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Donald Trump - President of the USA's legal troubles

<blockquote class="twitter-tweet"><p lang="und" dir="ltr"><a href="https://t.co/vnRpk0zl5y">pic.twitter.com/vnRpk0zl5y</a></p>— Donald J. Trump (@realDonaldTrump) <a href="https://twitter.com/realDonaldTrump/status/1273770669214490626?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">June 19, 2020</a></blockquote> <script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>

:bash:
 
U.S. Republican lawmakers urge Trump to reconsider Germany troop reduction plan

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - A group of Republican lawmakers in the House of Representatives urged President Donald Trump on Tuesday to reconsider his decision to cut the number of U.S. troops in Germany, saying their presence is the backbone of NATO’s deterrent against Russian aggression.

The six lawmakers led by House Foreign Affairs Committee senior Republican Michael McCaul said in a letter that the U.S. military footprint in Germany served Washington’s strategic interests beyond Europe and into the Middle East and Africa, which have seen the growing influence of Russia and China.

Trump said earlier this month he would cut the number of U.S. troops in Germany to 25,000, faulting the close U.S. ally for failing to meet NATO’s defense spending target and accusing it of taking advantage of the United States on trade.

His plans, which would mean a reduction of about 9,500 troops and would be a remarkable rebuke to one of the closest U.S. trading partners, had immediately drawn ire from Democrats and Republicans alike.

“This is not the time to take any action that might cause the Putin regime to question the credibility of the NATO deterrent or might lead our NATO allies and partners to doubt the U.S. commitment to our collective security,” the lawmakers wrote in the letter, a copy of which was seen by Reuters.

The lawmakers also warned that Moscow and Beijing sought to sow divisions between the United States and its allies, and said they were troubled to see that many U.S. allies had not been consulted on the plans to reduce U.S. troop numbers in Germany.

Trump accused Germany of being “delinquent” in its payments to the North Atlantic Treaty Organization and vowed to stick with the plan unless Berlin changed course. NATO in 2014 set a target that each of its 30 members should spend 2% of GDP on defense. Most, including Germany, do not.

https://www.reuters.com/article/us-...er-germany-troop-reduction-plan-idUSKBN23U1BI
 
Trump to visit New Jersey but won't quarantine

US President Donald Trump is to visit his golf club in Bedminster, New Jersey, this weekend, but the White House says he won't be following a regional travel advisory requiring visitors from hotspots to self-quarantine for 14 days.

On Tuesday Trump visited Arizona - a state experiencing a rise in Covid-19 cases that's on New Jersey's quarantine-needed list.

The quarantine requirement was announced by the governors of New Jersey, New York and Connecticut on Wednesday.

"The President of the United States is not a civilian," spokesman Judd Deere said, adding that anyone who is in close proximity to the president gets tested.

Deere said the White House had ensured Trump did not come into contact with symptomatic or untested individuals during his Arizona trip.

"Anyone travelling in support of the president this weekend will be closely monitored for symptoms and tested for Covid and therefore pose little to no risk to the local populations," he said.
 
Obamacare: Trump asks Supreme Court to invalidate Affordable Care Act

The Trump administration has asked the US Supreme Court to invalidate Obamacare, which has provided health insurance to millions of Americans.

Government lawyers said the act became invalid when the previous Republican-led Congress axed parts of it.

Democratic challenger Joe Biden attacked the move, saying Mr Trump had put millions of lives at risk during the coronavirus pandemic.

Health care will be a key battleground in the November presidential election.

Some 20 million Americans could lose their health coverage if the court overturns the Affordable Care Act, which was introduced by Donald Trump's Democratic predecessor, Barack Obama.

Mr Trump says the scheme costs too much and has promised a different plan to replace it, preserving some popular elements of the existing law but covering fewer people.

Under the act, millions of people in the United States must purchase health insurance or face a tax penalty.

But in 2017, Congress removed a key plank of the policy, eliminating the federal fine for those who did not sign up, known as the "individual mandate".

In its filing to the Supreme Court late on Thursday, the justice department argued "the individual mandate is not severable from the rest of the act".

As a result, it said, "the mandate is now unconstitutional as a result of Congress's elimination... of the penalty for non-compliance".

Mr Biden, who wants to rally the public behind an expanded Affordable Care Act, said some coronavirus survivors could lose their comprehensive healthcare coverage if the act was overturned.

"They would live their lives caught in a vice between Donald Trump's twin legacies: his failure to protect the American people from the coronavirus, and his heartless crusade to take healthcare protections away from American families," Mr Biden said.

The US has been badly hit by the pandemic, recording 2.4m confirmed coronavirus infections and 122,370 deaths - more than any other country.

But the true number of infections is likely to be 10 times higher than the reported figure, according to the latest estimate by health officials.

The Supreme Court is unlikely to hear the case before voters go to the polls in November, US media report.

https://www.bbc.com/news/world-us-canada-53190429
 
Trump denies being told about Russian bounties to kill U.S. troops in Afghanistan

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - President Donald Trump on Sunday said he was never briefed about Russian efforts to pay bounties to Taliban-linked militants to kill U.S. troops in Afghanistan, blasting a New York Times report that he had been told about the rewards but had not acted to respond to Moscow.

The White House on Saturday also denied that Trump was briefed on U.S. intelligence regarding the affair but it did not address the merits of the intelligence. The Director of National Intelligence also said Trump and Vice President Mike Pence were not briefed, and called the Times report inaccurate.

“Nobody briefed or told me, @VP Pence, or Chief of Staff [MENTION=132401]markm[/MENTION]eadows about the so-called attacks on our troops in Afghanistan by Russians, as reported through an ‘anonymous source’ by the Fake News @nytimes. Everybody is denying it & there have not been many attacks on us,” Trump tweeted, calling on the newspaper to reveal its source.

The Times on Friday reported that U.S. intelligence had concluded that a Russian military intelligence unit linked to assassination attempts in Europe had offered rewards for successful attacks last year on American and coalition soldiers, and that Islamist militants or those associated with them were believed to have collected some bounty money.

Russia’s foreign ministry dismissed the report.

Democrats said the report and Trump’s denial were the latest evidence of the president’s wish to ignore allegations against Russia and accommodate President Vladimir Putin.

“There is something very wrong here. But this must have an answer,” U.S. House of Representatives Speaker Nancy Pelosi told ABC’s “This Week” program.

“You would think, the minute the president heard of it, he would want to know more, instead of denying that he knew anything,” she said, adding that Trump has already given “gifts” to Putin by diminishing U.S. leadership in NATO, reducing U.S. forces in Germany and inviting Russia back into the G8.

https://www.reuters.com/article/us-...-kill-u-s-troops-in-afghanistan-idUSKBN23Z0HX
 
Republican pleas for Trump to wear mask

And the hearing in the US Senate has started.

Senate Committee Chairman Lamar Alexander, a Tennessee Republican, begins on reopening schools and businesses by noting that lawmakers and experts attending today's hearing are all wearing masks, except when they are speaking at the microphone.

"Sadly this simple life saving practice has become part of the political debate," says the ally of Republican President Donald Trump.

"If you are for Trump your don't wear a mask, if you are against Trump you do."

He goes on to "suggest that the president occasionally wear a mask," noting that "the president has plenty of admirers that would follow his lead".
 
A New York judge has temporarily blocked President Donald Trump's niece from publishing a damning tell-all memoir about the US first family.

Mary Trump's upcoming book, Too Much and Never Enough, How My Family Created the World's Most Dangerous Man, is due to be published on 28 July.

But on Tuesday a judge granted a restraining order to Ms Trump's uncle, the president's brother, Robert.

Lawyers for Ms Trump say they will immediately appeal against the ruling.

"The trial court's temporary restraining order is only temporary but it still is a prior restraint on core political speech that flatly violates the First Amendment," said her lawyer, Ted Boutrous.

"This book, which addresses matters of great public concern and importance about a sitting president in an election year, should not be supressed even for one day," he continued.

The book is being published by Simon & Schuster and has already reached fourth place on Amazon's best-seller list ahead of its release.

An undated photo of the Trump siblings, from left to right: Robert, Elizabeth, Fred, Donald and Maryanne
A hearing is scheduled in New York's Dutchess County for 10 July.

Ms Trump, 55, is the daughter of President Trump's elder brother, Fred Trump Jr, who died in 1981.

The book claims to reveal "a nightmare of traumas, destructive relationships, and a tragic combination of neglect and abuse".

Robert's Trump lawyer, Charles Harder, cheered the ruling, saying that "the actions of Mary Trump and Simon & Schuster are truly reprehensible".

"We look forward to vigorously litigating this case and will seek the maximum remedies available by law for the enormous damages caused by Mary Trump's breach of contract and Simon & Schuster's intentional interference with that contract," Mr Harder said.

"Short of corrective action to immediately cease their egregious conduct, we will pursue this case to the very end."

Earlier this month, President Trump said that his niece was violating her non-disclosure agreement (NDA) by writing a book.

"She's not allowed to write a book," he told Axios, referring to a 20-year legal document she reportedly signed following a dispute over her father's estate after his death in 2001.

Mr Trump called the NDA a "very powerful one" that "covers everything".

What does the book say?
The book was scheduled to hit shelves only weeks before the Republican National Convention, where Mr Trump will accept his party's nomination to seek a second term.

The memoir will reportedly reveal how Ms Trump supplied the New York Times with confidential documents to print a sprawling investigation into Mr Trump's personal finances.

The Pulitzer Prize-winning exclusive alleged the president had been involved in "fraudulent" tax schemes and received more than $400m (£316m) in today's money from his father's real estate empire.

A lawyer for the president and the White House denied the allegations of fraud and tax evasion made against Mr Trump.

An Amazon blurb for Ms Trump's book says the author will set out how her uncle "became the man who now threatens the world's health, economic security and social fabric".

This is the second book by publisher Simon & Schuster that Mr Trump and his associates are seeking to block.

Earlier this month, the US justice department was denied an injunction to block a memoir by John Bolton, President Trump's former National Security Adviser.

The Room Where It Happened is due to go on sale later this month. One of the book's claims is that Mr Trump "pleaded" with the Chinese president to help him win the November 2020 election.

https://www.bbc.com/news/world-us-canada-53243354
 
Mexican president to hold bilateral Trump talks on July 8

MEXICO CITY (Reuters) - Mexican President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador will hold bilateral talks in Washington with his U.S. counterpart Donald Trump on July 8 as part of a trip to mark a new North American trade deal, Mexico’s foreign minister said on Wednesday.

Mexico’s government proposed the two-day talks in Washington to celebrate the July 1 start of the United States-Mexico-Canada Agreement (USMCA), which is replacing the 26-year-old North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA).

Trilateral matters, which include Canada, will be on the agenda on July 9, Mexican Foreign Minister Marcelo Ebrard told a news conference alongside Lopez Obrador.

https://www.reuters.com/article/us-...bilateral-trump-talks-on-july-8-idUSKBN2425WG
 
US President Donald Trump has railed against the "cancel culture" of those who toppled monuments during recent anti-racism protests, in a speech to mark 4 July at Mount Rushmore.

He condemned those who targeted statues of Confederate leaders as "angry mobs".

Mr Trump called the racial equality demonstrations "a merciless campaign to wipe out our history, defame our heroes, erase our values, and indoctrinate our children".

"We will not be silenced," he said.

The president, who has been heavily criticised for his handling of the US coronavirus pandemic, made little reference to the disease that has now claimed almost 130,000 American lives.

The US recorded its largest single-day rise in coronavirus infections on Friday, bringing the total to more than 2.5 million - the most of any country.

Masks and social distancing were not mandatory at the Mount Rushmore event, despite warnings by health officials.

The location, too, was controversial. Mount Rushmore features the carved faces of four US presidents, two of whom - George Washington and Thomas Jefferson - were slave-owners. It also stands on land that was taken from the indigenous Lakota Sioux by the US government in the 1800s.

What else did Trump say?
Addressing Mount Rushmore itself, the president said the South Dakota landmark would "stand forever as an eternal tribute to our forefathers and to our freedom".

"This monument will never be desecrated, these heroes will never be defaced," he told a cheering crowd.

The president added that people who target "symbols of national heritage" will face "the fullest extent of the law". He said those who defaced statues could be sentenced to 10 years in jail, referring to a recent executive order he signed on protecting monuments.

A fireworks display set to music was then held at the pre-Independence Day event, watched by about 7,500 ticket-holders.

The fireworks were the first at the site in over a decade, after a ban was imposed over fears they could set off wildfires in the dry brush around the monument.

Welcoming people to the event, South Dakota's Republican Governor Kristi Noem echoed the president's tone, accusing demonstrators of "trying to wipe away the lessons of history".

"This is being done deliberately to discredit America's founding principles," she said.

Friday's gathering was the latest to be held by President Trump during the coronavirus pandemic, as he attempts to fire up his supporters ahead of November's presidential election.

What have Native Americans said about the event?

Native American groups have criticised Mr Trump's visit for posing a health risk, and for celebrating US independence in an area that is sacred to them.

Many Native Americans do not celebrate Independence Day because they associate it with the colonisation of their tribal homelands and the loss of their cultural freedoms.

The Mount Rushmore landmark was carved between 1927 and 1941, but the land it lies on - in the Black Hills of South Dakota - was taken from the Lakota Sioux during the previous century.

"The president is putting our tribal members at risk to stage a photo op at one of our most sacred sites," said Harold Frazier, chairman of the Cheyenne River Sioux Tribe.

Ahead of the event, a group of mostly Native American protesters blocked a main road to the monument with white vans, leading to a tense stand-off with police.

They were eventually cleared from the road by police officers and National Guard soldiers, who used smoke bombs and pepper spray, local reports say.

The vans were towed away and several protesters were arrested after the police declared the road block an "unlawful assembly", local newspaper the Argus Leader reported.

https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-us-canada-53284607
 
Donald Trump demands apology from black NASCAR driver Bubba Wallace over 'noose hoax'

Donald Trump has questioned the actions of NASCAR driver Bubba Wallace and claimed a noose-shaped rope found in his garage last month was a hoax.

Wallace is the only black driver in the famous racing series and received an outpouring of support from fellow drivers after the discovery at Alabama's Talladega circuit.

