Today’s installment of campaign-related news items from across the country.
* Miami Mayor Francis Suarez claimed this morning that he’s now qualified for next week’s Republican presidential debate. If his claims are true, he’ll be the ninth candidate to have met the fundraising and polling thresholds. (An Associated Press report cited unnamed Republican National Committee advisers who questioned whether his claims were accurate.)
* Speaking of Suarez, the mayor appeared on NBC News NOW this week and Chuck Todd asked why his presidential campaign doesn’t appear to have much of a staff. “We have been very lean and mean,” Suarez responded, adding that he and his operation “don’t want to peak too soon.”
* In related news, former Arkansas Gov. Asa Hutchinson has not qualified for the debate, but he still thinks he has a chance to meet the thresholds by Monday night’s deadline. The debate itself is scheduled to be held in Milwaukee on Wednesday, Aug. 23.
* In North Carolina, the Republican-led legislature is moving forward with election administration legislation that would, among other things, impose new restrictions on casting ballots through the mail. The state’s Democratic governor, Roy Cooper, is very likely to veto the measure, but Republicans enjoy veto-proof majorities.








