo surgery to ease the discomfort.

“I know Diego going back to 2004 when I operated on his right knee, 27 days after he said goodbye to football at the Bombonera,” Ochoa told TYC Sports .

“Then in June before the World Cup we did a basic treatment so that he could carry out his activities in Russia in the best way possible.

“Maradona has severe osteoarthritis in his two knees and has no cartilage left, the bones rub together and it is a serious problem as it causes a lot of pain, inflammation and difficulty to move.

“The solution is to operate and put in prostheses.

“It would not get to the point that Diego could not walk, it would not get that bad. Advances in technology offer a solution and the most prudent and intelligent option is to operate.”

Maradona is the current manager of Mexican side Dorados de Sinaloa , with the video above showing the difficulty he had in walking during a recent training session with the club.

Earlier in 2018 he  had been announced as the new chairman of Belarusian side Dynamo Brest, in which he made a somewhat elaborate entrance on board a huge-wheeled hummer, but, given the 57-year-old’s new position as Dorados coach, it would appear he is no longer in that role.

In his first game in charge of Dorados back in September, his side claimed a 4-1 win over rival second-division side Cafetaleros, with the Sinaloa club having gone on to claim two more wins and suffer two defeats since then.

Maradona won the World Cup with Argentina in 1986, and is regarded by many as the greatest footballer who ever lived.

There were concerns over his health and conduct at the World Cup in Russia over the summer, however, where he was seen giving middle-finger salutes during Argentina’s victory over Nigeria .

Arsenal were denied a 12th straight win after Granit Xhaka brought down Wilfried Zaha and Crystal Palace captain Luka Milivojevic equalised.

Granit Xhaka had no complaints over being penalised for the foul that allowed Crystal Palace to peg Arsenal back for a 2-2 draw.

Luka Milivojevic put the hosts ahead from the penalty spot in first-half stoppage time at Selhurst Park but Xhaka levelled with a venomous free-kick and Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang gave Arsenal the lead amid strong handball claims against Alexandre Lacazette.

But there was a sting in the tail as Xhaka – playing in the unfamiliar position of left-back – brought down Wilfried Zaha and gave Milivojevic the chance to make it two out of two from 12 yards.

The Switzerland international initially protested to referee Martin Atkinson but accepted he was in the wrong afterwards.

“It’s difficult. I think it’s a clear penalty,” Xhaka told Sky Sports. “I touched him in the knee.

“The referee gave a penalty. That’s football.”

After his goal, Xhaka ran off to celebrate with Unai Emery – his head coach having enquired why he was not on dead-ball duties during the first half.

“I heard something from the coach in the first half. He asked me why I wasn’t taking the corners and the free-kicks,” said Xhaka.

“It was the first free-kick of the second half, I took it and I scored.

“I wanted to say thank you. I heard [Emery] enough in the first half. He told me I must take the free-kicks and the corners.”

The result meant Arsenal’s winning streak in all competitions was halted at 11 but, on balance, Xhaka was happy to accept the point.

“We know we can’t win all the games. We try,” he added.

“It was not our best performance but one point here… alright. We take the positive things from this game and move forward.”

Arsenal host Blackpool in the Carabao Cup in midweek before welcoming Premier League leaders Liverpool to Emirates Stadium.

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Pogba's run-up helped penalty save, says Pickford

October 24, 2019 | News | No Comments

The Everton goalkeeper kept out the Man Utd midfielder’s 27th-minute spot-kick before the Frenchman redeemed himself by converting the rebound.

Jordan Pickford says he knew where Paul Pogba would place his penalty during Everton’s 2-1 defeat to Manchester United at Old Trafford on Sunday.

The England goalkeeper saved from Pogba after the Frenchman gave a stuttering run-up to his 27th-minute spot-kick, but was unable to keep out the rebound as United opened the scoring.

Pogba has embarked on an interrupted run-up for penalties earlier in the season, successfully converting from 12 yards against Leicester on the opening day, but Pickford used his knowledge of the midfielder’s technique to out-think the United man and repel the penalty, albeit to no avail.

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“When he did his run-up I knew where he was going to go and I saved it, but unfortunately it went back out,” Pickford told Everton’s club website.

