New York probing whether Donald Trump and the Trump Organization manipulated asset values – Reuters

NEW YORK (Reuters) - The New York state attorney general is investigating whether Donald Trump and the Trump Organization improperly manipulated the value of the U.S. presidents assets to secure loans and obtain economic and tax benefits, and said Trumps son Eric has been uncooperative in the civil probe.

FILE PHOTO: U.S. President Donald Trump attends a news conference about the latest coronavirus disease (COVID-19) developments, in the Brady Press Briefing Room of the White House in Washington, U.S. August 23, 2020. REUTERS/Erin Scott

The disclosure was made in a filing on Monday with a New York state court in Manhattan, where Attorney General Letitia James is demanding that the Trump Organization, Eric Trump and others comply with subpoenas from her office.

Lawyers for the attorney general said the subpoenas were issued as part of her ongoing confidential civil investigation into potential fraud or illegality, adding there has been no determination that any laws were broken.

Alan Garten, chief legal officer for the Trump Organization, where Eric Trump is an executive vice president, said the company has tried to cooperate with James, a Democrat, as the Republican Trump seeks a second term in office.

The Trump Organization has done nothing wrong, Garten said. The NYAGs continued harassment of the company as we approach the election (and filing of this motion on the first day of the Republican National Convention) once again confirms that this investigation is all about politics.

James said she began her probe after Donald Trumps former personal lawyer and fixer Michael Cohen said in Congressional testimony that the presidents financial statements inflated some asset values to save money on loans and insurance, and deflated other asset values to reduce real estate taxes.

She also said Eric Trump was intimately involved in one or more transactions being reviewed, and had no plausible basis to refuse to testify pursuant to a subpoena.

Four properties are being probed, with a particular focus on a 212-acre (85.8 hectare) property in northern Westchester County, north of New York City, called the Seven Springs Estate.

James is examining an apparent $21.1 million tax deduction for Seven Springs for 2015 from the donation of a conservation easement, following Donald Trumps two-decade failure to build a golf course or residential housing on the property.

Other properties being probed include 40 Wall Street in downtown Manhattan, the Trump National Golf Club in Los Angeles, and the Trump International Hotel and Tower in Chicago.

The attorney general said the latter property, which towers a quarter-mile over the Chicago River, has been omitted from Donald Trumps Statement of Financial Condition since 2009.

James said significant amounts of subpoenaed materials have been produced but there is an impasse over other materials.

For months, the Trump Organization has made baseless claims in an effort to shield evidence from a lawful investigation into its financial dealings, James said. They have stalled, withheld documents, and instructed witnesses, including Eric Trump, to refuse to answer questions under oath.

In separate litigation, Donald Trump for a year has been fighting to block Manhattan District Attorney Cyrus Vance from enforcing a subpoena seeking eight years of his tax returns, in connection with a criminal probe.

A federal appeals court will hear Trumps arguments on Sept. 1, after a judge refused to void Vances subpoena. The U.S. Supreme Court ruled last month that Trump does not deserve immunity from Vances probe.

Reporting by Jonathan Stempel in New York; Additional reporting by Tom Hals in Wilmington, Delaware; Editing by Noeleen Walder, Jonathan Oatis and Bill Berkrot

Read more from the original source:

New York probing whether Donald Trump and the Trump Organization manipulated asset values - Reuters

Webcast: Age of Extinction – Corruption in Donald Trump’s Dept of Interior – Oregon WildBlog

An overview of the Department of the Interior's most crooked political appointees and its most egregious anti-environmental actions.

This presentation explores the various ways that industry lobbyists and right-wing operatives have infiltrated the Interior Department and are now using the powerful agency to rollback essential environmental laws, including the Endangered Species Act. Interior Secretary David Bernhardt, a former mega-lobbyist for the oil and gas industry and Big Ag, has stocked DOI with conservative ideologues and corporate influence peddlers and together they are doing everything in their power to worsen the biodiversity crisis unfolding across this planet.

Journalist Jimmy Tobias(@JamesCTobias) discusses some of the investigative reporting he's done looking into Trump's Interior Department, with a focus on the agency's most crooked political appointees and its most egregious anti-environmental actions.

Oregon Wild's Doug Heiken reviews the Trump administration's newly announced rollbacks of critical habitat for the northern spotted owl and what the move means for Oregon's beloved remaining old growth forests, followed by a Q&A.

Jimmy Tobias is a contributing writer at The Guardian and a contributor at The Nation. An investigative reporter, he covers conservation, civil society and cities. He was formerly a trail worker with the U.S. Forest Service. His work has also appeared in The New York Times, The Intercept, Pacific Standard, HuffPost, Mother Jones, Outside, High Country News, and numerous other outlets.

Excerpt from:

Webcast: Age of Extinction - Corruption in Donald Trump's Dept of Interior - Oregon WildBlog

Trump goes dark on TV as early voting looms – POLITICO

The president is not slated to be on the airwaves anywhere during the final week of the month, as Republicans hold their convention.

Its a jarring turn of events for a reelection effort that has long promoted itself as a financial powerhouse and until recently had a heavy TV presence. And its exceedingly rare to see a sitting president go dark so close to an election. But the Trump campaign has seen its long-standing cash advantage over Biden dwindle to just about $20 million, according to the most recent financial disclosures, even as Biden pours money into commercials.

Trump aides say they have decided to focus their spending on the post-Labor Day final stretch of the campaign and say they see little reason to advertise during the national conventions, which are receiving widespread coverage. Bidens campaign spent $16 million on TV during his convention week, and is on track to spend more than $14 million during this weeks Republican confab.

It "makes little sense to blow donor money on ads during convention weeks, when all of the national media is focused on the candidates anyway," said Trump campaign spokesman Tim Murtaugh, who argued that Biden's advertising barrage was to designed to compensate for his relatively light public schedule.

Yet it has worried senior Republicans, who argue the reelection effort erred by allowing Bidens message to go unchallenged. Among Trump allies, there is a growing desire to see a super PAC fill the void. Many in the presidents sphere have long expressed dissatisfaction with America First Action, the principal pro-Trump outside group which has been outspent by its Biden-aligned rival.

Corey Lewandowski. | Tasos Katopodis/Getty Images

With 70 days to go in a campaign, all of the people who have raised money on behalf of Donald Trumps name should be spending it to support his campaign right now, said former Trump campaign manager Corey Lewandowski, who informally advises the president.

David Bossie, a former Trump deputy campaign manager who remains close to the White House, said, After years of planning, strategizing and fundraising, now is the time for the super PACs and those organizations that support President Trump and Vice President Mike Pences reelection to engage with their all-important dollars to have a positive impact now and not wait any longer.

An America First Action spokesperson did not respond to a request for comment. The organization has spent roughly $13 million over the past month and has booked $24 million from September through the election. It has announced plans for a post-Labor Day, anti-Biden assault.

The Trump forces have also been hamstrung by the downfall of the National Rifle Association. The prominent outside group aggressively bolstered Trump in 2016 but has been essentially a nonfactor in 2020 as it confronts an investigation into alleged financial improprieties.

Trump advisers note they have placed a premium on digital advertising, especially during the conventions. From July 21 to Aug. 15, the presidents campaign spent $31 million on Facebook and Google, while the Biden team invested $25 million, according to Advertising Analytics. It represents an advantage for Trump, but not of the same magnitude Biden has been enjoying on TV.

Trump aides strenuously push back on the idea they are facing financial problems, though campaign manager Bill Stepien has been examining the campaigns operations, including budgeting. He has charged deputy campaign manager Justin Clark to review spending going forward.

Trump campaign manager Bill Stepien. | Amy Newman/The Record via AP

After taking over the Trump campaign last month, Stepien briefly paused TV spending to reassess the strategy. Rather than airing commercials across the country, the campaign decided to target early voting states.

Pressed on the scale-back during a Sunday appearance on NBCs Meet the Press, Trump senior adviser Jason Miller said the campaign is conserving money right now and focusing a little bit more smartly and a little more effectively on the states that are voting early.

Yet even in most of those early voting states, Biden has dominated Trump. The former vice president spent more than three times as much as the president in North Carolina where absentee voting begins next week as well as in Florida and Arizona.

The one state where Trump outpaced Biden was Georgia, where the presidents team made a small investment. Losing Georgia would likely signal a catastrophic election for Trump, who carried the state by 5 percentage points in 2016.

The Trump campaign was also absent in Ohio and Nevada.

To some Republicans, the scenario feels eerily similar to 2012 when Barack Obama crushed Mitt Romney during the convention weeks, fueling an early fall bounce.

Over the dog days of summer, the Biden campaign and his outside allies have owned the airwaves in the states that matter most, said Nick Everhart, a Republican ad-maker.

Everhart, however, cautioned that the average voter has been more consumed with the pandemics impact on their life, and said that deciding who to vote for is still a fall not a summer activity.

Whether the Biden advertising advantage persists into autumn remains an open question. While the Biden campaign has announced plans to spend $220 million starting in September, it has so far reserved only about half that, according to media buying figures obtained by POLITICO. The Trump campaign has booked nearly $148 million so far.

The Biden team has greeted Trumps summertime absence from the airwaves with jubilation and say it's evidence of a campaign on the decline.

The Trump campaign promised us the Death Star, but instead what we got was something closer to the Titanic, said Biden spokesman Michael Gwin.

Not everyone is convinced the drop-off will matter, though. Even without TV ads, Trump has an ability to draw attention in a way few politicians can. And many Republicans point out that the president found himself in a similar position four years ago.

Trump was significantly outspent in 2016, said veteran GOP ad-maker Scott Howell, and that didnt seem to matter.

View original post here:

Trump goes dark on TV as early voting looms - POLITICO

How Donald Trump canceled the Republican party – The Guardian

The Republican convention that nominates Donald Trump for a second term will be the greatest event in the political history of cancel culture. What Trump is cancelling is nothing less than the Republican party as it has existed before him. He ran in 2016 in the primaries on cancelling the GOP and in 2020 he ratifies his triumph. After the election, political scientists and historians will study his obliteration of the Republican party as his greatest and most enduring political achievement.

The Republican party has been on a long journey away from being the party of Abraham Lincoln, accelerating since Barry Goldwater and rightwing cadres captured it in 1964 in reaction to the civil rights movement. After Richard Nixon embraced the southern strategy and won the nomination in 1968 with the help of Senator Strom Thurmond of South Carolina, the Dixiecrat segregationist presidential candidate in 1948, the party increasingly radicalized in every election cycle and became gradually unmoored. In 1980, Ronald Reagan opened his general election campaign at the Neshoba County Fair, the place where three civil rights workers had been murdered in 1964. Surrounded by Confederate flags, he hailed states rights. As brazen an appeal as it was, Reagan felt he had to resort to the old code words.

Central to Trumps unique selling proposition is that he dispenses with the dog whistles. His vulgarity gives a vicarious thrill to those who revel in his taunting of perceived enemies or scapegoats. He made them feel dominant at no social price, until his catastrophic mismanagement of the coronavirus pandemic and economic crisis. Flouting a mask is the magical act of defiance to signal that nothing has really changed and that in any case, Trump bears no responsibility.

But there has also been a political cost to Trumps louche comic lounge act that still transfixes a diehard audience lingering like late-night gamblers for the last show. Trump is the only president since the advent of modern polling never to reach 50% approval. Despite decisively losing the popular vote in 2016, he said he won the popular vote if you deduct the millions of people who voted illegally. This time, fearing an even more overwhelming popular rejection, he says the outcome will be rigged and he has pre-emptively tried to cancel the US Postal Service, to undermine voting by mail.

From Reagan onward, even as the fringe moved to the center and took it over, the party did not anticipate that it was slouching toward Trump. Conservatives have consistently failed to grasp the unintended consequences of conservatism. Even when Reagan fostered the evangelical right, George HW Bush appointed Clarence Thomas to the supreme court, George W Bush invaded Iraq and neglected oversight of financial markets that collapsed, and John McCain named Sarah Palin as his running mate, Republicans believed they were expanding the attraction of the conservative project. When Newt Gingrich, Roger Ailes and Rush Limbaugh methodically degraded language, it seemed a propaganda technique to herd supporters. When the dark money of the Koch family and the wealthy reactionaries of the cloaked Donors Trust bankrolled the lumpen dress-up Tea Party to do their bidding on deregulation of finance and industry, the munificently funded conservative candidates did their bidding as retainers of privilege.

