ReportWire

Tag: Donald Trump

  • Michigan takeaways: Presidential primaries show warning signs for Trump and Biden

    Michigan takeaways: Presidential primaries show warning signs for Trump and Biden

    LANSING, Mich.Joe Biden and Donald Trump easily won their party’s primaries in Michigan, but Tuesday’s results showed that both candidates have cause for concern in their bid to win the swing state in November.

    An “uncommitted” vote in Michigan’s Democratic primary was the first indication of how backlash over President Biden’s handling of the Israel-Hamas war in Gaza might impact his reelection campaign. Trump won his primary by a large margin, but support for rival Nikki Haley once again showed that some Republican voters may have misgivings about giving the former president another four years in the general election.

    Here are some takeaways from Michigan:

    Biden, Trump each move closer to party’s nomination

    Michigan was the last major primary state before Super Tuesday, and both sides were watching closely for implications for the November general election in one of the few genuine swing states left in the country.

    Biden has now cruised to victories over lesser known candidates in South Carolina, Nevada and New Hampshire, which he won in a write-in campaign. Tuesday’s results show that his standing is still strong in Michigan, which Biden returned to the Democratic column in 2020.

    Trump has swept all five of the early state contests, including South Carolina, the home state of rival Haley. He now heads into Super Tuesday, when 15 states and one territory hold Republican nominating contests, as the overwhelming favorite to lock up the Republican nomination.

    Michigan was one of three so-called blue wall states, including Wisconsin and Pennsylvania, that Trump won in 2016. He predicted a big win beforehand.

    Just 16 of Michigan’s 55 Republican presidential delegates will be determined by the primary results, while the remaining delegates will be allocated during a March 2 convention. Trump’s anticipated dominance at the state convention, where grassroots activists will play a key role, will decide the allocation of the remaining 39 GOP delegates.

    Some Democrats express anger over Gaza with ‘uncommitted’ vote

    Michigan has become the focal point of Democratic frustration regarding the White House’s actions in the Israel-Hamas conflict. It has the largest concentration of Arab Americans in the nation.

    That anger came through loud and clear on Tuesday as some voters marked “uncommitted” on their ballot in the Democratic primary. Biden still dominated the primary, but the result could be a concern in a state he won by less than 3% in 2020 and likely can’t afford to lose this year.

    Organizers of the “uncommitted” movement had purposely kept expectations low, having only seriously begun their push a few weeks ago. The “Listen to Michigan” campaign that organized the push said they were hoping for 10,000 votes, pointing to Trump’s win of less than 11,000 votes in 2016 to show the significance of that number.

    When Barack Obama ran for reelection in 2012, the last time a Democratic presidential incumbent sought re-election, the “uncommitted” option received close to 21,000 votes — or 11 percentage points.

    The “uncommitted” vote totals would need to be between 20 and 30 percentage points for Democrats to worry about their impact in November, said Richard Czuba, a pollster who has long tracked Michigan politics.

    “Twenty percent gets my attention. If it rises to 25%, that gets a lot more attention and if it rises above 30%, I think that’s a signal that Joe Biden has pretty substantial issues in his base,” said Czuba.

    Much of the “uncommitted” vote was expected to come from the east side of the state, in communities such as Dearborn and Hamtramck, where Arab Americans represent close to half of the population. Biden won Dearborn by a roughly 3-to-1 advantage in 2020 and Hamtramck by a 5 to 1 margin.

    Some Republicans still oppose Trump

    Despite Trump’s clear victory in Michigan, Haley still saw significant support from the swing state’s Republicans.

    Some of her best results came in Oakland and Kent counties, where Democrats have been gaining ground in recent years, contributing to their recent statewide success. She also performed better in counties where the state’s largest universities are located, Washtenaw and Ingham counties.

    Trump has dominated in primaries with help from his base but his strength among general election voters remains unclear. The former president has appeared in Michigan regularly in the eight years since he became president, while Haley only began stumping in the state over the weekend.

    AP VoteCast reveals that a large portion of Trump’s opposition within the Republican primaries has come from voters who abandoned him before this year.

    All three statewide Republican candidates that Trump endorsed in the 2022 midterms were crushed by Democratic incumbents.

    Copyright 2024 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed without permission.

    Joey Cappelletti, Associated Press

    Source link

  • 2/27: CBS Evening News

    2/27: CBS Evening News

    2/27: CBS Evening News – CBS News


    Watch CBS News



    Ukrainian town under siege pleads for military aid; 5-year-old with brain cancer lives out dream of becoming police officer

    Be the first to know

    Get browser notifications for breaking news, live events, and exclusive reporting.


    Source link

  • CNBC Daily Open: Americans sour on the economy

    CNBC Daily Open: Americans sour on the economy

    US President Joe Biden speaks to employees at the CS Wind America Inc on November 29, 2023 in Pueblo, Colorado. 

    Helen H. Richardson | The Denver Post | Getty Images

    This report is from today’s CNBC Daily Open, our international markets newsletter. CNBC Daily Open brings investors up to speed on everything they need to know, no matter where they are. Like what you see? You can subscribe here.

    What you need to know today 

    Mixed bag on Wall Street
    U.S. stocks
    ended mixed Tuesday as investors prepared for key inflation data due out later this week. The S&P 500 and the Nasdaq Composite closed with small gains, up 0.17% and 0.37%, respectively. The 30-stock Dow fell for a second straight day, off by 0.25%. Bitcoin also extended gains rising above $57,000. 

    Apple kills EV plans
    Apple has cancelled its plan to build electric cars, according to Bloomberg. This signals an end to the company’s secretive effort to compete in the EV space against rival Tesla. Reports of Apple’s ambition first surfaced in 2014 after it recruited automotive engineers and other talent from auto companies. 

    Will South Korean measures work?
    South Korea’s Japan-style measures to boost corporate governance may not work to lift its undervalued stock markets and tackle the so-called “Korea discount.” In its latest attempt, the Financial Services Commission revealed a “Corporate Value-up Program,” aimed at supporting shareholder returns through incentives including tax benefits.

    Honor’s foray into flip phones
    Chinese technology firm Honor will launch a foldable flip phone this year, the company’s CEO George Zhao told CNBC. It will be the firm’s first entry into the vertical-folding style of smartphone as the company looks to push into the premium end of the market in a challenge to tech giants like Samsung and Apple.

    [Pro] Alibaba’s compelling appeal
    Despite the recent slump in Alibaba’s shares, the Chinese e-commerce giant remains on the radar of fund managers. “Alibaba is our third biggest stock [position] now. Why? The valuation is absolutely compelling,” said Andrew Lapping, Ranmore’s chief investment officer.

    The bottom line

    Americans’ attitudes about the economy have soured.

    Consumer confidence fell to 106.7 in February, said the Conference Board, down from a revised 110.9 in January. This comes after a three-month streak of improving mood.

    The index measuring short-term expectations for income, business and the job market fell to 79.8 from 81.5 in January. A reading under 80 often signals an upcoming recession.

    While Americans were less worried about food and gas prices, there were rising concerns over jobs and the upcoming presidential elections.

    “The decline in consumer confidence in February interrupted a three-month rise, reflecting persistent uncertainty about the US economy,” said Dana Peterson, chief economist at The Conference Board. 

    “While overall inflation remained the main preoccupation of consumers, they are now a bit less concerned about food and gas prices, which have eased in recent months. But they are more concerned about the labor market situation and the US political environment.”

    The drop in consumer confidence was broad based, affecting most income groups, as well as among people under 35 years old and those aged 55 and over, according to Peterson.

    The survey findings reveal that despite data showing a strong labor market and a surprisingly resilient economy, public perception on the economy proves to be a challenge ahead of high-stakes elections this year.