“I did my research and made the save. Even if it even goes three yards out to his left or right, I’ve got enough time to get up and make the save from the rebound but it wasn’t to be.”

Pogba’s penalty run-up took longer to complete than sprinter Usain Bolt’s 100m world record, and the midfielder explained his rationale after the game , telling Sky Sports: “I always try and destabilise the keeper. Maybe they know how I take penalties.”

After Pogba had given United the lead, Anthony Martial scored a second with a spectacular curling effort from 18 yards, before Gylfi Sigurdsson scored from the spot to set up a nervous finish for Jose Mourinho’s side.

“We showed character and plenty of spirit and we fought right until the end,” said Pickford.

“We dug in as a group and we almost got something out of the game.”

Everton boss Marco Silva accused Martial of having dived to win the penalty from which United took the lead, after the Frenchman went down under contact from Idrissa Gueye who appeared to have played the ball.

“That moment, it was no penalty,” said Silva. “It was difficult for us. That moment makes it easy for our opponents. You are more exposed then because you have to take more risks. They scored a fantastic goal but we had a good chance to score at 2-1.”

 

The Tottenham manager once again hailed the midfielder for his tackle against Spain

Eric Dier’s crunching tackle on Sergio Ramos showcased the spirit and attitude of Tottenham, according to manager Mauricio Pochettino.

Dier was booked for the aggressive slide tackle, which was largely unnecessary, on Ramos during England’s 3-2 Nations League win over Spain.

Pochettino said the challenge showed the attitude that had been developed at Spurs, and the manager was proud.

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“The tackle was nice, eh? The tackle was good. He touched the ball. He was aggressive,” he said.

“In England, it’s never a foul. Of course, in Europe it’s different but in England it’s never a foul.

“But to be brave like this… look, Dier, a holding midfielder, was pressing Sergio Ramos in the penalty area and that is the mentality that – from day one – we tried to translate to the players.

“Of course, I feel proud about that. It’s a fantastic attitude, that always we need to keep pushing.”

Dier’s tackle came four minutes before Raheem Sterling opened the scoring in an incredible first half by England, who led 3-0 at the break.

Pochettino, whose team face West Ham on Saturday, said challenges like Dier’s early in games could set the tone.

“The signal that you send to your opponents is important,” he said.

“To say, ‘We are not scared of you. We come here and we want to beat you’. We can play good or bad but always it’s about the attitude. With different attitudes, sure, the game would be completely different and have different results.

“With only talent you cannot beat any team. But talent with attitude is everything.”

 

The Portuguese superstar completed a move to Juventus over the summer and has made an immediate impression on those around him in Turin

Joao Cancelo claims “everybody” at Juventus wants to be like Cristiano Ronaldo, with even Giorgio Chiellini swept up by the hype surrounding the Portuguese superstar.

A stunning €100 million (£87m/$114m) transfer took the five-time Ballon d’Or winner to Turin over the summer, with a new challenge sought after nine trophy-laden seasons at Real Madrid.

Ronaldo made a slow start to his time in Serie A, but has rediscovered his spark to net seven times across his last 10 appearances.

At 33 years of age he continues to set the standard for individual excellence, with his efforts in training and competitive action making others aware of what is required to reach the very top.

Those around him at Juve have been inspired by his presence, with fellow summer signing Cancelo conceding that it is impossible not to be caught up in the Ronaldo buzz.

The 24-year-old defender told Tuttosport of a fellow countryman: “Everybody at Juventus looks at Cristiano Ronaldo as a great example. 

“Everybody wants to be like him, even the more experienced players like Chiellini.

“He is an incredible player, he works a lot and he is an example for us all. He is humble and a hard worker.”

While Cancelo is delighted to be working with Ronaldo in the present, he has suggested that his future may lie back home.

The Portugal international is a product of the famed academy system at Benfica and, having only spent one season as a first-team regular at the club before heading to Valencia, admits that the Lisbon giants retain a special place in his heart.

He added: “Benfica? I am at one of the best clubs in the world but I miss the 60,000 fans of the Estadio Da Luz.”

Cancelo penned a five-year contract with Juve upon his arrival, with the club having invested €40m (£35m/$46m) of faith in his talent, so there is no chance of him returning to his roots any time soon.

