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Joe Biden: Former President of the United States

Trump likes to call people losers. Now Biden's using the insult on him​


When former President Donald Trump has a beef with someone, it's almost inevitable he will call that person a "loser" or a "stone cold loser."

Now, President Biden is turning one of his predecessor's favorite insults against him, using his first two campaign speeches of the year to pointedly label Trump a loser.

"Losers are taught to concede when they lose," Biden said on Monday, noting that Trump violated a basic principle of American democracy by refusing to concede the 2020 election. "And he's a loser."

Biden says the fight for democracy is at the heart of his 2024 rematch with Trump
ELECTIONS

The South Carolina audience broke out into laughter and applause — just as a Pennsylvania crowd did a few days earlier after Biden discussed Trump's failed efforts to challenge the election results in court.

"The legal path just took Trump back to the truth — that I had won the election, and he was a loser," said Biden.

Biden and his campaign expect Trump to win the Republican nominating contest, which kicks off Monday in Iowa. A core part of Biden's campaign strategy is to call out Trump for the threat he poses to democracy. Trump's lies about the election being stolen drove the January 6th insurrection.

But long before that, Trump revealed at a 2019 rally how he felt about being associated with losing. "I never want to be called a loser," Trump said.

Source: NBC News
 

Biden may get some help from Republicans against Trump​


Many GOP voters resistant to Trump are holding out hope that Haley can secure the nomination. An NBC News/Des Moines Register/Mediacom poll of Iowa voters conducted days before Monday’s caucuses found 43 percent of those who supported Haley said they would vote for Biden over Trump in a general election.

But Trump’s dominant showing in Iowa and his strong polling lead in other early primary states suggests he’s likely to be the nominee.

“I think it’s highly likely that it’s gonna be Biden against Trump. And in that case, there is no question who I would support. I believe in America way more than I believe in the Republican Party,” former Rep. Adam Kinzinger (R-Ill.), who served on the House committee that investigated Jan. 6, said on CNN.

Asked if he would vote for Biden, Kinzinger said he’d pick the sitting president over Trump “in a heartbeat.”

“To me, that’s not even a question I would have to wrestle with,” Kinzinger said.

Anthony Scaramucci, who infamously spent 10 days as Trump’s White House communications director, backed former New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie (R) in the 2024 primary. But he told CNN on Saturday he would “100 percent” support Biden over Trump in a general election.

“This really is going to be a battle for democracy, this one,” Scaramucci said, warning Trump would expand executive power and use the Justice Department to target his adversaries.

Other Republicans have yet to go as far as outright saying they would vote for Biden but have signaled they could not fathom supporting Trump again.

“There are some conservatives who are trying to make this claim that somehow Biden is a bigger risk than Trump,” former Rep. Liz Cheney (R-Wyo.) said during a recent appearance on “The View.”

Source : The Hill
 
Donald Trump leads Democratic President Joe Biden by six percentage points in a Reuters/Ipsos poll that showed Americans are unhappy about an election rematch that came into sharper focus this week.

The nationwide poll of 1,250 U.S. adults showed Trump leading Biden 40% to 34% with the rest unsure or planning to vote for someone else or no one. The poll had a margin of error of three percentage points.

That represented a gain for Trump after a Reuters/Ipsos poll conducted earlier this month showed him and Biden tied, though a nationwide survey does not capture the subtleties of the electoral college contest that will be decided this fall in just a handful of competitive states.

As Trump handily beat his sole remaining primary challenger, Nikki Haley in New Hampshire on Tuesday, some 67% of respondents polled Monday through Wednesday said they were "tired of seeing the same candidates in presidential elections and want someone new." Still, just 18% said they would not vote if Biden and Trump were their choice.

"I hate to think that we're constantly navigating the lesser of two evils," said Kimberly Sofge, a 56-year-old project manager in Washington, D.C., this week. "I honestly feel that we can do better." The two candidates themselves seem ready for a rematch following Trump's back-to-back wins in Iowa and New Hampshire, with the White House regarding Trump as a beatable challenger, and Trump fuming because Haley did not immediately drop out of the Republican race.

Trump's six-point lead held even when respondents were given the option of voting for third-party candidates, including anti-vaccine activist Robert F. Kennedy Jr., with Trump drawing 36% support, Biden 30% and Kennedy 8%. Slightly more than half of respondents said they were dissatisfied with the U.S. two-party system, with just one in four satisfied by it.