    This signals troubling signs for President Joe Biden, who has been trying to tout his administration’s economic accomplishments ahead of a likely rematch against Republican nominee Donald Trump in November.

    Source link

  • Hunter Biden’s years of personal grief and public missteps are focus of House impeachment probe

    Hunter Biden’s years of personal grief and public missteps are focus of House impeachment probe

    WASHINGTON – As his father stood in the Rose Garden at the White House in the fall of 2015 and announced he would not run for president, Hunter Biden was facing his own crossroads.

    It was a deeply emotional and traumatic time for Joe Biden and his close-knit family, still reeling from the death of his oldest son, Beau, that spring, as Donald Trump was making his unexpected entry into U.S. presidential politics.

    In deciding to forgo a White House run, then-Vice President Biden was preparing to enter private life for the first time in his long political career, potentially teaching or launching a policy center. Hunter, who had recently agreed to a lucrative position on the board of Ukrainian energy firm Burisma, was working to stay sober, mend his marriage and rebuild from devastating grief.

    “As horrible as I feel, I have a feeling of real purpose,” he said after his brother’s funeral.

    It would not last for long. Hunter Biden descended quickly into a Christmas-time relapse in his battle with addiction, his father watched Democrats hand over the White House to Trump after the 2016 election and the family that had built a political legacy in Washington drifted uneasily to an uncertain new chapter.

    This fragile period — playing out over several years of very public missteps and private misfortunes — in the business, political and personal life of Hunter Biden and his family is the focus of the U.S. House’s long-running, Republican-led Biden impeachment inquiry.

    Hunter Biden is expected Wednesday to appear behind closed doors for a private deposition with the House committees leading the probe, apparently eager to fight back against allegations of influence peddling of the family “brand” in his business dealings.

    It’s a high-profile moment for the president’s son, but also for the impeachment inquiry itself, which has found scant direct evidence of wrongdoing by the president despite months of probing. Even some Republican lawmakers are backing away from impeaching Joe Biden.

    This account of Hunter Biden and his family during this period is drawn from publicly available material, including transcripts of congressional hearing interviews and his memoir — a page-turning account of a family in turmoil and the grip of drug addiction.

    At times, it all reads like a movie — a camera crew has documented some of Hunter Biden’s visits to Capitol Hill. His lawyer and friend, the Hollywood attorney Kevin Morris, testified in his interview with the House committees that the footage is being made for legal purposes, and any commercial movie-making has not been decided.

    “When I first met Hunter, he was emerging from the lowest point in his life,” Morris testified last month, detailing some $5 million in loans he has made since their meeting in 2019 to help pay rent, a car loan, security and other needs for the client he now considers a brother.

    A Yale-educated lawyer, Hunter never expected to practice high-powered corporate law. He had met his first wife in college at a Jesuit volunteer program, and only after facing down $160,000 in student loans, a mortgage and their growing young family did he realize, “I had to make money.”

    But when his father joined the Obama presidential ticket in 2008, Hunter Biden was forced to abruptly change course, dropping his firm’s lobbying clients over political concerns and launching a consulting firm.

    “My world was upended,” he wrote in his memoir. “I had to find new work.”

    In 2014, Hunter Biden received an enticing offer to serve on the board of Burisma, the Ukrainian energy firm, that offered a steady check at a time when his work was slipping as he helped care for Beau. It involved global travel — one board meeting was in Norway, another in Monte Carlo.

    “Did I make a mistake by taking a seat on the board of Ukrainian gas company? No.” he writes in his memoir. “Would I do it again? No.”

    Burisma would become a central counter-argument to Trump’s first impeachment in 2019 after Trump disclosed that summer he had asked for “a favor” during a phone call with the new Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy.

    House Democrats impeached Trump after showing his administration had withheld U.S.-approved military aid to Ukraine, which was needed at the time to counter Russian aggression, all while pressuring Zelenskyy to dig up dirt on Joe Biden, a political rival in the 2020 election. Trump was acquitted by the Senate.

    At the time, Trump’s team led by attorney Rudy Giuliani floated a counter theory that it was Joe Biden who was corrupted by actions he took, including the firing of a Ukrainian prosecutor, allegedly to favor his son’s work on the Burisma board.

    Those claims, which became central to the House GOP’s decision to investigate the Bidens, unraveled largely because the Obama administration and other Western countries made no secret of wanting the prosecutor fired as part of an effort to clean up corruption in Ukraine.

    The Burisma claims were further upended this month with the arrest of Alexander Smirnov, an FBI informant who had claimed executives associated with Burisma paid $5 million each to Joe and Hunter Biden during that period. Federal prosecutors say Smirnov’s allegation was a lie.

    The charges against Smirnov were filed by Justice Department special counsel David Weiss, who has separately charged Hunter Biden with firearm and tax violations.

    While Hunter Biden’s five years at Burisma once figured prominently in the House investigation, the Republicans have veered to other aspects of his business career, interviewing a half-dozen associates including the president’s brother, Jim Biden, for potential links to Joe Biden.

    In the most explicit testimony, Tony Bobulinski, a former business partner of Hunter Biden, testified two weeks ago that what the Bidens were selling was “the brand” — meaning Joe Biden.

    Bobulinksi has been making his claims for years, including voluntarily to the FBI and at a press conference ahead of the second Trump-Biden presidential debate in 2020. He produced for the committee emails and text messages he claims back up his interactions with the Biden family.

    Chief among them is a 2017 email in which another associate suggested an equity stake breakdown for the firm Hunter Biden, Bobulinksi and others were starting with a Chinese energy conglomerate. It proposed the equity would be split to include 10% “held for H for the big guy” — with a question mark at the end — an apparent reference to Joe Biden.

    But testifying before the committees, another business associate involved, Rob Walker dismissed the proposal as “bullshit.”

    “Nobody responded to this email. I don’t think people took it seriously,” Walker testified. “There is no point where Joe Biden was a part of anything we were doing.”

    The deal never happened.

    The allegations go on, as the committees probe bank records, wire transfers and other aspects of Hunter Biden’s business dealings searching for links to his father.

    Hunter Biden is remarried now, a father again to a young son, Beau, and working on his sobriety and his paintings. Morris, an avid art enthusiast, testified he has purchased various pieces for more than $875,000.

    The Biden impeachment inquiry is lumbering along, coming against the backdrop of the 2024 presidential election, in which Biden and Trump are potentially heading toward a rematch, and Russia’s continued threat to the U.S. political process.

    Russia intervened in the 2016 U.S. presidential elections in favor of Trump, according to the findings of the U.S. intelligence community and the Justice Department, and did so again in 2020.

    While Trump has pushed Republicans to impeach Biden, the House GOP leadership has not said whether they will go through with it.

    The chairman of the House Oversight Committee James Comer says he will “continue to follow the facts” intending to “propose legislation to reform federal ethics laws and to determine whether articles of impeachment are warranted.”

    Copyright 2024 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed without permission.

    Lisa Mascaro, Associated Press

    Source link

  • Wade’s ex-lawyer says he was speculating when he told attorney about Fani Willis relationship

    Wade’s ex-lawyer says he was speculating when he told attorney about Fani Willis relationship

    Wade’s ex-lawyer says he was speculating when he told attorney about Fani Willis relationship – CBS News


    Watch CBS News



    Terrence Bradley, the former law partner and divorce lawyer for Nathan Wade, testified he was speculating when he told a defense attorney for one of Donald Trump’s co-defendants about an alleged relationship between Wade and Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis. The defense attorneys in the Trump case allege that Willis engaged in an improper relationship with Wade, whom she hired to work on the racketeering case against Trump, and financially benefited from it.