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Beto O’Rourke shunned precision politics in his Texas Senate run last year, running an unorthodox — and often haphazard — effort to turn out hundreds of thousands of Democratic-leaning but previously inactive voters.

But as he begins running for president, O’Rourke is trying something new: a conventional campaign.

After eschewing strategists and pollsters in his Senate run, O’Rourke this week hired a data expert, Jen O’Malley Dillon, to manage his presidential campaign. He recruited Norm Sterzenbach, a veteran strategist with deep knowledge of Iowa’s caucus math and mechanics, to marshal his operations in the first-in-the-nation caucus state.

O’Rourke has advance staffers with presidential campaign experience in place for what are expected to be frequent, road trip-style campaign appearances. And the campaign was organizing more than 1,000 watch parties around the country to coincide with a campaign kickoff event in El Paso on Saturday.

His burgeoning organization is a concession to the unique rigors of a crowded presidential campaign, but it’s also a reflection of the vastly different landscape he faces in 2020. In the Texas Senate race, O’Rourke could focus almost exclusively on turnout as the only Democrat running in a general election against Republican Ted Cruz. And he could afford to visit every one of Texas’ 254 counties in 2018.

Now, however, with more than 3,000 counties in the United States, he faces geographical constraints that will require selectivity in his campaign spending and candidate appearances. And the Democratic voters O’Rourke will confront in Iowa and New Hampshire nominating contests will require more nuanced messaging from the Texas congressman — persuading them not only to vote, but to vote for him instead of any number of other high-profile Democrats.

“They’re making smart hires and building the kind of campaign you need to run for president,” said Scott Arceneaux, a Democratic strategist and the Florida Democratic Party’s former executive director. “Running for president is different than running for statewide office. It’s just a different animal. It’s a lot bigger and it’s multidimensional chess. You’re playing in four, five, 10 states at a time with both national and in-state implications. It’s different. He seems to be building an organization to do that, not just run statewide.”

Middle Seat, a digital firm that worked on O’Rourke’s Senate campaign, remains involved in O’Rourke’s presidential effort, as does the fundraising and consulting firm Katz Watson Group, according to a source familiar with O’Rourke’s operation. Becky Bond, a senior adviser to Sen. Bernie Sanders’ 2016 presidential campaign, has been speaking with prospective operatives in early primary states.

Chris Lippincott, an Austin-based consultant who ran a super PAC opposing Cruz in the Senate campaign, said O’Rourke’s early staffing and organizational efforts reflect an understanding that in 2020 “he can’t DIY things like he did in Texas.”

“Clearly, they’ve acknowledged they can’t just re-create their Texas mechanism in Iowa or New Hampshire,” Lippincott said. “This idea of, ‘We’re running against one other guy, Ted Cruz, who’s really unattractive to your average voter, and you’ve got all these people who just don’t vote,’ that’s the terrain in which they just ran superfast and hit every door, bang, bang, bang. You can’t do that … You have to be much more specific with your targeting.”

For months, it was unclear how significantly O’Rourke would elect to adapt. Before entering the presidential contest, O’Rourke told reporters that in “any campaign I run … I would want to run in the same way that I’ve run every race — just as grassroots as possible, powered by people, directly connected to the people that I want to serve and represent.”

In a highly unusual move, O’Rourke announced his candidacy before hiring a campaign manager. Ignoring the advice of many political consultants, he headquartered his campaign in El Paso, far from political and media centers on the East Coast. And dashing across eight states to open his campaign this month, O’Rourke insisted on driving himself to events in a rented minivan — an unheard of allocation of time by a top-tier presidential contender.

“I think part of his appeal is the fact that he’s nontraditional,” said former New Mexico Gov. Bill Richardson, who ran for president in 2008.

Richardson, who met with O’Rourke in El Paso for a lengthy lunch before O’Rourke announced his candidacy, chuckled, “I made six recommendations on his campaign, and he hasn’t followed any of them,” including that O’Rourke find someone else to drive his car.

But Richardson called O’Rourke’s recent hires “first-rate talent.”