Whitney Tallarico, 33, a consultant interviewed in Washington, is among those considering an alternative. "The independents don't really have a voice. Polarizing characters usually take the front seat, and it's a little sad for our country," Tallarico said this week. Asked whether she would vote for Biden or Trump, she said, "I'll probably go for a third party."

AGE ISSUE
Overall, the poll gave numerous signs that voters are not happy with their choices.
Seventy percent of respondents - including about half of Democrats - agreed with a statement that Biden should not seek re-election. Fifty-six percent of people responding to the poll said Trump should not run, including about a third of Republicans. Biden has been weighed down by the widespread view that at 81, already the oldest person ever to be U.S. president, he is too old for the job.

Three-quarters of poll respondents agreed with a statement that Biden was too old to work in government, while half said the same about Trump, who at 77 would also be among the oldest U.S. leaders ever if returned to the White House. Just over half of Democrats saw Biden as too old while a third of Republicans viewed Trump that way.

Haley, 52, is trying to marshal dissatisfaction to turn around her well-financed but flagging campaign.
"Most Americans do not want a rematch between Biden and Trump," she said on Tuesday after her loss to Trump in New Hampshire. "The first party to retire its 80-year-old candidate is going to be the party that wins this election." The new poll showed Trump with a towering nationwide lead over Haley - 64% to 19% - as they prepare for the Feb. 24 Republican nomination contest in South Carolina, which Haley led as governor 2011-2017. Turnout could still be high in the November general election in part because voters from both parties are highly motivated to beat the other side.

Fifty-nine percent of respondents who said they planned to vote for Biden said they were motivated primarily by opposition to Trump, while Trump voters were more positive about their candidate and his policies, with just 39% describing their vote as one against Biden. Anti-Trump sentiment helped Biden defeat Trump in the 2020 election, when a record-high share of eligible voters cast ballots.

Another factor that could weigh on Trump: 55% of Republicans in the poll said he should be convicted and sentenced to prison if he broke the law. Trump, who is currently facing four criminal prosecutions, has argued in court that he should be immune to prosecution for actions taken while he was president.
To be sure, most Republicans do not think he is guilty - only one in five Republican respondents said it was believable that Trump solicited election fraud, one of the key charges against him, and four out of five said his political opponents were abusing the legal system to derail his presidential bid.
Reporting by Jason Lange, additional reporting by Alexandra Sarabia Editing by Scott Malone, Heather Timmons, Daniel Wallis, Peter Graff

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles., opens new tab

Source: Reuters
 
Biden pledge to shut down border points to policy shortfalls

A group of migrants from Venezuela pause along the border wall that separates the United States from Mexico on Sept. 19.

President Biden’s surprise declaration Friday that he would “shut down” the southern border when illegal crossings surge to overwhelming levels illustrates how his many other efforts to address immigration have fallen short of their goals.

Biden signed more executive orders related to immigration than any other topic on his first day in office. He’s taken more than 500 executive actions since then, already surpassing former president Donald Trump’s four-year total, according to a recent tally by the nonpartisan Migration Policy Institution.

Source: The Washington Post
 
Biden says he has decided US response to Jordan attack


President Joe Biden says he has decided how the US will respond to a drone strike that killed three American troops in Jordan at the weekend.

Mr Biden did not elaborate in his remarks at the White House, but added: "I don't think we need a wider war in the Middle East."

An Iran-backed militia group has claimed responsibility for the attack at a US military base.

Dozens more were injured in Sunday's strike near the Syrian border.

The drone strike was the first time US soldiers were killed by enemy fire in the Middle East since the Israel Gaza war erupted on 7 October.

Iran has denied any involvement in the attack.

Asked by reporters on Tuesday morning if he had decided how to respond to the attack, Mr Biden said: "Yes."

He was also asked if Iran should be blamed. "I do hold them [Iran] responsible in the sense that they're supplying the weapons to the people who did it," he said.



 
Biden sanctions Israeli settlers over West Bank violence

US President Joe Biden has imposed sanctions on four Israeli settlers accused of attacking Palestinians in the occupied West Bank.

He signed an executive order on Thursday, saying violence had reached "intolerable levels".

The sanctions will block the individuals from accessing all US property and other assets.

Violence in the West Bank has spiked since Hamas's 7 October attack on Israel.


BBC
 
US President Joe Biden honoured the three Americans killed in Jordan at the Dover Air Force Base in Delaware. First Lady Jill Biden and Secretary of Defence Lloyd Austin were among the other hight ranking officials at the dignified transfer.