    Be the first to know

    Get browser notifications for breaking news, live events, and exclusive reporting.


    Source link

  • Former Prime Minister Describes “Creepy” Trump Being In Awe Of Putin

    Former Prime Minister Describes “Creepy” Trump Being In Awe Of Putin

    Former Prime Minister of Australia Malcolm Turnbull warned of Donald Trump returning to the White House, saying Trump’s “awe” of Vladimir Putin directly threatens Australia’s security.

    “When you see Trump with Putin, as I have on a few occasions, he’s like the 12-year-old boy that goes to high school and meets the captain of the football team. ‘My hero!’ It’s really creepy,” Turnbull said on Australia’s ABC News Q+A.

    He noted that the Republican Party are very sympathetic to Putin.

    The Republican Party under Donald Trump, and particularly the right wing of the Republican Party, are very sympathetic to Vladimir Putin.

    The former Prime Minister, who was in office during Trump’s time as U.S. President (2015 to 2018), called Trump a “terrifying” threat to democratic order, noting “creepy” embrace of autocrats like Vladimir Putin.

    “I’ve been with Trump and Putin. Trump is in awe of Putin. When you see Trump with Putin, as I have on a few occasions, he’s like a 12-year-old boy that goes to high school and meets the captain of the football team.”

    “‘My hero.’ It is really creepy, it’s really creepy… It struck everybody. You could touch it. The creepiness was palpable.”

    Turnball brought up Tucker Carlson’s sycophantic pretend interview with Putin and later pointed to Trump’s attraction to dictators and tyrants like Kim Jong Un and Xi Jinping.

    “Are we going to find ourselves not dealing just with two autocracies in Russia and China, but what is Trump’s America going to look like?”

    Trump’s awe of Putin is a direct threat to Australia’s national security if he returns to the White House, Turnball warned.

    “This is a guy leading a party that is no longer committed to democracy as we understand it.”

    The host asked if he thinks America is sliding into an autocracy.

    “If by democracy, you mean a country that is governed by the rule of law, yeah for sure,” Turnball responded. “Donald Trump doesn’t believe the law applies to him. Donald Trump lost the 2020 election and refused to accept it and saw the mob, encouraged a mob to overthrow the constitutional process in the Congress. Tried to overthrow his own Constitution.”

    “Tyrants are often popular…. If you get to the point where anybody can muster a majority is given absolute power and can do whatever they like to the minority, that’s not a democracy. That is a tyranny. That is an autocracy, even if it’s got the support of 51% of the population.”

    “A democracy as we understand it is one where the rule of law protects all citizens and the rule of law applies to all citizens, whether they’re the president or the prime minister or an ordinary elector.”

    Trump’s worship of Putin is a global humiliation for the United States of America, and one that if emboldened to return to office will surely destroy the “free” part of the American experiment.

    Trump’s awe of Putin is clear to global leaders around the world, and is the opposite of “making America great again.” Trump continues to weaken the United States on the global stage and here at home.

    A Special Message From PoliticusUSA

    If you are in a position to donate purely to help us keep the doors open on PoliticusUSA during what is a critical election year, please do so here. 

    We have been honored to be able to put your interests first for 14 years as we only answer to our readers and we will not compromise on that fundamental, core PoliticusUSA value.

    Sarah Jones

    Source link

  • Biden faces anger from key Arab-American voters in Michigan primary over Israel support in Gaza war

    Biden faces anger from key Arab-American voters in Michigan primary over Israel support in Gaza war

    A man explains the importance of voting ‘uncommited’ as he hands out fliers outside the Islamic Center of Detroit to ask voters to vote ‘uncommitted’ in Michigan Primary elections on Tuesday, in Michigan, United States on February 26, 2024. 

    Mostafa Bassim | Anadolu | Getty Images

    Palestinian keffiyehs and signs that read “Abandon Biden”: Arab-American demonstrators in Warren, Michigan made no secret of their anger at the president in early February as he visited the key swing state that helped carry him to victory in 2020.

    As voters head to the polls for Michigan’s Democratic primary on Tuesday, there is a local campaign urging Democrats to choose “uncommitted” on the ballot as a form of protest vote again the administration’s support for Israel in its war in Gaza.

    In January, Biden’s reelection campaign manager Julie Chavez Rodriguez canceled a meeting with Arab-American activists in Dearborn because of backlash over the administration’s policies. The U.S. has sent billions of dollars in advanced weapons to supply Israel before and since the terror attack led by Palestinian militant group Hamas on Oct. 7. The attack killed some 1,200 people there and took a further 240 hostage, according to Israeli authorities.

    The Israeli military’s response, which has been sharply criticized by numerous world leaders and aid organizations, has displaced some 1.9 million people in Gaza, according to the United Nations, and killed nearly 30,000, according to Gaza’s health ministry, which is run by Hamas. The U.N. says that half a million people in the besieged enclave face starvation.

    Dearborn, Michigan is home to the largest Arab-American population in the U.S. At the time Rodriguez’ Dearborn meeting was canceled, the city’s mayor, Abdullah H. Hammoud, tweeted: “Little bit of advice – if you’re planning on sending campaign officials to convince the Arab American community on why they should vote for your candidate, don’t do it on the same day you announce selling fighter jets to the tyrants murdering our family members.”

    A spokesperson for the White House wasn’t immediately available when contacted by CNBC.

    The primary vote on Tuesday will essentially be a referendum on what many of the state’s Democratic voters feel about Biden, and will be a harbinger of just how worried the Biden campaign should be about its level of support in Michigan when it comes time for the General Election.

    Michigan’s Arab-American community voted overwhelmingly for Biden in 2020, helping him carry the state and defeat then-incumbent Donald Trump. But its population could be the determining factor in whether Biden takes the state this year, and its crucial 15 electoral college votes with it.

    “The U.S. election for President Biden could swing on two or three states,” Fred Kempe, CEO of the Atlantic Council, told CNBC. “Take one of those states, Michigan, [which] Biden won by fewer votes in the last election than there are Arab American votes that could go against him, because of what’s going on in the Middle East. So it’s an international situation for Biden, it’s also a deeply domestic political situation.”

    U.S. President Joe Biden is welcomed by Israeli Prime Minster Benjamin Netanyahu, as he visits Israel amid the ongoing conflict between Israel and Hamas, in Tel Aviv, Israel, October 18, 2023.

    Evelyn Hockstein | Reuters

    Biden has voiced support for the creation of an independent Palestinian state, and has asked Israel to do more to protect civilian life in Gaza — but critics say the words are meaningless if the administration refuses to use its leverage to force the government of Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to change course. The U.S. has consistently voted against every cease-fire measure put forward at the U.N. since the war began.

    Senior White House officials met with community leaders in Michigan on Feb. 8, during which U.S. deputy national security advisor Jon Finer vocally acknowledged the administration’s actions and “missteps” with regard to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict and the war in Gaza.

    “We are very well aware that we have missteps in the course of responding to this crisis since October 7,” Finer said in recordings of the closed-door meeting published by The New York Times. “We have left a very damaging impression based on what has been a wholly inadequate public accounting for how much the president, the administration and the country values the lives of Palestinians,” he continued.

    “And that began, frankly, pretty early in the conflict.”

    Finer added that he did not “have any confidence in this current government of Israel.”

    A view of destruction with destroyed buildings and roads after Israeli Forces withdrawn from the areas in Khan Yunis, Gaza on February 02, 2024. 

    Abdulqader Sabbah | Anadolu | Getty Images

    Michigan Governor Gretchen Whitmer has warned voters against the “uncommitted” campaign, stressing that “any vote that’s not cast for Joe Biden supports a second Trump term,” which she said would be “devastating” for the Muslim community.