The FBI concluded no crime was committed and that the door cord had been in place as early as October 2019 - and that nobody could have known Wallace would be assigned that garage.

The US president tweeted: "Has @BubbaWallace apologized to all of those great NASCAR drivers & officials who came to his aid, stood by his side, & were willing to sacrifice everything for him, only to find out that the whole thing was just another HOAX? That & Flag decision has caused lowest ratings EVER!"

NASCAR president Steve Phelps said it was a member of Wallace's team who noticed and reported the "noose" - a symbol connected to lynching and America's slave history.

Wallace - who has raced a car with a special Black Lives Matter paint job - initially called it a "despicable act of racism and hatred".

However, days later he thanked the FBI and officials for treating the matter seriously and said he was relieved "this wasn't what we feared it was".

The president's tweet also referenced Wallace's successful campaign to ban the controversial Civil War-era Confederate flag at NASCAR events.

He claimed the organisation was suffering with its "lowest ratings ever" as fans unhappy about the decision tuned out, but ratings have actually increased since the flag was banned last month.

White House spokeswoman Kayleigh McEnany said the president had tweeted to make "a broader point that this rush to judgement on the facts before the facts are out is not acceptable".

"The president's merely pointing out that we've got to let facts come out," she told Fox News.

"There was no hate crime committed against Bubba Wallace as determined by the FBI as noted in the NASCAR statement."

One NASCAR driver, Corey LaJoie, is now sporting "Trump 2020" logos on his car after his team signed a sponsorship deal with a campaign group backing the president's re-election bid.

Mr Trump will take on Democrat candidate and former vice president Joe Biden in November.

https://news.sky.com/story/donald-t...driver-bubba-wallace-over-noose-hoax-12022568
 
What about the million false and jhooti tweets trump has spread since he became president.. including the lie about obama not being citizen..

We are still waiting for those apologies!
 
What about the million false and jhooti tweets trump has spread since he became president.. including the lie about obama not being citizen..

We are still waiting for those apologies!

<blockquote class="twitter-tweet"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">Why does the Lamestream Fake News Media REFUSE to say that China Virus deaths are down 39%, and that we now have the lowest Fatality (Mortality) Rate in the World. They just can’t stand that we are doing so well for our Country!</p>— Donald J. Trump (@realDonaldTrump) <a href="https://twitter.com/realDonaldTrump/status/1280234504985157637?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">July 6, 2020</a></blockquote> <script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>
 
<blockquote class="twitter-tweet"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">Why does the Lamestream Fake News Media REFUSE to say that China Virus deaths are down 39%, and that we now have the lowest Fatality (Mortality) Rate in the World. They just can’t stand that we are doing so well for our Country!</p>— Donald J. Trump (@realDonaldTrump) <a href="https://twitter.com/realDonaldTrump/status/1280234504985157637?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">July 6, 2020</a></blockquote> <script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>

Does the US have the lowest mortality rate?

President Trump has claimed the US has the lowest coronavirus mortality rate in the world.

There are a couple of ways you can measure mortality rates, although international comparisons can be tricky as not all countries count deaths in the same way.

One way to measure it is to look at the ratio of deaths to confirmed cases - of all the people who test positive for coronavirus, how many go on to die?

The US’s case mortality rate is around 4.4%.

This is lower than many major countries - such as the UK, Italy and France, which all sit at around 15%. But it is also higher than a series of others - such as South Korea, Australia, and Norway, which all fall below 3%.

Some countries, like the US, are testing more widely, which can make the ratio of deaths to confirmed cases, and therefore the case mortality rate, appear lower.

Another way to measure it is to compare how many deaths have occurred with the size of a country's population.

The US is not the lowest by this measure either, with about 40 deaths per 100,000 people.

A handful of countries have recorded more deaths per population than the US - such as Sweden, the UK and Spain - but the vast majority have fewer.
 
A quirky wooden sculpture of US First Lady Melania Trump is reported to have been set on fire near her hometown in Slovenia, prompting its removal.

Brad Downey, the American artist who commissioned the statue, said it was targeted on 4 July, Independence Day in the US.

The Berlin-based artist arranged for the charred statue to be removed the next day.

Police told Reuters news agency they had launched an investigation.

The White House did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

The sculpture of Mrs Trump, which could be described as only bearing a crude likeness to the US first lady, was carved out of a tree trunk on the outskirts of Sevnica, her hometown in central Slovenia.

The statue, which depicts Mrs Trump dressed in a blue coat similar to one she wore to her husband's inauguration and with a club-like hand gesturing to the sky, received mixed reviews when it was erected in July 2019.

Some residents branded the statue a "disgrace", complaining it looked more like the Smurfs character Smurfette than the first lady.

Mr Downey told Reuters he wanted to understand who targeted the statue and why.

He said he had hoped the statue would open a dialogue about the political situation in the US, including the fractious debate on immigration.

Melania Trump statue in Slovenia gets mixed reviews
Mrs Trump, a model who grew up in Slovenia when it was part of Yugoslavia, moved to the US in the 1990s.

The statue in Slovenia was targeted at a time when monuments of US leaders with links to slavery are being re-evaluated as a result of national reflection prompted by anti-racism protests.

In recent speeches, including his Independence Day address, US President Donald Trump has taken a hardline against those who vandalise or tear down statues.

Since Mr Trump was elected US president in 2016, Sevnica has become a tourist magnet, as visitors search for an insight into Mrs Trump's early years

Residents have brought out ranges of Melania-branded merchandise, including slippers, cakes, and Trump-like burgers with fly-away cheese "hair".

In August last year, a wooden statue of President Trump was constructed in Slovenia, east of the capital Ljubljana. Like the rendering of Mrs Trump, the statue of her husband divided opinion.

Standing nearly 8m (26ft) tall, the statue was burnt to the ground by unknown arsonists in January this year.

https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-europe-53343671
 
The US Supreme Court is set to decide whether President Donald Trump's tax returns and other financial records can be examined by Congress and prosecutors - a ruling with potentially huge political consequences.

Mr Trump refuses to share documents concerning his fortune and business.

His lawyers argue he enjoys total immunity while in office.

The ruling will test that claim and has implications on how far US lawmakers can scrutinise the president.

Even a ruling in Congress's favour would not necessarily make Mr Trump's tax returns public before his bid for re-election in November.

Mr Trump, who made his money as a property developer, is the first president since Richard Nixon in the 1970s not to have made his tax returns public.

He calls the investigation into his tax affairs a "witch hunt" and sees the congressional case as a device to harass him politically.

Why has this gone to the Supreme Court?
Two Democrat-controlled House of Representatives committees and New York District Attorney Cyrus Vance - also a Democrat - are demanding the release of his tax returns and other information.

The subpoenas - orders to hand over evidence - were issued last year to Mazars USA, who are Mr Trump's accountants, and to major Trump lenders Deutsche Bank and Capital One.

Lower courts in Washington and New York ruled against the president in all cases, but those decisions have been put on hold pending a final court ruling.

Deutsche Bank was one of the few banks willing to lend to Mr Trump after a series of corporate bankruptcies in the 1990s, and the documents sought include records related to the president, the Trump Organization and his family.

The banks and the accounting firm said they would release the information if ordered.

Mr Trump's lawyers argued that Congress had no authority to issue the subpoenas, and no valid justification to seek the records.

Damaging revelations about President Trump's financial affairs could hurt his campaign for re-election. He has already slumped in opinion polls, as critics accuse him of mishandling the coronavirus crisis.

The New York investigation covers alleged hush money payments made by Mr Trump's former lawyer Michael Cohen to two women - adult film star Stormy Daniels and former Playboy model Karen McDougal - who both say they had affairs with Mr Trump.

Such payments could violate campaign financing laws. The president denies the affairs took place.

Concerns have already been raised about possible conflicts of interest in Mr Trump's businesses.

At hearings in May there was fierce debate among the Supreme Court judges over the degree to which Congress should scrutinise the president's personal records.

In the New York case, they were sceptical about a Trump lawyer's argument that a president cannot be investigated while in office.

This is despite the court having a 5-4 conservative majority and including two Trump appointees - Neil Gorsuch and Brett Kavanaugh.

In two earlier cases over presidential power, in 1974 the Supreme Court acted unanimously in requiring President Nixon to surrender White House tapes in the Watergate scandal, and in 1997 it allowed a sexual harassment lawsuit to go ahead against President Bill Clinton.

Judges appointed by Mr Nixon and Mr Clinton voted against them in the cases.

https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-us-canada-53345679
 
The United States Supreme Court ruled on Thursday that the Manhattan district attorney can obtain President Donald Trump's tax records and that Congress can not have access to his financial records for now.

The justices heard arguments in two cases involving Trump's tax records by telephone in May.

Court observers thought the justices might combine the two cases, they have not, ruling in favour of release in one case and sending the second, involving US Congressional requests, back to a lower court.

The court upheld a New York prosecutor’s demand for Trump’s tax returns as part of a criminal investigation that includes hush-money payments to women who claim they had affairs with Trump.

Trump's lawyers argued at the time that a president can't be investigated while he holds office, suggesting that a ruling validating the subpoenas would open the door to harassing future presidents.

The cases resemble earlier disputes over presidents' assertions that they were too consumed with the job of running the country to worry about lawsuits and investigations. In 1974, the justices acted unanimously in requiring President Richard Nixon to turn over White House tapes to the Watergate special prosecutor. In 1997, another unanimous court allowed a sexual harassment lawsuit to go forward against President Bill Clinton.

In those cases, three Nixon appointees and two Clinton appointees, respectively, voted against the president who chose them for the high court.

Appellate courts in Washington and New York ruled that the documents should be turned over, but those rulings were put on hold pending a final court ruling. The appellate decisions brushed aside the president's broad arguments, focusing on the fact that the subpoenas were addressed to third parties asking for records of Trump's business and financial dealings as a private citizen, not as president.

House committees want records from Deutsche Bank and Capital One, as well as the Mazars USA accounting firm. Mazars also is the recipient of a subpoena from Manhattan District Attorney Cyrus Vance Jr.

Two congressional committees subpoenaed the bank documents as part of their investigations into Trump and his businesses. Deutsche Bank has been one of the few banks willing to lend to Trump after a series of corporate bankruptcies and defaults starting in the early 1990s.

Vance and the House Oversight and Reform Committee sought records from Mazars concerning Trump and his businesses based on payments that Trump's then-personal lawyer, Michael Cohen, arranged during the 2016 presidential race to keep two women from airing their claims of extramarital affairs with Trump.

Trump sued to block the subpoenas. He was represented by personal lawyers at the Supreme Court, and the Justice Department supported the high-court appeal.

https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2020...p-turn-financial-records-200622130204422.html
 
Donald Trump's tax returns can be seen by a New York prosecutor, the US Supreme Court has ruled.

The request to view the documents is part of a criminal investigation into alleged hush-money payments to women who claim they had affairs with the US president.

However in a separate ruling, Supreme Court justices said Mr Trump does not have to hand over his financial records to Congress, which has sought them for more than a year.

In response, the US president - who has tried hard to keep his financial records private - tweeted: "This is all political prosecution."

"I won the Mueller Witch Hunt, and others, and now I have to keep fighting in a politically corrupt New York," he wrote.

He added: "Courts in the past have given 'broad deference'. BUT NOT ME!"

In the New York case, Supreme Court judges rejected arguments by Mr Trump's lawyers and the US Justice Department that the president is immune from investigation while he holds office, or that a prosecutor must show a greater need than normal to obtain the records.

The tax returns are held by the president's longtime accounting firm, Mazars USA, which has said it would comply with a court order.

It is likely to be at least several weeks before the court issues a formal judgment that would trigger the turnover of the documents.

Because the grand jury process is confidential, the rulings make it unlikely any of Mr Trump's financial records will become public soon.

Unlike other recent presidents, Mr Trump has refused to release his tax returns and other documents that could provide details on his wealth and the activities of his family real estate company, the Trump Organisation.

As part of a criminal investigation by the Manhattan district attorney's office, court writs were issued to Mazars for financial records - including nearly a decade of Mr Trump's tax returns - to be turned over to a grand jury in New York City.

The investigation launched in 2018 into Mr Trump and the Trump Organisation was spurred by claims of hush payments to two women who said they had past sexual relationships with him; adult film actress Stormy Daniels and former Playboy model Karen McDougal.

Mr Trump has denied having relationships with the women.

Following the Supreme Court's ruling, Manhattan District Attorney Cyrus Vance said: "This is a tremendous victory for our nation's system of justice and its founding principle that no one - not even a president - is above the law."

The ruling on Congress' request for Mr Trump's financial records returns the case to lower courts, with no clear prospect for when the case might ultimately be resolved.

https://news.sky.com/story/donald-t...-york-prosecutor-supreme-court-rules-12024940
 
Donald Trump's tax returns can be seen by a New York prosecutor, the US Supreme Court has ruled.

The request to view the documents is part of a criminal investigation into alleged hush-money payments to women who claim they had affairs with the US president.

However in a separate ruling, Supreme Court justices said Mr Trump does not have to hand over his financial records to Congress, which has sought them for more than a year.

In response, the US president - who has tried hard to keep his financial records private - tweeted: "This is all political prosecution."

"I won the Mueller Witch Hunt, and others, and now I have to keep fighting in a politically corrupt New York," he wrote.

He added: "Courts in the past have given 'broad deference'. BUT NOT ME!"

In the New York case, Supreme Court judges rejected arguments by Mr Trump's lawyers and the US Justice Department that the president is immune from investigation while he holds office, or that a prosecutor must show a greater need than normal to obtain the records.

The tax returns are held by the president's longtime accounting firm, Mazars USA, which has said it would comply with a court order.

It is likely to be at least several weeks before the court issues a formal judgment that would trigger the turnover of the documents.

Because the grand jury process is confidential, the rulings make it unlikely any of Mr Trump's financial records will become public soon.

Unlike other recent presidents, Mr Trump has refused to release his tax returns and other documents that could provide details on his wealth and the activities of his family real estate company, the Trump Organisation.

As part of a criminal investigation by the Manhattan district attorney's office, court writs were issued to Mazars for financial records - including nearly a decade of Mr Trump's tax returns - to be turned over to a grand jury in New York City.