In the wasteland, only cockroaches and Mitch McConnell may survive

At the presidential level there still remained residual elements contrary to what metastasized into Trumpism. Reagan represented free trade and western firmness against Russia. George HW Bush was a paragon of public service. George W Bush was an advocate for immigrants. John McCain was the embodiment of patriotic sacrifice.

After Trump, all that has been cancelled. Since he first rode down the escalator at Trump Tower in 2015, to declare his candidacy against Mexican rapists, there has always been a new escalator downward. After overcoming his initial hesitation, the House Republican leader, Kevin McCarthy, welcomed the election of a QAnon conspiracy-spouting candidate from Georgia, Marjorie Taylor Greene. Then McCarthy condemned QAnon and stated that Greene wasnt part of a movement she continued to defend.

Trump hailed her as a future Republican star. For months, he has been tweeting messages to encourage the racist, antisemitic cult. Theres a once-in-a lifetime opportunity to take this global cabal of Satan-worshiping pedophiles out, and I think we have the president to do it, Greene proclaimed. Ive heard these are people that love our country, Trump said. In the wasteland, only cockroaches and Mitch McConnell may survive.

Stuart Stevens, a prominent Republican political consultant, eyes startled wide open, has entitled his expos of the party It Was All A Lie. He describes the conservative Trump apologists, the adults in the room, as latter-day versions of Franz von Papen, the German chancellor who enabled the rise of Hitler in the complacent belief that he could be controlled and the conservatives would maintain power.

On 4 July, at the mammoth stage set of Mount Rushmore, Trump mugged for his photo op by posing his face next in line to the carving of Abraham Lincoln. He had earlier told the South Dakota governor, Kristi Noem, Did you know its my dream to have my face on Mount Rushmore? And I started laughing, she recounted. And he wasnt laughing, so he was totally serious. (Trump tweeted that it was fake news that he had ordered an aide to inquire about immortalizing his face on the mountain.)

Ostensibly, Trump came to deliver his ideological message. He denounced cancel culture, which he said was the very definition of totalitarianism, and it is completely alien to our culture and to our values, and it has absolutely no place in the United States of America. He attributed it to a new far-left fascism. And he spelled out its punitive nature: If you do not speak its language, perform its rituals, recite its mantras and follow its commandments, then you will be censored, banished, blacklisted, persecuted and punished. Thus, he offered a concise description of his own cancel cultures methods.

Trumps cancel culture deals in aggressions, not micro-aggressions. The only safe space is where Trump is worshipped. Before, during and after the death of McCain, Trump unleashed tirades of insult. He finally complained that the McCain family never thanked him for approving the senators funeral arrangements, even though it was Congress that gave approval. For years, Trump has disparaged the Bush family. At the onset of the coronavirus pandemic, when George W Bush called for setting aside partisanship and embracing national unity, Trump tweeted, but where was he during Impeachment calling for putting partisanship aside.

Trumps cancel culture deals in aggressions, not micro-aggressions. The only safe space is where Trump is worshipped

Trump has invoked Reagan only as a stepping stone of his own monumental pedestal. At a rally in 2019, Trump mused: I was watching the other night the great Lou Dobbs [of Fox News], and he said, When Trump took over, President Trump, he used to say, Trump is a great president. Then he said, Trump is the greatest president since Ronald Reagan. Then he said, No, no, Trump is an even better president than Ronald Reagan. And now hes got me down as the greatest president in the history of our country, including George Washington and Abraham Lincoln. Thank you. We love you too.

When Trump sought to profit for his 2020 campaign by selling a gold-colored Trump-Reagan commemorative coin set, the Reagan Foundation sent him a curt letter, telling him to cease and desist. Trump has constantly retailed a false story about Reagan supposedly remarking after meeting him, For the life of me, and Ill never know how to explain it, when I met that young man, I felt like I was the one shaking hands with the president. The chief administrative officer of the Reagan Foundation felt compelled to note that Reagan did not ever say that about Donald Trump.

Trumps petty, vindictive and exploitative abuse of the Bush presidents, McCain and Reagan pales in comparison to his raging obsessions about Lincoln. He has boasted his poll numbers are better than Lincolns ever were (true), claimed he is more a victim than the assassinated martyr (untrue), and declared he has done more for Black Americans than Lincoln (untrue).

Trump, the would-be Great Emancipator and upholder of Confederate monuments, has lately ruminated about giving an address at Gettysburg. There are many such monuments there to the thousands of poor white southerners who gave their lives for the Slave Power and to overthrow the democracy of the United States. Perhaps, contemplating his last campaign, Trump could trudge across the rutted field of Picketts Charge. He might ask what his bikers and self-styled militia would be willing to do for him. What Lincoln consecrated, Trump would desecrate. But he would undoubtedly speak longer.

Trumps compulsive need to elevate himself as greater than the greatest president does not stand alone among strange statements about Lincoln from members of his inner circle. Some fancy that they too resemble Lincoln, alongside Trump. Some insist they are bravely fighting the civil war, on behalf of Trump. Some depict Trump as the reincarnation of Lincoln, to justify his dishonesty. Some summon Lincoln to claim God is on their side. The disconnect of these incoherent and eccentric gestures from any reality past or present is a telltale sign of terminal party identity. Each weird distortion marks the progress of Trumps cancel culture, the eclipse of history bred by one-man misrule that is a half-cocked aspiration to an authoritarian system that might be codified by the likes of William Barr.

Stephen Bannon, Trumps now-indicted former campaign manager and senior adviser, appeared in a 2019 documentary about his post-White House crusade to organize an international neo-fascist alliance. The film opens with Bannon cradling a volume of Carl Sandburgs biography of Lincoln. Bannon says portentously that its 1862. Then he reads Lincolns words: They wish to get rid of me and I am sometimes half-disposed to gratify them. We are now on the brink of destruction. It appears to me the Almighty is against us and I can hardly see a ray of hope. Lincolns fiery trial to preserve the union is reduced to Bannons dark apocalyptic mutterings against the forces conspiring against him and Trump: the Deep State, rootless cosmopolitans, globalists and liberal elites. Were a long way from, as Lincoln said, the last best hope of earth.

Betsy DeVos's definition of freedom as 'what we ought', that is, what she determines, is more Orwellian than Lincolnian

Ivanka Trump has turned to Lincoln for the occasional non-sequitur defense of her father. Her vacant voice and immobile expression augment the surprise effect of her inapt citations. After Attorney General Barr issued a deceptive characterization of the Mueller Report to mislead the public about its actual content, Ivanka rushed to support Barrs falsehood. She tweeted a quote: Truth is generally the best vindication against slander Abraham Lincoln. The difference between Barr and Lincoln was that Barr covered up the truth.

During the impeachment inquiry into Trumps withholding of nearly $400m in military aid to Ukraine, to coerce its government to launch an investigation that would smear Joe Biden with fabricated accusations of corruption, Ivanka leaped to protect her father. She claimed the incontrovertible facts were nothing but a partisan attack contrived to malign him, originating from a whistleblower within the intelligence community who was not particularly relevant.

Basically since the election, she said, this has been the experience that our administration and our family has been having. Rather than wait, under a year, until the people can decide for themselves based on his record and based on his accomplishments, this new effort has commenced. Once again, she reached for Lincoln as her fathers model. This has been the experience of most, she observed with the sagacious tone of a student of history. Abraham Lincoln was famously, even within his own cabinet, surrounded by people who were former political adversaries. Ivankas smug confusion was complete. She had mistaken the whistleblower whose memo triggered the impeachment process with Lincolns team of rivals.

On 23 January, Betsy DeVos, Trumps secretary of education, a billionaire heiress and funder of rightwing causes, spoke at the Museum of the Bible in Washington to a group from the Colorado Christian University, to claim Lincoln as the imaginary leader for the anti-abortion movement.

He too contended with the pro-choice arguments of his day, she said. They suggested that a states choice to be slave or to be free had no moral question in it. According to DeVos, women asserting their reproductive rights are engaged in a vast moral evil, equivalent to slavery.

Lincoln was right about slavery choice then, and he would be right about the life choice today, she said. Freedom is not about doing what we want. Freedom is about having the right to do what we ought.

DeVoss mangling of Lincoln, who was an early advocate of womens rights and suffrage but never said a word about abortion, is intended to legitimate the anti-abortion agenda of granting personhood rights to fetuses, which she and other zealots equate to enslaved African Americans. Her definition of freedom as what we ought, that is, what she determines, is more Orwellian than Lincolnian. Historically, claiming that law should be rooted in theological dogma is in the tradition of the southern theologians Lincoln condemned, who justified slavery by biblical references and divine sanction.

Mike Pence, Trumps vice-president, a former rightwing radio host, travelled in January to Ripon, Wisconsin, site of the founding of the Republican party in 1854, garrulously to praise Trump as the true heir to Lincoln in the advancement of our highest ideals. Once again, Pence explained, we are at a crossroads of freedom. Trump, the Lincoln manqu, is all that stands between America and the threat of Joe Biden and socialism and decline. Months before the murder of George Floyd and the wave of Black Lives Matter demonstrations that swept across the country, Pence charged, Joe Biden believes America is, in his words, systemically racist. And despite historically low crime rates prior to this pandemic, Joe Biden believes that law enforcement in America has a, quote, implicit bias against minorities. In conclusion, the evangelical Pence declared, The Bible says, Where the Spirit of the Lord is, there is freedom, and with President Donald Trump in the White House for four more years, well make America great again, again.

In the long-ago days when there was only one again, during the 2016 campaign, Pence defended Trumps shout-out to Vladimir Putin to hack and release Clinton campaign emails: Russia if youre listening

You know, Pence explained, Abraham Lincoln said, give the people the facts, and the republic will be saved. I mean, I think thats the point that [Trump is] making. Hes not encouraging some foreign power to compromise the security of this country. Bowdlerizing a dubiously sourced Lincoln quote, Pence portrayed Trump as the simple protector of facts and denied he was encouraging Russian intervention. Pences statement was a cover-up in real time. We now know from the Senate intelligence committee report that Roger Stone, Trumps longtime political operative and dirty trickster, was directly in touch with Trump on the theft of the Clinton emails by Russian intelligence and their release by WikiLeaks. To quote Marx Groucho Who are you going to believe, me or your lying eyes? If Trump has a faithful servant, it is Mike Pence.

Mike Pompeo, Trumps secretary of state and yet another evangelical crusader, has raised Lincoln to justify his own brand of dogma. In a speech entitled Being a Christian Leader, to the American Association of Christian Counselors at the Gaylord Opryland Hotel at Nashville on 11 October, he explained how God directs him to be humble, forgiving and thrifty.

I know some people in the media will break out the pitchforks when they hear that I ask God for direction in my work, he said. But you should know, as much as Id like to claim originality, it is not a new idea. I love this quote from President Lincoln. He said quote, I have been driven many times upon my knees by the overwhelming conviction that I had nowhere else to go.

Unfortunately, in their Recollected Words of Abraham Lincoln, the historians Don and Virginia Fehrenbacher rate the words Pompeo spoke with a grade D: in other words, bogus. Lincoln is in fact recorded to have referred to knees only three times, all involving jokes. The Fehrenbachers also give a D to another well-used Lincoln quotation: You can fool all the people some of the time; you can fool some of the people all the time; but you cant fool all the people all the time.

Stephen Miller, Trumps senior adviser, originator of the Muslim ban and separating migrant children from their families, author of the cancel culture speech at Mount Rushmore, is impatient for the apocalypse. Observing the protests at Portland before the federal courthouse that were met with a show of armed force, Miller went on Tucker Carlson Tonight to explain why this was Fort Sumter.

The Democratic party for a long time historically has been the party of secession, he said. What youre seeing today is the Democratic party returning to its roots.

In his compact and inverted analogy, the protest against police violence was a battle in a new civil war and the ragtag shifting bands of protesters including the Wall of Moms were the restoration of the pro-secession Southern Democratic party, which would of course transform Trump into Lincoln. The identity of the enemy may change Muslims, Mexicans or Moms but Miller is prepared to draw the sword for whatever clash of civilization may come. Hes just not prepared for a virus.