    Within the primary election, Biden doesn’t have any realistic Democratic competitors. But for Arab-Americans organizing across the country, the message is clear: No cease-fire, no vote.

    Khalid Turaani, the co-organizer of the Abandon Biden campaign, handed out pamphlets outside the Islamic Center of Detroit telling people to vote “uncommitted” on their ballots, and told the BBC in an interview published Tuesday that his group had made more than 30,000 calls with the same message.

    “We’re doing all that we can to ensure that Biden is a one-term president,” Turaani said, according to the U.K. broadcaster. “In November, we will remember. When you stand against the will of the people, you’re going to lose.”

    Source link

  • What’s at stake during Michigan’s primary

    What’s at stake during Michigan’s primary

    What’s at stake during Michigan’s primary – CBS News


    Watch CBS News



    The battle for the role of commander in chief intensifies as former President Donald Trump is set to overshadow Nikki Haley in Michigan’s primary, despite her unwavering commitment to persevere.

    Be the first to know

    Get browser notifications for breaking news, live events, and exclusive reporting.


    Source link

  • 2/26: CBS Evening News

    2/26: CBS Evening News

    2/26: CBS Evening News – CBS News


    Watch CBS News



    Bodycam video from Lakewood Church shooting released; Massive donation provides free tuition at Bronx medical school

    Be the first to know

    Get browser notifications for breaking news, live events, and exclusive reporting.


    Source link

  • 2/26: Prime Time with John Dickerson

    2/26: Prime Time with John Dickerson

    2/26: Prime Time with John Dickerson – CBS News


    Watch CBS News



    John Dickerson reports on the Michigan GOP and Democratic primaries, President Biden says he is “hopeful” of a ceasefire between Israel and Hamas by Monday, and Sweden clears the final hurdle to join NATO.

    Be the first to know

    Get browser notifications for breaking news, live events, and exclusive reporting.


    Source link

  • 4 reasons Trump says a judge should dismiss charges in the classified documents case

    4 reasons Trump says a judge should dismiss charges in the classified documents case

    In four motions filed late last week in the U.S. District Court for the District of South Florida, Donald Trump’s lawyers seek dismissal of 40 felony charges based on his retention of classified documents after leaving the White House in January 2021. They argue that his decision to keep the documents is shielded by “absolute” presidential immunity for “official acts,” that he had complete discretion to designate records as personal rather than presidential, and that the charges related to mishandling “national defense information” are based on an “unconstitutionally vague” statute. They also argue that Special Counsel Jack Smith, who obtained the indictment, was improperly appointed, making all of the charges invalid.

    The motion based on presidential immunity, which seeks dismissal of the 32 counts alleging unlawful retention of specific classified documents, rehashes the argument that a D.C. Circuit panel unanimously rejected this month in the federal case based on Trump’s attempts to remain in office after he lost the 2020 presidential election. “The D.C. Circuit’s analysis is not persuasive,” Trump’s lawyers write, “and President Trump is pursuing further review of that erroneous decision, including en banc review if allowed, and review in the U.S. Supreme Court if necessary.” They say U.S. District Judge Aileen M. Cannon, who is overseeing the documents case in Florida, “should not follow the D.C. Circuit’s non-binding, poorly reasoned decision.”

    As Trump sees it, the separation of powers bars federal courts from sitting in judgment of a former president’s “official acts,” whether in the context of a civil case or in the context of a criminal prosecution. The D.C. Circuit, including Republican appointee Karen L. Henderson, was troubled by the implications of that position, which would allow presidents to commit grave crimes, including assassination of political opponents, without being held accountable unless they were impeached and removed from office based on the same conduct.

    Trump’s lawyers read the Supreme Court’s 1803 decision in Marbury v. Madison as prohibiting judicial review of any presidential act. But as the D.C. Circuit emphasized, federal courts historically have passed judgment on the legality of presidential decisions, most famously in the 1952 case Youngstown Sheet & Tube Co. v. Sawyer. In that case, the appeals court noted, the Supreme Court “exercised its cognizance over Presidential action to dramatic effect” by holding that “President Harry Truman’s executive order seizing control of most of the country’s steel mills exceeded his constitutional and statutory authority and was therefore invalid.”

    Strictly speaking, however, Youngstown dealt with an order issued by the secretary of commerce rather than the president himself. “To be sure,” Trump’s lawyers say,  federal courts “sometimes review the validity of the official acts of subordinate executive officials below the president, and such review may reflect indirectly on the lawfulness of the president’s own acts or directives. But the authority of judicial review of the official acts of subordinate officers has never been held to extend to the official acts of the president himself.”

    Marbury drew a distinction between “discretionary” and “ministerial” acts. Regarding the first category, Chief Justice John Marshall said in the majority opinion, “the President is invested with certain important political powers, in the exercise of which he is to use his own discretion, and is accountable only to his country in his political character, and to his own conscience.” In that situation, he said, “the subjects are political and the decision of the executive is conclusive,” meaning it “can never be examinable by the courts.”

    But that is not true, Marshall added, “when the legislature proceeds to impose on [an executive official] other duties; when he is directed peremptorily to perform certain acts; when the rights of individuals are dependent on the performance of those acts.” Then “he is so far the officer of the law, is amenable to the laws for his conduct, and cannot at his discretion, sport away the vested rights of others.” In those circumstances, he is acting as a “ministerial officer compellable to do his duty, and if he refuses, is liable to indictment.”

    Although Trump’s lawyers do not explicitly address that distinction, they argue that the counts charging him with illegally retaining 32 listed classified documents are based on 1) presidential decisions that 2) fell within the “discretionary” category. Both of those conclusions seem dubious.

    The indictment says Trump “caused scores of boxes, many of which contained classified documents, to be transported” from the White House to Mar-a-Lago. Trump’s lawyers say the indictment “makes clear that this decision and the related transportation of records occurred while President Trump was still in office.”

    As Trump’s lawyers see it, in other words, the first 32 counts are all based on actions that he took as president. That interpretation seems problematic based on the text of the statute and the wording of the indictment.

    Trump is charged with violating 18 USC 793(e), which applies to someone who has “unauthorized possession” of “information relating to the national defense” and  “willfully retains” it when he “has reason to believe” it “could be used to the injury of the United States or to the advantage of any foreign nation.” The indictment says Trump “did willfully retain the documents and fail to deliver them to the officer and employee of the United States entitled to receive them.”

    Retaining the documents and failing to deliver them are distinct from the initial act of transportation. While the latter may have happened while Trump was still in office, the former included his conduct during the year and a half that elapsed from the end of his term until an FBI search of Mar-a-Lago discovered the 32 documents, along with 70 or so others marked as classified, on August 8, 2022. During that time, Trump delivered some classified documents but retained others, even after he claimed to comply with a federal subpoena demanding their return. But for that continuing resistance, the FBI would not have obtained a search warrant and Trump would not be facing these charges.

    Why does Trump think the initial act of bringing the documents to Mar-a-Lago was within his discretion as president? Under the Presidential Records Act, he argues in another motion, he had complete authority to classify documents as personal, meaning he could keep them rather than turn them over to the National Archives. His possession of those documents therefore was not “unauthorized,” as required for a conviction under Section 793(e). And since the FBI’s investigation was not legally justified, Trump’s lawyers say, the other eight counts, including conspiracy to obstruct justice, concealing records, and lying to federal investigators, also should be dismissed.

    That reading of the Presidential Records Act is counterintuitive given its motivation and text. The impetus for the law was President Richard Nixon’s assertion of the very authority that Trump is now claiming. Rather than allow a president to destroy or retain official documents at will, Congress declared that “the United States shall reserve and retain complete ownership, possession, and control of Presidential records.”