The investigation launched in 2018 into Mr Trump and the Trump Organisation was spurred by claims of hush payments to two women who said they had past sexual relationships with him; adult film actress Stormy Daniels and former Playboy model Karen McDougal.

Mr Trump has denied having relationships with the women.

Following the Supreme Court's ruling, Manhattan District Attorney Cyrus Vance said: "This is a tremendous victory for our nation's system of justice and its founding principle that no one - not even a president - is above the law."

The ruling on Congress' request for Mr Trump's financial records returns the case to lower courts, with no clear prospect for when the case might ultimately be resolved.

https://news.sky.com/story/donald-t...-york-prosecutor-supreme-court-rules-12024940

Lets leave his stupidity aside for one moment.... His hypocrisy is staggering.

Calling this a political witch hunt, what about Birther Gate against Obama? How about Trump being only the second President in History to refuse to disclose his returns?
 
US President Donald Trump has commuted the prison sentence of his longtime ally and former adviser Roger Stone.

The move - sparing Stone from jail but not a pardon - came just after a court denied Stone's request to delay the start date of his 40-month prison term.

He was convicted of lying to Congress, obstruction and witness tampering.

Stone was the sixth Trump aide found guilty on charges linked to a justice department probe that alleged Russia tried to boost the Trump 2016 campaign.

The 67-year-old had been due to report to a federal prison in Jesup, Georgia, next Tuesday.

What did the president say?
The White House said in a statement: "Roger Stone is a victim of the Russia Hoax that the Left and its allies in the media perpetuated for years in an attempt to undermine the Trump Presidency."

It said that Department of Justice prosecutors under special counsel Robert Mueller only charged Stone out of frustration after failing to prove the "fantasy" that the Trump campaign had colluded with the Kremlin.

"This is why the out-of-control Mueller prosecutors, desperate for splashy headlines to compensate for a failed investigation, set their sights on Mr Stone," said the statement.

The White House also suggested that the FBI had tipped off CNN about their pre-dawn raid on Stone's house, noting that a camera crew for the cable network was on the scene to record the arrest.

"Roger Stone has already suffered greatly," the statement said. "He was treated very unfairly, as were many others in this case. Roger Stone is now a free man!"

Mr Trump had been hinting about a reprieve for Stone for months, including on Thursday night in an interview with a Fox News host.

https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-us-canada-53371756
 
Mueller defends Russia probe, says Roger Stone 'remains a felon'

Donald Trump may have commuted Roger Stone's prison sentence but the US president's longtime ally remains a convicted criminal, former special counsel Robert Mueller has said.

Stone, 67, had been set to begin serving a 40-month prison term on Tuesday after his conviction on seven felony charges originally brought by Mueller as part of the Russia collusion probe.

The charges include tampering with a witness and obstructing the House investigation into whether the Trump campaign conspired with Russia to help him win the 2016 election.

In an op-ed piece published in The Washington Post on Saturday, Mueller defended his probe as being of "paramount importance", dismissing White House claims that he was out to get Trump and those who worked with him.

"Stone was prosecuted and convicted because he committed federal crimes. He remains a convicted felon, and rightly so," Mueller wrote as Democrats - and two Republican senators - piled on Trump for again intervening in the justice system to help an ally.

Senator Mitt Romney, who infuriated Trump when he became the only Republican to vote to convict the president in his impeachment trial, pulled no punches on Saturday.

"Unprecedented, historic corruption: an American president commutes the sentence of a person convicted by a jury of lying to shield that very president," he tweeted.

Another Republican senator, Pat Toomey, also criticised Trump but in milder terms, saying that as Stone has been duly convicted, it was "a mistake" to commute his sentence.

Trump defended his Friday night move to commute Stone's sentence, saying Stone and others convicted of crimes in the Russia probe were caught up in a "witch-hunt".

"They've all been treated unfairly, and what I did, I will tell you this: people are extremely happy, because in this country, they want justice," Trump told reporters.

'Staggering corruption'

Most Republicans have remained largely mute on the matter, while Democratic critics led by House Speaker Nancy Pelosi unanimously condemned Trump.

"President Trump's decision to commute the sentence of top campaign adviser Roger Stone, who could directly implicate him in criminal misconduct, is an act of staggering corruption," she said in a statement.

Pelosi called for legislation "to ensure that no president can pardon or commute the sentence of an individual who is engaged in a cover-up campaign to shield that president from criminal prosecution."

Democratic presidential candidate Joe Biden weighed in without mentioning Stone by name.

"I've said it before, and I'll say it again: Donald Trump is the most corrupt president in modern American history," he tweeted.

"Every day that he remains in office, he further threatens the future of our democracy. We have to vote him out this November," Biden wrote.

Stone, a longtime political activist and consultant, is easily recognised by his trademark dark glasses and bowler hat. He and Trump were introduced in the 1980s and were said to have hit it off immediately.

Trump's action instantly brought new accusations that the president has intervened freely in the US justice system to help friends and allies, and to punish critics and perceived enemies.

In a highly unusual move in May, the US Justice Department moved to dismiss its own case against Michael Flynn, a former national security adviser to Trump, though he had pleaded guilty to lying to the FBI. A federal judge has demanded a further judicial review of the matter.

Stone was the first person directly involved in Trump's campaign to receive clemency.

Indictment papers said a top Trump campaign official had dispatched Stone to get information from the WikiLeaks organisation regarding thousands of emails hacked from Democratic accounts - a leak that fuelled Republican attacks on Trump's 2016 opponent, Hillary Clinton.

Trump has denied knowledge of any such outreach to WikiLeaks.
https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2020...oger-stone-remains-felon-200712091336960.html
 
US President Donald Trump has retweeted a social media post that accused the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention of “lying” about Covid-19. The original tweet was shared by conservative game-show host Chuck Woolery

The White House has also been briefing against the nation’s top infectious disease expert, Dr Anthony Fauci. In comments to US media, a White House official said Dr Fauci had “been wrong on things”
 
Lawyers for United States President Donald Trump told a federal judge on Wednesday they are planning further challenges to the Manhattan district attorney's efforts to see the president's financial records, despite a US Supreme Court decision allowing the prosecutor's review.

In a filing with the US District Court in Manhattan, Trump's lawyers said the president will file an amended complaint raising arguments against district attorney Cyrus Vance's subpoena that the Supreme Court said he can still make.

Trump's lawyers said the Republican president may argue that the grand jury subpoena was too broad.

He may also argue that Vance, a Democrat, brought the subpoena to harass Trump, manipulate or retaliate against his policies, or otherwise "impede his constitutional duties".

US District Judge Victor Marrero has scheduled a Thursday hearing to discuss the matter.

A public opinion poll by Reuters/Ipsos this week suggested many Americans remain concerned about Trump's finances and potential conflicts of interest with his family business.

The poll suggested 66 percent of adults agreed that Trump "should release his tax returns from earlier years", and 68 percent said: "Americans have a right to see each presidential candidate's financial records before the election."

When asked why the Republican president has not released the records, about half said it was because of reasons that could make it tougher for him to be re-elected.

According to the poll, 26 percent said they believe Trump's taxes contain "incriminating evidence against him", and 10 percent said Trump is "trying to hide significant financial losses". Another 16 percent said they thought Trump does not want to reveal them because he "does not pay taxes".

The case concerns a subpoena by Vance last August to Trump's accounting firm Mazars USA for eight years of personal and corporate tax returns.

Vance's criminal probe into Trump and his Trump Organization was spurred by revelations about hush money paid before the 2016 election.

These included payments to buy the silence of adult film star Stormy Daniels and former Playboy model Karen McDougal about their claimed sexual encounters with Trump, which he denies.

The Supreme Court on July 9 rejected Trump's arguments for sweeping presidential immunity and ruled that Vance could obtain the records but prevented - at least for now - the Democratic-led House of Representatives committees from obtaining similar documents.

https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2020...lock-tax-records-release-200715161958486.html
 
New York prosecutor warns against Trump tax return delays

A New York prosecutor has urged a judge not to allow US President Donald Trump to run out the clock on a criminal probe that is currently seeking the president's much-sought-after tax returns.

Carey Dunne, general counsel for District Attorney Cyrus Vance, spoke at a hearing in federal court in Manhattan to discuss a renewed legal challenge by the president to block or narrow Vance's ability to see the documents.

Vance has sought the records as part of an investigation into reports that Trump's former lawyer Michael Cohen paid pornographic film actress Stormy Daniels $130,000 to buy her silence before the 2016 presidential election about claimed sexual encounters with Trump, which he has denied.

US Supreme Court rules Trump financial records can be subpoenaed

Last week, the Supreme Court ruled that Vance's office could obtain Trump's financial records as part of an August 2019 subpoena issued to Trump's accounting firm Mazars USA, which sought to obtain eight years of personal and corporate tax returns.

The court rejected the president's lawyers' arguments that he is immune from investigation while he holds office or that a prosecutor must show a greater need than normal to obtain the records.

Dunne told US District Judge Victor Marrero there are looming deadlines to prosecute cases because of statutes of limitations, and more delays could give Trump the "absolute temporary immunity" the US Supreme Court has rejected.

"Let's not let delay kill this case," Dunne said. "Justice delayed becomes justice denied."

Highly sought-after tax returns
Meanwhile, William Consovoy, a lawyer for Trump, said the president could argue that the subpoena was "wildly overbroad", reflecting Vance's bad faith.

He added that Vance, a Democrat, might have gone after the Republican president to harass him or because of political differences.

Vance has denied having motivations beyond the criminal investigation.

Consovoy also said the subpoena was similar to congressional subpoenas that the Supreme Court last week refused to enforce, and instead sent back down to a lower court.

Trump's tax returns have been at the centre of public interest since his campaign, when he vowed to release the documents but later reversed his position, citing an audit by the Internal Revenue Service (IRS).

Although not required by law, it has become customary for presidential candidates to release their tax returns in recent decades.

A Reuters/Ipsos poll recently found that 66 percent of American adults agreed that Trump should release his tax returns from earlier years, and 68 percent said Americans have a right to see presidential candidates' returns before the November 3 election.

However, even if Vance prevails in obtaining Trump's documents, grand jury secrecy rules make it unlikely they will become public soon.

That could change if criminal charges were brought against the president or other defendants.

The litigation from Trump's team has made it unlikely this would happen, at least until after the election.

During Thursday's court appearance, Judge Marrero approved a jointly negotiated schedule giving Trump until July 27 to file papers formally opposing the subpoena and its scope. Vance, for his part, agreed he would not enforce the subpoena through that date.

https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2020...-trump-tax-return-delays-200716160725649.html
 
Robert O'Brien, President Trump's national security adviser, 'tests positive for Covid-19' sources tell US media
 
US President Donald Trump on Monday filed a new challenge to the Manhattan District Attorney's subpoena for his tax returns, weeks after the United States Supreme Court said the president was not immune from state criminal probes.

In their new court papers, Trump's lawyers said the subpoena of his tax records was "wildly overbroad" and "amounts to harassment of the President".

They said the subpoena seeks detailed information about all of Trump's assets in the US and abroad for a 10-year period.

"Simply put, it asks for everything," the lawyers wrote.

Trump's lawsuit said the subpoena concerns entities in California, Florida, Hawaii, Illinois, New Jersey, North Carolina, Pennsylvania, Virginia, and the District of Columbia. It said other affected entities are located outside the U.S., including in Canada, the Dominican Republic, Dubai, India, Indonesia, Ireland, the Philippines, Scotland, and Turkey.

https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2020...elease-financial-records-200727212946935.html
 
A United States Senate committee abruptly cancelled a confirmation hearing on Thursday for retired Army Brigadier General Anthony Tata to be the Pentagon's undersecretary for policy after a furore erupted over offensive remarks he made about Islam and other inflammatory comments.

Tata's nomination was already under criticism from Senate Democrats, who sent a letter to him this week calling on him to withdraw.

Tata, a staunch supporter of President Donald Trump and a conservative commentator for the Fox News television outlet, has been working in the US Department of Defense as a senior adviser to Secretary of Defense Mark Esper.

Cancellation of Tata's confirmation hearing, a Washington ritual for presidential political appointees, now puts in question whether his nomination would be withdrawn by the White House.

According to media reports, Tata had posted tweets in 2018 calling Islam the "most oppressive violent religion I know of", and he called former President Barack Obama a "terrorist leader", and referred to him as Muslim. The tweets were later taken down.

Senate Armed Services Committee Chairman Jim Inhofe, a Republican, announced the hearing's cancellation shortly before it was scheduled to start.

"There are many Democrats and Republicans who didn't know enough about Anthony Tata to consider him for a very significant position at this time," Inhofe said.

Inhofe said the panel did not get required documents from Tata until Thursday. "As I told the president last night, we're simply out of time with the August recess coming, so it wouldn't serve any useful purpose to have a hearing at this point, and he agreed," he said.

Jonathan Hoffman, the Pentagon's chief spokesman, told reporters that Tata would continue to work as an adviser to Esper.

"The department was looking forward to General Tata having the opportunity to share his experience and success leading large public organisations, public sector organisations, and his extensive national security experience with the committee today," Hoffman said during a Pentagon news briefing.

Asked if Esper supported Tata's tweets on Islam, Hoffman said, "The general himself has stated that he does not believe or support the comments he made. He issued a letter to the committee retracting those statements."

The committee's top Democrat, Senator Jack Reed, said the senators had a closed-door meeting on Tuesday, and Inhofe "did the right thing" by cancelling the hearing.

'"It's fair to say members on both sides of the aisle have raised serious questions about this nominee," Reed said.

According to a statement from the senators who sent the letter, Tata walked back his statements, "many of which he deleted, only after his nomination became public". They said Tata referred to the tweets as an "aberration in a four-decade thread of faithful public service."

The letter to Tata, signed by nine Democratic senators and Vermont independent Bernie Sanders, said, "Your letter to committee leadership appears to be a conveniently timed retraction by someone who has suddenly realized his nomination is in jeopardy. But your multiple past statements cannot be dismissed simply as an aberration."

Islamic groups have repeatedly called for lawmakers to oppose Tata's nomination. And they hailed the hearing cancellation.