During his 2016 campaign, Trump plagiarized not only Reagans slogan, Make America Great Again, but also Nixons appeal to the silent majority. He also boasted: I could stand in the middle of Fifth Avenue and shoot somebody and I wouldnt lose any voters. Trumps attorney, asked about the Fifth Avenue example by the judge presiding in the case of the Manhattan district attorney seeking Trumps tax returns, argued that Trump would have legal immunity if he killed somebody.

Since March, more than 170,000 Americans the New York Times estimates more than 200,000 have died of coronavirus. On 20 June, Trump kicked off his campaign with a rally at Tulsa. Campaign workers tore stickers off the seats that encouraged social distancing. In the sparse but closely packed crowd sat Herman Cain, proudly grinning, not wearing a mask. For a brief moment in 2012 the former CEO of Godfathers Pizza and fast-talking Tea Party advocate had been the frontrunner for the Republican presidential nomination. Disillusioned after he quit the race when accused of sexual harassment, he called for a third party. Then came Trump.

For 2020, the man who said his Secret Service code name as president would be Cornbread became chairman of Black Voices For Trump. A month later, he was dead of coronavirus. Cain would miss his speaking slot at the Republican convention. He had joined what the ancient Greeks called the silent majority. Yet 20 days after Cains death, on 19 August, his Twitter account posted Trumps latest ad: Boy, it sure looks like Joe Biden is losing his mental faculties. In death, nobody, not even Mike Pence, could claim greater devotion to the party of Trump.

Go here to read the rest:

How Donald Trump canceled the Republican party - The Guardian

The Desperation of Donald Trump Jr. – The Nation

Donald Trump Jr. tapes his Republican National Convention speech in Washington, D.C. (Susan Walsh / AP Photo)

Subscribe now for as little as $2 a month!

Cocaine and Donald Trump Jr. started trending at the same time on Twitter on Monday night. This was a direct result of liberals freely and without facts theorizing about the presidents eldest son. These speculations are not just baseless but also unfair. There are far more human reasons for Trump Jr.s odd performance during the speech he gave at the RNC.Ad Policy

If you simply examine the text, the speech itself is perfunctory. Its a hard-right statement of the case for Donald Trumps reelection, in keeping with Trump Jr.s role as the family member who works hardest to enthuse the conservative base. His sister Ivanka, by contrast, is much more an emissary to the larger world and tries to put a moderate spin on Trumpism.

Heres a not uncharacteristic specimen from Juniors speech:

If Democrats really wanted to help minorities and underserved communities, instead of bowing to big money union bosses, theyd let parents choose what school is best for their kids. Theyd limit immigration to protect American workers. Theyd support the police who protect our neighborhoods. Theyd learn how to negotiate trade deals that prioritize Americas interest for a change. Theyd end the endless wars and quit sending our young people to solve problems in foreign lands. Theyd cut taxes for families and workers. Theyd create opportunity zones that drive investment into inner cities. In other words, if Democrats cared for the forgotten men and women of our country, theyd do exactly what President Trump is doing. America is the greatest country on earth, but my fathers entire worldview revolves around the idea that we can always do even better. Imagine the life you want to have, one with a great job, a beautiful home, a perfect family. MORE FROM Jeet Heer

Its only in the last sentence that Trump Jr. sounds a bit off, as if he were a radio station that suddenly shifted from Rush Limbaugh to Talking Heads. (And you may find yourself in a beautiful house / With a beautiful wife / And you may ask yourself, well / How did I get here?)

Whats odd about the speech is Trump Jr.s mannerisms, the wild, distant glaze in his eyes, his strange puppet-like hand gestures, the too-fast racing through the words.

The most likely explanation is existential dread. Trump Jr. has never been comfortable in public life; hes always tried to mimic his father (a more successful public speaker). Trump Jr. has always seemed more like a lost puppy than a grown man, someone who is never at ease with the world but anxiously trying to spy out the situation. Added to this natural discomfort are his likely worries about his fate if his father loses.

More than any of the other Trump progeny, Trump Jr. was implicated in Russiagate. As The New York Times reports:

Dons the only person who thinks theyre going to lose, says a prominent conservative activist who is in regular contact with him and other key members of Trumps political operation. Hes like, Were losing, dude, and were going to get really hurt when we lose. An electoral defeat in November, Trump Jr. fears, could result in federal prosecutions of Trump, his family and his political allies. He has told the conservative activist that he expects that a Biden administration will not participate in a peaceful transition and instead will shoot the prisoners.

We dont need cocaine to explain Trump Jr.s speech patterns. There are reasons more firmly rooted in his life.

Read the rest here:

The Desperation of Donald Trump Jr. - The Nation

The Incestuous Relationship Between Donald Trump and Fox News – The New York Times

HOAXDonald Trump, Fox News and the Dangerous Distortion of TruthBy Brian Stelter

Just about everyone understands that Fox News is the cheerleader in chief for a TV-obsessed president. We know the channel traffics in misinformation. Weve seen hosts lob softball questions during their regular interviews with President Trump. Was anyone really surprised to see Sean Hannity warming up the crowd at a Trump rally?

Even so, it is easy to forget the full extent of the power that Fox News wields over the Trump administration. The channel has spawned some of the defining myths of this presidency and spurred Trump to adopt positions so hard-line as to be unpalatable even to congressional Republicans.

A small sampling of Foxs fictions: The caravan of terrorists and criminals supposedly marching north to invade America. The debunked conspiracy theory that a Democratic National Committee staffer was murdered for leaking campaign emails. The false claim that Ukraine, not Russia, was interfering in the 2016 election. Most recently, the deadly notion that the coronavirus was no worse than the seasonal flu.

One moment those falsehoods were being served up by Fox personalities. The next, the president was parroting them, embellishing them, amplifying them to his tens of millions of social media followers sometimes even plagiarizing Foxs parodical chyrons.

This is the value of Hoax, the new book by the CNN journalist Brian Stelter. It provides a thorough and damning exploration of the incestuous relationship between Trump and his favorite channel and of Foxs democracy-decaying role as a White House propaganda organ masquerading as conservative journalism.

Hoax is not likely to change many readers minds. Its basic thesis that Fox is powerful and toxic is already conventional wisdom, thanks in part to last years authoritative New York Times expos of Rupert Murdoch, whose company owns Fox. (Also, lets be honest, not many Fox fans are likely to read this book.) Even so, Stelters cataloging of the power and toxicity of Fox is an important addition to the growing library of books documenting this strange period in American history.

Foxs clout extends far beyond warping peoples understanding of the world. Stelter shows, for example, how spurious attacks by Fox hosts led Trump to fire cabinet secretaries and shut down the federal government. It is the type of old-school media muscle-flexing that would be impossible under a stronger president.

Stelter is at his best when he is explaining the underlying forces that led Fox to embrace propaganda. (Once upon a time, he writes, Fox had a journalistic culture.) Part of the reason is money. Fox News makes nearly $2 billion a year. Its intensely loyal audience allows the channel to charge more for advertising and in fees assessed by cable companies. Inciting viewers is crucial for keeping ratings high.

But there is another force at play. Many Fox employees view their job as catering to the president. Nothing gets people buzzing like a @realDonaldTrump tweet. Everyone at Fox could see that the way to get attention, to get promoted, to get ahead was to hitch a ride with Trump and never look back, Stelter writes. Some Fox journalists yes, they still exist! find this troubling. Very few have the guts to say so publicly.

Stelter traces the Trump-Fox synergies to 2011, when Roger Ailes, the channels longtime boss, gave Trump a weekly phone-in slot on the Fox & Friends morning show. The platform provided him a direct line into the brains of millions of Republican primary voters. For its part, Fox got someone whose penchant for bombast and demagogy proved a ratings winner.

That symbiosis inspired other Fox hosts, none more so than Hannity.

Pre-Trump, Hannity was in trouble. He was churning out bland, predictable screeds against President Obama. Some producers were considering pairing him with a female co-host to spice things up. In Trump, Hannity sensed a chance to turn things around. He glommed onto the ascendant candidate, stoking fears of rigged elections, violent immigrants and murderous Democrats, and pitching Trump as the panacea.

By the time Trump was sworn in, Hannitys entwinement with the new president went far beyond sycophantic interviews and concocted conspiracies. On a near-daily basis, Hannity served as a presidential sounding board, and Stelter amusingly describes the TV star as exhausted by the round-the-clock counseling.

Stelter is far from an impartial observer. He is the host of a CNN show about the media, and his regular criticisms of Fox have made him a popular punching bag for Hannity and others.

Early on in Hoax, Stelter acknowledges that he is shocked and angry by what is going on at Fox, and his emotions sometimes seem to get the better of him. He resorts to name-calling and spreads gratuitous gossip about Fox personalities, at one point quoting an unnamed sources assertion that a female anchor knew how to use sex to get ahead. Coming from a victim of Foxs smears, it feels a little retributive.

Stelter also glosses over the fact that CNN is guilty of its own, Fox-lite version of partisan pandering. Certain hosts tend to ask leading, left-leaning questions. Everyone is incentivized to say things that go viral; hyperbole trumps nuance. This is not new. Tucker Carlson who has emerged as Foxs leading promoter of racist lies rose to notoriety as a flamethrower on the CNN show Crossfire.

To be clear, there is no equivalence between the occasionally inaccurate and misleading liberal media, which generally owns up to its mistakes, and the highly productive factory of falsehoods at Fox. But in a polarized America, cable news networks reflect and to varying degrees contribute to that polarization.

My biggest disappointment with Hoax is that Stelter doesnt unpack the greatest mystery of Foxs success: Why is the channels unbridled demagogy so enticing? Do viewers realize theyre getting played? Do they care?

The book cites research that shows Fox viewers are especially likely to hold inaccurate views of important issues, but what is actually going on in their heads when they sit down in front of the TV? The closest Stelter comes to answering this question is when he asserts that for some, Fox is an identity. Almost a way of life.

That may be true, but I would be curious to hear from and better understand those viewers. There is no sign that Stelter spoke to any. Readers are left to look down on Foxs millions of loyalists as gullible members of an extremist cult. It is just the sort of easy-to-digest but unnuanced conclusion that would play well on cable news.

The rest is here:

The Incestuous Relationship Between Donald Trump and Fox News - The New York Times

Donald Trump was finally asked about Sarah Cooper’s viral impersonations of him – CNN

But the target of Cooper's ridicule hadn't been asked what he thinks of the videos ... until Sunday.

"I have not, no," Trump said, blank-faced. "I'd like to see them. Are they good or bad?"

Hilton told Trump he thought the president would find them very entertaining.

"OK, good! I'd like to see them," Trump said. "If you're saying they're positive, I'd like to look. If they're not positive...."

Hilton acknowledged that Cooper "doesn't mean it to be positive."

"I see," Trump said. "Well, I'll have to check it out."

Cooper has garnered a huge social media following since going viral in April 2020 for her satirical Trump impressions. She has been retweeted and praised by a multitude of entertainers, including Lin-Manuel Miranda, Ben Stiller, Halle Berry, Chrissy Teigen and Cher.

Prior to her online success, Cooper was a writer and correspondent on the CBS All Access pilot "Old News," produced by Stephen Colbert. She is also the author of the best-selling books "100 Tricks to Appear Smart in Meetings" and "How to be Successful Without Hurting Men's Feelings."

-- CNN's Lisa France contributed to this report

Follow this link:

Donald Trump was finally asked about Sarah Cooper's viral impersonations of him - CNN

Mark Zuckerberg reportedly warned President Trump about the rise of Chinese tech firms – CNBC

Mark Zuckerberg, chief executive officer and founder of Facebook Inc., arrives for a House Financial Services Committee hearing in Washington, D.C., U.S., on Wednesday, Oct. 23, 2019.

Andrew Harrer | Bloomberg | Getty Images

Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg warned President Donald Trump at a White House dinner last October that Chinese tech firms posed a direct threat to the U.S. business, according to The Wall Street Journal, citing people familiar with the matter.

Zuckerberg is said to have argued that clamping down on these firms should be more of a priority than reining in Facebook.