BBC
 
Fake Biden video prompts call for Meta to label posts

The independent body that reviews how the owner of Facebook moderates online content has said the firm should label fake posts rather than remove them.

The Oversight Board said Meta was right not to remove a fake video of US President Joe Biden because it did not violate its manipulated media policy.

But it said the policy was "incoherent" and should be widened beyond its scope ahead of a busy election year.

A Meta spokesperson told the BBC it was "reviewing" the guidance.

"[We] will respond publicly to their recommendations within 60 days in accordance with the bylaws," Meta said.

The Oversight Board called for more labelling on fake material on Facebook, particularly if it cannot be removed under a certain policy violation.

It said this could reduce reliance on third-party fact checkers, offer a "more scalable way" to enforce its manipulated media policy and inform users about fake or altered content.


 
US President Joe Biden on Tuesday night won Nevada's Democratic presidential primary, bringing him one step closer to securing his party's nomination for a potential GOP rematch against Donald Trump.

Representative Dean Phillips, a Minnesota Democrat, entered the race too late to get on the Nevada ballot, leaving self-help author Marianne Williamson as Biden's best-known challenger.

Biden is on track to win the majority of the vote, with Williamson finishing far behind him, as she did in previous contests, in New Hampshire and South Carolina, NBC News reported.

"I want to thank the voters of Nevada for sending me and Kamala Harris to the White House four years ago, and for setting us one step further on that same path again tonight. We must organise, mobilise, and vote. Because one day, when we look back, we’ll be able to say, when American democracy was a risk, we saved it — together," Biden said in a statement.

Nevada Democrats have held a primary for the first time in 2024, following new rules from the Democratic National Committee (DNC).

The state's next challenge is on February 27 in Michigan, a newcomer to the pre-Super Tuesday window of early primaries and a critical general election swing state.

While Biden’s campaign made a show of competing in last Saturday’s South Carolina primary and it is working to shore up support among restive groups in Michigan, such as Muslim voters, it put little effort into Nevada.

Despite polls showing Biden weaker against Trump now than at any point in 2020, he has faced only token opposition for renomination, and virtually every elected Democrat in the country has rallied behind him, depriving Phillips or Williamson of much political oxygen or momentum.

With the Democratic nomination seemingly in hand, Biden’s re-election campaign has been focused on Trump since it started.

Biden, who kept his name off the ballot due to violating party rules, won the unsanctioned January 23 contest as a write-in candidate, receiving 64% of the vote.

In South Carolina, Biden won 96% of the vote.

Source: The Guardian
 
President Joe Biden won't face criminal charges for mishandling classified records: DOJ

The Justice Department notified President Joe Biden it wouldn’t pursue criminal charges for his handling of classified documents, which were found at his former office in Washington, D.C., and at his home in Delaware, but the report contained multiple comments that may reinforce public concerns about the 81-year-old president's age and memory.

In a report made public Thursday, special counsel Robert Hur said criminal charges would not have been warranted even if department policy didn't foreclose charging a sitting president.

"Our investigation uncovered evidence that President Biden willfully retained and disclosed classified materials after his vice presidency when he was a private citizen," according to the report, which noted in particular classified documents about military and foreign policy in Afghanistan.

Embarrassingly for Biden, the report said the president's document practices "present serious risks to national security," and that Biden presented himself "as a sympathetic, well-meaning, elderly man with a poor memory."

Biden's lawyers Richard Sauber and Bob Bauer took issue with Hur's comments about Biden's age and memory, in a letter to the special counsel. "We do not believe that the report's treatment of President Biden's memory is accurate or appropriate," Sauber and Bauer wrote. "The report uses highly prejudicial language to describe a commonplace occurrence among witnesses: a lack of recall of years-old events."


 
Democrats are defending President Joe Biden after a report on his handling of classified documents raised concerns about his age and mental fitness.

Mr Biden will not be charged for keeping classified documents, but the report cast him as a "well-meaning, elderly man with a poor memory".

Vice-President Kamala Harris slammed the description as "gratuitous, inaccurate and inappropriate".

She also alleged the prosecutor was "clearly politically motivated".

Robert Hur, a Donald Trump appointee who has previously clerked for two well-known conservative judges, was appointed to lead the Biden classified document probe last year.

Prosecutor faces political glare after Biden report
His selection by US Attorney General Merrick Garland that January came as the justice department faced criticism from Republicans over a separate special counsel appointment to investigate Donald Trump's alleged mishandling of top secret files.