    The law defines presidential records as “documentary materials, or any reasonably segregable portion thereof, created or received by the President, the President’s immediate staff, or a unit or individual of the Executive Office of the President whose function is to advise or assist the President, in the course of conducting activities which relate to or have an effect upon the carrying out of the constitutional, statutory, or other official or ceremonial duties of the President.” That term excludes “personal records,” defined as “all documentary materials, or any reasonably segregable portion thereof, of a purely private or nonpublic character which do not relate to or have an effect upon the carrying out of the constitutional, statutory, or other official or ceremonial duties of the President.”

    As Trump reads the Presidential Records Act, however, it “conferred unreviewable discretion on President Trump to designate the records at issue as personal.” That interpretation would, on its face, render the statute a nullity. If a president has total discretion to decide that a document is “of a purely private or nonpublic character,” regardless of its content, the situation that Congress sought to rectify would be unchanged in practice.

    Trump also argues that Section 793(e), as applied to him, violates his Fifth Amendment right to due process because it is so vague that it does not “give people of common intelligence fair notice of what the law demands of them.” In particular, his lawyers say, the phrases “unauthorized possession,” “relating to the national defense,” and “entitled to receive” have no clear meaning.

    Finally, Trump says the indictment is invalid because “the Appointments Clause does not permit the Attorney General to appoint, without Senate confirmation, a private citizen and like-minded political ally to wield the prosecutorial power of the United States.” Smith therefore “lacks the authority to prosecute this action.”

    The Appointments Clause empowers the president to “appoint Ambassadors, other public Ministers and Consuls, Judges of the supreme Court, and all other Officers of the United States, whose Appointments are not herein otherwise provided for, and which shall be established by Law.” Because there is “no statute establishing the Office of Special Counsel,” Trump’s motion says, “Smith’s appointment is invalid and any prosecutorial power he seeks to wield is ultra vires”—i.e., without legal authority.

    This question, the motion says, is “an issue of first impression in the Eleventh Circuit,” which includes Florida. But in 2019, the D.C. Circuit rejected the argument that Trump is deploying here, holding that Special Counsel Robert Mueller was an “inferior” rather than “principal” officer, meaning that Acting Attorney General Rod Rosenstein had the authority to appoint him.

    Trump is asking Cannon to approve “discovery and pretrial hearings on factual disputes” relevant to his motions. That is apt to delay the trial in this case, which had been scheduled to begin on May 20.

    The Section 793(e) charges require the government to show that the 32 documents listed in the indictment contained information that could compromise national security, a task complicated by their classified status. But the obstruction-related counts, which include allegations that Trump defied the federal subpoena, deliberately concealed classified records, and tried to cover up his cover-up by instructing his underlings to delete incriminating surveillance camera footage, may be the strongest charges that he faces across four criminal cases. Assuming the government can prove the facts it alleges in the indictment, it seems pretty clear that Trump is guilty of multiple felonies, including half a dozen that are punishable by up to 20 years in prison.

    Jacob Sullum

    Source link

  • Mike Johnson Is in Way Over His Head

    Mike Johnson Is in Way Over His Head

    Once again, the federal government has started preparing for a government shutdown. And the blame should fall squarely on the shoulders of Mike Johnson, the election-denying Louisiana backbencher whom Donald Trump wanted to become Speaker of the House. It seems that MAGA Mike is learning firsthand that being Speaker is a much harder job than it looks, with Johnson trying to lead a caucus seemingly more focused on impeachment stunts and further restricting abortion access than keeping the government open. Perhaps electing an inexperienced zealot to be second in line for the presidency wasn’t the brightest idea. 

    Well, now you’ll even find Republicans pointing out that Johnson wasn’t the first draft pick. “We went through five choices and Mike Johnson’s the fifth choice,” Representative Patrick McHenry told CBS News last week. McHenry, who served as Speaker pro tempore last year after Kevin McCarthy, his ally, was ousted, may feel like he can finally speak freely since he’s not running for reelection. He’s part of a wave of House GOP retirements that includes Cathy McMorris Rodgers, Mike Gallagher, and Ken Buck. (Notably, Gallagher and Buck both voted against the impeachment of Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas.) In the CBS interview, McHenry continued to muse about Johnson: “He has not been around these leadership decisions. He’s had a really tough process. We’ve thrown him into the deepest end of the pool with the heaviest weights around him and [we’re] trying to teach him how to learn to swim. It’s been a rough couple of months.” Sounds like McHenry has a little Speaker’s remorse! Or, as Punchbowl put it bluntly on Monday: “Johnson, quite frankly, has been hesitant to lead on any issue at all.”

    House members are not back in DC until Wednesday, even as the shutdown clock ticks away. Perhaps cognizant of that, Johnson told House Republicans on Friday evening that he had a plan for avoiding a shutdown, one involving four separate appropriation bills. While Johnson is said to not want to pass a continuing resolution, there may need to be a stopgap measure. On the Friday call, according to Politico, Johnson suggested party disunity was helping the Democrats and took issue with Republicans for tanking rule votes. The House GOP, while under Johnson, recently set a record for failed procedural votes.

    Believe it or not, Johnson may have bigger problems than a government shutdown. House Republicans, who currently hold just a two-seat majority, are trying to orchestrate two impeachments based primarily on vibes.

    The impeachment of President Joe Biden looks like the brainchild of the guy who helped elevate Johnson to Speaker. “Either IMPEACH the BUM, or fade into OBLIVION,” Trump urged Republicans last August in a Truth Social post. “THEY DID IT TO US!” It seems pretty clear that Trump hoped a Biden impeachment might help his reelection bid and muddy the waters enough to obscure his own two impeachments, along with the 91 criminal charges he’s facing. (Trump has pleaded not guilty to all charges.) As he’s racked up primary wins and is poised to become the party’s 2024 nominee, Trump has only ramped up his calls for Republicans to impeach Biden (while also driving them to blow up a bipartisan border bill, presumably to keep immigration in headlines through November).

    You’d think Republicans might try to pretend their Biden impeachment crusade never happened following the charging of informant Alexander Smirnov, whose claims they’d been pushing and who’s now been accused of lying to the FBI and creating false records. And yet House Oversight Committee chair James Comer told Newsmax that Smirnov “wasn’t an important part of this investigation—because I didn’t even know who he was.” But Smirnov’s bribery allegations involving Biden and his younger son, Hunter Biden, “were frequently cited by congressional Republicans in their now stalled attempt to unseat” the president, according to The New York Times, which noted how right-wing media, having also seized upon Smirnov’s claims, remains “undeterred.” As for the Mayorkas impeachment, even conservative law professor Jonathan Turley said on Fox News that he didn’t think Republicans had “established any of those bases for impeachment,” adding, “The fact is, impeachment is not for being a bad Cabinet member or even being a bad person. It is a very narrow standard.”

    Republicans did this to themselves by letting Trump call the shots. After Matt Gaetz led the charge to remove McCarthy, they went down the list of possible Speakers. Steve Scalise would have been the smart succession play, but Trump suggested the House majority leader couldn’t handle the job because he was “in serious trouble from the standpoint of his cancer.” Trump backed Jim Jordan, one of his most loyal attack dogs in Congress, but the Ohio representative couldn’t get the votes. Trump didn’t want Tom Emmer, who, unlike McCarthy, Scalise, Jordan, and Johnson, didn’t try to overturn the 2020 election. After Emmer won the Republican conference’s nomination to be House Speaker, Trump accused him of being a “Globalist RINO” who was “totally out-of-touch with Republican Voters.” Trump reportedly bragged later that he “killed him.”