"If Mr Tata truly does not have enough votes to proceed, his defeat will represent a victory over anti-Muslim bigotry, and for the principle that hatred has no place in our government," said Robert McCaw, government affairs director of the Council on American-Islamic Relations.

Tata, who retired in 2009 after 28 years in the US Army, served in a number of command and combat jobs.

https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2020...led-furore-islam-remarks-200730203251237.html
 
Trump wears mask, voices hope on coronavirus vaccine in North Carolina

MORRISVILLE, N.C. (Reuters) - President Donald Trump wore a mask and talked up the possibility of a coronavirus vaccine by the end of the year on Monday as he looked to show voters in the battleground state of North Carolina that he is responding to the pandemic.

Trump, whose job approval ratings have dropped as many Americans believe he has handled the virus badly, sought for the second week to look in command after setting aside his hands-off approach.

“I trust all Americans to do the right thing but we strongly advise everyone to especially, especially focus on maintaining a social distance, maintain a rigorous hygiene, avoid crowded gatherings and indoor bars and wear masks when appropriate,” Trump said.

The Republican president spoke during a visit to a Fujifilm plant in Morrisville, North Carolina, where work on a vaccine is being performed. During a tour of the facility, he wore a mask publicly for a second time, the first being on a trip to Walter Reed Medical Center near Washington earlier this month.

“I heard very positive things, but by the end of the year, we think we’re in very good shape to be doing that,” Trump said of a potential vaccine.

He expressed confidence in the economic recovery and said: “A lot of governors should be opening up states that they’re not opening.”

Infection rates have climbed since June in the United States, which leads the world in the total number of deaths and cases. National security adviser Robert O’Brien became the most senior official in Trump’s inner circle to test positive for the coronavirus, the White House said on Monday.

Trump, who is seeking re-election on Nov. 3, has his work cut out for him in North Carolina, a state he won narrowly in 2016 and where he had originally hoped to accept his nomination for a second term.

A new NBC News/Marist poll said Democrat Joe Biden led Trump by 7 points in North Carolina. It said respondents by a 2-to-1 margin favored Democratic Governor Roy Cooper’s opposition to a large Republican nominating convention event in Charlotte, North Carolina, in late August.

Cooper’s opposition prompted Trump to try to arrange a big event in Jacksonville, Florida, but that plan fell apart last week and now it is unclear where Trump will give his acceptance speech.

Republican delegates are still to meet in Charlotte in late August to conduct some convention business.

https://www.reuters.com/article/us-...virus-vaccine-in-north-carolina-idUSKCN24S2NG
 
No confidence in White House virus chief, Pelosi says

US House Speaker Nancy Pelosi has taken a swipe at the White House’s coronavirus task-force co-ordinator, Dr Deborah Birx, casting doubt on her ability to do the job.

Pelosi linked Birx to disinformation she accused US President Donald Trump of spreading.

Since the start of the pandemic, President Trump has regularly drawn criticism for his claims about Covid-19, many of which have been verified as false.

"I think the president has been spreading disinformation about the virus and she is his appointee, so I don't have confidence there, no," Pelosi told ABC's This Week programme.

Pelosi made the comments in response to a question about a Politico report. The report quoted Pelosi as saying Birx was “the worst” in a meeting with Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin on Thursday.

In response, Birx told CNN's State of the Union she thought the criticism was triggered by a New York Times article which suggested she was too ready to embrace overly optimistic assessments of the situation.

"This was not a pollyannish view. I’ve never been called pollyannish, or non-scientific, or non-data driven," she said. "I will stake my 40-year career on those fundamental principles of using data to implement better programmes and save lives."
 
Whether you love him or hate him, he is the one who has walked his talk around immigration, America first and of course sticking it back to China
 
Lawyers for a Manhattan prosecutor trying to get President Donald Trump's tax returns have told a judge that the request is justified because of public reports of "extensive and protracted criminal conduct at the Trump Organization".

Manhattan District Attorney Cyrus Vance Jr has been seeking eight years of the Republican president’s personal and corporate tax records, but had previously disclosed little about what prompted him to request the records, other than that part of the investigation is related to payoffs made to women to keep them quiet about alleged affairs with Trump.

Trump’s lawyers last month said the grand jury subpoena for the tax returns was issued in bad faith and amounted to harassment of the president.

In their court filing on Monday, though, lawyers for Vance said Trump's arguments that the subpoena was too broad stemmed from "the false premise" that the probe was limited to the so-called "hush-money" payments.

"This Court is already aware that this assertion is fatally undermined by undisputed information in the public record," Vance’s lawyers wrote.

They said public reporting demonstrates that at the time the subpoena was issued "there were public allegations of possible criminal activity at Plaintiff’s New York County-based Trump Organization dating back over a decade".

"These reports describe transactions involving individual and corporate actors based in New York County, but whose conduct at times extended beyond New York’s borders. This possible criminal activity occurred within the applicable statutes of limitations, particularly if the transactions involved a continuing pattern of conduct," the lawyers said.

'Temporary absolute immunity'
The lawyers urged Judge Victor Marrero to swiftly reject Trump's arguments, saying the baseless claims were threatening the investigation. Marrero, who ruled against Trump last year, has scheduled arguments to be fully submitted by mid-August.

"Every day that goes by is another day Plaintiff effectively achieves the ‘temporary absolute immunity’ that was rejected by this Court, the Court of Appeals and the Supreme Court," Vance's lawyers said. "Every such day also increases the prospect of a loss of evidence or the expiration of limitations periods - the precise concerns that the Supreme Court observed justified its rejection of Plaintiff’s immunity claim in the first place."

The Supreme Court last month rejected claims by Trump’s lawyers that the president could not be criminally investigated while he was in office.

Vance sought the tax records in part for a probe of how Trump’s then-personal lawyer, Michael Cohen, arranged during the 2016 presidential race to keep the porn actress Stormy Daniels and model Karen McDougal from airing claims of extramarital affairs with Trump. Trump has denied the affairs.

Cohen is serving the last two years of a three-year prison sentence in home confinement after pleading guilty to campaign finance violations and lying to Congress, among other charges. He said he plans to publish a book critical of the president before the November election.

https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2020...reports-criminal-conduct-200803171940756.html
 
Trump challenges subpoena for tax records after court ruling

US President Donald Trump has insisted in court papers that a grand jury subpoena over his tax returns was "overbroad" and issued "in bad faith".

Trump on Monday reiterated the argument in his latest court filing challenging the subpoena for eight years of his personal and corporate tax records.

The filing in federal court in Manhattan was in response to a motion by Manhattan District Attorney Cyrus Vance to dismiss the new challenge to the subpoena without delay.

The dispute already was subject to a ruling from the US Supreme Court last month that the president was not immune from state criminal probes.

Grand jury deliberations are secret, and the public may not learn what the subpoena uncovers until after the November 3 election.

But on Monday, Trump's lawyers argued the probe is about hush-money payments made in 2016 by his former lawyer and fixer Michael Cohen.

"The president plausibly alleges that the grand jury investigation is about certain payments made in 2016 - not some murky inquiry into broader financial practices," Trump's lawyers said.

Vance last week said in his papers that it was a "false premise" that the investigation was limited to the hush-money payments.

Rather, Vance hinted, it is part of an investigation of "possibly extensive and protracted criminal conduct at the Trump Organization," including alleged insurance and bank fraud.

Cohen pleaded guilty in 2018 to campaign violations tied to the payments to pornographic film actress Stormy Daniels and former model Karen McDougal, who said they had affairs with Trump, which he denies.

https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2020...tax-records-court-ruling-200810160538585.html
 
US President Donald Trump was abruptly led out of a news briefing by a Secret Service agent, after shots were fired outside the White House.

The agent walked on stage as Mr Trump was speaking and whispered in his ear.

Mr Trump was heard to say "Oh!" and "What's happening", as he left the room. The White House was placed on lockdown during Monday's incident.

The president returned nine minutes later to say the situation was under control and a man had been shot.

The US Secret Service confirmed the incident, saying there had been "an officer involved shooting at 17th Street and Pennsylvania Ave".

It said "a male subject and a USSS officer were both transported to a local hospital", adding that "at no time during this incident was the White House complex breached or were any protectees in danger".

President Trump told reporters he believed the US Secret Service had shot a suspect, who was armed "from what I understand".

He said did not know if the person harboured any ill intentions towards him.

"It might not have had anything to do with me," the president said.

Mr Trump acknowledged it was an unusual situation, but praised the professionalism of the USSS.

A journalist asked Mr Trump if he was rattled by the events.

"Do I seem rattled?" he replied.

The president added: "It's unfortunate that this is the world, but the world's always been a dangerous place. It's not something that's unique.

"The world has been, if you look back over the centuries, the world has been a dangerous place, very dangerous place, and it will continue, I guess, for a period of time."

He told journalists he was escorted to the Oval Office outside the briefing room during the incident.

Also led out of the news conference were Treasury Secretary Steve Mnuchin and Office of Management and Budget Director Russ Vought. The doors were locked.

The District of Columbia fire department said a man suffered serious or possibly critical injuries, according to the Associated Press.

The news agency also reported that authorities were looking into whether the individual has a background of mental illness.

https://www.bbc.com/news/world-us-canada-53731624
 
US calls for shower rules to be eased after Trump hair complaints

The US government has proposed changing the definition of a showerhead to allow increased water flow, following complaints from President Donald Trump about his hair routine.

Under a 1992 law, showerheads in the US are not allowed to produce more than 2.5 gallons (9.5l) of water per minute.

The Trump administration wants this limit to apply to each nozzle, rather than the overall fixture.

Consumer and conservation groups argue that it is wasteful and unnecessary.

The changes were proposed by the Department of Energy on Wednesday following complaints by Mr Trump at the White House last month.

"So showerheads - you take a shower, the water doesn't come out. You want to wash your hands, the water doesn't come out. So what do you do? You just stand there longer or you take a shower longer? Because my hair - I don't know about you, but it has to be perfect. Perfect," he said.

Andrew deLaski, executive director of the energy conservation group Appliance Standards Awareness Project, said the proposal was "silly".

With four or five or more nozzles, "you could have 10, 15 gallons per minute powering out of the showerhead, literally probably washing you out of the bathroom," he told the Associated Press news agency.

"If the president needs help finding a good shower, we can point him to some great consumer websites that help you identify a good showerhead that provides a dense soak and a good shower," he added.

David Friedman, vice president of advocacy at the organisation Consumer Reports, said showerheads in the US already "achieve high levels of customer satisfaction", while saving people money.

The proposal could face court battles if it advances, Reuters news agency reports.

https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-us-canada-53761744
 
Donald Trump hit by blunt question over whether he 'regrets all the lying' during presidency

Donald Trump swerved a question from a reporter suggesting he had consistently lied to the American people during his presidency.

Mr Trump was expected to give an update on the coronavirus pandemic in the US during a White House press conference on Thursday, but the briefing quickly moved on to other topics.

"Mr President... after three and a half years, do you regret at all, all the lying you've done to the American people?," asked S.V Date, a veteran journalist for the Huffington Post.

Mr Trump asked the correspondent to clarify his question, to which he replied: "All the lying. All the dishonesties."

"That who has done?," asked a still confused president.

Mr Date made clear that he was asking about Mr Trump himself, prompting the president to turn his gaze to another journalist and give them the chance to ask a question instead, without offering up an answer or defence.

"Go ahead, please," the president repeated, keen to move on from his exchange with Mr Date.

After the briefing, Mr Date, who has long urged White House journalists to push back against the president's claims, tweeted: "For five years I've been wanting to ask him that."

Previously, an investigation by The Washington Post claimed that Mr Trump had made more than 20,000 false or misleading statements since he took office in January 2017.

His record is under ever-increasing scrutiny as COVID-19 continues to spread throughout much of the US, which has more confirmed cases than any other country with just shy of 5.3 million.

More than 167,250 people have died with COVID-19 in the US, which is also the highest count globally, according to Johns Hopkins University, which is tracking the pandemic.

Mr Date also tweeted that Mr Trump was using his news briefing to deliver a partisan campaign speech, which he suggested could be in violation of the law if White House staff had been involved.

The president took aim at Kamala Harris during the briefing, amplifying a conspiracy theory that Joe Biden's running mate for the upcoming election was not born in the US and therefore unqualified to serve as vice president.

Ms Harris - who earlier this week became the first woman of colour to be nominated for national office by a major US political party - was born in Oakland, California.

Mr Trump previously questioned whether Barack Obama was eligible to be president for the same reason, and only stopped after his predecessor released a birth certificate proving that he was born in Hawaii.

https://news.sky.com/story/donald-t...e-lying-youve-done-during-presidency-12048999
 
President Donald Trump has paid tribute to his "best friend" and youngest brother following his death at 71.

"It is with [a] heavy heart I share that my wonderful brother, Robert, peacefully passed away tonight," he said in a statement on Saturday.

The president had visited his brother in hospital in New York the day before his death, telling reporters: "He's having a hard time."

It is unclear what caused Robert Trump's death.

A number of US media reports suggested he had been seriously ill.

"He was not just my brother, he was my best friend," Donald Trump said in a statement on Saturday. "His memory will live on in my heart forever."

President Trump's son Eric described his uncle as an "incredible man - strong, kind and loyal to the core".

"He will be deeply missed by our entire family," he wrote on Twitter.

https://www.bbc.com/news/world-us-canada-53796429
 
A video has shown Melania Trump appearing to refuse to hold husband Donald Trump's hand as they stepped off Air Force One.

Footage, which has been widely shared online, shows the First Lady, 50, navigating the steps from the presidential aircraft in high heels while trying to hold her dress down in windy conditions.

However, many on social suggested she was giving her 74-year-old husband the cold shoulder as she moved her arm away when he tried to grab hold of it.

The US president appeared to make a second attempt before finally placing his right hand on her lower back.

Twitter users had mixed opinions on the couple's body language, with one person writing: "Nope. She doesn't want him touching her."

Another said: "Or she's trying to keep her dress down from wind. But you keep doing you."

The couple, who were travelling with their 14-year-old son, Barron, had arrived at Joint Base Andrews in Washington DC after flying in from New Jersey.

It is not the first time the First Lady has appeared to reject Mr Trump's hand in public.