But Mr Hur's publicly-released report included a letter from the White House asking that the comments about the president's memory be revised "in a manner that is within the bounds of your expertise and remit".

Ms Harris, who has previously served as a prosecutor, echoed that criticism at a news conference on Friday.

"The way that the president's demeanour in that report was characterised could not be more wrong on the facts, and clearly politically motivated," she said.

"When it comes to the role and responsibility of a prosecutor in a situation like that, we should expect there would be a higher level of integrity."

Political grenade puts spotlight on Biden’s age

Democratic allies on Capitol Hill also told the BBC they believed Mr Hur's remarks went beyond the scope of the investigation.

"I think it was an entirely inappropriate way to approach the remit of the special counsel and the role of the special counsel," Senator Jeff Merkley of Oregon said.

"It's unfortunate it wandered into territory that was so inappropriate."

Minnesota's Tina Smith called Mr Hur's comments "outrageous" and "despicable", accusing him of "blatantly politicising" his role as special counsel.

Since launching his re-election campaign, Mr Biden has been plagued by concerns about his age and mental capacities.

He is 81, just a few years older than the front-runner Republican candidate, former President Donald Trump, 77.

This report has done little to assuage voters' concerns. It alleged that Mr Biden could not remember when his son Beau died of cancer or when he served as vice-president during interviews with investigators.

But Democrats who spoke to the BBC on Friday said they remain unconcerned about the president's mental faculties.

Summing up his takeaways from the report, Senator Jon Ossoff from Georgia said: "No charges recommended. Unusual commentary straying from what one would typically expect in a focused and substantive report. Ultimately just noise."

The youngest member of the Senate, Mr Ossoff emphasised that he had spent a "substantial amount of time" with the president in recent months.

"I've found him to be sharp, focused, impressive, formidable and effective," he said.

Mr Ossoff's colleagues agreed, including Senator Chris Van Hollen of Maryland, who called the president "thoughtful and experienced" at a Friday news conference.

Democrats remain "absolutely confident" in the president, he said. "We want to stick with somebody who understands what this country needs."

Source: BBC
 
Democrats are defending President Joe Biden after a report on his handling of classified documents raised concerns about his age and mental fitness.

Mr Biden will not be charged for keeping classified documents, but the report cast him as a "well-meaning, elderly man with a poor memory".

Vice-President Kamala Harris slammed the description as "gratuitous, inaccurate and inappropriate".

She also alleged the prosecutor was "clearly politically motivated".

Robert Hur, a Donald Trump appointee who has previously clerked for two well-known conservative judges, was appointed to lead the Biden classified document probe last year.

Prosecutor faces political glare after Biden report
His selection by US Attorney General Merrick Garland that January came as the justice department faced criticism from Republicans over a separate special counsel appointment to investigate Donald Trump's alleged mishandling of top secret files.

But Mr Hur's publicly-released report included a letter from the White House asking that the comments about the president's memory be revised "in a manner that is within the bounds of your expertise and remit".

Ms Harris, who has previously served as a prosecutor, echoed that criticism at a news conference on Friday.

"The way that the president's demeanour in that report was characterised could not be more wrong on the facts, and clearly politically motivated," she said.

"When it comes to the role and responsibility of a prosecutor in a situation like that, we should expect there would be a higher level of integrity."

Political grenade puts spotlight on Biden’s age

Democratic allies on Capitol Hill also told the BBC they believed Mr Hur's remarks went beyond the scope of the investigation.

"I think it was an entirely inappropriate way to approach the remit of the special counsel and the role of the special counsel," Senator Jeff Merkley of Oregon said.

"It's unfortunate it wandered into territory that was so inappropriate."

Minnesota's Tina Smith called Mr Hur's comments "outrageous" and "despicable", accusing him of "blatantly politicising" his role as special counsel.

Since launching his re-election campaign, Mr Biden has been plagued by concerns about his age and mental capacities.

He is 81, just a few years older than the front-runner Republican candidate, former President Donald Trump, 77.

This report has done little to assuage voters' concerns. It alleged that Mr Biden could not remember when his son Beau died of cancer or when he served as vice-president during interviews with investigators.

But Democrats who spoke to the BBC on Friday said they remain unconcerned about the president's mental faculties.

Summing up his takeaways from the report, Senator Jon Ossoff from Georgia said: "No charges recommended. Unusual commentary straying from what one would typically expect in a focused and substantive report. Ultimately just noise."