    Trump has a long history of picking people who kissed the ring but weren’t necessarily very good choices. Just ask Senator Mehmet Oz, or Senator Herschel Walker, or Senator Blake Masters, or Governor Kari Lake. Fealty to Trump may be a prerequisite for Republicans to land the job, but it doesn’t mean they can actually do it.

    Molly Jong-Fast

    Source link

  • Donald Trump appeals $454 million judgment in New York civil fraud case

    Donald Trump appeals $454 million judgment in New York civil fraud case

    Donald Trump has appealed his $454 million New York civil fraud judgment, challenging a judge’s finding that Trump lied about his wealth as he grew the real estate empire that launched him to stardom and the presidency.The former president’s lawyers filed a notice of appeal Monday asking the state’s mid-level appeals court to overturn Judge Arthur Engoron’s Feb. 16 verdict in Attorney General Letitia James’ lawsuit.Trump’s lawyers wrote in court papers that they’re asking the appeals court to decide whether Engoron “committed errors of law and/or fact” and whether he abused his discretion and/or his jurisdiction.Engoron found that Trump, his company and top executives, including his sons Eric and Donald Trump Jr., schemed for years to deceive banks and insurers by inflating his wealth on financial statements used to secure loans and make deals. Among other penalties, the judge put strict limitations on the ability of Trump’s company, the Trump Organization, to do business.The appeal ensures that the legal fight over Trump’s business practices will persist into the thick of the presidential primary season, and likely beyond, as he tries to clinch the Republican presidential nomination in his quest to retake the White House.If upheld, Engoron’s ruling will force Trump to give up a sizable chunk of his fortune. Engoron ordered Trump to pay $355 million in penalties, but with interest the total has grown to nearly $454 million. That total will increase by nearly $112,000 per day until he pays.Video below: Trump gives remarks after closing arguments at his New York civil fraud trial

    Donald Trump has appealed his $454 million New York civil fraud judgment, challenging a judge’s finding that Trump lied about his wealth as he grew the real estate empire that launched him to stardom and the presidency.

    The former president’s lawyers filed a notice of appeal Monday asking the state’s mid-level appeals court to overturn Judge Arthur Engoron’s Feb. 16 verdict in Attorney General Letitia James’ lawsuit.

    Trump’s lawyers wrote in court papers that they’re asking the appeals court to decide whether Engoron “committed errors of law and/or fact” and whether he abused his discretion and/or his jurisdiction.

    Engoron found that Trump, his company and top executives, including his sons Eric and Donald Trump Jr., schemed for years to deceive banks and insurers by inflating his wealth on financial statements used to secure loans and make deals. Among other penalties, the judge put strict limitations on the ability of Trump’s company, the Trump Organization, to do business.

    The appeal ensures that the legal fight over Trump’s business practices will persist into the thick of the presidential primary season, and likely beyond, as he tries to clinch the Republican presidential nomination in his quest to retake the White House.

    If upheld, Engoron’s ruling will force Trump to give up a sizable chunk of his fortune. Engoron ordered Trump to pay $355 million in penalties, but with interest the total has grown to nearly $454 million. That total will increase by nearly $112,000 per day until he pays.

    Video below: Trump gives remarks after closing arguments at his New York civil fraud trial

    Source link

  • Watch Live: Supreme Court hears social media cases that could reshape how Americans interact online

    Watch Live: Supreme Court hears social media cases that could reshape how Americans interact online


    CBS News Live 2

    Live

    Washington — The Supreme Court is hearing arguments Monday in a pair of social media cases that could transform online speech.

    The two cases concern disputes surrounding Republican-backed laws in Florida and Texas that aim to restrict social media companies from moderating content, which tech groups representing platforms like Facebook and X, see as a violation of their First Amendment rights.  

    The laws, both passed in 2021, came in response to what their backers saw as discrimination by social media platforms. The controversy followed social media companies’ decisions to ban former President Donald Trump from their platforms after his handling of the Jan. 6, 2021 attack on the U.S. Capitol. (Trump’s accounts were eventually reinstated.)

    The states in the case argue that the social media companies should be treated like any business and be restricted from removing posts or banning users from their platforms based upon their views. But the social media companies counter that the laws infringe upon their editorial discretion, arguing that they should be treated more like news outlets. 


    Supreme Court to decide on social media moderation powers

    01:22

    Both the Biden administration and Trump have weighed in on the dispute, upping the ante on the political implications. 

    While Trump filed a brief in support of the state laws, arguing that a platform’s “decision to discriminate against a user” is not protected under the Constitution, the Biden administration filed a brief in support of the tech groups. It argued among other things that the high court has “repeatedly held” that the presentation of speech generated by others is protected under the First Amendment, as is often seen among the opinion pages of many newspapers.

    Source link

  • 2/25: CBS Weekend News

    2/25: CBS Weekend News

    2/25: CBS Weekend News – CBS News


    Watch CBS News



    Haley doubles down on promise to stay in presidential race; Art exhibit shows the power of African American doll making

    Be the first to know

    Get browser notifications for breaking news, live events, and exclusive reporting.


    Source link

  • How AI Is Being Used to Influence and Disrupt the 2024 Election

    How AI Is Being Used to Influence and Disrupt the 2024 Election

    Two days before the New Hampshire primary in January, a robocall featuring an AI-generated imitation of President Biden’s voice was sent out to thousands of people in the state urging them not to vote. The call was also spoofed to appear as if it had come from the telephone of a former state Democratic Party official. Independent analysis later confirmed that the fake Biden voice had been created with ElevenLabs’ AI text-to-speech voice generator.

    The New Hampshire attorney general’s office launched an investigation into the robocall and subsequently determined it had been sent to as many as 25,000 phone numbers by a Texas-based company called Life Corporation, which sells robocalling and other services to political organizations.

    On February 23, NBC News reported that a New Orleans magician named Paul Carpenter had admitted using ElevenLabs to create the fake Biden audio. Carpenter said he did it after being paid by Steve Kramer, a longtime political operative then working for Democratic presidential candidate (and AI proponent) Dean Phillips. The campaign has denied having any knowledge of the effort.

    “I was in a situation where someone offered me some money to do something, and I did it,” Carpenter said. “There was no malicious intent. I didn’t know how it was going to be distributed.” He told NBC he was admitting his role in part to call attention to how easy it was to create the audio:

    Carpenter — who holds world records in fork-bending and straitjacket escapes, but has no fixed address — showed NBC News how he created the fake Biden audio and said he came forward because he regrets his involvement in the ordeal and wants to warn people about how easy it is to use AI to mislead. Creating the fake audio took less than 20 minutes and cost only $1, he said, for which he was paid $150, according to Venmo payments from Kramer and his father, Bruce Kramer, that he shared.

    “It’s so scary that it’s this easy to do,” Carpenter said. “People aren’t ready for it.”

    Kramer, who also previously worked on the failed 2020 presidential campaign of Kanye West, was paid nearly $260,000 by the Phillips campaign across December and January for ballot-access work in Pennsylvania and New York. A Phillips campaign spokesperson told NBC News that it played no part in the AI robocall:

    “If it is true that Mr. Kramer had any involvement in the creation of deepfake robocalls, he did so of his own volition which had nothing to do with our campaign,” Phillips’ press secretary Katie Dolan said. “The fundamental notion of our campaign is the importance of competition, choice, and democracy. We are disgusted to learn that Mr. Kramer is allegedly behind this call, and if the allegations are true, we absolutely denounce his actions.”

    In a statement to NBC News, Kramer eventually admitted he was behind the robocall, which he said he sent to 5,000 likely Democratic voters. He claimed he did it to prevent future AI deepfaked robocalls:

    “With a mere $500 investment, anyone could replicate my intentional call,” Kramer said. “Immediate action is needed across all regulatory bodies and platforms.”