The former model abruptly pulled her hand out of her husband's while attending a College Football Championship in New Orleans in January as they stood on the field before singing the National Anthem.

Mr Trump and his family returned to Washington DC on Sunday after his brother Robert died on Saturday at the age of 71 in a New York City hospital.

The president had visited him in hospital the day before and later said in a statement: "He was not just my brother, he was my best friend. He will be greatly missed, but we will meet again."

His cause of death has not been disclosed, although the businessman reportedly spent at least 10 days in June in the neurosciences intensive care unit at Mount Sinai Hospital in Manhattan.

https://www.skysports.com/live-scores/cricket/england-v-pakistan/35236/commentary
 
<blockquote class="twitter-tweet" data-conversation="none"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">TRUMP: "We are going to win four more years. And then after that we'll go for another four years, because they spied on my campaign. We should get a redo of four years." <a href="https://t.co/lBxbJZiv2M">pic.twitter.com/lBxbJZiv2M</a></p>— Aaron Rupar (@atrupar) <a href="https://twitter.com/atrupar/status/1295475269504032769?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">August 17, 2020</a></blockquote> <script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>

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President Donald Trump's older sister, a former federal judge, has been heard sharply criticising her brother in a series of recordings, at one point saying the president "has no principles".

Maryanne Trump Barry was secretly recorded by her niece, Mary Trump, who recently released a book denouncing the president, Too Much and Never Enough: How My Family Created the World's Most Dangerous Man.

Mary Trump said on Saturday she made the recordings in 2018 and 2019.

In one recording, Barry, 83, says she had heard a 2018 interview with her brother on Fox News in which he suggested that he would put her on the border to oversee cases of immigrant children separated from their parents.

"His base, I mean my God, if you were a religious person, you want to help people. Not do this," Barry says.

Read more on:

https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2020...er-president-phony-cruel-200823045753340.html
 
Donald Trump has suggested people in the midst of Hurricane Laura could sell his autograph for $10,000.

The US president was in Lake Charles, Louisiana, on Saturday to see the damage from the hurricane and to be briefed on the disaster and federal response.

He signed autographs for some of those listening, saying they could sell them on eBay for $10,000 (£7,500).

Mr Trump sat down and called to a group of people, saying: "Come here fellas, get over here. I want a little power."

Handing over his autograph to an official, he said: "Sell this on eBay tonight, you'll get $10,000", telling another recipient that he is deliberately not putting his name on as it would be worth more without it.

EBay already has a number of pieces of Trump-autographed memorabilia, with bids for some of them reaching into thousands of dollars.

Tall buildings in Lake Charles had their windows smashed by Hurricane Laura's 150mph (240kmph) winds, which left glass and debris scattered across the city.

At least four people were killed after trees fell on their homes.

"I'm here to support the great people of Louisiana," Mr Trump said in a news conference in Lake Charles, adding: "It was a tremendously powerful storm."

He said he knew one thing about the state of Louisiana: "They rebuild it fast."

https://news.sky.com/story/trump-ha...his-on-ebay-tonight-youll-get-10-000-12059527
 
Donald Trump's older sister heavily criticised her brother and his children in a new set of recordings released by her niece.

Former federal judge Maryanne Trump Barry can be heard condemning Ivanka Trump, the president's adviser and second child, the president's son Eric as well as Mr Trump himself.

Mrs Trump Berry criticises Ivanka after she posted a photo on Instagram of herself and her young son on the same day the Trump administration was reportedly separating migrant children from their families in 2018.

Referring to a comedian who denounced Ivanka's photo, she said: "When that damn Ivanka puts this picture, of the Madonna and Child, on Instagram, when the big news of the day was about children being ripped from their families, I couldn't blame.

"I never heard of Samantha Bee before. I couldn't blame what she said."

Bee used an obscenity to describe Ivanka, and has since apologised.

Mr Trump's niece, Mary Trump, released the secretly recorded conversation between her and Mrs Trump Barry on Friday.

In the recording, the pair continued to talk about Ivanka, with Mr Trump's sister saying: "Ivanka gives a s***. It's all about her.

"She's a mini-Donald," she said, adding the president is "besotted with her. He always has been. She's always been his favourite".

Moving onto Eric Trump, the president's second son, Mrs Trump Barry had a few choice words about him.

"Meanwhile, Eric's become the ***** publicly," she can be heard saying.

And she is no less relentless when it comes to her brother, saying he "won't do anything for anybody unless it's going to enure to his...".

Mrs Barry Trump can be heard adding: "He won't do anything publicly. I mean, if you...Anything he did, he says, 'Look what I've done! Aren't I wonderful!

"And he's as tight as a duck's a**. Just like dad, really."

The aunt and niece also spoke about Mr Trump's action on Dreamers - people who were brought to the US illegally as children who can receive deferred deportation and can become eligible for a US work permit - an initiative brought in by Barack Obama.

"Well, what happened, what he did with the Dreamers. I mean," Mrs Barry Trump said.

"But he denies it. I mean, he would deny he changed his mind.

"He's all over..."

Mary Trump then says there are children in "de facto concentration camps" and the president blames the Democrats for the "horrible policy" which "suggested that he thinks it's a bad thing - and yet he's allowing it to continue".

Mrs Barry Trump replies: "It's mind-boggling. But that's all about his base."

Mary Trump, who is the daughter of the president's older brother Fred Trump Jr, says she made the recordings in 2018 and 2019.

She recently published a book entitled: "Too Much and Never Enough: How My Family Created the World's Most Dangerous Man".

The latest series of recordings were released a week after Mary Trump released another clip in which Mrs Trump Barry said her brother had "no principles" and was a "liar".

Mary Trump's spokesman said she began recording conversations with Mrs Trump Barry in 2018 to catch her family members in a lie over the value of the family's estate.

In New York state it is legal to record a conversation as long as at least one participant gives consent.

https://news.sky.com/story/donald-t...-is-a-*****-and-ivanka-a-mini-donald-12059651
 
US eyes giving COVID-19 vaccine emergency approval

Stephen Hahn, the head of the US Food and Drug Administration, has raised the possibility of giving an emergency approval on coronavirus vaccines being developed in the country, even before trials are concluded.

"If they do that before the end of Phase Three," which involves large-scale human testing, "we may find that appropriate. We may find that inappropriate, we will make a determination," Hahn told the Financial Times.


But the move has drawn criticism that he is giving in to pressure by the Trump administration to step up the production of a vaccine ahead of the November 3 elections.

"This is going to be a science, medicine, data decision. This is not going to be a political decision," he said.

The US has reported almost six million cases and 183,000 deaths, raising criticism and questions against the Trump administration's handling of the deadly pandemic.
 
Alexei Navalny: Trump refuses to condemn Russia over poisoning

President Donald Trump has refused to condemn Russia over the poisoning of opposition figure Alexei Navalny, saying he has not seen proof.

He said the case was "tragic" but urged reporters to focus instead on China, which he said was a bigger threat to the world than Russia.

Nato and Germany say there is "proof beyond doubt" that Mr Navalny was attacked with a Novichok nerve agent.

His team says he was poisoned on the Kremlin's orders. Russia denies this.

On Saturday, the Russian foreign ministry suggested that if a Novichok-type nerve agent had indeed been used, it did not necessarily originate in Russia.

Mr Navalny - an anti-corruption campaigner who has long been the most prominent face of opposition to President Vladimir Putin in Russia - is in a coma in a Berlin hospital having been airlifted there from Siberia, where he fell ill.

What did Trump say?

Speaking at a press event on Friday, he said he had yet to see evidence of poisoning in the case.

"So I don't know exactly what happened. I think it's tragic, it's terrible, it shouldn't happen. We haven't had any proof yet but I will take a look," he said.

He also stopped short of criticising Mr Putin and said Beijing posed a greater threat.

"It is interesting that everybody's always mentioning Russia and I don't mind you mentioning Russia but I think probably China at this point is a nation that you should be talking about much more so," he said.

Read more:

What is Nato's position?

Tests at a military laboratory in Germany show "beyond doubt" the presence of a Novichok nerve agent, the German government and Nato say.

On Friday Nato called for Russia to disclose its Novichok nerve agent programme to international monitors. Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg said members were united in condemning the "horrific" attack on Mr Navalny.

Mr Stoltenberg said it required an international response, but gave no further details.

The US National Security Council has pledged to "work with allies and the international community to hold those in Russia accountable".
https://www.bbc.com/news/world-us-canada-54039710
 
Before he became president, Donald Trump's strong dislike of Barack Obama saw him hire a "Faux-Bama" to take part in a video in which he mocked and "fired" him, it has been claimed.

According to a new book by his former personal lawyer and fixer Michael Cohen, as reported by CNN, Mr Trump employed a lookalike for a skit in which he "ritualistically belittled the first black president and then fired him".

The claim comes from Mr Cohen's upcoming memoir Disloyal: The True Story Of The Former Personal Attorney To President Donald J Trump, which CNN has obtained an early copy of.

While CNN reports that the book does not name the man who allegedly played Mr Obama, or give a date for when the incident happened, it does include a photograph.

It shows Mr Trump sitting behind a desk, facing a black man in a suit, who has a US flag pin on his lapel - and on the desk are two books, one displaying his White House predecessor's name in large letters.

Also in the memoir, Cohen - who worked as Mr Trump's attorney between 2006 and 2018 - alleges that his former boss was "guilty of the same crimes" that landed him in a federal prison.

Cohen was jailed for three years in May last year after pleading guilty to various crimes - including making illegal hush money payments to silence two women alleged to have had an affair with Mr Trump, and lying to Congress.

Still under house arrest, Cohen reiterates his long-standing claim that Mr Trump approved a $130,000 (£98,000) payment to silence one of those women - porn actress Stormy Daniels - ahead of the 2016 election.

Mr Trump has previously denied knowledge of the payment and having an affair with Ms Daniels.

Cohen's memoir also claims that Mr Trump admires Vladimir Putin, but says the Trump campaign was "far too chaotic and incompetent to actually conspire with the Russian government".

The book - released on Tuesday - has been dismissed by the White House as "fan fiction".

https://news.sky.com/story/donald-t...ire-predecessor-former-lawyer-claims-12064914
 
Donald Trump behaves like a mobster and has "a low opinion of all black people", according to the US president's former lawyer Michael Cohen.

The allegations come from Cohen's new book, Disloyal: A Memoir, written during his jail term for Trump campaign finance violations, among other crimes.

Cohen claims Mr Trump also made racist comments about Nelson Mandela and Hispanics.

The White House says Cohen is lying.

"Cohen is a disgraced felon and disbarred lawyer, who lied to Congress," press secretary Kayleigh McEnany said in a statement at the weekend. "He has lost all credibility, and it's unsurprising to see his latest attempt to profit off of lies."

In the book, Cohen alleges that Mr Trump is "guilty of the same crimes" that landed him in prison, and calls his former boss "a cheat, a liar, a fraud, a bully, a racist, a predator, a conman". He said he had the mentality of a "mob boss".

Various US news outlets have published quotes from the book, which comes out on Tuesday. Here are some of the key claims.

On black people and Mandela
"As a rule, Trump expressed low opinions of all black folks, from music to culture and politics," Cohen writes in his book.

He claimed Donald Trump said the late South African president and anti-apartheid activist Nelson Mandela was "no leader".

"Tell me one country run by a black person that isn't a ********. They are all complete [expletive] toilets," Mr Trump once said, according to Cohen.

The words echo similar allegations, from 2018, that Trump referred to African countries as "********" nations .

Back then, Mr Trump told reporters: "I am not a racist. I'm the least racist person you have ever interviewed."

Racism accusations have marred his first term and continue to be an issue as the Republican president campaigns for a November re-election against his Democratic rival, Joe Biden.

In the book, Cohen alleges that Mr Trump has "hatred and contempt" for his predecessor, Barack Obama.

"Trump hired a 'Faux-Bama' to participate in a video in which Trump 'ritualistically belittled the first black president and then fired him'," Cohen writes.

US media has since shown an old video, showing Mr Trump reprising his role as the host of The Apprentice television show and firing a man posing as President Obama.

It is believed to have been made for the 2012 Republican convention, when Mitt Romney was nominated as the Republican candidate, but it was never aired.

On Hispanic voters

According to Cohen, Mr Trump once said: "I will never get the Hispanic vote. Like the blacks, they're too stupid to vote for Trump. They're not my people."

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His comments on Latin Americans have come under scrutiny throughout his presidency, especially after he repeatedly disparaged Mexicans during his campaign .

In 2019, President Trump told a rally in New Mexico: "Nobody loves Hispanics more."

Cohen says that after Mr Trump met with evangelical leaders at Trump Tower shortly after he won the election, he turned and said: "Can you believe people believe that [expletive]?"

Mr Trump has heavily courted the evangelical vote and has said he is a deep believer himself. His vice-president, Mike Pence, is a devout evangelical.

On Putin
Donald Trump admired Russian President Vladimir Putin because he was able "to take over an entire nation and run it like it was his personal company - like the Trump Organization, in fact," Cohen writes.

According to The Washington Post, Cohen said Mr Trump initially saw cosying up to Mr Putin as a means of ensuring access to Russian markets if he lost the 2016 election, as was originally expected.

However, Cohen also says that Trump's campaign was "far too chaotic and incompetent to actually conspire with the Russian government" when it got into power.

On Stormy Daniels
in 2016, Cohen arranged a hush-money payment to adult-film star Stormy Daniels, who was alleged to have had an affair with Mr Trump. The payment, which violated campaign funding rules, was among the crimes that led to Cohen's jail term.

Cohen has long insisted he was acting on the president's orders, but Mr Trump has always denied this.

"It never pays to settle these things, but many, many friends have advised me to pay," Mr Trump said, according to Cohen's book. "If it comes out, I'm not sure how it would play with my supporters. But I bet they'd think it's cool that I slept with a porn star."

Who is Michael Cohen?
Cohen worked closely with Mr Trump for years and was often known as his "fixer", but they fell out and Cohen gave a brutal testimony to Congress last year, prior to Mr Trump's impeachment.

Five things Cohen said about Trump
Video captionFive things Cohen said about Trump
In 2018, Cohen was jailed for tax evasion, false statements and campaign finance violations.