The youngest member of the Senate, Mr Ossoff emphasised that he had spent a "substantial amount of time" with the president in recent months.

"I've found him to be sharp, focused, impressive, formidable and effective," he said.

Mr Ossoff's colleagues agreed, including Senator Chris Van Hollen of Maryland, who called the president "thoughtful and experienced" at a Friday news conference.

Democrats remain "absolutely confident" in the president, he said. "We want to stick with somebody who understands what this country needs."

Source: BBC
He is just too old let someone else come forward from the Democratics Rank.
 
President Joe Biden has blasted criticism of Nato by his likely 2024 election challenger, Donald Trump, as "dumb", "shameful" and "un-American".

The Democrat assailed Mr Trump for saying he would "encourage" Russia to attack any Nato member that did not meet its defence spending quota.

Mr Biden said the remarks underscored the urgency of passing a $95bn (£75bn) foreign aid package for US allies.

The bill just passed the Senate, but it faces political headwinds in the House.

At the White House on Tuesday, Mr Biden said a failure to pass the package - which includes $60bn for Ukraine - would be "playing into Putin's hands".

He said the stakes have risen because of Mr Trump's "dangerous" remarks on Saturday.

"No other president in history has ever bowed down to a Russian dictator," Mr Biden said.

"Let me say this as clearly as I can. I never will. For God's sake. It's dumb. It's shameful. It's dangerous. It's un-American."


 

Biden inches away from Netanyahu as Israeli PM fails to heed US on Gaza​

A long time ago, Joe Biden signed a photo for Benjamin Netanyahu. “Bibi, I love you,” he recalls writing. “I don’t agree with a damn thing you say.”

This twisty, best-of-frenemies relationship has been at the heart of the crisis in Gaza for the past five months. Unfortunately for the US president, the message from Jerusalem has been: he’s just not that into you.

After the Hamas attack on Israel on 7 October that killed 1,200 people, Biden invoked his long commitment to the country by giving full-throated support to its government’s right to defend itself. Biden’s embrace of the Israeli prime minister was supposed to come with an understanding – spoken or unspoken – that Netanyahu would heed US advice, show restraint and alleviate the humanitarian crisis in Gaza.

But as the months have gone by and the death toll has mounted, it is a case of all give and no take. Biden is fond of saying “This is not your father’s Republican party” when considering the influence of Donald Trump. Slowly but surely, he has been forced to confront that this is not your father’s Israeli government, either.

“We’re not dealing with the old Benjamin Netanyahu,” said Aaron David Miller, a former state department analyst, negotiator and adviser on Middle East issues who has worked for several administrations. “The risk-averse Israeli prime minister would take one step backward, one step forward and one step to the side.

“We’re dealing with a different incarnation. He’s almost desperate to keep his coalition and prioritises it above all else even at the risk of incurring suspicion, mistrust, the anger of an American president. We’re five months into this and you’ve yet to see the administration impose any cost or consequence.”

Biden, 81, and Netanyahu, 74, have known each other for nearly four decades, since the days when the former served in the Senate and the latter worked at the Israeli embassy in Washington. Biden became chair of the Senate foreign relations committee and ran unsuccessfully for the Democratic presidential nomination in 1988.

Netanyahu served as Israeli ambassador to the United Nations and became prime minister in 1996, holding the position intermittently ever since. Relations with the US have not always been smooth. Miller, now a senior fellow at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace thinktank, said: “I remember when Bill Clinton emerged from his first meeting with Netanyahu in June 1996. He exploded. He said: ‘Who’s the fucking superpower here?’ Frustration with Benjamin Netanyahu is not new.”

Tensions flared during Obama’s presidency when Biden was vice-president. A 2014 report in the Atlantic magazine characterised US-Israel relations as on the edge of a “full-blown crisis”, but Biden publicly declared that he and Netanyahu were “still buddies”, adding: “He’s been a friend for over 30 years.”

However, the Israeli prime minister undercut the Obama administration by speaking before a joint meeting of Congress on Capitol Hill and denouncing a nuclear deal that the US and its allies were negotiating with Iran. Relations with Obama never recovered.

When the 7 October attack happened, Biden was as unequivocal as ever in declaring himself a Zionist and duly travelled to Israel to meet Netanyahu and his war cabinet in person. It was a classic diplomatic play: bear-hug Netanyahu in public while urging restraint in private. The administration claims that Israel has duly heeded its advice and taken steps to minimise civilian casualties.