Around the time of the dinner, Zuckerberg warned U.S. officials and lawmakers that Chinese tech firms pose a risk to American values and the nation's technological dominance.The tech mogul is also said to have pointed out that TikTok, which is owned by Beijing-based ByteDance, doesn't share Facebook's commitment to freedom of expression.

Rep. Tom Cotton, R-Ark., and Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer who met Zuckerberg in September called for an inquiry into TikTok in October.A national security review was launched soon after, and Trump signed an executive order to ban the app this month citing national security concerns. TikTok confirmed over the weekend that it has launched a legal appeal against the ban.

TikTok presents major competition to Facebook's business. The social video-sharing app, which has boomed in popularity in recent months, competes directly with Instagram. Given the size of TikTok's audience, it's possible companies would rather pay for advertising space on TikTok than on Instagram or Facebook.

White House trade advisor Peter Navarro told CNBC's "Squawk Box" on Monday that Zuckerberg has "zero influence" when it comes to TikTok and that the report has "zero credibility."

A Facebook spokesperson told CNBC on Monday: "Mark has never advocated for a ban on TikTok. He has repeatedly said publicly that the biggest competitors to U.S. tech companies are Chinese companies, with values that don't align with democratic ideals like free speech.It's ludicrous to suggest that long-standing national security concerns raised by policymakers on both sides of the aisle have been shaped by Mark's statements alone."

Read The Wall Street Journal's full report here.

Read the original:

Mark Zuckerberg reportedly warned President Trump about the rise of Chinese tech firms - CNBC

‘The Trump show’ continues as RNC heads to second night packed with Donald’s family US politics live – The Guardian

Trump trade adviser, hydroxychloroquine hawk and Deep State conspiracy theory propagator Peter Navarro had a tetchy exchange earlier with Andrea Mitchell of NBC, about the administrations move to approve convalescent plasma therapy for the coronavirus, despite its efficacy being very much in doubt.

On air, the veteran host of Andrea Mitchell Reports said to Navarro: FDA commissioner Stephen Hahn has now apologised. He, along with the president, [Health secretary Alex] Azar, on Sunday night, said that, out of 100 people with Covid-19, 35 were saved by convalescent plasma in a study.

He now says that the criticism of those false claims, exaggerated claims, was entirely justified, and that he should have said there is a relative risk reduction, not an absolute reduction. And, in fact, the study was only a subset of a subset, not a randomized study.

You are a PhD economist. Youre an expert. You know statistics inside and out. Emergency approval of using plasma this way reduces the possibility of having a proper randomized study, and it falsely inflates hopes.

Navarro in fact a China trade hawk who has published books in which he extensively quoted an expert by the name Ron Vara, an anagram of Navarro said he did not accept that premise, which was like a crazy talking point, and added: On the issue of not being able to do randomized trials, I mean, what is the calculus here?

Are we going to wait to use something that can save thousands of lives, just so we can have a study that tells us what we already know, which is that plasma works?

Mitchell replied: Yes, that is scientific practice, sir.

And it carried on from there.

Talking of crazy talking points, Axios reported at the weekend that during attempts by the Trump White House to get Hahn and the FDA to hurry up on vaccines and therapeutics, Navarro aggressively confronted FDA officials, saying: You are all deep state and you need to get on Trump Time.

Heres a paragraph Ive written before: The deep state conspiracy theory holds that a permanent government of bureaucrats exists to thwart the presidents agenda. Former Trump campaign manager and White House adviser Steve Bannon, an enthusiastic propagator of the theory, has also said it is for nut cases and none of this is true.

Continue reading here:

'The Trump show' continues as RNC heads to second night packed with Donald's family US politics live - The Guardian

Ex-NFL star Herschel Walker on what Donald Trump taught him during their 37-year friendship – CNBC

On Monday during his2020 Republican National Conventionspeech, Heisman Trophy-winning former running back Herschel Walker told the world he has learned a lot from President Donald Trump.

Walker first met Trump in 1983 when he was drafted by the New Jersey Generals. The team was part of the short-lived United States Football League, which Trump owned at the time.

Walker says he immediately formed a friendship with the famous real-estate developer, one that has lasted over the last 37 years.

"I'm talking about a deep personal friendship," Walker said on Monday.

The two shared good times (for instance, when his and Trump's families went Disney World together, "there [Trump] was in a business suit on It's a Small World ride," Walker said. "That was something to see"). But Walker, who after retiring from the NFL more than 20 years ago now ownspoultryandfoodcompany Renaissance Man Foods as well as other businesses, says Trump has taught him important lessons over the years.

First, Walker said when Trump owned the Generals, he would watch his boss in meetings. One thing that stood out was how Trump would drop everything if one of his kids needed something.

"He can be in the middle of a big meeting, but if one of the kids was on the phone, he dropped everything to take the call. He taught me that family should be your top priority," Walker said.

Another thing that Walker noticed was how Trump treated people.

Though Trump has been widely criticized for bullyingeveryone from his critics to small business owners he worked with as a businessman, Walker said his experience was the opposite.

Not only was Trump eager to learn "every detail" about the Generals, including every player and coach, said Walker, but he also watched Trump "treat janitors, security guards and waiters the same way you would treat a VIP. He made them feel special because he knew they were."

"Herschel, make an effort to get to know people. Remember their names," Walker said Trump told him.

Walker acknowledged during his speech that some people dislike how Trump "knocks down obstacles that get in the way of his goals," as Walker put it. But, said Walker, "the opposing team they don't like when I ran over them either, but that's how you get the job done."

Check out:Americans spend over $5,000 a year on groceriessave hundreds at supermarkets with these cards

Don'tmiss:

Magic Johnsons advice to new start-ups amid Covid-19 pandemic: I would just lay low

How this 1950s self-help guru shaped Donald Trumps attitude toward life and business

Read this article:

Ex-NFL star Herschel Walker on what Donald Trump taught him during their 37-year friendship - CNBC

What if President Donald Trump loses and wont leave the White House? Amherst College professors book explor – MassLive.com

What if President Donald J. Trump loses the election but just says no? What if he just wont leave?

Preposterous in more normal times, the potential for this scenario is described by Amherst College professor Lawrence Douglas in a new book, Will He Go? Trump and the Looming Election Meltdown in 2020. Its an ominous, even chilling examination of what could result from the loopholes in the U.S. presidential election process, coupled with unprecedented modern circumstances and a president unlike any before him.

President Trump sees no daylight between his political fortunes and the good of the country, says Douglas, a professor of law, jurisprudence and social thought. Douglas premises are based not just on the presidents behavior, but on ambiguities in the Constitutions election process, which has changed very little since the first election in 1788.

He separates himself from the common fear by anti-Trump observers, which is that the president will react to an Electoral College defeat by simply barricading himself in the White House, declaring martial law or using his powers as commander-in-chief (which remain in place until Inauguration Day on Jan. 20) to essentially keep power by a coup.

Instead, he envisions Trump possibly blaming defeat on fraudulent or tampered voting, regardless of whether any such proof exists, and refusing to recognize the results.

Im not embracing what Joseph Biden said, which is that Trump could be frog-marched out of the White House (by the military), Douglas says. Rather, the professor points to an archaic method of using electoral votes (which produce 51 distinctively separate elections at once), a possibly very close vote, and the likelihood of massive mail-in by citizens fearing COVID-19 exposure at the polls.

Amherst College professor Lawrence Douglas says unprecedented circumstances and a president unwilling to accept unfavorable outcomes could create a 2020 election crisis.

American elections have not always gone smoothly. The popular vote winner (who received the most individual peoples votes) has lost five times, most recently in 2000 and 2016.

Twice in our early history, the election was settled in the House of Representatives, which becomes the arbiter if no candidate receives more than 50 percent of the electoral vote. In 1876, a special panel had to cut a deal to break a deadlock over disputed votes in three states an arrangement that ended post-Civil War reconstruction and robbed African-Americans in the South of many protections.

The 2000 election between George W. Bush and Albert Gore was decided by a deeply-divided U.S. Supreme Court, a decision Douglas still believes was driven more by politics than law. Alleged vote-counting shenanigans in Texas and Illinois still cast a shadow, in some Republican minds at least, over John F. Kennedys 1960 win over Richard M. Nixon.

None of these elections had the added variables of multiple faithless electors (who ignore their states popular vote by casting their own, personal Electoral College vote), a likely explosion of mail-in voting (which accounted for one quarter of the 2016 ballots and figures to soar in the COVID-19 age), and Trumps willingness to attach fraud to results that dont go his way.

To Douglas, this goulash of laws and emotions could produce an all-time test of the most fundamental tenet of a democracy the ability to stage an election whose results are indisputable. His book was published this spring by Twelve, an imprint of the Hatchette Book Groups Grand Central Publishing.

Mail-in ballots come more commonly from people in densely populated districts. Those areas often vote Democratic. Its called the blue shift. Some of those votes arent tallied until days or weeks after the election, Douglas says.

This could create a scenario by which Trump would be leading on Election Night, only to see the numbers swing to Democratic nominee Biden in subsequent days or weeks.

If that were to happen, its easy to see Trump screaming foul and just as easy to see his supporters in agreement.

Americans expect to know who won by 11 oclock on Election Night, Douglas said. That did not happen in 2000. He sees more reason to think it wont happen on Nov. 3.

Douglas is certainly no fan of Trump, but he does acknowledge that mail-in voting can be susceptible to confusion, especially if done in great numbers. Given Trumps propensity for blaming others, that could give the president an opening justified in his mind, and with or without proof to refuse to acknowledge the result of a defeat, Douglas reasons.

Mail-in ballots have historically been undercounted. They have to be signed, and the signatures are checked, the author says. Questionable signatures often cause ballots to be thrown out.

Douglas said faithless electors must be considered. Of the 538 electors (appointed within their individual states to formally cast electoral votes and certify the outcome), a total of 10 tried to vote contrary to the wishes of their states constituency in 2016.

Seven succeeded. That was the highest number in the countrys history, discounting the 1872 election, when candidate Horace Greeley died before the Electoral Vote was counted.

Of the 50 states, 18 do not constrain their electors to follow the (popular) vote. Some others fine or punish those who dont follow the peoples vote, but the vote still counts, Douglas says.

The U.S. Supreme Court is currently hearing a case to determine whether state governments have the power to nullify faithless electors votes. At issue is that when the Founding Fathers created the electoral system, Alexander Hamilton and many other leaders saw no problem in having individual electors rectify supposed mistakes by the uninformed voters, a practice that would cause fury today if it altered an election, but which some Constitutional experts insist is legal.

If enough faithless electors chose candidates other than Trump or Biden, leaving neither with the required majority of 270 for victory, the House of Representatives would elect the president (one vote per state delegation). That last happened in 1824. The Senate would pick the vice-president. Douglas says that in one deadlock-riddled scenario, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi could wind up in the Oval Office.

Ridiculous? Not to Douglas, who points to an almost even split of Democratic and Republican House delegations, and the unknown factor of the Nov. 3 House election results.

Three crucial swing states (Pennsylvania, Wisconsin and Michigan) have Democratic governors but GOP-controlled state houses. That could lead to in-state disputes over which election results would be certified or even which electors would be seated.

It adds up to a potentially frightening mess, a tangle of election loopholes, a nation almost evenly split into two polarized factions, and a president who, Douglas feels, has shown ample willingness to manipulate the Constitution to his own liking.

The best way to avoid this (controversy) would be if one candidate won decisively. That would certainly weaken any argument from the other, he says.

Related Content:

See the original post here:

What if President Donald Trump loses and wont leave the White House? Amherst College professors book explor - MassLive.com

Donald Trump: Where does the Republican president stand on key issues? – BBC News

Donald Trump won the 2016 US presidential election riding on one simple phrase: "Make America Great Again".

As he seeks a second term, he faces a country struggling with challenges from the coronavirus and the pandemic's economic aftershocks - and an electorate that will weigh his record from his four years in office.

His 2020 pitch is to bring back the economy, boost jobs, protect US trade interests, and to continue with his hard-line stance on immigration.

Here in detail is where the candidate stands on eight key issues.

President Trump has long campaigned on "America First" principles, and has pushed for bringing jobs and manufacturing back to the US.

During his first campaign, Mr Trump promised huge tax cuts for working Americans, to lower the corporate tax rate, to shake up the trade status quo and to revive American manufacturing.