    Chas Danner

    Source link

  • Crypto bulls take aim at US politics with $80m war chest

    Crypto bulls take aim at US politics with $80m war chest

    Pro-crypto super PACs (political action committees) raked in $80 million, earmarked for candidates who favor cryptocurrency regulation and innovation.

    According to Politico, three super PACs — Fairshake, Protect Progress, and Defend American Jobs — are backed by crypto industry behemoths like Coinbase, Ripple, and Andreessen Horowitz.

    And they’re putting money to work.

    In West Virginia, for example, the crypto-funded group Defend American Jobs recently bankrolled the candidacy of Governor Jim Justice with $1.5 million.

    Justice, lauded by former President Donald Trump for his commitment to various conservative causes, has found his Senate aspirations entwined with the crypto cause. 

    The alignment with Trump, who recently softened his previously frosty stance on cryptocurrencies, adds another layer to the narrative. On Fox News, the GOP presidential front-runner noted Bitcoin’s influence, especially among younger demographics, despite his allegiance to the U.S. dollar.

    These PACs are also strategically positioning themselves for high-impact interventions that could potentially tip the scales against crypto critics like Senators Elizabeth Warren and Sherrod Brown. 

    The tactic has manifested in Ohio and Massachusetts, where Republican hopefuls are receiving an enthusiastic boost from both the blockchain proponents and Trump’s vocal support.

    Bernie Moreno gets boost from Trump

    In Ohio, Bernie Moreno — who is rallying to unseat Senator Brown — is campaigning with a narrative that champions cryptocurrencies.

    With the support of both Trump and Senator J.D. Vance, Moreno — a former car salesman — previously captured attention as a key advocate for blockchain technology, bringing crypto to the forefront of his campaign strategy.

    Deaton takes on Warren

    John Deaton, a Republican crypto attorney based in Rhode Island, initiated his own bid to confront Massachusetts Senator Elizabeth Warren.

    Despite concerns over his background, Deaton’s campaign has already stirred up significant attention on social media, where he consistently challenges Warren’s stance on crypto regulation. 

    Warrne and other Senators — including Republicans — introduced the bipartisan Digital Asset Anti-Money Laundering Act. 

    Deaton has strong ties to Ripple and is often a notable participant in legal discourse within the crypto industry.

    Shifting the focus to California, the Fairshake super PAC—fresh off a substantial financial infusion from cryptocurrency exchange founders Tyler and Cameron Winklevoss—is reportedly trying to assert its mission to advocate for candidates prepared to nurture the crypto economy. 

    This movement comes at a pivotal time when large sums are being funneled into political campaigns with the potential to influence the digital currency ecosystem. 

    The political playbooks being drafted could very well etch the trajectory of cryptocurrency’s regulatory future and its grip over innovation and economic growth in America. 

    Echoing a sentiment larger than any individual race, these cryptocurrency titans, armed with their PACs, are not just participating in the political discourse but aiming to shape a future where digital assets could hold sway over the nation’s economic steering wheel.


    Follow Us on Google News

    Julius Mutunkei

    Source link

  • Donald Trump Dubs Himself a “Political Dissident” in CPAC Speech

    Donald Trump Dubs Himself a “Political Dissident” in CPAC Speech

    In his speech at the Conservative Political Action Conference (CPAC) on Saturday, former President Donald Trump cast the 2024 presidential election as a quasi-religious day of reckoning for his political opponents. 

    “For hard-working Americans, Nov. 5 will be our new Liberation Day,” he said. “But for the liars, and cheaters, and fraudsters, and censors and imposters who have commandeered our government, it will be their Judgment Day.”

    The line underscored the apocalyptic tone that suffused Trump’s speech, which was peppered with warnings of “hoards of illegal aliens stampeding across our borders,” Hamas coming to “terrorize our streets,” and the utter “collapse” of public services including education and healthcare. “If crooked Joe Biden and his thugs win in 2024, the worst is yet to come,” Trump said. “Our country will go and sink to levels that were unimaginable.”

    “When we win, the curtain closes on their corrupt reign, and the sun rises on a bright new future for America,” he added. “I believe it’s our last chance.”

    Throughout his campaign, Trump has consistently portrayed himself as a singular bulwark against onrushing tyranny, a theme he reprised on Saturday. “Our country is being destroyed, and the only thing standing between you and its obliteration is me,” Trump said. “I stand before you today only as your past and hopefully future president, but as a proud political dissident. I am a dissident.”

    The line recalled Trump’s comments last week comparing his legal woes to the persecution of Russian dissident Alexey Navalny, who died in an Arctic panel colony under mysterious circumstances. President Joe Biden, Western leaders and Kremlin critics have all blamed Russian President Vladimir Putin for Navalny’s death.

    Continuing what has become a campaign theme, Trump accused President Biden, without evidence, of orchestrating the 91 criminal indictments against him. “He indicted me,” Trump said of Biden, adding that his legal cases were “Stalinist show trials carried out at the Joe Biden orders.”

    Trump’s speech came as he coasted to victory in Saturday’s South Carolina Republican primary, besting the state’s former two-term governor Nikki Haley by more than 20 points. Sensing his hold on the nomination growing even more potent, Trump didn’t even utter Haley’s name during his CPAC speech.

    Biden campaign rapid response director Ammar Moussa responded to the speech by calling Trump a “loser.”

    “Under his presidency, America lost more jobs than any president in modern history, women in more than 20 states have lost the freedom to make their own health care decisions because Trump overturned Roe, and the MAGA wing of the Republican Party lost their damn minds putting Trump’s quest for power over our democracy,” he said.

    Jack McCordick

    Source link

  • Nikki Haley Pledges to Continue Campaign Despite Resounding South Carolina Loss

    Nikki Haley Pledges to Continue Campaign Despite Resounding South Carolina Loss

    After a disappointing 20-point primary loss in her home state of South Carolina on Saturday, Nikki Haley pledged to soldier on, even as former President Donald Trump appears to have all but secured the GOP nomination.

    Addressing a crowd of hundreds of supporters at her headquarters in Charleston, Haley briefly appeared to be gearing up to announce that she was dropping out of the race. “This has never been about me or my political future. We need to beat Joe Biden in November,” she said before adding, to her supporters’ relief: “I don’t believe Donald Trump can beat Joe Biden.”

    After Haley lost to Trump in New Hampshire in late January, the former South Carolina governor said she felt she would need a better result in her home state in order “to give people in Super Tuesday states a reason to see and have us fight on.” 

    Haley’s Saturday result—just under 40 percent—fell below that mark (she won 43 percent of the vote in New Hampshire). In her speech, she appeared to fudge the numbers, saying she won “around” 40 percent, which was “about” the size of her tally in New Hampshire.

    Earlier last week, Haley vowed to continue campaigning until “the last person votes,” and on Saturday, she declared, “Today is not the end of our story.”

    “I’m not giving up this fight when a majority of Americans disapprove of both Trump and Biden,” she wrote on X, formerly Twitter. “In the next ten days, 21 states and territories will speak. They have the right to a real choice, not a Soviet-style election with only one candidate. And I have a duty to give them that choice.”

    But her comments hint that she may not last past early March, when voters in 15 states and one territory will head to the polls on Super Tuesday. In a comment to reporters after she cast her own vote Saturday, Haley said Super Tuesday was “as far as I’ve thought in terms of going forward,” per Politico.

    Haley is traveling to Michigan on Sunday, which hosts its primary on Tuesday, and then will hit at least six more states. Her campaign announced Friday that it would be launching a seven-figure ad buy ahead of the March 5 primaries.

