Ms. Abrams said she would focus her next year on identifying and stemming voter suppression efforts throughout the country. But she has remained close to the presidential race, meeting privately with several candidates.
“I’ve been thinking about this for the last few weeks,” she said, “and I’ve just come to the decision that my best value add, the strongest contribution I can give to this primary, would be to make sure our nominee is coming into an environment where there’s strong voter protections in place.”
Recapping the weekend in Iowa
Our reporters seemed to be in every corner of Iowa last weekend — at the state fair, at a gun violence forum and elsewhere — keeping tabs on the 20 Democrats who had come to do some retail politicking in the key early voting state.
Here’s a roundup of some of what they reported:
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At a forum in Des Moines, the candidates voiced support for a common set of gun control proposals, like requiring universal background checks and banning military-style semiautomatic rifles.
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At the state fair, Senator Bernie Sanders of Vermont “examined the butter cow” and “gobbled a corn dog” but, as my colleague Sydney Ember put it, “spoke to almost no one” as he walked around. (Like others, he did draw a large crowd for his political speech.) Mr. Sanders’s approach underscored how he has grounded his campaign in championing ideas rather than establishing human connections.
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In our politics newsletter, Lisa Lerer provided some takeaways from her four days at the fair. Among them: The race has firmly separated into tiers, and Senator Elizabeth Warren of Massachusetts is having a moment.
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So who “won” the Iowa State Fair? We rated the candidates by corn dogs. If that seems confusing, just trust me: This is the best thing you’ll read today.
A new proposal to tax the rich
A Democratic candidate heartily endorsed new taxes on the wealthiest Americans this week. And no, it was not Ms. Warren or Mr. Sanders.
The former housing secretary Julián Castro rolled out his expansive “People First Economic Plan for Working Families” on Thursday, a suite of new proposals aimed at providing relief to working families. A pair of new wealth taxes would help fund the commitments and are central to the plan.
The first, an “inherited wealth tax,” would replace the estate and gift taxes with a federal tax on inherited incomes of more than $2 million. Mr. Castro’s team said such a tax would raise more than $250 billion over 10 years.
The second tax, a “wealth inequality tax,” would apply to the top tenth of the top 1 percent of earners. Under the tax, capital income would be treated the same as labor income.