On some of those, he has delivered.

In the last four years, he has rolled back federal regulations on businesses, enacted corporate and income tax cuts and signed executive orders supporting preferences for domestic-made products.

Since January 2017, the US has added more than 480,000 manufacturing jobs, though analysts say growth in the sector is slowing down and Mr Trump's related policies - like tariffs - have not addressed the structural issues at play.

Mr Trump has also predicted the economy will bounce back immediately after the pandemic - though critics say his Covid-19 response has caused long-term economic damage.

Mr Trump first campaigned on the promise the US should put focus on its own economic interests though he has said "America First" does "not mean "America alone".

On trade, Mr Trump has taken a hard-line stance on China, coupled with a policy to protect local manufacturers from foreign competition - and those remain the key aspects of his trade policy.

Throughout his first term, the president emphasised his work renegotiating past trade deals he says were unfair to the US - like Nafta, between the US, Canada, and Mexico - or leaving them outright - like the Trans-Pacific Partnership.

On the 2016 campaign trail, he also promised to fix the US trade deficit (the gap between imports v exports), which, for the first time in six years did decline in 2019, though economists disagree on whether this suggests an improvement in the economy.

President Trump's ongoing trade war with China has raised border taxes on close to $500bn of annual trade, and this year's "phase one" deal between the two nations saw most of the tariffs remain in place.

In August, he said he wants to offer tax credits to entice US firms to move factories out of China , saying "we will end our reliance on China".

Mr Trump has also imposed tariffs on goods from the European Union - from steel to French wine - has threatened tariffs on steel and aluminium from Brazil and Argentina, and recently re-imposed tariffs on some Canadian aluminium products.

As with trade, Mr Trump has also promised to put "America First" in US foreign policy.

In the White House's words, that means "reasserting American sovereignty and the right of all nations to determine their own futures", with a focus on ensuring security and prosperity.

What has that meant in practice?

It has included stepping away from some large multilateral agreements like the Paris climate accord or pulling back from some multilateral organisations, like the World Health Organization.

He has challenged some international alliances, pushing for North Atlantic Treaty Organization (Nato) members to boost their defence spending in the military alliance.

And he has recently reiterated a promise to bring down US troop levels overseas - which are currently at about the same level as when he took office - specifically in places like Germany and Afghanistan.

Critics have said he has created tensions with historically close US allies while reaching out to adversaries like North Korea and Russia.

He has had foreign policy successes, recently helping to broker a deal between Israel and the United Arab Emirates to normalise relations.

And he has touted the killings of Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, leader of the Islamic State (IS) group, and Iran's powerful military commander, Gen Qasem Soleimani.

Promises to curb immigration levels have been foundational to the president's political career.

Now, as he seeks re-election he has promised to continue the construction of a border wall on the US-Mexico border - he has so far secured funding for 445 miles (716 km) of the 722 mile barrier.

He also vows to eliminate the visa lottery and chain migration - meaning immigration to the US that is based on family ties - and shift to a "merit-based" entry system.

Mr Trump's plans for immigration reform faced defeat this summer when the Supreme Court ruled against his administration's bid to rescind Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (Daca), which protects about 650,000 young people who entered the US without documents as children.

Mr Trump campaigned in 2016 on repealing the Affordable Care Act, brought in by former President Barack Obama.

Though falling short of a complete repeal, the administration has succeeded in undoing parts of that law including a repeal of the individual mandate, which required people to buy health insurance or pay a tax penalty.

President Trump has also promised to bring down drug prices in the US, and in July brought in measures that would allow discounts and import of cheaper drugs from abroad, though some industry analysts have said they would not have much effect.

He declared the opioid crisis a national health emergency in 2017 and offered $1.8bn in federal funding to states for prevention, treatment and recovery measures. He has also taken steps to restrict opioid prescribing.

But critics say his ongoing efforts to dismantle the Affordable Care Act, which expanded healthcare coverage to millions, is detrimental to battling the opioid crisis.

Since he took office, Mr Trump has rolled back hundreds of environmental protections, including limits on carbon dioxide emissions from power plants and vehicles, and protections for federal waterways across the country, fulfilling a campaign promise from 2016.

He also withdrew the US from the Paris climate agreement, saying the deal disadvantaged the US "to the exclusive benefit of other countries". That withdrawal will only be formally completed after November's election.

Most recently, his administration approved oil and gas drilling in Alaska's Arctic National Wildlife Refuge, which has been off-limits for drilling for decades.

President Trump has touted the First Step Act as a key step he made towards criminal justice reform.

The 2018 bipartisan bill was significant, and reformed laws at the federal level, giving judges more discretion during sentencing as well as strengthening prisoner rehabilitation efforts.

Mr Trump had also promised a follow-up Second Step Act that would address employment barriers for former prisoners, though no such legislation has been proposed thus far.

During his 2016 campaign, Mr Trump branded himself as a firm advocate of law enforcement and has remained so during his presidency, most recently escalating his support of police amid the nationwide protests against racial injustice.

In June, President Trump signed an executive order introducing several police reforms, offering federal grants for improved practices, including the creation of a database to trace abuses by officers.

The president has said that controversial chokehold methods for restraining suspects should be prohibited "generally speaking", but has not moved to enforce a ban.

After the US was rocked by mass shootings in Texas and Ohio in 2019, Mr Trump expressed support for a series of reforms, like tighter background checks for gun buyers and "red flag laws", which block access to firearms for those who are deemed a risk to society.

But after this initial flurry of interest, Mr Trump has done little to move these ideas forward. The president has instead continued his vocal defence of the US constitution's Second Amendment - which preserves Americans' right to bear arms - and of the powerful gun lobby, the National Rifle Association (NRA).

The rest is here:

Donald Trump: Where does the Republican president stand on key issues? - BBC News

Trumps Platform Doesnt Bother With the Details – Bloomberg

Jonathan Bernstein is a Bloomberg Opinion columnist covering politics and policy. He taught political science at the University of Texas at San Antonio and DePauw University and wrote A Plain Blog About Politics.

Photographer: Andrew Harrer/Bloomberg

Photographer: Andrew Harrer/Bloomberg

Get Jonathan Bernsteins newsletter every morning in your inbox.Click here to subscribe.

Once upon a time, American political parties had relatively detailed platforms. Then Jared Kushner came along, and decided he could replacethe Republican Partystraditional document with a one-page placard, small enough to fit into peoples pockets.A month later, that project was scrapped in favor of just using the partys2016 platform. Verbatim. Great! Except that document was filled with all sorts of harsh criticisms of the current administration (that is,Barack Obamas). Even so,that was the official-ish position for a couple of months. Until

The Republican platform committee met on Sunday and decidedthat there wouldnt be any platform at all they were good with whatever President Donald Trump wanted. Which everyone had good fun with for a while, until later Sunday when whatTrump wanted turned out to be50 bullet points.

More from

The resultingplanhas the feel of somethingthat was slapped together in 20 minutes or so.So Trump is supposedly going to produce 10 million new jobs in 10 months, but theres nothing really, nothing at all about how to fulfill that promise. Same with a million new small businesses.The presidentplans to Build the Worlds Greatest Infrastructure System, which soundsnice, butgiven that hes been promising the same thingfor almost four years and hasnt yet sent a bill to Capitol Hill, some might find it hard to take it seriously. Wipe Out Global Terrorists also seems ambitious, but the plan contains nothing about how it would be donein practice or how it squareswith the promise to Stop Endless Wars and Bring Our Troops Home.

Meanwhile, there are some notableomissions. Nothing about eliminating Obamacare (or, for that matter, about Trumps promised replacement thats always two weeks away). Nothing about supporting U.S. allies not even Israel. Nothing about abortion. Or guns. Nothing about the payroll-tax holiday Trump has been talking about over the past few weeks, or his efforts to restore full deductibility for dining and entertainment expenses.

Its not clear what happens next. One possibility is that the50 bullet points keep getting revised to appease various party groups until they eventually looklike the platform theyweresupposed to replace. Another is that those groups would bewilling to go along with this version since its not an official statement of the party but wont be circulating anything like itto their members.

Again, the whole thingsounds like a last-minute attempt to avoid being ridiculed for not having any second-term agenda without actually doing the work of coming up with a second-term agenda. Which is pretty much what Im expecting of the Republican Convention. Maybe theyll surprise me! But everything thats been reportedso far suggests that the event isbeing thrown together at the last minute, with Trump himself constantly changing what he wants and the organizers having to tear up their plans and start over.

To be sure: Hardly any voters watchmuch more than the major speakers (who this year appear to mostly be Trumps family), and those who do are almost all enthusiastic partisanswho arent going to care if the product looks a big ragged. Still, it would be nice to see some evidence that the president and his partyactually had some sort of policy agenda. After all, they want to govern. Dont they?

1. Brian F. Schaffner, Jesse H. Rhodes and Raymond J. La Raja on political polarization and the suburbs.

2. Seth Masket onthe Democrats and empathy.

3. Sarah Bush and Lauren Prather at the Monkey Cage on public opinion about foreign interference in U.S. elections.

4. Harold Pollack on what the pandemic shows us about public health.

5. Nathaniel Rakich and Meredith Conroy on progressive groups and Democratic primaries.

6. James Fallows on the Democratic convention.

7. Carl Hulse on what virtual conventions leave behind which is why I expect future conventions to be a combination of the old and the new.

8. And Julian Sanchez on the cruelty of playing along with false conspiracy theories.

Get Early Returns every morning in your inbox.Click here to subscribe. Also subscribe toBloomberg All Accessand get much, much more. Youll receive our unmatched global news coverage and two in-depth daily newsletters, the Bloomberg Open and the Bloomberg Close.

This column does not necessarily reflect the opinion of the editorial board or Bloomberg LP and its owners.

To contact the author of this story:Jonathan Bernstein at jbernstein62@bloomberg.net

To contact the editor responsible for this story:Timothy Lavin at tlavin1@bloomberg.net

Before it's here, it's on the Bloomberg Terminal.

Jonathan Bernstein is a Bloomberg Opinion columnist covering politics and policy. He taught political science at the University of Texas at San Antonio and DePauw University and wrote A Plain Blog About Politics.

See the rest here:

Trumps Platform Doesnt Bother With the Details - Bloomberg

Donald Trump Jr. warns of silenced majority as RNC speakers say freedom, safety on the line in November – Fox News

President Trumps oldest son praised his father as the man who represents a bright and beautiful future for all and tore into Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden as the Loch Ness Monster of the Swamp during the opening night of the Republican National Convention.

Giving one of the major concluding addresses on Monday night, Donald Trump Jr. also charged that "the other party is attacking the very principles on which our nation was founded.

Joe Biden and the radical left are also now coming for our freedom of speech and want to bully us into submission. If they get their way, it will no longer be the silent majority, it will be the silenced majority, he warned.

Coming off a week during which Democrats used theirquadrennial confabto hammer the presidents handling of the coronavirus pandemic and warn that another four years of Trump in the White House would threaten the nations democratic foundations, the president's son and other speakers returned fire, railing against socialism, cancel culture, and warning of chaos if Biden is elected.

And Trump used part of his speech to praise his fathers record combating the coronavirus, pushing back against repeated charges from Biden and other Democrats that the president had initially downplayed the severity of the crisis and then botched the federal response to the pandemic.

Asthe virus began to spread, the president acted quickly and ensured ventilators got to hospitals that needed them most. He delivered PPE to our brave frontline workers. And he rallied the mighty American private sector, to tackle this new challenge, the younger Trump emphasized. There is more work to do, but there is light at the end of the tunnel.

And pointing to an economy that was nearly flattened by the coronavirus, Trump who has become a top Republican fundraiser and his fathers most-requested campaign surrogate as he excites the partys populist base --spotlighted that job gains are outpacing what the so-called experts expected.

Taking aim at the former vice president who continues to lead the president in national polling and in many of the key general election battleground states Trump charged that Bidens radical leftwing policies would stop our economic recovery cold. Hes already talking about shutting the country down -- again. Its madness.

Referencing the national unrest this spring and summer sparked by the death of George Floyd, a Black man in Minnesota who died while in police custody, the younger Trump stressed that we must put an end to racism, and we must ensure that any police officer who abuses their power is held accountable. What happened to George Floyd is a disgrace. And if you know a police officer, you know they agree with that, too.