“You need some structure,” he said. “This is a big campaign, this is a long campaign. You can’t micromanage the campaign with junior aides that so far have been effective. You need an Iowa professional, you need a national campaign professional. So, it’s the right move.”

In hiring O’Malley Dillon, O’Rourke adhered to nonconformity in one significant way — putting a woman in charge of a presidential campaign. Doug Herman, a Democratic strategist, called O’Malley Dillon a “mold-breaker” for that reason.

But O’Malley Dillon is also expected to bring a traditionalist’s sense of order to the O’Rourke campaign. A former executive director of the Democratic National Committee and deputy campaign manager to President Barack Obama’s reelection campaign in 2012, O’Malley Dillon is steeped in field organizing experience and is an expert at using data to target voters.

“This is more than data, it’s also organizational discipline and sort of a deep understanding of what needs to happen to win in Iowa and win in these early states and she’s done tons of presidentials, so it was a huge get for him,” said Jessica Post, executive director of the Democratic Legislative Campaign Committee.

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Post pointed to O’Rourke’s canvassing for a state Senate candidate in Iowa this month — a mainstay for presidential candidates — as evidence of his understanding of traditional campaign norms. Sterzenbach, a former executive director of the Iowa Democratic Party, is an expert in the state’s caucuses.

In 2020, Post said of O’Rourke, “I think he might still be the same authentic, table-standing Beto but with an organization behind him that can collect volunteer sign-up cards and supporter pledges in the Iowa caucuses.”

O’Malley Dillon did not respond to a request for comment, and the O’Rourke campaign declined to provide any information about its staffing.

Despite hiring O’Malley Dillon, O’Rourke remains far behind rival candidates in staffing and organization. On its hiring page, the O’Rourke campaign asks applicants specifically if they have experience in more than a dozen states that come relatively early in the 2020 primary calendar — states where other Democrats already have operations. Multiple Democratic donors, activists and operatives have complained privately that their calls to O’Rourke’s campaign go unreturned or that, once contacted, the campaign has failed to follow up.

“I think there’s a lot we don’t know about what Beto’s candidacy is going to look like,” said Pete Brodnitz, a Democratic pollster. “I mean at some point they get beyond the kitchen counter, or the tables and the cafe, and then what does that look like?”

Boyd Brown, a former South Carolina lawmaker and former Democratic National Committee member, helped to organize O’Rourke’s trip to South Carolina last week as a volunteer, after working on a “Draft Beto” effort to encourage O’Rourke to run.

Like other supportive Democrats, Brown said many staffing and organizational decisions appear to have been delayed until a campaign manager was in place.

“I think they were waiting on Jen to ramp up,” he said. “Anybody who’s been involved with Democratic politics over the last decade knows [O’Malley Dillon] is about a good a hire as you’re going to make, if not the best hire I’ve seen made this cycle.”

A lobbyist for the U.S. Soccer Federation reached out to at least five Democratic presidential campaigns ahead of their primary debate last month to argue that the women’s national team isn’t paid less than the men’s team.

The soccer organization has been fighting a highly publicized lawsuit brought by the World Cup-winning women’s team, and the federation apparently believed the players’ claims of being underpaid might become an issue in the Democratic debate, emails obtained by POLITICO show.

“Given the high profile nature of this issue, and the fact that it could come up during the debate, the U.S. Soccer Federation wants to be sure all of the candidates have access to all available information,” Ray Bucheger, a lobbyist hired by U.S. Soccer, wrote in an email to one of the campaigns late last month.

Bucheger also sent to several campaigns a presentation U.S. Soccer has circulated on Capitol Hill in recent weeks as part of a lobbying campaign to push back against the women’s pay claims. Bucheger and another lobbyist, along with U.S. Soccer’s general counsel, Lydia Wahlke, have met with staffers for lawmakers who have introduced legislation designed to force U.S. Soccer to pay the women’s and men’s teams equally.

Staffers for five presidential campaigns contacted by U.S. Soccer shared details of Bucheger’s outreach on the condition that POLITICO not identify which candidates they worked for. U.S. Soccer declined to answer questions about Bucheger’s efforts to reach the campaigns. Bucheger didn’t respond to a request for comment.