The disbarred lawyer is currently serving what remains of his three-year sentence at his home in New York, having been released from prison amid concerns about the spread of coronavirus.

He was briefly returned to jail, until a federal judge intervened and ruled that the government had made the move in retaliation for him writing his book.

Mr Trump has called Cohen "a rat" and a liar.

Cohen once said he would take a bullet for Donald Trump. He has since said he has received death threats from Trump supporters.

https://www.bbc.com/news/amp/world-us-canada-54060687?__twitter_impression=true
 
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The Nelson Mandela Foundation has hit back at disparaging comments attributed to US President Donald Trump about Black world leaders, including the late anti-apartheid hero and South Africa's first Black president.

In a book to be published this week, Trump's former personal lawyer Michael Cohen alleges that the president described Mandela as a poor leader, according to the Washington Post which reported on Saturday that it had obtained a copy of the book.

According to the newspaper, Cohen wrote that following Mandela's death in 2013, Trump said: "Mandela f***ed the whole country up. Now it's a s***hole. F*** Mandela. He was no leader."

Cohen also alleged that Trump said: "Tell me one country run by a Black person that isn't a s***hole. They are all complete f***ing toilets."

In a statement on Monday, the foundation said it did not believe leaders conducting themselves in the way Trump did were "in position to offer authoritative commentary on the life and work" of Mandela.

Using the Xhosa clan name by which Mandela was affectionately known, the statement added: "Reflecting on leadership, Madiba once said: 'A good leader can engage in a debate frankly and thoroughly, knowing that at the end he and the other side must be closer, and thus emerge stronger. You don't have that idea when you are arrogant, superficial, and uninformed.' We would recommend these words to Mr Trump for consideration."

'Disgraced felon'

Cohen worked closely with Trump for years before turning against him, most publicly in testimony to Congress last year before Trump's impeachment.

He is currently is serving a three-year sentence for, among other things, making false statements to Congress.

White House Spokeswoman Kayleigh McEnany responded by attacking Cohen's credibility.

"Michael Cohen is a disgraced felon and disbarred lawyer, who lied to Congress. He has lost all credibility, and it's unsurprising to see his latest attempt to profit off of lies," McEnany said in a statement.

Trump has called Cohen "a rat," and a liar, and Cohen has said he faced repeated death threats from Trump supporters.

Cohen also alleged that Trump was dismissive of minorities and that Trump said during his 2016 presidential campaign that he would not win the Hispanic vote, the Washington Post reported. According to Cohen, Trump said: "Like the Blacks, they're too stupid to vote for Trump."

Cohen is serving time for tax evasion, false statements and campaign finance violations, the last related to payments to silence women who alleged affairs with Trump before the 2016 election.

He was released to home confinement in May given the risks of catching COVID-19 in prison but then was briefly imprisoned again in July. A federal judge then ruled Cohen had been subjected to retaliation for planning to publish his book and ordered him released again.

Trump, a Republican, is seeking re-election and will face Democrat Joe Biden at the polls on November 3.

https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2020...eged-denigrating-remarks-200908061640573.html
 
The list of women who have publicly made sexual misconduct allegations against Donald Trump outnumbers the list of officials in his cabinet. Before today, no fewer than 25 women had made such accusations against Trump, ranging from harassment to sexual assault and rape.

The allegations span four decades. Trump has denied every charge, dismissing his accusers as liars and publicity seekers, claiming never to have met some of them and, in at least two cases, suggesting they were not attractive enough for him.

Trump’s victory in the 2016 presidential race suggests a sizeable portion of the American electorate either believed his claims of innocence or were unswayed by the allegations.

Today Amy Dorris becomes at least the 26th woman to publicly accuse Trump of sexual misconduct – with more than a dozen of that group having accused him of sexual assault. In an exclusive interview with the Guardian, she has alleged that Trump accosted her outside the bathroom of his VIP box at the US Open tennis tournament in New York in 1997.

She accused Trump of forcing his tongue down her throat, touching her all over her body and holding her in a grip from which she could not escape, while ignoring her pleas to stop. “His hands were very gropey and all over my butt, my breasts, my back, everything,” she said, recalling how she used her teeth to try to force his tongue out of her mouth. “I felt trapped.”

Via his lawyers, Trump denied in the strongest possible terms having ever harassed, abused or behaved improperly toward Dorris.

Some women making #MeToo sexual misconduct allegations have been forced to rely solely only on their own memories of events. But Dorris immediately shared her account of the alleged incident with two people and has recounted it to several others since. All said Dorris had shared with them details of the alleged incident that matched what she told the Guardian.

Dorris also has six photos of her encounters with Trump over the four days she spent with him, and kept her ticket to the US Open from the day of the alleged assault, 5 September 1997. “I feel like there’s a lot of girls who have had a lot worse from him. But in this case, he’s not going to be able to say he doesn’t know me,” she said.

Dorris is the second woman to accuse Trump of assaulting her at the US Open. Karena Virginia, also a former model, alleges Trump touched her breast at the tournament in 1998. When Virginia made her allegation in 2016, a Trump representative dismissed her account as “fictional” and politically motivated.

Virginia and Dorris are not the only former models to say Trump assaulted them. More than half of the accusations made against Trump, who bought the Miss Universe franchise in 1996 and set up his own modelling agency, Trump Model Management, in 1999, relate to models or pageant contestants.

One was Kristin Anderson, who was a model in her early 20s when she alleges Trump sexually assaulted her. She claims he put his hand up her skirt and touched her genitals through her underwear when they were at a nightclub in New York in the early 1990s. Trump claimed Anderson was seeking “free publicity” and said her allegation was “phoney”.

Taken together, the accusations paint a pattern of alleged predatory behaviour.

Dorris claims Trump assaulted her after waiting for her outside the bathroom while Trump’s other US Open guests, including Dorris’s then boyfriend, Jason Binn, were just metres away.

The dividing wall is visible behind Trump and Dorris’s head in photographs she has shared with the Guardian. It can also be seen in a photo taken the day after the alleged assault, when Dorris returned for a second day of tennis and she and Binn posed for photographs with celebrities including Leonardo DiCaprio and the illusionist David Blaine, who were among Trump’s other guests that day. DiCaprio and Blaine did not respond to requests for comment.

Karen Johnson, a former dancer, has claimed she was “grabbed and pulled behind a tapestry” by Trump during a New Year’s Eve party at his Mar-a-Lago resort in the early 2000s, when he allegedly groped and forcibly kissed her. In a similarity with Dorris’s allegation, Johnson alleged the assault happened just out of sight from other guests, including her husband, while she was on her way to the bathroom. Trump has denied the accusation.

These allegations also have similarities with those made by Jill Harth, who claimed Trump sexually assaulted her after pulling her into his daughter Ivanka’s childhood bedroom at Mar-a-Lago in the early 1990s, during a group tour of the residence. Her then boyfriend, George Houraney, was also in the Palm Beach residence at the time.

Harth’s allegations were initially contained in a lawsuit brought against Trump following a business dispute she and Houraney had with him. Harth later withdrew the lawsuit and Trump’s lawyers say she has no credibility. A spokesman for Trump said he “denies each and every statement made by Ms Harth”.

The journalist Natasha Stoynoff also alleges she was assaulted in a room at Mar-a-Lago with people close by. She was scheduled to interview Trump about his first year of marriage to his third wife, Melania, who was then pregnant with their son Barron. Stoynoff alleges that as Melania was changing in a nearby room, “within seconds he was pushing me against the wall and forcing his tongue down my throat”. Trump denied the allegation, saying: “Take a look. Look at her. Look at her words. And you tell me what you think. I don’t think so.”

Last year, the writer E Jean Carroll came forward to accuse Trump of raping her in the mid-1990s. She too alleges he pushed her against a wall, this time in a dressing room at Bergdorf Goodman, a luxury department store in Manhattan. Last November, Carroll sued Trump for defamation after he called her a liar and said he had never met her. Last month a New York judge rejected Trump’s bid to temporarily halt proceedings.

In January the former Apprentice contestant Summer Zervos, who accused Trump in 2016 of forcibly kissing her and groping her breast, had her defamation lawsuit put on hold after several attempts by Trump to delay it. A New York court of appeal is yet to determine whether to dismiss the case, allow it to continue or postpone it until Trump is out of office. Zervos is one of 11 women, including Dorris, Stoynoff and Johnson, to claim that Trump forcibly kissed them.

Several women have also described being allegedly groped in a fashion similar to that recounted by Dorris.

The allegation that most resonated with Dorris in 2016, when many of his accusers first came forward, was that of Jessica Leeds, whose accusation against Trump is the most historical.

Leeds said that in the late 70s when she was a travelling businesswoman she had sat beside Trump, whom she had never met before, in the first-class cabin of a flight to New York. She alleged that about 45 minutes after takeoff Trump lifted the armrest, grabbed her breasts and tried to put his hand up her skirt. Trump responded to Leeds’s allegation at a campaign rally, saying: “Believe me, she would not be my first choice. That I can tell you.” A Trump spokesman called her allegation “fiction”.

Leeds alleged Trump’s “hands were everywhere”, describing them as “like an octopus”.

That is exactly how Dorris says she described her alleged encounter with Trump to friends over the years. “It felt like there were tentacles on me that I couldn’t rip off,” she said. “I was trying to get his arms off of me and they would not come off because I wasn’t strong enough.”

She said she felt like she was suffocating. “It’s like his arms were moving so fast, it was like he had eight,” she said. “You just picture those suction cups on an octopus and they’re stuck on you. You’re trapped. That’s how I felt.”

Trump famously bragged about sexually molesting women in the now–infamous Access Hollywood tape. In the recording, first published by the Washington Post during the 2016 presidential campaign, Trump can be heard making a series of lewd remarks about women to the TV host Billy Bush while off-air.

“I better use some Tic Tacs just in case I start kissing her,” he said in the previously unaired recording about the actor and model Arianne Zucker, whom they were waiting to meet. “You know I’m automatically attracted to beautiful … I just start kissing them. It’s like a magnet. Just kiss. I don’t even wait. And when you’re a star they let you do it. You can do anything … Grab ’em by the *****.”

Trump dismissed the recording as mere “locker room talk”. Leeds, who is now in her 70s, said it was Trump’s defence of his comments that drove her to come forward with her story. She said she “wanted to punch the screen”, and days later wrote to the New York Times about her allegation, telling them: “His behaviour is deep-seated in his character.”

Dorris said the video was “triggering” for her, too, reminding her of both the alleged assault and the way Trump acted toward her in the days afterwards, including on a trip to a memorial service for Gianni Versace.

She recalled how Trump, who was sat next to her, “kept leaning over and asking me: ‘How much longer do we have to be here? How much longer does this have to take?’… I felt like I was with a small child.”

She was one of the few non-celebrities there. “Elton John sang a song, Madonna read a poem, Whitney Houston sang. I mean, it was superstars constantly.”

“He kept asking me if I wanted a Tic Tac and he kept eating Tic Tacs,” she said. “They were making so much noise.” According to Dorris, Trump continued to pursue her, which she said she ignored because she did not want to “make a scene”.

Now, whenever Dorris hears a reference to the Access Hollywood tape, or a mention of Tic Tacs, the memories return. “The only thing that I can think of is him and that incident and that weekend,” she said.

Dorris said she felt that Trump had been seeking to make it look like they were a couple throughout the weekend she was in New York, in spite of the fact she was there with her boyfriend. Dorris recalls Trump claiming after the memorial to have been given the supermodel Stephanie Seymour’s phone number, but appeared to rip it up in front of Dorris, telling her he only wanted hers.

Dorris recalls one newspaper mistaking her for Trump’s then wife, Marla Maples, and a picture of them appeared in the New York Daily News.

“Yesterday we called Donald Trump’s office to ask the name of that lovely blonde at his side,” the caption read. “Proving that hell might still freeze over, a spokeswoman responded: ‘Donald said he wants to keep his private life private. He said it is not fair to expose this girl to the mean world of the paparazzi.’”

Trump’s lawyers said her allegations did not stand up to scrutiny and had there been any inappropriate behaviour by Trump outside of the bathroom within the VIP box, there would have been numerous witnesses.

They said Jason Binn – who did not respond to requests for comment from the Guardian – had told the president’s US lawyers he had no recollection of Dorris telling him that anything inappropriate had happened with Trump. They also questioned why Dorris, after the alleged assault, would choose to spend two more days in the company of Trump, at the US Open and the Versace memorial event.

They said Dorris had never raised the allegations with a law enforcement agency or Trump, and suggested the timing of her claims so close to the November presidential election suggested they might be politically motivated.

Dorris said she considered coming forward in 2016, when many of Trump’s other accusers chose to do so, but she was concerned for her twin daughters and could see that many of the women were being dismissed or ignored, which caused “a lot of anxiety and fear”.

Several of Trump’s accusers from 2016 have told the Guardian about the profound impact speaking out has had on their lives. Some say they were turned down for jobs and struggled to find work; others received hate mail and endured online harassment.

Virginia, who had death threats sent to her family home after going public with her allegations against Trump, which she reported to the police, feels that the context has changed since the advent of the #MeToo era: “We came forward pre-#MeToo and it was a different world then; our voices weren’t listened to.”

Dorris lives in Palm Beach county, not far from Mar-a-Lago. “I have a lot of friends that are Trump supporters, so it’s just been a little difficult,” she said.

“I don’t feel safe,” she said, but added: “It’s time to speak out.”

She said she was not coming forward for “political reasons”. “I’ve always been independent and I’ve voted Republican many times. If he was a Democrat I would still come forward,” she said. “It’s about the example he’s setting. He’s shut down every woman who has come forward.”

She added: “I’ve noticed a shift in how women are being treated since he became president … so I am coming out for me, for my kids.”

https://www.theguardian.com/us-news...nald-trump-women-who-accuse-sexual-misconduct
 
US President Donald Trump has denied allegations that he sexually assaulted a former model in New York in 1997.

Amy Dorris told the UK's Guardian newspaper that Mr Trump groped various parts of her body and forcibly kissed her as she came out of a bathroom at the US Open tennis tournament.

Mr Trump's lawyers have denied the claims, branding it an "attempt to attack" him before the election.