But pushing back by calls by some activists to defund police departments, Trump argued that we cannot lose sight of the fact that our police are American heroes. They deserve our deepest appreciation. Because no matter what the Democrats say, you and I both know when we dial 911, we dont want it going to voicemail. So defunding the police is not an option.

Anarchists have been flooding our streets and Democrat mayors are ordering the police to stand down, Trump argued. Small businesses across Americamany of them minority ownedare being torched by mobs. The Democrat mayors pretend its not happening. They actually called it a summer of love.

Following Monday night's speakers, Biden deputy campaign manager Kate Bedingfield fired back.

If you tuned into the Republican convention tonight looking for some indication from President Trump that he has a strategy to contain the coronavirus, youre still waiting," she emphasized. "What you heard tonight was a parade of dark and divisive fear-mongering designed to distract from the fact that Donald Trump does not have an affirmative case to make to the American people about why he should be re-elected."

Trumps warning about personal freedoms being on the line in Novembers general election were echoed throughout the evening by other speakers, including some everyday Americans who were featured on the first night of the convention.

Patricia and Mark McCloskey, the St. Louis couple who made headlines this summer as they aimed their firearms at a group of protesters advocating police reforms who were walking along their neighborhoods private streets, warned that no matter where you live, your family will not be safe in the radical Democrats America.

Mark McCloskey has maintained that he was scared for his life and brandished a weapon to protect his home and wife, and the White House has defended the couple's actions on multiple occasions, as they face felony charges. He charged that the radicals are not content just marching in the streets. They want to walk the halls of Congress. They want power. This is Joe Bidens party. These are the people who will be in charge of your future and future of your children.

Republican National Committee (RNC) chairwoman Ronna McDaniel also warned about a Democratic Party thats pushing polices that were unthinkable a decade ago. And she claimed that Biden cares more about countries like China and Iran than the United States of America."

The president made two brief recorded appearances in the prime time programming hosting at the White House sixAmericans held hostage in Iran, Syria, and Venezuela who were freed during his presidency, and a discussion with frontline workers in the battle against the coronavirus.

Trump whos not expected to stray far from the spotlight during the 4-day confab --didnt wait until the Republican conventions kick off prime time session to stoke the flames.

REPUBLICANS OFFICIALLY RE-NOMINATE TRUMP AT GOP CONVENTION

Earlier Monday, the president speaking to Republican Party officials and delegates gathered in Charlotte, North Carolina to formally re-nominate Trump and Vice President Mike Pence used his nearly hour long speech to raise doubts about the integrity of Novembers general election. And he peppered his defiant and incendiary comments with blasts against efforts to increase voting my mail during the coronavirus pandemic and accusations that the Democrats are using COVID to steal our election.

The president, who took to the stage amid chants of four more years from his supporters, immediately began stirring the pot bysaying if you want to really drive them crazy, you say 12 more years.

While the first evening of the convention spotlighted the presidents oldest son, it shift to first lady Melania Trump on Tuesday. Shes scheduled to give the crowning address. Earlier in the evening, two of the presidents children, Eric and Tiffany, have speaking slots.

Also speaking during the second day of the confab Secretary of State Mike Pompeo and Sen. Rand Paul of Kentucky both of whom may have national aspirations in 2024. Pompeos expected to deliver his address from an undisclosed location in Israel, as Americans top diplomat is on a Mideast peace swing. Despite assurances from the State Department that Pompeo will be speaking in his personal capacity, he and Republican Party officials are facing a chorus of criticism that the secretary of states breaking decades of precedence in not using the office for partisan purposes.

Nicholas Sandmann, the Trump supporter and MAGA cap wearing teen from Covington, Kentucky will also be in the convention spotlight. Sandmann made national headlines last year after being falsely accused of harassing a Native American demonstrator as he and fellow classmates protested against abortion rights at the Lincoln Memorial in the nations capital.

And the governor and lt. governor of two general election battleground states crucial to a Trump victory in November also get speaking slots on Tuesday. They are Gov. Kim Keynolds of Iowa and Florida Lt. Gov. Jeanette Nunez.

Original post:

Donald Trump Jr. warns of silenced majority as RNC speakers say freedom, safety on the line in November - Fox News

Don Jr. and Kimberly Guilfoyle Said It All Very Loud and Very Fast So All of It Must Be True – Esquire

OLIVIER DOULIERYGetty Images

Just for the record, the violent crime rate in America has been in decline for three decades, despite an uptick in homicides this year, and the vast and overwhelming majority of racial-justice protesters who've taken to American streets in the last few months have demonstrated peacefully. Not that you'd know it from the sprawling images of fire and destruction that exploded out of the Republican National Convention on Monday night, an event that was billed in the lead-up as a more optimistic and positive exhibition than the Democratic counterpart last week. The attempt to paint Joe Bidena fairly conservative Democrat on policing issuesas a Trojan Horse for Marxist anarchist revolution who will abolish the police and suburbs left little room for positive vibes.

The event was buoyant on one score: here, the Covid-19 pandemic was under control, apparently because the president took it seriously(!) when no one else did. This was kaleidoscopic propaganda: the president repeatedly and consistently downplayed the threat, said the coronavirus would simply go away, praised China's initial response, and dismissed Democrats and the media as alarmists for heeding the warnings of public-health experts. His signature policy response"banning" travel from Chinadid not actually ban travel for tens of thousands of people, and besides, the virus was actually coming over from Europe. The United States now has nearly a quarter of the world's cases and nearly 22 percent of the deaths spread across just over four percent of the world's population. But that was another element of the positivity here: the 175,000 Americans who have died scarcely merited a mention.

OLIVIER DOULIERYGetty Images

The outing was nearly as bizarre as it was counterfactual. Elsewhere in the festivities, it was suggested that under a President Biden, "we'd be lucky if we could see any doctor," which is certainly a novel claim. There were a couple of semi-normal speakers, like Tim Scott and Nikki Haley, who demonstrated what the party might look like if it backed nearly all Trump's policies but could keep its freak flag at half-mast in public. But mostly, it was a reminder that one thing we'll likely look back on and marvel at about this era is the towering mediocrity of many of the people elevated to the highest echelons of public life. High up on that list are the various Trumpian spawn and their spouses, all of whom seem to be marauding the country making the case for both the big guy's re-election and anti-nepotism policies.

There doesn't seem to be anyone in this orbit who will point out when something is going on that is insane, which may be how this pre-taped speech from Kimberly Guilfoyle, significant other to Donald Trump, Jr. and well-compensated Trump campaign surrogate, made it on air.

This content is imported from Twitter. You may be able to find the same content in another format, or you may be able to find more information, at their web site.

Jesus, what a time to be alive. Though I do think we can all agree that "human sex drug traffickers" should not be allowed to cross our borders, even if that is a great band name. Guilfoyle cycled through the new greatest hits collection, echoing the other speakers in warning that the country is turning into a violent apocalyptic burning wastelandbut also it's the best country in the world and Democrats only talk about its flawsand encouraging viewers to re-elect the incumbent president who is overseeing this surge in firey End Times riot-looting, but also making everything great. She did so in a way that was somehow uniquely unnerving, her volume rising all the time until it hit a genuinely frightening crescendo. All the while, she was both irate and cheerful, a neat visual summation of this movement's relationship to the reactionary grievance that is its animating force. The anger, in the end, feels good.

But Guilfoyle's was not to be the only bizarro performance from the extended Trump clan. Her boyfriend, Donald Trump, Jr., emerged later to make the case for my fatherand for the idea that there was quite a scene in the green room backstage. If Guilfoyle was energized, Junior brought the weeping eyes and fast-lane delivery and jerky hand movements as he warned the audience that they would be CANCELLED by the Democrats.

This content is imported from Twitter. You may be able to find the same content in another format, or you may be able to find more information, at their web site.

This is indeed another novel attack: that Democrats oppose "church, work, and school," presumably because they share public-health experts' concerns about people gathering indoors for long periods of time when the virus is raging out of control. Instead, they support "rioting, looting, and vandalism," a claim made throughout last night's proceedings that, despite running against what Joe Biden has actually said on the topic, does sound scary. So does the notion Biden intends to defund the police, even though, much to the chagrin of the actual left, he wants to boost police funding. So does the notion that he wants to abolish the suburbs, which the president has basically admitted is a crude attempt to fear-monger his way towards clawing back some support among suburban whites.

Meanwhile, you can't help but feel Junior could liberate himself from this whole sad mess if he'd just go Kendall Roy for a minute. When he did his best impression of the Talking Heads staging an infomercial"Imagine the life you want to have, one with a great job, a beautiful home, a perfect family."it was hard not to sense his pain.

Jearld Johnson

Treat yourself to 85+ years of history-making journalism.

In all, the night was another showcase of the now bedrock Republican belief that if you say something loud enough and often enough that enough people come to believe it, it might as well be true. (In Guilfoyle's case, this was quite literal.) It was a kind of quantum vision of the country, where it is both teetering over the edge into the chaotic abyss and the greatest it's ever been, and the guy in charge is only responsible for the good parts. His opponent, who currently exercises no actual power in any jurisdiction, is nonetheless responsible for the apocalyptic destruction. ("Democrat" cities are a hellscape, especially if you haven't been to one recently.) That's how the incumbent is now running on a platform to restore "law and order" to a country he's already in charge of.

It's a fool's errand to try to speculate whether it will work, but there's plenty of evidence that human beings are unable to accurately process the threat of crime in their personal lives. They hugely overrate it. Republicans have basically abandoned their former talk of how the protests following George Floyd's killing reflected legitimate grievances, and that those people causing property damage were just a minority giving everyone else a bad name. Now, just as the president almost never talks about immigrants except for violent gang members, you'll rarely hear talk in these precincts about peaceful protesters. Everyone's a violent anarchist Marxist now, coming to destroy your suburb. The president and his lackeys will once again test the limits of what people will choose to believe.

This content is created and maintained by a third party, and imported onto this page to help users provide their email addresses. You may be able to find more information about this and similar content at piano.io

Visit link:

Don Jr. and Kimberly Guilfoyle Said It All Very Loud and Very Fast So All of It Must Be True - Esquire

Donald Trump Jr. promises law, order and ‘a light at the end of the tunnel’ – Yahoo News

Donald Trump Jr. said that economic recovery is within arms reach during his Monday evening address at the first night of the Republican National Convention.

In his remarks, Trump Jr. touted the administrations economic accomplishmentsa list of greatest hits that President Trumps surrogates have been rattling off for at least a year. He noted that, before the coronavirus pandemic hit the United States, the country had seen record-low unemployment for Black and Hispanic Americans. He also touted the GOPs 2017 tax cut.

All of that was scrambled, Trump Jr. said, courtesy of the Chinese Communist Party and the virus that led to widespread lockdowns across the country.

Trump Jr. also spoke of the death of George Floyd, who was killed by Minneapolis police in May, while also insisting that the GOP is the party of law and order.

We must put an end to racism, and we must ensure that any police officer who abuses their power is held accountable. What happened to George Floyd is a disgrace. And if you know a police officer, you know they agree with that too, he said.

He went on: Everything starts with safety and security. You cant have anything else without it. You cant focus on building a better future for your children without the peace of mind that they can study safely in their classrooms, play safely in their neighborhoods and sleep safely in their beds.

The presidents eldest son also defended the administrations response to the coronavirus pandemic. Over 170,000 Americans have been killed so far by the virus, and the presidents response has been widely criticized by doctors, lawmakers and other experts.

Fortunately, as the virus began to spread, the president acted quickly and ensured ventilators got to hospitals that needed them most, said Trump Jr., the first of the Trump children to formally address the RNC.

He delivered PPE to our brave frontline workers. And he rallied the mighty American private sector to tackle this new challenge, he said. There is more work to do, but there is light at the end of the tunnel.

Story continues

Trump Jr. often uses his huge online platform to taunt Democrats while hosting the semifrequent live show Triggered, named for his book of the same title, to his nearly 5 million Twitter followers.

In May, Trump Jr. baselessly suggested via Instagram that Democratic nominee Joe Biden was a pedophile. Met with indignation, he attempted to characterize his post as a joke.