It’s unclear how many campaigns were approached. POLITICO reached out to the campaigns of all 20 Democrats who participated in the debate last month. Several said they weren’t aware of any outreach from Bucheger, and others did not respond to requests for comment.

Patricia Ewing, a spokeswoman for Marianne Williamson’s campaign, said no one from U.S. Soccer had reached out ahead of the debate.

“If they had, Marianne Williamson would have told U.S. Soccer to pay the women more than the men, since it is the women that are world champions,” she wrote in an email to POLITICO.

In the lawsuit the women’s team filed against U.S. Soccer in March, they argued, among other things, that under a previous contract, a player on the women’s team could have earned in a year as little as 38 percent of what a men’s team player made.

U.S. Soccer has hired two Washington lobbying firms, FBB Federal Relations and Van Ness Feldman, to push back against those claims. The lobbyists they’ve hired have met with staffers for lawmakers who introduced equal-pay legislation, including Sen. Dianne Feinstein (D-Calif.) and Rep. Doris Matsui (D-Calif.), both of whom have cited the 38 percent statistic in pushing for pay equity.

The presentation given to congressional staffers and sent to presidential campaigns emphasizes the benefits the female players receive — including a guaranteed salary, maternity leave, a nanny subsidy, injury protection, health benefits, and retirement perks — that the male players do not. It also states that the women were paid nearly five times as much as the men last year, earning $275,478 in average cash compensation per player, compared with $57,283 for the men’s team. Both teams have criticized those numbers as misleading.

Comparing how the women’s and men’s teams are paid is tricky because they play different numbers of games each year and their compensation is structured differently. Molly Levinson, a spokeswoman for the women’s team players in their lawsuit, said the presentation Bucheger sent to the campaigns contained “inflated and cherry-picked numbers.”

“Imagine the proudest time of your life was putting on a USA jersey, working harder than ever, winning the World Cup,” Levinson said in a statement Friday. “Then imagine coming home to find that [U.S. Soccer], your employer, the organization whose stated purpose is to promote and support you, has had hidden meetings with lawmakers to diminish and undervalue you.”

Neil Buethe, a U.S. Soccer spokesman, said the organization was trying to provide accurate information about how the women’s team is compensated.

“There was a dearth of information publicly available about U.S. Soccer and its role in supporting women’s soccer; an information gap we were asked by several Members of Congress and others to fill,” Buethe wrote in an email to POLITICO. “We are 100 percent supportive of the Women’s National Team and have done more than any organization in the country, and perhaps the world, to invest in and build the girls and women’s teams.”

U.S. Soccer might not have needed to worry about the debate. Only one candidate — Sen. Kamala Harris of California — talked about the pay gap between men and women during the two-night event in Detroit, but she didn’t mention the women’s team.

“Since 1963, when we passed the Equal Pay Act, we have been talking about the fact women are not paid equally for equal work,” Harris said. “Fast forward to the year of our Lord 2019 and women are paid 80 cents on the dollar, black women 61 cents, Native American women 58 cents, Latinas 53 cents.”

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Harris proposed requiring corporations to make public whether they’re paying women equally and fining them 1 percent of their profits for every percentage point of difference between what they pay men and women.

“That will get everybody’s attention,” she said.

A senior adviser to one of the campaigns contacted by Bucheger who spoke on condition of anonymity because he wasn’t authorized to talk with reporters said the lobbying efforts had no effect on the campaign’s debate preparations.

“Whoever does their lobbying and PR should be fired, and the money should go to the players,” the adviser said.

HOUSTON — 

This is where a nation changes: a public school auditorium that moonlights as a veritable citizenship factory.

At the M.O. Campbell Educational Center, where murals honoring the arts and sciences adorn the walls, U.S. immigration officials routinely hold packed naturalization ceremonies. Immigrants approved for citizenship walk in, take the oath of allegiance, and walk out as Americans — and as a small army of new voters.

“It will never, ever be easier to register than it is this morning,” U.S. District Judge Keith P. Ellison, who presided over a ceremony last month, told the 2,155 immigrants from more than 100 countries who had just taken their citizenship oaths. “The record for registrations is 89% of those who are sworn in…. Let’s see if we can break that record today.”