Multiple women have accused Mr Trump of inappropriate sexual misconduct.

The president has denied all of the allegations against him.

Ms Dorris, who was 24 years old at the time, said she watched matches with her then-boyfriend Jason Binn in Mr Trump's VIP box.

She said she used the bathroom and alleged Mr Trump was waiting for her outside.

"He just shoved his tongue down my throat and I was pushing him off. And that's when the grip became tighter and his hands were very gropey and all over my butt, my breasts, my back, everything," she told the Guardian.

"I was in his grip, and I couldn't get out of it."

She says she told Mr Trump to stop, but that "he didn't care".

Ms Dorris said she decided to come forward with her story in order to be a role model to her two teenage daughters. She said she had considered speaking about the incident in 2016, but chose not to out of fear for her family.

Jenna Ellis, legal adviser to the Trump campaign, told CBS News "the allegations are totally false".

"We will consider every legal means available to hold The Guardian accountable for its malicious publication of this unsubstantiated story," she said.

Speaking to The Guardian, Mr Trump's lawyers say there would have been other witnesses to the assault and suggested the allegation could be politically motivated ahead of the November election.

His lawyers also said Mr Binn told them he did not recall Ms Dorris saying anything inappropriate or uncomfortable had happened with Mr Trump.

It is not the first time claims of sexual assault have been made against the president.

During the run-up to the 2016 presidential election, Mr Trump faced a barrage of sexual misconduct claims, bringing his behaviour towards women into sharp focus.

Most of the accusers came forward after video footage of Mr Trump claiming celebrities such as him can "do anything" to women.

One of the women was columnist Jean E Carroll who accused Mr Trump of sexually assaulting her in a department store in late 1995 or early 1996.

She alleges Mr Trump lunged at her, pinned her against a wall and forced himself on her.

Mr Trump accused Ms Carroll of "totally lying" about the allegations.

https://www.bbc.com/news/world-us-canada-54197250
 
The country's fracturing big time. The divide is now astounding. A big thanks to the Russians who have been quietly using the social media and fake news to flame the underground white supremacists and ultra RWers as well as the ultra left radicals..

USA is now well past her glory days and Trump seems like the final nail in the coffin.
 
Woman arrested at US-Canada border for poison mailed to White House

A woman has been arrested on suspicion of sending a package containing ricin poison to US President Donald Trump, according to US immigration officials.

The unnamed woman was found at a border crossing in Buffalo, New York, as she tried to enter the US from Canada, and was reportedly carrying a gun.

The letter containing the deadly poison is believed to have come from Canada, according to investigators there.

The letter was discovered last week before it could reach the White House.

Ricin, a poison found naturally in castor beans, has been used in other attempted attacks against the White House in recent years.

The Trump administration is yet to comment on the reports.

The Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) and the Secret Service are investigating the package, which was discovered at a processing facility for mail sent to the White House.

"At this time, there is no known threat to public safety," the FBI told CNN on Saturday.

The suspect may have also sent ricin to five addresses in Texas, including a jail and a sheriff's office, according to police.

The presence of ricin was confirmed after several tests by the FBI, authorities said.

The Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP) said on Saturday it was working with the FBI to investigate the "suspicious letter sent to the White House".

A spokesman for the Mission, Texas, police department told the Associated Press on Monday an envelope was in the care of local officials and no one had been hurt.

Another Texas Sheriff, Eddie Guerra in Hidalgo County, also confirmed envelopes with ricin were posted to staff there, but reported no injuries.

The RCMP division in Quebec is leading a search of a residence in the Montreal suburb of St-Hubert, which authorities said on Monday is linked to the suspect.

Their chemicals and explosives team is on site, along with local police and fire units.

The suspect is due to appear in court on Tuesday in Buffalo.

Ricin is a lethal substance that, if swallowed, inhaled or injected, can cause nausea, vomiting, internal bleeding and ultimately organ failure.

No known antidote exists for ricin. If a person is exposed to ricin, death can take place within 36 to 72 hours, depending on the dose received, according to the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).

The CDC said the poison - which has been used in terror plots - can be manufactured into a weapon in the form of a powder, mist or pellet.

The White House and other federal buildings have been the target of ricin packages in the past.

In 2014, a Mississippi man was sentenced to 25 years in prison for sending letters dusted with ricin to former President Barack Obama and other officials.

Four years later, in 2018, a former Navy veteran was charged with sending toxic letters to the Pentagon and White House.

Source: https://www.bbc.com/news/world-us-canada-54221893.
 
Pascale Ferrier: White House ricin package suspect in court

A Canadian woman has been charged in US federal court for allegedly posting a letter with deadly ricin poison to President Donald Trump.

Pascale Ferrier, of Quebec, was arrested at a border crossing in Buffalo, New York, on Sunday. Officials say she was carrying a gun.

She has pleaded not guilty to making threats against the president.

The letter she allegedly sent last week was discovered before it reached the White House.

In it, she called on Mr Trump to drop out of the US presidential race. The envelop contained ricin, a poison found naturally in castor beans.

"I found a new name for you: 'The Ugly Tyrant Clown'," she wrote in the letter to Mr Trump, according to FBI charging documents filed ahead of her first court appearance in New York on Tuesday.

"I hope you like it. You ruin USA and lead them to disaster. I have US cousins, then I don't want the next 4 years with you as president. Give up and remove your application for this election."

The letter, which the FBI says had her fingerprints on it, referred to the poisoned note as "a special gift", adding: "If it doesn't work, I'll find better recipe for another poison, or I might use my gun when I'll be able to come. "

The suspect may have also sent ricin to five addresses in Texas, including a jail and a sheriff's office, according to the court documents.

Ms Ferrier appeared in court on Tuesday afternoon in Buffalo, New York, with the aid of a French-speaking translator, according to local media.

She asked for a court appointed defence lawyer during the hearing. That lawyer also requested an identity and probable cause hearing, to have the court determine that she is the individual named in the complaint.

The judge scheduled these next hearings for 28 September. She will be in the custody of the US Marshals until that time, as prosecutors argued she poses a flight risk.

Who is Pascale Ferrier?
Pascale Cecile Veronique Ferrier, 53, is a computer programmer who is originally from France, but became a Canadian citizen in 2015, according to Canadian media. Sources tell Reuters she retains dual French-Canadian citizenship. She was living in the Canadian province of Quebec.

In March 2019, she was arrested in Texas for unlawfully carrying a weapon and using a fake driver's licence, according to jail records. She was deported to Canada after officials found she had overstayed her visa and committed a crime while in the US, according to the New York Times.

The Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) and the Secret Service are investigating the package, which was discovered at a processing facility for mail sent to the White House.

The presence of ricin was confirmed after several tests by the FBI, authorities said.

A spokesman for the Mission, Texas, police department told the Associated Press on Monday an envelope was in the care of local officials and no-one had been hurt.

Another Texas Sheriff, Eddie Guerra in Hidalgo County, also confirmed envelopes with ricin were posted to staff there, but reported no injuries.

On Monday, the RCMP division in Quebec searched a residence in the Montreal suburb of Saint-Hubert that authorities said is linked to the suspect.

Senior US Customs and Border Protection official Mark Morgan on Tuesday said that Ms Ferrier had told border officers "she was wanted by the FBI for mailing envelopes with ricin to the White House and other locations" when she approached the checkpoint on Sunday.

Officers found a gun, knife and ammunition in her car at the time of her arrest.

What is ricin?
Ricin is a lethal substance that, if swallowed, inhaled or injected, can cause nausea, vomiting, internal bleeding and ultimately organ failure.

No known antidote exists for ricin. If a person is exposed to ricin, death can take place within 36 to 72 hours, depending on the dose received, according to the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).

The CDC said the poison - which has been used in terror plots - can be manufactured into a weapon in the form of a powder, mist or pellet.

The White House and other federal buildings have been the target of ricin packages in the past.

In 2014, a Mississippi man was sentenced to 25 years in prison for sending letters dusted with ricin to former President Barack Obama and other officials.

TV actress Shannon Richardson, who was featured on the programme The Walking Dead, was jailed for 18 years in 2014 for mailing ricin to Mr Obama and former New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg.

Four years later, in 2018, a former Navy veteran was charged with sending toxic letters to the Pentagon and White House.

Source: https://www.bbc.com/news/world-us-canada-54255727.
 
Trump: Major carmakers sue US government over China tax

Major carmakers are suing the US government over import taxes it has imposed on Chinese parts.

Tesla, Volvo, Ford and Mercedes-Benz are all unhappy with the customs duties introduced by the Trump administration and are demanding refunds.

The US and China have imposed border taxes on each other's goods and services as part of a trade war.

Tensions between Washington and Beijing have rapidly escalated in recent weeks, mainly concerning technology firms.

The lawsuits were filed by the carmakers in the past few days in the New York-based Court of International Trade.

Mercedes-Benz in its filing accused Washington of "prosecution of an unprecedented, unbounded, and unlimited trade war impacting over $500bn in imports from the People's Republic of China".

Tesla in its filing called the tariffs "arbitrary, capricious, and an abuse of discretion".

The car firms are asking for the import taxes to be revoked and any money paid to be returned.

Trade war
The trade war began in 2018 between the world's two biggest economy.

US President Donald Trump has long accused China of unfair trading practices and intellectual property theft.

In China, there is a perception that America is trying to curb its rise as a global economic power.

Early this year the two signed their "phase one" deal that partially ended the dispute. Washington backed down on tariffs on $160bn in Chinese goods, particularly consumer electronics.

However, tensions between the two nations have massively ramped up since.

Earlier this month the World Trade Organization (WTO) ruled that tariffs the US imposed on Chinese goods were "inconsistent" with international trade rules.

The WTO said the US did not provide evidence that its claims of China's unfair technology theft and state aid justified the border taxes.

But the US retaliated saying that the WTO was "completely inadequate" to the task of confronting China.

Ambassador Robert Lighthizer, America's top trade negotiator, said the US "must be allowed to defend itself against unfair trade practices".

Source: https://www.bbc.com/news/business-54260917.
 
The number of Americans filing for first-time unemployment benefits again dipped below one million last week, with figures showing a further 870,000 claims.

The figure was slightly up from the previous week, however, suggesting the job market and the economic recovery in the US remains fragile.

The numbers show that, even six months after the coronavirus pandemic hit the US economy, employers continue to lay off workers. Meanwhile, the millions of Americans who were laid off earlier in the crisis continue to depend on unemployment benefits.

Also worrying economists is the cooler weather ahead. Many restaurants and businesses moved operations outdoors during the summer, but will probably have to start laying off workers again as winter approaches.

Next week, the US government will release the monthly unemployment rate for September. The jobless rate for August fell below 10% for the first time since the pandemic began, to 8.4%. Hopes will be high for another dip.
 
Trump signs executive order on health care; attracts criticism from Democrats

CHARLOTTE, N.C. — More than three-and-a-half years into his presidency and 40 days from an election, U.S. President Donald Trump on Thursday launched what aides termed a “vision” for health care heavy on unfulfilled aspirations.

“It is affirmed, signed and done, so we can put that to rest,” Trump said after signing an executive order covering a range of issues, including protecting people with preexisting medical conditions from insurance discrimination.

But that right is already guaranteed in the Obama-era health law his administration is asking the Supreme Court to overturn.

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi dismissively said Trump’s “bogus executive order on pre-existing conditions isn’t worth the paper it’s signed on.” Democrats are betting heavily that they have the edge on health care this election season.

Trump spoke at an airport hangar in swing-state North Carolina to a crowd that included white-coated, mask-wearing health care workers. He stood on a podium in front of a blue background emblazoned with “America First Healthcare Plan.” His latest health care pitch won accolades from administration officials and political supporters but failed to impress others.

“Executive orders issued close to elections are not the same thing as actual policies,” said Katherine Hempstead, a senior policy adviser with the nonpartisan Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, which works on a range of health care issues, from coverage to quality.

Trump returned to health care amid disapproval of his administration’s handling of the coronavirus pandemic and growing uncertainty about the future of the Obama-era Affordable Care Act.

In a rambling speech, he promised quality health care at affordable prices, lower prescription drug costs, more consumer choice and greater transparency. His executive order would also to try to end surprise medical bills.

“’If we win we will have a better and less expensive plan that will always protect people with preexisting conditions,” Trump declared.

But while his administration has made some progress on its health care goals, the sweeping changes Trump promised as a candidate in 2016 have eluded him.

The clock has all but run out in Congress for major legislation on lowering drug costs or ending surprise bills, much less replacing the Affordable Care Act, or “Obamacare.”

Pre-election bill signing ceremonies on prescription drugs and surprise medical charges were once seen as achievable — if challenging — goals for the president. No longer.

Trump’s speech Thursday conflated some of his administration’s achievements with policies that are in stages of implementation and ones that remain aspirational.

Democrats are warning Trump would turn back the clock if given another four years in the White House, and they’re promising coverage for all and lower drug prices.

Health and Human Services Secretary Alex Azar said Trump’s executive order would declare it the policy of the U.S. government to protect people with preexisting conditions, even if the ACA is declared unconstitutional. However, such protections are already the law, and Trump would have to go to Congress to cement a new policy.

On surprise billing, Azar said the president’s order will direct him to work with Congress on legislation, and if there’s no progress, move ahead with regulatory action. However, despite widespread support among lawmakers for ending surprise bills, the White House has been unable to forge a compromise that steers around determined lobbying by interest groups affected.

Health care consultant and commentator Robert Laszewski said he’s particularly puzzled by Trump’s order on preexisting conditions.

“For more than twenty years we debated ways to protect people from preexisting conditions limitations,” said Laszewski. Former President Barack Obama’s landmark legislation finally established protections, he continued.

“So, after 20 years of national public policy debate and hard-fought congressional and presidential approval, how does Trump conclude he can restore these protections, should the Republican Supreme Court suit overturn them, with a simple executive order?”

For Trump, health care represents a major piece of unfinished business.

Prescription drug inflation has stabilized when generics are factored in, but the dramatic price rollbacks he once teased have not materialized. In his speech the president highlighted another executive order directing Medicare to pay no more than what other nations pay for medications, but it remains yet to be seen how that policy will work in practice, if it can overcome fierce opposition from the drug industry.