He continued those slights Monday night.

Joe Biden is basically the Loch Ness monster of the swamp. For the past half-century, hes been lurking around in there. He sticks his head up every now and then to run for president, then he disappears and doesnt do much in between, said Trump Jr.

He continued: Joe Biden and the radical left are also now coming for our freedom of speech and want to bully us into submission.If they get their way, it will no longer be the silent majority, it will be the silenced majority.

In June, Trump Jr. temporarily lost access to his Twitter account for circulating a post that falsely claimed that lupus drug hydroxychloroquine could cure COVID-19. He has frequently claimed that the social media site is biased against conservatives.

Trump Jr. has also publicly toyed with the idea of running for elected office.

In recent years, he has become a main conduit between mainstream GOP and the fringe right. And in his speech Monday, he painted an optimistic message of what four more years of his father would look like, as opposed to what he described as the horrors of Democratic government.

Imagine the life you want to have one with a great job, a beautiful home, and a perfect family. You can have it. Imagine the country you want to live in one with true equality of opportunity, where hard work pays off and justice is served with compassion and without partiality. You can have it, he said.

Imagine a world where the evils of communism and radical Islamic terrorism are not given a chance to spread, where heroes are celebrated and the good guys win. You can have it.

Trump Jr. frequently collaborates with his girlfriend, ex-Fox News host Kimberly Guilfoyle, for campaign activities.

Guilfoyles mother was born in Puerto Rico, and her father emigrated from Ireland in the 1950s.

She used her platform Monday evening to stress the importance of the immigrant experience to the GOP.

My mother, Mercedes, was a special education teacher from Aguadilla, Puerto Rico. My father, also an immigrant, came to this nation in pursuit of the American dream. Now, I consider it my duty to fight to protect that dream, said Guilfoyle, who spoke earlier in the evening.

She added: Manifest and be the change in this country that you dream, that you hope, that you believe in. Stand for an American president who is fearless, who believes in you, and who loves this country and will fight for her!

One of Trumps very first campaign promises was to construct a wall along the U.S.-Mexico border to keep out, in the presidents words, drug dealers, criminals and rapists. The president also reportedly griped in 2018 about immigrants from predominantly nonwhite countries coming to the United States.

Guilfoyle struck similar tones, saying that some immigrants from across the border would commit heinous crimes.

Rioters must not be allowed to destroy our cities. Human, sex, drug traffickers should not be allowed to cross our border, she said.

Guilfoyle, an attorney who was married to Gavin Newsom before he became governor of California, left her job at Fox News in 2018 to help assist the Trump reelection effort. She has since pivoted to public-facing roles in Trumps reelection PAC and his campaign, and she warned Monday that Democrats would dismantle and destroy American law enforcement.

Biden, Harris and their socialist comrades will fundamentally change this nation. They want open borders, closed schools, dangerous amnesty and will selfishly send your jobs back to China while they get richer, Guilfoyle said,

They will defund, dismantle and destroy Americas law enforcement... When you are in trouble, and need 911, dont count on the Democrats.

_____

Read more from Yahoo News:

Here is the original post:

Donald Trump Jr. promises law, order and 'a light at the end of the tunnel' - Yahoo News

Barack Obama slams the president at the DNC: ‘Donald Trump hasn’t grown into the job because he can’t’ – CNBC

WASHINGTON Former President Barack Obama delivered a searing critique of his successor, President Donald Trump, during his keynote address Wednesday night at the virtual Democratic National Convention.

Obama spoke live from Philadelphia, where he described why he thinks his former vice president, Joe Biden, is the right man for the White House.

Asked to respond to excerpts of Obama's criticism Wednesday, Trump told reporters, "President Obama did not do a good job. ... The reason I'm here is because of President Obama and Joe Biden. Because if they did a good job, I wouldn't be here."

Below are Obama's full remarks:

"Good evening, everybody. As you've seen by now, this isn't a normal convention. It's not a normal time. So tonight, I want to talk as plainly as I can about the stakes in this election. Because what we do these next 76 days will echo through generations to come.

"I'm in Philadelphia, where our Constitution was drafted and signed. It wasn't a perfect document. It allowed for the inhumanity of slavery and failed to guarantee women and even men who didn't own property the right to participate in the political process. But embedded in this document was a North Star that would guide future generations; a system of representative government a democracy through which we could better realize our highest ideals. Through civil war and bitter struggles, we improved this Constitution to include the voices of those who'd once been left out. And gradually, we made this country more just, more equal, and more free.

"The one Constitutional office elected by all of the people is the presidency. So at minimum, we should expect a president to feel a sense of responsibility for the safety and welfare of all 330 million of us regardless of what we look like, how we worship, who we love, how much money we have or who we voted for.

"But we should also expect a president to be the custodian of this democracy. We should expect that regardless of ego, ambition, or political beliefs, the president will preserve, protect, and defend the freedoms and ideals that so many Americans marched for and went to jail for; fought for and died for.

"I have sat in the Oval Office with both of the men who are running for president. I never expected that my successor would embrace my vision or continue my policies. I did hope, for the sake of our country, that Donald Trump might show some interest in taking the job seriously; that he might come to feel the weight of the office and discover some reverence for the democracy that had been placed in his care.

"But he never did. For close to four years now, he's shown no interest in putting in the work; no interest in finding common ground; no interest in using the awesome power of his office to help anyone but himself and his friends; no interest in treating the presidency as anything but one more reality show that he can use to get the attention he craves.

"Donald Trump hasn't grown into the job because he can't. And the consequences of that failure are severe. 170,000 Americans dead. Millions of jobs gone while those at the top take in more than ever. Our worst impulses unleashed, our proud reputation around the world badly diminished, and our democratic institutions threatened like never before.

"Now, I know that in times as polarized as these, most of you have already made up your mind. But maybe you're still not sure which candidate you'll vote for or whether you'll vote at all. Maybe you're tired of the direction we're headed, but you can't see a better path yet, or you just don't know enough about the person who wants to lead us there.

"So let me tell you about my friend Joe Biden.

"Twelve years ago, when I began my search for a vice president, I didn't know I'd end up finding a brother. Joe and I came from different places and different generations. But what I quickly came to admire about him is his resilience, born of too much struggle; his empathy, born of too much grief. Joe's a man who learned early on to treat every person he meets with respect and dignity, living by the words his parents taught him: "No one's better than you, Joe, but you're better than nobody."

"That empathy, that decency, the belief that everybody counts that's who Joe is.

"When he talks with someone who's lost her job, Joe remembers the night his father sat him down to say that he'd lost his. When Joe listens to a parent who's trying to hold it all together right now, he does it as the single dad who took the train back to Wilmington each and every night so he could tuck his kids into bed. When he meets with military families who've lost their hero, he does it as a kindred spirit; the parent of an American soldier; somebody whose faith has endured the hardest loss there is.

"For eight years, Joe was the last one in the room whenever I faced a big decision. He made me a better president and he's got the character and the experience to make us a better country.

"And in my friend Kamala Harris, he's chosen an ideal partner who's more than prepared for the job; someone who knows what it's like to overcome barriers and who's made a career fighting to help others live out their own American dream.

"Along with the experience needed to get things done, Joe and Kamala have concrete policies that will turn their vision of a better, fairer, stronger country into reality.

"They'll get this pandemic under control, like Joe did when he helped me manage H1N1 and prevent an Ebola outbreak from reaching our shores. They'll expand health care to more Americans, like Joe and I did 10 years ago when he helped craft the Affordable Care Act and nail down the votes to make it the law. They'll rescue the economy, like Joe helped me do after the Great Recession. I asked him to manage the Recovery Act, which jump-started the longest stretch of job growth in history.

"And he sees this moment now not as a chance to get back to where we were, but to make long-overdue changes so that our economy actually makes life a little easier for everybody whether it's the waitress trying to raise a kid on her own, or the shift worker always on the edge of getting laid off, or the student figuring out how to pay for next semester's classes.

"Joe and Kamala will restore our standing in the world and as we've learned from this pandemic, that matters. Joe knows the world, and the world knows him. He knows that our true strength comes from setting an example the world wants to follow. A nation that stands with democracy, not dictators. A nation that can inspire and mobilize others to overcome threats like climate change, terrorism, poverty, and disease.

"But more than anything, what I know about Joe and Kamala is that they actually care about every American. And they care deeply about this democracy.

"They believe that in a democracy, the right to vote is sacred, and we should be making it easier for people to cast their ballot, not harder.They believe that no one including the president is above the law, and that no public official including the president should use their office to enrich themselves or their supporters.

"They understand that in this democracy, the commander-in-chief doesn't use the men and women of our military, who are willing to risk everything to protect our nation, as political props to deploy against peaceful protesters on our own soil. They understand that political opponents aren't "un-American" just because they disagree with you; that a free press isn't the 'enemy' but the way we hold officials accountable; that our ability to work together to solve big problems like a pandemic depends on a fidelity to facts and science and logic and not just making stuff up.

"None of this should be controversial. These shouldn't be Republican principles or Democratic principles. They are American principles. But at this moment, this president and those who enable him, have shown they don't believe in these things.

"Tonight, I am asking you to believe in Joe and Kamala's ability to lead this country out of these dark times and build it back better. But here's the thing: No single American can fix this country alone. Not even a president. Democracy was never meant to be transactional you give me your vote; I make everything better. It requires an active and informed citizenry. So I am also asking you to believe in your own ability to embrace your own responsibility as citizens to make sure that the basic tenets of our democracy endure.

"Because that's what at stake right now. Our democracy.

"Look, I understand why a lot of Americans are down on government. The way the rules have been set up and abused in Congress make it easier for special interests to stop progress than to make progress. Believe me, I know. I understand why a White factory worker who's seen his wages cut or his job shipped overseas might feel like the government no longer looks out for him, and why a Black mom might feel like it never looked out for her at all. I understand why a new immigrant might look around this country and wonder whether there's still a place for him here; why a young person might look at politics right now, the circus of it all, the meanness and the lies and conspiracy theories and think, what's the point?

"Well, here's the point: this president and those in power those who benefit from keeping things the way they are they are counting on your cynicism. They know they can't win you over with their policies. So they're hoping to make it as hard as possible for you to vote, and to convince you that your vote doesn't matter. That's how they win. That's how they get to keep making decisions that affect your life, and the lives of the people you love. That's how the economy will keep getting skewed to the wealthy and well-connected, how our health systems will let more people fall through the cracks. That's how a democracy withers, until it's no democracy at all.

"And we cannot let that happen. Do not let them take away your power. Do not let them take away your democracy. Make a plan right now for how you're going to get involved and vote. Do it as early as you can and tell your family and friends how they can vote too. Do what Americans have done for over two centuries when faced with even tougher times than this all those quiet heroes who found the courage to keep marching, keep pushing in the face of hardship and injustice.

"Last month, we lost a giant of American democracy in John Lewis. Some years ago, I sat down with John and the few remaining leaders of the early civil rights movement. One of them told me he never imagined he'd walk into the White House and see a president who looked like his grandson. Then he told me that he'd looked it up, and it turned out that on the very day that I was born, he was marching into a jail cell, trying to end Jim Crow segregation in the South.

"What we do echoes through the generations.

"Whatever our backgrounds, we're all the children of Americans who fought the good fight. Great grandparents working in firetraps and sweatshops without rights or representation. Farmers losing their dreams to dust. Irish and Italians and Asians and Latinos told to go back where you came from. Jews and Catholics, Muslims and Sikhs, made to feel suspect for the way they worshipped. Black Americans chained and whipped and hanged. Spit on for trying to sit at lunch counters. Beaten for trying to vote.

"If anyone had a right to believe that this democracy did not work, and could not work, it was those Americans. Our ancestors. They were on the receiving end of a democracy that had fallen short all their lives. They knew how far the daily reality of America strayed from the myth. And yet, instead of giving up, they joined together and said somehow, some way, we are going to make this work. We are going to bring those words, in our founding documents, to life.

"I've seen that same spirit rising these past few years. Folks of every age and background who packed city centers and airports and rural roads so that families wouldn't be separated. So that another classroom wouldn't get shot up. So that our kids won't grow up on an uninhabitable planet. Americans of all races joining together to declare, in the face of injustice and brutality at the hands of the state, that Black lives matter, no more, but no less, so that no child in this country feels the continuing sting of racism.