But the overall Palestinian death toll from the war has surpassed 28,000 people, according to the Gaza health ministry, while Netanyahu has been reluctant to pursue a long-term peace agreement (and rejected calls for Palestinian sovereignty). Anti-war protests have erupted across the US and demonstrators have interrupted Biden’s speeches to brand him “Genocide Joe” – a potential disaster in an election year.

Brett Bruen, a former global engagement director for the Barack Obama White House, said: “Biden went out on a limb for him and part of that effort is that Netanyahu, even if it was not explicitly said, needed to do the minimum to keep things from getting untenable for Biden. And yet it seems as though Netanyahu’s back to his old way of operating, and that’s going to prove costly because Biden now has a pretty strong justification for taking a harder line.”

Source: The Guardian
 
Russian President Vladimir Putin has said he would rather a Joe Biden presidency over Donald Trump ahead of the US election this November.

Mr Biden was the more experienced, predictable person, he said in remarks sure to raise eyebrows.
Before Mr Trump's first run for president in 2016, Mr Putin had praised him as "outstanding and talented".
Mr Biden has been a fierce critic of Mr Putin for years, calling him a "killer" before the invasion of Ukraine.
The Russian president also remarked on his recent interview with US journalist Tucker Carlson, saying he had found it disappointing because the questions had not been sharp enough.

Tucker Carlson interview: Russia-Ukraine ties will eventually heal,
Speaking to Russian TV in an on-camera interview on Wednesday, Mr Putin said Mr Biden's leadership would be better for Russia because he was a "more experienced person, he is predictable, he is a politician of the old formation".

He dismissed questions about Mr Biden's age and mental health, and said when they had last met in 2021, he had not noticed anything peculiar." Even then [three years ago] people were saying that he was incompetent, but I did not see anything of this sort," he said.

"Yes, he kept looking at his papers, but to be honest I kept doing the same. So there was nothing peculiar."
Mr Putin clarified that Russia would work with anyone who "gains the trust of the American public" and wins the presidency.

It wasn't all glowing feedback for Mr Biden, however: Mr Putin described the US president's condemnation of the war in Ukraine as "extremely harmful and erroneous".In the lead-up to the 2016 US election, Mr Trump had suggested he and Mr Putin would "get along very well".

Mr Trump recently caused outrage when he said he would "encourage" Russia to attack any Nato member that failed to meet the US-led alliance's financial contribution target of 2% of their GDP.
In response, Nato chief Jens Stoltenberg asked Mr Trump not to "undermine" the alliance's collective security guarantee.

Source: BBC News​

 
Like Father like Son
========
An ex-FBI informant has been charged with making false statements about an alleged bribery scheme involving a Ukrainian company, President Joe Biden and his son Hunter.

Alexander Smirnov, 43, is accused of lying about the Bidens accepting payments from energy firm Burisma.

The Justice Department said Mr Smirnov gave false statements to the FBI because he disliked President Biden.

Republicans had relied on his claims in an ongoing bid to impeach Mr Biden.

Hunter Biden, who has resolutely denied the allegations against him, is due to testify before the House Oversight Committee later this month about the accusations.

Mr Smirnov was arrested in Las Vegas on Thursday after returning from an overseas flight, the Justice Department said. He was charged with making a false statement and creating a false and fictitious record.

In a 37-page indictment document released on Thursday, Special Counsel David Weiss - who has overseen the investigation of Hunter Biden - accused Mr Smirnov of providing "false derogatory information" to the FBI about the president and his son in June 2020.

This information was provided after Mr Biden was cemented as the Democratic presidential candidate ahead of the 2020 election, prosecutors said, and after Mr Smirnov had expressed bias against the former vice-president.

Congressional Republicans have used Mr Smirnov's allegations over the last year in their impeachment inquiry into President Biden.

When announcing the inquiry, then-House Speaker Kevin McCarthy said "a trusted FBI informant has alleged a bribe to the Biden family".

Republicans later successfully pushed the FBI to release their memos on Mr Smirnov's claims.

At the time, senior congressional Republicans acknowledged the allegation was unverified, and there was no evidence that Joe Biden had received any payments from Ukraine.

Mr Smirnov had originally alleged that Burisma officials said they hired the president's son Hunter to "protect us, through his dad, from all kinds of problems" during a series of meetings in 2015 and 2016.

At the time, Mr Biden was serving as vice-president under Barack Obama, and his son Hunter was a board member of Burisma.