Trump said Medicare recipients will soon receive a card that they can use to save $200 on medications. “I will always take care of our wonderful senior citizens,” he promised.

More broadly, the number of uninsured Americans started edging up under Trump even before job losses in the economic shutdown to try to contain the coronavirus pandemic. Various studies have tried to estimate the additional coverage losses this year, but the most authoritative government statistics have a long time lag. Larry Levitt of the nonpartisan Kaiser Family Foundation says his best guess is “several million.”

Meanwhile, Trump is pressing the Supreme Court to invalidate the entire Obama health law, which provides coverage to more than 20 million people and protects Americans with medical problems from insurance discrimination. That case will be argued a week after Election Day.

The death of Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg has added another layer of uncertainty. Without Ginsburg, there’s no longer a majority of five justices who previously had voted to uphold the ACA.

Democrats, unable to slow the Republican march to Senate confirmation of a replacement for Ginsburg, are ramping up their election-year health care messaging. It’s a strategy that helped them win the House in 2018. Former Vice-President Joe Biden has said he wants to expand the Obama law, and add a new public program as an option.

A recent Kaiser Foundation poll found Biden had an edge over Trump among registered voters as the candidate with the better approach on making sure everyone has access to health care and insurance, 52% to 40%. The gap narrowed for lowering costs of health care: 48% named Biden, while 42% picked Trump.

Trump was unveiled his agenda ahead of a two-day swing to several battleground states, including the all-important Florida. There, he will hold a rally in Jacksonville and later court Latino voters at a roundtable in Doral on Friday. Then he’ll fly to Atlanta, Georgia, to deliver a speech on black economic empowerment. He’ll end the day with another rally in Newport News, Virginia.

The scramble to show concrete accomplishments on health care comes as Trump is chafing under criticism that he never delivered a Republican alternative to Obamacare.

Trump had repeatedly insisted his plan would be coming.

“We’ve really become the health care party — the Republican Party,” he said Thursday. “And nobody talks about that.”

Source: https://globalnews.ca/news/7357405/trump-executive-order-health-care/.
 
Donald Trump paid no income tax in 10 of last 15 years, NY Times claims

Donald Trump has paid no income taxes in 10 of the last 15 years , according to a report in the New York Times.

Citing tax-return data, the newspaper also claimed the US president paid just $750 (£590) in federal income taxes in 2016, the year he was elected, and the same figure again in his first year in office.

The claims come just weeks before a divisive election, with early voting already under way.

A lawyer for the Trump Organisation called the report “inaccurate”.

https://news.sky.com/story/donald-t...-10-of-last-15-years-ny-times-claims-12084054
 
Donald Trump 'paid $750 in federal income taxes in 2016 and 2017' - NY Times


The New York Times says Donald Trump paid just $750 (£587) in federal income tax both in 2016, the year he ran for the US presidency, and in his first year in the White House.
The newspaper - which says it obtained tax records for Mr Trump and his companies over two decades - also alleges that he paid no income taxes at all in 10 of the last 15 years.
The records reveal "chronic losses and years of tax avoidance", it says.
Mr Trump called the report "fake news".
"Actually I paid tax. And you'll see that as soon as my tax returns - it's under audit, they've been under audit for a long time," he told reporters after the story was published on Sunday.
"The [Internal Revenue Service] does not treat me well… they treat me very badly. You have people in the IRS - they treat me very badly," he said.
Mr Trump has faced legal challenges for refusing to share documents concerning his fortune and business. He is the first president since the 1970s not to make his tax returns public, though this is not required by law.
The Times said information in its report was "provided by sources with legal access to it".
The report came just days before Mr Trump's first presidential debate with Democratic rival Joe Biden and weeks before the 3 November election.
What are the key claims?
The Times said it reviewed tax returns relating to President Trump and the companies owned by the Trump Organization going back to the 1990s, as well as his personal returns for 2016 and 2017.

It said the president paid just $750 in income taxes in both 2016 and 2017, while he paid no income taxes at all in 10 of the past 15 years, "largely because he reported losing much more money than he made".
Before becoming president, Mr Trump was known as a celebrity businessman and property mogul.
But the newspaper says his reports to the IRS "portray a businessman who takes in hundreds of millions of dollars a year yet racks up chronic losses that he aggressively employs to avoid paying taxes".
In a public filing, President Trump indicated that he earned at least $434.9m in 2018. The newspaper disputes this, alleging that his tax returns show the president had instead gone into the red, with $47.4m in losses.
The Trump Organization joined the president in denying the allegations in the report.
The company's chief legal officer, Alan Garten, told the Times that "most, if not all, of the facts appear to be inaccurate".

"Over the past decade, President Trump has paid tens of millions of dollars in personal taxes to the federal government, including paying millions in personal taxes since announcing his candidacy in 2015," he said.
What else does the report say?
The newspaper also claims that "most" of Mr Trump's biggest businesses - such as his golf courses and hotels - "report losing millions, if not tens of millions, of dollars year after year".
"That equation is a key element of the alchemy of Mr Trump's finances: using the proceeds of his celebrity to purchase and prop up risky businesses, then wielding their losses to avoid taxes," it says.
It adds that the president is personally responsible for more than $300m in loans, due to be repaid in the next four years.
The newspaper also alleges that some of President Trump's businesses have received money from "lobbyists, foreign officials and others seeking face time, access or favour" from the president.
The Times says it used tax records to find out how much income the president makes from his companies overseas, alleging that he made $73m in revenue from abroad in his first two years at the White House.
Much of that came from his golf courses in Ireland and Scotland, but the Times says the Trump Organization also received money "from licensing deals in countries with authoritarian-leaning leaders or thorny geopolitics".
The Times alleges that the licensing deals netted $3m from the Philippines, $2.3m from India and $1m from Turkey.
The newspaper claims that President Trump made $427.4m in 2018 in revenues from The Apprentice US series, as well as from branding deals where organisations paid to use his name. He also made $176.5m by investing in two office buildings that year, it is alleged.
However, the Times alleges that the president paid almost no taxes on these revenues, because he reported that his businesses made significant losses.

It also claims that President Trump has been making use of a tax code that enables business owners to "carry forward leftover losses to reduce taxes in future years".
For example, the newspaper says that in 2018, President Trump's largest golf resort, Trump National Doral, near Miami, made $162.3m in losses. Similarly, his two golf courses in Scotland and one in Ireland, reported a combined $63.3m in losses, it is alleged.

Source: https://www.bbc.com/news/technology-54319948.
 
I’ve paid more every month. Not that it would matter to “the base.”
 
He is donating his salary and his businesses are operated by his kids...

Good accounting/tax work tho :thumbsup
 
He will escape till its legal... and that's why the middle class Americans are the biggest idiots that pay tax on everything and go out and waste time fighting for their political candidates when actually they should be fighting to find these loopholes and moving up the ladder.

It's like Dave Chappelle saying to Trump's poor white supporters :"He is fighting for me not you"
 
So when Obama was in power it was really easy for the rich to evade paying tax, This shows how bad Obama was.
 
Donald Trump: Five things we've learned about the president's finances

Donald Trump has cultivated a reputation for being a shrewd, successful businessman over the years - but an in-depth article into the state of the president's finances casts doubt on the image he portrays to the world.

Here are five things we learned from The New York Times report, which was published just a couple of days before Mr Trump is due to face Joe Biden in the first televised presidential debate.

1. Many of his best-known businesses are losing money

The Times says many of Mr Trump's hotels, golf courses and resorts have been haemorrhaging money - despite him frequently pointing to these as evidence of his success.

On his golf courses, Mr Trump has claimed $315m (£246m) in losses since 2000, while his Trump International Hotel in Washington has lost $55m (£43m), the paper reported.

2.The president is set to face financial pressure as debts become due

Mr Trump appears to be personally responsible for $421m (£329m) in loans, most of which will become due within four years, according to the Times.

In 2012, he also took out a $100m (£78.3m) mortgage on Trump Tower in New York - and although his company has paid $15m in interest on the loan, the original amount is yet to be repaid. That is due in 2022.

"Should he win re-election, his lenders could be placed in the unprecedented position of weighing whether to foreclose on a sitting president," the article warned.

3. Mr Trump spent $70,000 on his hair while filming The Apprentice

Among his extravagant purchases was $70,000 (£54,786) spent on styling his hair while filming the TV show that helped propel him to fame.

The Times reports the US president has used the cost incurred from his multiple businesses to finance his luxurious lifestyle.

His homes, planes and golf courses are part of the Trump family business and therefore Mr Trump classified them as business expenses.

The expenses have helped reduce the president's tax liability because they can be written off as deductions.

4. Mr Trump may have reduced his taxable income by treating his daughter as a consultant

The president's daughter, Ivanka, reported receiving payments from a consulting company she co-owned totalling $747,622 (£579,171).

This exactly matched consulting fees claimed as tax deductions by the Trump Organisation for hotel projects in Vancouver and Hawaii.

Ms Trump was an executive officer of the Trump companies that received profits from and paid the consulting fees for both projects, so it appears she was treated as a consultant on the same deals she helped manage.

Employers can deduct consulting fees as a business expense, but the arrangement must be an "ordinary and necessary" part of running the business.

5. Mr Trump paid $750 in taxes in 2016 and 2017

Donald Trump reportedly paid just $750 (£578) in income tax in the year he became president.

The article says the US president initially paid $95m (£74m) in taxes over the 18 years it studied, but he later claimed a $72.9m (£57.03m) federal tax refund.

He also allegedly pocketed $21.2m (£16.5m) in state and local refunds.

Thanks to the refund, Mr Trump paid an average of $1.4m (£1.09m) in federal taxes between 2000 and 2017, the Times reported.

An average US taxpayer in the top 0.001% of earners would have paid about $25m (£19.5m) a year over the same timeframe.

The huge refund is the focus of an Internal Revenue Service (IRS) inspection of his finances which has already been widely reported - and if the taxman rules against Mr Trump, it could cost him more than $100m.

The president has often faced calls to release his tax returns, but claims he cannot reveal the information because an audit is taking place. The head of the IRS says this is not true.

In a statement given to the Times, Alan Garten, a lawyer for the Trump Organisation said "most, if not all, of the facts appear to be inaccurate" - adding: "Over the past decade, President Trump has paid tens of millions of dollars in personal taxes to the federal government, including paying millions in personal taxes since announcing his candidacy in 2015."

The newspaper argued that "personal taxes" are not the same as "income taxes".

https://news.sky.com/story/donald-t...earned-about-the-presidents-finances-12084375
 
Google it
Both of these facts are common knowledge... :uak

I did google it.

I cant find where he donated to his wages to businesses operated by his kids.
Recent salary donations go to the Health Department
Trump continues to fulfill his 2015 campaign promise that he will forgo his salary.

The Constitution doesn't allow the president to reject his earnings, which originally forced George Washington to accept the first presidential salary, so Trump began donating his salary quarterly in April 2017. The first $100,000 went to the National Park Service, and since then, he has donated to various federal departments.

Most recently, Trump donated the last two quarters of his 2019 salary and his first quarter of his 2020 salary to the Department of Health and Human Services. The department is working on two issues that Trump designated for the funds: the opioid crisis and COVID-19.
 
I did google it.

I cant find where he donated to his wages to businesses operated by his kids.

I am not his accountant I don't know where he is donating but according to him and all the other publication I have heard from say that he donates and takes 1$ as his salary
 
I am not his accountant I don't know where he is donating but according to him and all the other publication I have heard from say that he donates and takes 1$ as his salary

You made the statement that he donated his salary to businesses operated by his kids.

Can you show me evidence of this or did you just make it up.
 
I am not his accountant I don't know where he is donating but according to him and all the other publication I have heard from say that he donates and takes 1$ as his salary

Oh you're saying that I am saying trump donated to his children's charity

There's a misunderstanding I didn't say that
I said he is donating his salary

Second different point that his businesses are operated by his kids (so no CEO salary and I think his business is a corporation so it's not on his name) maybe that's how he is showing that he isn't earning much so no income tax for him

I don't know much about the tax code but [MENTION=2501]Savak[/MENTION] can possibly make sense of this situation
 
I am not his accountant I don't know where he is donating but according to him and all the other publication I have heard from say that he donates and takes 1$ as his salary

My bad, I read your post as Trump donating his wage to businesses operated by his kids. You didnt say that I just read your post wrongly.
 
Oh you're saying that I am saying trump donated to his children's charity

There's a misunderstanding I didn't say that
he is donating his salary to his childrens charity, I just said that he donating his salary (I don't know where he is donating his salary and definitely didn't say he is donating his salary to his kids charity)

Second different point that his businesses are operated by his kids (so no CEO salary and I think his business is a corporation so it's not on his name) maybe that's how he is showing that he isn't earning much so no income tax for him

I don't know much about the tax code but [MENTION=2501]Savak[/MENTION] can possibly make sense of this situation
Better
 
Oh you're saying that I am saying trump donated to his children's charity

There's a misunderstanding I didn't say that
I said he is donating his salary

Second different point that his businesses are operated by his kids (so no CEO salary and I think his business is a corporation so it's not on his name) maybe that's how he is showing that he isn't earning much so no income tax for him

I don't know much about the tax code but [MENTION=2501]Savak[/MENTION] can possibly make sense of this situation

Any intelligent businessman would reduce the amount of tax they pay. I own a business and my accountant always makes sure I pay the least amount of tax possible, profits are distributed between all members of my family so that we pay the lowest amount of tax possible.

If Trump was paying huge amounts of tax when he didnt have to then that would be poor business management.
 
Reading more about it, his modus operandi appears to be to get fresh loans to pay off interest from prior loans. I’m wondering if he was Ishaq Dar in a previous lifetime.

Anyhow, once the principal is due, he will get further loans to pay it off... or declare bankruptcy and start over.

All of this is borderline legal, but then there’s the $70,000 he wrote off as a business expense because he spent it on... hair care.
 
There’s also the minor question of who owns the hundreds of millions of dollars of debt. Whoever owns it also holds significant leverage.
 
... and as a commentator pointed out recently, this purported multi billionaire has no standalone housing property. He lives at his various workplaces: either Trump Tower or Mara Lago or the various golf clubs. He’s probably claiming his living costs as business expenses.
 
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