    Trump, for his part, is already acting as if the GOP nomination is already a foregone conclusion. In stark contrast to his New Hampshire victory speech, in which he relentlessly bashed Haley, the GOP frontrunner didn’t even utter his chief rival’s name on Saturday. “I have never seen the Republican Party so unified,” he said in a victory speech.

    Jack McCordick

    Source link

  • How Donald Trump Became Unbeatable

    How Donald Trump Became Unbeatable

    Not too long ago, Donald Trump looked finished. After the January 6 attack on the Capitol, the repeal of Roe v. Wade, and a poor Republican showing in the 2022 midterms, the GOP seemed eager to move on from the former president. The postTrump era had supposedly begun.

    Just one week after the midterms, he entered the 2024 race, announcing his candidacy to a room of bored-looking hangers-on. Even his children weren’t there. Security had to pen people in to keep them from leaving during his meandering speech.

    Today, thanks to Trump’s dominant performance in South Carolina, the Republican primary is all but over. Trump’s margin was so comfortable that the Associated Press called the race as soon as polls closed. How did we get here? How did Trump go from historically weak to unassailable?

    I talk with Republican-primary voters in focus groups every week, and through these conversations, I’ve learned that the answer has as much to do with Trump’s party and his would-be competitors as it does with Trump himself. Most Republican leaders have profoundly misread their base in this moment.

    The other candidates hoped to be able to defeat Trump even as they accommodated his behavior and made excuses for his criminality. They even said they would support his reelection. By doing so, they established a permission structure for Republican voters to return to Trump, all but ensuring his rise.

    My focus groups over the past few years can be seen as a travelogue through the GOP’s journey back to Trump. Three key themes emerged that help explain why Trump’s opponents failed to gain traction.

    First, you can’t beat something with nothing. The Republican field didn’t offer voters anything new.

    Nikki Haley and Mike Pence cast themselves as avatars of the pre-Trump GOP. Ron DeSantis and Vivek Ramaswamy did their best to imitate Trump, presenting themselves as younger and more competent stewards of the same MAGA agenda. None of them offered a viable alternative to Trump; instead, they spent their resources trying not to anger his supporters.

    But Republican voters don’t want Reagan Republicanism. Old-school conservatives may pine for a return to balanced budgets, personal responsibility, and American leadership in the world (guilty). But a greater share of Republican voters prefer an isolationist foreign policy and candidates who promise to punish their domestic enemies.

    “The feds, both parties, the elites … want everything to go back to the way it was before Trump got elected,” said Bret, a two-time Trump voter from Georgia. “And that would be the wrong direction, in my opinion.”

    And voters aren’t interested in Trump-lite when they can have the real thing. Trump’s supporters see in him a leader who’s willing to fight for them. No other candidate proved they could do that better than Trump.

    “We need a man that is strong as hell, a brick house,” said Fred, a two-time Trump voter from South Carolina, in May 2023. “He is that man.”

    Larry, an Iowa Republican, called Trump “a disruptor. In the business world, you bring in a disruptor when everybody’s stuck in groupthink. That’s what I hired him to do: blow stuff up.”

    Contrast that with how Republican voters saw his opponents. “If you want to be president, you’ve got to be hated by half the country,” said Dakota, a two-time Trump voter from Iowa, adding, about Nikki Haley: “I don’t think she can do it.”

    “Does it kind of feel in a sense that he just kind of gave up?” Ashley, another Iowa Republican, asked about DeSantis before he dropped out of the race.

    Pence, Chris Christie, and the other also-rans came in for much worse criticism. “I don’t know if anyone would vote for him, just his family at this point,” Justin, a two-time Trump voter from Texas, said of Pence. “I think he’s alienated everyone.”

    The second theme: Trump’s competitors declined to hit him on his 91 felony counts, despite the fact that voters say they have serious concerns about them. Instead, most of them (with the honorable exception of Christie and Asa Hutchinson) actively defended Trump.

    DeSantis called the charges the “criminalization of politics.” Haley said the charges were “more about revenge than … about justice.” And Ramaswamy promised to pardon Trump “on day one.”

    By the time Haley started attacking Trump in recent weeks, it was already too late. She can call him “diminished,” “unhinged,” “weak in the knees,” and “incredibly reckless,” but voters saw her raise her hand six months ago when asked whether she would support him if he became the nominee.

    If Trump’s primary opponents weren’t going to hold his indictments against him, why should GOP voters? “It’s all a witch hunt,” Dennis, a two-time Trump voter from Michigan, said of the charges. The Department of Justice and state prosecutors bringing the cases “are terrified of Trump for whatever reason … because they’re afraid he will run and they’re afraid he will win.”

    Lastly, Trump started to be seen as electable. This represented a big shift from a year ago, when voters had concerns about Trump’s ability to beat President Joe Biden in a rematch.

    In February 2023, Isaac, a Pennsylvania Republican, said of Trump: “I just feel he is unelectable. I think you could put him up there against fricking Donald Duck and Donald Duck will end up coming out ahead. He just ticks too many people off.”

    But as they got a better look at the alternatives—and as they came to believe that Biden was too frail, weak, and senile to be competitive in the general election—GOP voters came around.

    “I’m convinced that he is in the final stages of dementia,” Clifton, an Iowa Republican, said of Biden. “I mean, yeah, Trump’s an asshole and he doesn’t have a filter and he says stupid things, but it doesn’t matter.”

    These voters have come to believe that the election is a choice between senility and recklessness. And they’ve decided they prefer the latter.

    DeSantis’s rise and fall is the clearest demonstration of how we got here. For a time, he looked like the greatest threat to Trump, leveraging culture-war issues to gin up the base while projecting an image of being, as one voter put it to me, “Trump not on steroids.”

    He sent refugees to Martha’s Vineyard, went after Disney, banned books—and the base loved him for it. “For the most part, from what I hear, he’s doing a good job in Florida,” said Chris, a Republican voter from Illinois, in March 2023. “He stands for a lot of the same values that I think I do.”

    But over time, DeSantis’s star began to fade. The more retail campaigning he did, and the more voters were exposed to him, the less they liked what they saw.

    “I think he was a strong candidate before he was actually a candidate,” said Fred, a two-time Trump voter from New Hampshire in December 2023. He cited “things he’s done in Florida and how big he won his last governor’s election.” But now, he said, “I think he got a little too into the social issues.”

    By the time DeSantis dropped out, skepticism had turned to contempt among the Republican voters I spoke with. Sean, a two-time Trump voter from New Hampshire, put it succinctly last month: “He has a punchable face, and I just don’t like him.”

    This time last year, DeSantis had a real shot at consolidating the move-on-from-Trump faction of the GOP while making inroads with the maybe-Trumpers—each of which constitutes about a third of the party. Instead, he tried to wrestle the former president for his always-Trump base, a doomed effort. He couldn’t get traction with the always-Trumpers and he alienated the move-on-from-Trumpers. It was a hopeless strategy for a flawed candidate.

    Haley may hold out for a few more weeks, even though she has virtually no chance of beating Trump outright. Her only real incentive for remaining in the race is to be the last person standing in the event that he is imprisoned or suffers a major health event. Barring either of these scenarios, Trump’s path to the nomination is clear.

    This outcome wasn’t inevitable; Trump was beatable. His opponents had real opportunities to cleave off his support, but they squandered them.

    The reason is simple: Republican elites don’t understand their voters. They spent eight years making excuses for Trump and supporting him at every turn, sending the clear signal that this is his party. They spent nearly a decade saying that he was a persecuted martyr—and the greatest president in history. It’s frightening, but not surprising, that their voters think he’s the only man for the job.

    Sarah Longwell

    Source link