Burisma was also the subject of a criminal investigation conducted by the then-Ukrainian prosecutor general.

Mr Smirnov claimed that the company had paid $5m each to Mr Biden and his son, so that Hunter "will take care of all of those issues through his dad", referring to the company's legal troubles.

Prosecutors said that, in reality, Mr Smirnov had only spoken with Burisma officials in 2017, after Mr Biden was no longer vice-president, and after the then-Ukrainian Prosecutor General had been fired in February 2016.

Source: BBC
 
Joe Biden wins Michigan primary despite sizeable Gaza protest vote

President Joe Biden has won Michigan's Democratic presidential primary comfortably, despite a significant protest vote over strong US support for Israel in the war in Gaza.

Mr Biden won 81% of the vote, according to projections, but the "uncommitted" exceeded expectations with 13%.

His campaign will pay close attention to see if that result in the key swing state will spread nationwide.

Many voters have been angered by the US stance in the Israel-Hamas conflict.

On Wednesday, activists from the group Listen to Michigan and its supporters hailed the size of the protest vote - more than 100,000 - as a victory.

They pledged to continue to pressure the Biden administration to back a ceasefire in Gaza and limit foreign aid to Israel.


 
This guy is too old to be the president of the USA. Not only he is old, but he is a hypocrite as well. Funding Israel for arms as well as sending aid to Gaza. Pathetic.

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Joe Biden twice confuses Gaza with Ukraine as he approves US military aid airdrops

The US president referred to airdrops to help Ukraine in a speech - but White House officials clarified he was referring to Gaza. The airdrops of "food and supplies" will be provided "in the coming days", Mr Biden said.

Mr Biden, 81, confirmed on Friday that humanitarian assistance would be airdropped into Gaza - a day after the Hamas-run health ministry said 30,000 Palestinians have died since the war began last October.

"In the coming days, we're going to join with our friends in Jordan and others who are providing airdrops of additional food and supplies", the president said, adding the US will "seek to open up other avenues in, including possibly a marine corridor".

The United Arab Emirates, Egypt, France, Jordan and the UK have already carried out airdrops.

But Mr Biden twice mistakenly referred to airdrops to help Ukraine - leaving White House officials to clarify that he was in fact talking about Gaza.

Mr Biden revealed the development while hosting Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni in Washington - as he warned "children's lives are on the line".

"Aid flowing to Gaza is nowhere nearly enough," he said.

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"Now, it's nowhere nearly enough. Innocent lives are on the line and children's lives are on the line.

"We won't stand by until we get more aid in there. We should be getting hundreds of trucks in, not just several."

Mr Biden also said he hoped there would be a ceasefire deal between Israel and Hamas by the time of Ramadan, the Muslim holy month which is expected to start on 10 March.

He told reporters: "We're still working real hard at it. We're not there yet."

He said all sides have to agree on timing but that "they're still far apart".

Mr Biden's promise of airdrops came a day after dozens of Palestinians perished during a deadly aid truck incident in Gaza City.

At least 115 Palestinians were killed and more than 750 others were injured, according to Gaza's Hamas-run health ministry, on Thursday.

Witnesses said nearby Israeli troops opened fire as huge crowds raced to pull goods off an aid convoy.

Israel said many of the dead were trampled in a stampede linked to the chaos - and that its troops fired at some people in the crowd who they believed moved towards them in a threatening way.

On Friday evening, the UK joined demands for an investigation into the killings, described by Foreign Secretary David Cameron as "horrific".

Lord Cameron said there must be "an urgent investigation and accountability" - amid growing international calls for a probe into the episode.

"This must not happen again," he said.

While he did not directly blame Israel, he linked the deaths to the lack of aid being allowed into Gaza.

"We can't separate what happened yesterday from the inadequate aid supplies," Lord Cameron said.

"In February, only half the number of trucks crossed into Gaza that did in January. This is simply unacceptable.

"Israel has an obligation to ensure that significantly more humanitarian aid reaches the people of Gaza."

SOURCE: SKY NEWS
 
State of the Union: Biden draws election battle lines in fiery speech

President Joe Biden delivered a fiery State of the Union address on Thursday, taking repeated swipes at Donald Trump and covering the broad themes of his re-election campaign.

Mr Biden used the term "my predecessor" to refer to Mr Trump 13 times in a speech that lasted more than an hour.

He accused his likely election opponent of "bowing down" to Russia and criticised him over the Capitol riot.