Amish Soni, a 34-year-old radiologist from India holding a small American flag, was one of the 85% who registered to vote that morning, aided by a volunteer from the League of Women Voters. He “definitely” plans to vote in 2020, partly because he thinks the healthcare system should be fixed, but also: “I’m not a big fan of Donald Trump.” And he’s far from the only one.

At ceremonies like these across the country, hundreds of thousands of immigrants are expected to receive their U.S. citizenship and become eligible to vote before November 2020, gently reshaping and threatening — the electoral path that President Trump must thread to win reelection.

Over the last two decades, naturalized immigrants have grown into a force at the ballot box, with the United States recently swearing in more than 700,000 foreign-born U.S. citizens each year.

Naturalized citizens — who share the full legal rights of natural-born citizens, except for the ability to become president — cast more than 8% of the ballots in the 2018 midterm elections, almost double their share in the 1996 presidential contest, according to U.S. Census Bureau estimates.

Surveys show that many of the new citizens are liberal-leaning, which is one of several demographic trends helping put some historically red states such as Texas, Arizona and Georgia closer to Democrats’ reach.

The gains in immigrants’ electoral strength have been gradual. But Trump’s anti-immigration policies may be accelerating the trend by spurring even more people to naturalize and to vote, worrying some moderate Republican experts.

“It’s not ‘bad-ish’ news. It’s extremely bad,” said Mike Madrid, a Sacramento-based GOP consultant who studies Latino voters. He thinks the party’s use of anti-immigrant rhetoric to mobilize non-college-educated white voters will come at a steep electoral price. “This is a five-alarm fire.”

Some experts said the national climate reminded them of California in the mid-1990s, when heightened rhetoric against immigrants and the Proposition 187 ballot measure to prohibit services for some immigrants inspired a wave of eligible Latino immigrants to naturalize and register to vote.

It helped transform the home of Ronald Reagan and Richard Nixon into a nearly impenetrable Democratic stronghold.

“Republicans did not learn their lesson, and they have revived some of that anti-Latino sentiment,” said U.S. Rep. Norma Torres (D-Pomona), who was born in Guatemala and naturalized in 1996 so she could get more involved in politics.

The Trump campaign disagrees.

“Democrats make a mistake when they assume that all immigrants think the same way,” said campaign spokesman Tim Murtaugh. “Our own data shows that a great many legal immigrants agree with President Trump’s position on enforcing immigration laws, because they feel that if their families played by the rules, then other people ought to as well.”

Murtaugh declined to share the data, but he said the numbers are why Trump made a recent visit to New Mexico — a state he lost to Hillary Clinton by more than 8 percentage points — to court Latino voters.

Citizenship applications spiked in the two years before the 2016 election, which is common before a presidential contest. But instead of dropping as usual afterward, the number of filings grew in 2017 in the wake of Trump’s victory. The more than 800,000 citizenship requests in 2018 were also the most filed in a midterm election year in two decades.

“There are these surges in applications when immigrants perceive that it’s a time of crisis,” said Arturo Vargas, chief executive of NALEO Educational Fund, a nonprofit that promotes greater Latino participation in civic life. “We are going through a similar period right now at the national level, where immigrants are feeling a bit in the cross-hairs by the Trump administration.”

According to data collected by the New Americans Campaign, a coalition of nonprofits, almost a third of U.S. immigrants hoping to naturalize this year were most interested in gaining the power to vote — the “top reason by far,” said Melissa Rodgers​, the director of programs at the Immigrant Legal Resource Center, which runs the coalition.

Filing an application does not necessarily lead to naturalization; the denial rate is usually about 1 in 10. Immigrant advocacy groups have complained that the Trump administration has allowed a backlog to pile up, putting some applicants at risk of missing the 2020 election.

Latino and Asian immigrants are particularly potent additions to the electorate, with turnout rates that are often 5 to 8 percentage points higher than their natural-born counterparts, according to census estimates.

A September survey by Univision, conducted by the research firm Latino Decisions, said 81% of naturalized Latino respondents disapproved of the job Trump was doing as president; 12% said they were committed to voting for Trump in the 2020 election; and 64% said they planned to vote for the eventual Democratic nominee.