"To the young people who led us this summer, telling us we need to be better in so many ways, you are this country's dreams fulfilled. Earlier generations had to be persuaded that everyone has equal worth. For you, it's a given a conviction. And what I want you to know is that for all its messiness and frustrations, your system of self-government can be harnessed to help you realize those convictions.

"You can give our democracy new meaning. You can take it to a better place. You're the missing ingredient the ones who will decide whether or not America becomes the country that fully lives up to its creed.

"That work will continue long after this election. But any chance of success depends entirely on the outcome of this election. This administration has shown it will tear our democracy down if that's what it takes for them to win. So we have to get busy building it up by pouring all our efforts into these 76 days, and by voting like never before for Joe and Kamala, and candidates up and down the ticket, so that we leave no doubt about what this country we love stands for today and for all our days to come.

"Stay safe. God bless."

The rest is here:

Barack Obama slams the president at the DNC: 'Donald Trump hasn't grown into the job because he can't' - CNBC

Elections 2020: will Donald Trump leave the White House if he loses? – AS English

US President Donald Trump will go head to head with Democratic nominee Joe Biden in the 3 November presidential elections with various polls currently giving the former vice president to Barack Obama a lead of up to seven points over the current occupier of the White House. Trump is facing widespread criticism over his administrations handling of the coronavirus pandemic as well as spiraling unemployment as a result of the Covid-19 crisis and amid an impasse in the Senate over a fresh stimulus package to boost an ailing economy. Still, he remains bullish about winning the election and securing a second term in the Oval Office. But the question many people are asking is: will he accept the results of the election if they do not go the way he hopes?

Trump has repeatedly attacked mail-in voting, claiming that the results of the election will be fraudulent despite experts on the subject insisting that there is no evidence supporting the presidents theory. Such is Trumps dislike of mail-in voting that his re-election campaign has made moves to prevent ballot drop boxes being used in the key battleground state of Pennsylvania, which the president won by less than a single percentage point in 2016.

The only way were going to lose this election is if the election is rigged, Trump told a rally in Oshkosh, Wisconsin on Monday.

The White House press secretary, Kayleigh McEnany, echoed Trumps concerns during a briefing on Wednesday: He believes that voter fraud is real, in line with what we see all across the country, particularly with mail-in ballots, which are prone to fraud.

The President has always said hell see what happens and make a determination in the aftermath. Its the same thing he said last November. He wants a free election, a fair election, and he wants confidence in the results of the election, particularly when you have states like Nevada doing mass mail-out voting to their voting rolls. And when they tried this in the primary, it was a massive failure. Ballots were piled up in trash cans. Ballots were pinned to apartment dartboards. And with that being the system, the President wants to take a hard look at this and make sure that these are fair election results and not subject to fraud, McEnany added when asked if Trump will accept the results of the election.

The president, however, made no such promises during an interview with Fox News Sunday. No. I have to see. Look you - I have to see. No, Im not going to just say yes. Im not going to say no. And I didnt last time, either. It was a significant change of tack from comments the president made in June. "Certainly if I dont win, I dont win. I mean, you know, go on and do other things, he told the same broadcaster.

If Biden is victorious, Trumps presidential term will officially come to an end on January 20, 2021, with the former vice president assuming office the following day at noon. However, observers have speculated that the president will use whatever means he can to hold on to power.

I dont think he plans to leave the White House, House Majority Whip Jim Clyburn told CNN. He doesnt plan to have fair and unfettered elections. I believe that he plans to install himself in some kind of emergency way to continue to hold onto office.

Biden suggested in an interview on the Daily Show that the military would be called in to remove Trump if it came to it. I promise you, I'm absolutely convinced, they will escort him from the White House in a dispatch.

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, who would theoretically be the beneficiary of a protracted legal bid on Trumps part to contest the results of the elections, told MSNBC recently: There is a process. It has nothing to do with if the certain occupant of the White House doesnt feel like moving and has to be fumigated out of there because the presidency is the presidency.

Read the original:

Elections 2020: will Donald Trump leave the White House if he loses? - AS English

Donald Trump’s five revealing words – CNN

He said it in an interview with Jonathan Swan, of Axios, who asked how Trump could argue that the Covid-19 pandemic was "under control" since "1,000 Americans are dying a day." Trump responded, "They are dying, that's true. And you have it is what it is. But that doesn't mean we aren't doing everything we can. It's under control as much as you can control it. This is a horrible plague that beset us."

But not Trump. In a long career -- in real estate, reality TV and the White House -- Trump has reached often for exaggeration and falsehoods to convince people it is what it isn't.

At another point in the Axios interview, more in character, he praised his administration for doing a "great job" on Covid.

The mystery of Dr. Birx

At key moments, Dr. Deborah Birx has been the face of the White House's effort to fight the coronavirus. Widely respected for her years of work on HIV/AIDS, Birx has lately been the target of criticism from some medical experts and House Speaker Nancy Pelosi. She even drew fire from President Trump, after she acknowledged the "extraordinarily widespread" nature of the pandemic in the US. A fellow expert on infectious disease, Dr. Kent Sepkowitz, wrote, "All of her work shows Birx to be a sophisticated physician-scientist with genuine interest in the health of vulnerable and underserved populations."

But he argued that as response coordinator for the White House Coronavirus Task Force, Birx has made "a real hash out of the entire effort, with a series of poor decisions -- changing hospital data reporting protocols for coronavirus patients to cut out the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and report directly to Health and Human Services, painting a rosy picture of the problem and of the President's engagement and still developing no national plan for testing, tracking, opening schools and businesses."

What's killing us

One of the biggest Covid-related questions facing Americans right now is whether to send children back to school. Biologist Erin Bromage said his are going back but acknowledged that the decision is made easier by the fact they attend private school in an area where community transmission of the disease is low.

Veep search

There's one thing Joe Biden doesn't lack in his search for a running mate: advice.

For more on the 2020 campaign:

Devastation in Beirut

As white smoke billowed out of a warehouse Tuesday at the port of Beirut, an enormous explosion, captured on video as a gigantic red flash, decimated the area, killing at least 158 people, wounding more than 5,000 and forcing half of the city's population out of their homes. The blast was attributed to a huge cache of ammonium nitrate stored at the port.

"Perhaps the shared anger over this event can bring the Lebanese together to push back against the incompetent and the greedy, the functionaries, politicians, and outside players, who have hijacked their country and created conditions for the Lebanese people's never-ending tragedy; admittedly a monumental task."

Where is Congress?

Democrats and Republicans remained far apart last week on the outline of a new pandemic relief bill. The jobless rate in July, although modestly lower than in June, was 10.2% -- a number slightly higher than the peak of the Great Recession. But there was no agreement in Congress on extending any portion of the $600 a week in extra aid for the unemployed. On Saturday, Trump signed executive actions that could provide additional aid and defer payroll taxes for some workers, but they face serious hurdles.

Among the hardest hit industries is restaurants, John Avlon noted: "Independent restaurant owners face an economic apocalypse." The industry employs "11 million Americans, with an economic impact that is felt up and down the supply chain, from farmers to fishermen," he wrote. Often barely eking out a profit pre-pandemic, restaurants faced closure at the beginning of the crisis, and now, in many cases, are trying to survive on takeout or outdoor dining. Restaurants are backing legislation to create a $120 billion federal grant program.

100 years later ...

August marks the 100th anniversary of the ratification of the 19th Amendment, which gave women the vote and will be celebrated on Women's Equality Day, August 26.

Today it's viewed widely as the long-delayed but almost inevitable political empowerment of more than half the population. So, it's surprising to read, as Nicole Hemmer recounted, that more than a few of the activists opposing suffrage were women.

"The women who opposed women's right to vote have often been left out of the story of suffrage," Hemmer wrote. "Talk of women's interests, like the interest of other marginalized groups, often trades in flat stereotypes, treating all members of the group as though they think, and vote, the same. But as the anti-suffragist women show, women have been shrewd political actors, understanding -- and protecting -- their sources of power in unexpected ways."

Hemmer sees echoes of the anti-suffrage women in the activists, led by Phyllis Schlafly, who fought off the Equal Rights Amendment in the 1970s, a story told in the recent FX series, "Mrs. America."

Don't miss:

AND...

Michelle Obama and Melinda Gates

In a piece for CNN Opinion, Michelle Obama and Melinda Gates expressed concern about students like Fortunate Ayomirwoth, who lives in a suburb of Kampala, Uganda. Her school has been closed since the pandemic erupted, they wrote. While Fortunate does chores and cares for four younger siblings, she hopes "there will be enough food to eat. Since her mother lost her job, money has been tight -- and for Fortunate, her window of opportunity feels like it, too, is getting tighter."

"We know from past crises, like the 2014 Ebola outbreak, that adolescent girls in low and middle-income countries are particularly at risk of being overlooked and left behind," noted Obama and Gates. "During a crisis like this one, adolescent girls face a heightened threat of physical and sexual violence, early and forced marriage, and unintended pregnancy on top of sustained economic hardship."

Read more here:

Donald Trump's five revealing words - CNN

Donald Trump is no Harry Truman, but a comeback is on the cards – The Guardian

A month ago it looked like curtains for Donald Trump. The number of Covid-19 cases was surging across the US. Consumers were taking the decision to self-isolate and there were fears of a new wave of job losses as people stayed at home rather than going out to eat or shop.

Today the outlook for Trump, while not exactly rosy, is better than it was and good enough to prompt debate about whether the president could pull off a surprise to match that of Harry Truman in 1948 an against the odds victory against which all comebacks are gauged.

Trump is no Truman and has the added disadvantage of seeking re-election during a global pandemic that is proving a lot more stubborn than he blithely assumed six months ago. The damage wrought to the economy on which Trump was depending since then means it is hard to see why anybody who didnt vote for him in 2016 would do so in 2020. Joe Biden leads in all the key swing states.

That said, the polls have started to tighten a bit and are likely to close still further over the coming weeks, because Trump has three things going for him.

The first is that the number of new Covid-19 cases appears to have peaked, with definite signs of progress in some of the bigger states such as Florida, Texas and California. What happens to the virus over the coming months will have a material impact on the state of the economy.

The second somewhat ironically is that activity in China has bounced back more rapidly than expected, and this is keeping global stock markets buoyant. Here, Trump is getting the best of both worlds: he piggybacks on Chinese growth while at the same time getting tough with Beijing over trade and human rights something that plays well with voters.

Finally, he has the benefit of being the incumbent, which allows him to pull off stunts like the signing of executive orders to provide fresh support to the unemployed. Under the separation of powers, Congress holds the purse strings in the US so Trumps initiative is unlikely to amount to much, but thats not the point. This is all about who gets blamed for the impasse between Republicans and Democrats over the next phase of stimulus.

To win, Trump needs nothing to go wrong and everything to go right in the coming months: no surges in Covid-19, no setbacks to the economy, no share price crashes on Wall Street. It is a tall order but Biden should take nothing for granted.

The weather is hot. People are desperate to have a good time after being cooped up for months at home. Best of all, the government is making eating out cheaper by picking up part of the bill. Britons love a bargain and so it is no surprise that Rishi Sunaks eat out to help out is proving a hit.

What has come as a shock, perhaps even to the chancellor, is just how popular the scheme has been. The fact that more than 70,000 outlets from fast food joints to Michelin starred restaurants have signed up gives the initiative critical mass. Moreover, the subsidy of up to 10 per person is big enough to tempt people even against a backdrop of a modest rise in the number of Covid-19 cases.

The Treasury will be especially pleased that the data from the retail analysts Springboard showed that there was a knock-on benefit for retailers and that the demand for the scheme was stronger in smaller market towns than in bigger regional cities. With the furlough scheme being phased out, the timing could hardly have been better. It has distracted attention from the steady stream of redundancy announcements.

Like the good weather, eat out to help out will be short-lived and the hospitality sector awaits the autumn with trepidation. But if only a fraction of the people who have been tempted to head out for a bowl of pasta or a curry get a renewed appetite for going out again Sunak will consider it 500m well spent.

Continue reading here:

Donald Trump is no Harry Truman, but a comeback is on the cards - The Guardian