“A lot of folks are responding to the climate of fear and division and general intimidation against immigrant and refugee communities,” said Diego Iñiguez-Lopez, the policy and campaigns manager at National Partnership for New Americans, a coalition of immigrant advocacy groups. This year, the coalition launched a campaign to try to naturalize 1 million new citizens in time for the 2020 election.

Trump has been less unpopular with naturalized Asian immigrants, with a 38% approval and 52% disapproval rating, according to a 2018 survey by Asian and Pacific Islander American and AAPI Data. These voters reported supporting Hillary Clinton over Trump by 48% to 28%.

In recent decades, Asian Americans as a whole — the fastest-growing ethnicity in the country — had been generally more open to supporting Republicans. But the diverse group is increasingly becoming a reliably Democratic demographic, according to Karthick Ramakrishnan, a professor of public policy at UC Riverside who studies Asian American voting trends.

“What we’ve seen in the last two election cycles is either a crystallization or solidification in voting preferences and increasingly party preferences as well,” Ramakrishnan said.

Liking a party is one thing. Mobilizing to vote is another. Roughly three-fifths of foreign-born Asian American voters surveyed by APIAVote and AAPI Data said they were not contacted by the Democratic Party or the GOP before the 2018 election.

Language can be a barrier, and “a lot of folks don’t watch the same channels,” making people harder to reach through the media, said Harris County, Texas, Judge Lina Hidalgo, who immigrated to the U.S. in 2005 after fleeing Colombia and who became a U.S. citizen in 2013. Last year, the 28-year-old was among the Democrats who swept Republicans out of power in the county, where immigrants make up more than a quarter of the population.

Politicians need “to reach people where they are,” said Hidalgo, who appeared at last month’s ceremony to urge the new citizens to get involved in their communities and vote.

At the presidential level, naturalized immigrants’ voting power is largely diluted by the electoral college. New citizens most commonly settle in Democratic bastions such as California and New York, where their votes are not expected to affect the next presidential election.

Along with Texas, Florida is a key exception. The battleground state adds between 70,000 and 100,000 naturalized citizens each year, with more than 20,000 born in communist Cuba, a more conservative voter bloc that has helped Republicans maintain razor-thin majorities in the state.

Immigration is only one of several forces reshaping the electoral map, such as rural areas’ swing toward the GOP and the suburbs’ moves toward the Democratic Party.

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Paul Bentz, a senior vice president of research and strategy at HighGround Inc., a traditionally Republican public affairs firm, said that younger voters, college-educated suburbanites and new residents from California are also helping push Arizona from red to purple.

“The president’s got big problems in multiple segments, not just naturalized voters,” Bentz said. He added that new voters are not monolithic, either, and that “border enforcement is not every Latino in Arizona’s No. 1 issue.”

At the Houston ceremony, new citizen Raul Borjas, 32, who was born in Venezuela, said he generally shares Republicans’ policy views.

“The U.S. has given me the freedom to express myself, which is particularly important to us as Venezuelans, who are losing that freedom in our country,” Borjas said, alluding to the political strife in his home country, as he waited to get his picture taken with the judge who administered his citizenship oath.

But he said he thought the party had fallen out of step on gun control policies, and he’s not sure whether he will vote for Trump.

Hans Gottwald, 74, an Alvin, Texas, retiree, said he was born in Germany and has lived in the U.S. since 1963 after he served three years in the U.S. Army. He said he decided to become a citizen so he could vote in the next national election.

“I miss that I couldn’t vote for many years, but I think 2020 is very important to me,” Gottwald said. He’s not sure whether he’s going to support Trump or a Democratic challenger. He likes Sen. Elizabeth Warren of Massachusetts, but said, “I will not vote for a socialist,” apparently referring to Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders.

Walter Martinez, 22, who was born in El Salvador and has lived in the U.S. since he was a young child, said he long felt like an American, and he wanted to naturalize as a citizen before it potentially became more difficult to do so.

He doesn’t see himself as very politically engaged, but he plans to vote in 2020 — and definitely not for Trump.

“No doubt,” Martinez said with a laugh, adding he doesn’t like the way the administration has treated Latinos.

“Maybe he knows money,” Martinez said of the president, “but I don’t agree how he is toward other people.”