Mr Biden also covered immigration, abortion, the economy and Gaza.

The atmosphere in the House chamber was raucous at times, with loud cheering from Democrats and heckling from some Republicans.

It was a spectacle more typical of a political convention than a State of Union address - a constitutionally mandated report that is usually heavy on pageantry and policy.

But this is an election year and the stakes for Mr Biden were high. He was feisty and confrontational as he sought to draw the battle lines for his nascent campaign.

Taking aim at Trump

Unsurprisingly, many of his barbs were aimed at Mr Trump given he is almost certain to be his opponent in November's general election.

"My predecessor failed the most basic duty any president owes the American people - the duty to care," he said in reference to Mr Trump's handling of the Covid pandemic. "That is unforgivable."

He criticised Mr Trump for his recent comments about Russia and Nato, and said that he sought to "bury the truth" about the 6 January 2021 attack on the US Capitol.

He blamed him for the Supreme Court decision to overturn the Roe v Wade ruling which guaranteed abortion rights and for blocking bipartisan immigration reforms.

Mr Trump, meanwhile, had promised to react in real time to the speech on his Truth Social platform. "Biden is on the run from his record and lying like crazy to try to escape accountability for the horrific devastation he and his party have created," he wrote.

"They continue the very policies that are causing this horror show to go," he said.

Mr Biden aggressive approach on Thursday may have been born, at least in part, out of necessity. At 81, he is the oldest president in US history and has been beset by questions about his age and mental acuity.

His approval ratings are the lowest of any modern president seeking re-election. He is in a statistical dead heat with Mr Trump, however, who also is viewed negatively by voters.

Even when Mr Biden addressed his age, he did so with a jab at Mr Trump, who at 77 is only a few years younger than him.

"I know it may not look like it, but I've been around for a while," he said. After rattling off a list of positive attributes he said defined America, he added a kicker.

"Some other people my age see a different story: an American story of resentment, revenge and retribution."

A punchy exchange on immigration

Mr Biden regularly ad-libbed responses to what was at times a hostile audience on the Republican side of the chamber. He quipped, parried and expressed mock surprise at their outbursts.

When the topic turned to immigration, a subject of political vulnerability for the president, he was once again ready to engage. But here, he stumbled.

After Republican Congresswoman Marjorie Taylor Greene accused him of ignoring the murder of Georgia nursing student Laken Riley, allegedly by an undocumented Venezuelan immigrant, Mr Biden held up a button with her name on it - one Ms Greene had given him as he walked in.

After seemingly mispronouncing her name as "Lincoln" Riley, he said she was murdered by an "illegal" - a term criticised by immigrant-rights groups.

Mr Biden went on to call for Republicans to support the bipartisan immigration legislation passed by the Senate and accused Mr Trump of "playing politics" by opposing the bill for electoral gain. The damage, however, may have been done.

A sales pitch for November

When Mr Biden wasn't throwing haymakers at his opponent, he sought to highlight what he characterised as a record of accomplishment during his first term and outline a sales pitch for his re-election.

"I inherited an economy that was on the brink," he said, "and now our economy is the envy of the world."

Figures on the American economy have been trending up for months now. The public perception of the economy, however, has been much darker.

Mr Biden nodded at this split, calling the US economic revival "the greatest story never told".

Whether the president's words will be enough to change minds, however, remains to be seen.

It was a speech geared toward the American middle class - the voters of moderate means who make up the bulk of the electorate.

It included a variety of new proposals, most of which would require congressional legislation to enact - an unlikely scenario unless Democrats retake the House of Representatives in November.

He pitched a tax credit for new home buyers, who have seen their purchasing power eroded by higher mortgage rates. He also called for expanding a cap on prescription drug spending to every American who has health insurance and raising taxes on corporations.

Walking the line on Gaza

Mr Biden opened his speech with a call for military aid to Ukraine, but the bulk of his discussion of foreign policy came towards the end when he turned his attention to the Middle East.

The Gaza war has divided Democrats, with a vocal portion of the president's liberal flank calling for the US to use every means at its disposal to push for a ceasefire. Some took to the Washington streets on Thursday evening in an unsuccessful attempt to block the president's motorcade from reaching the Capitol.

Mr Biden said his administration was working towards a ceasefire that would last "at least 6 weeks," and he detailed a new plan - announced earlier in the day - for the US to construct a temporary seaport in Gaza to allow humanitarian aid to enter by ship.

He had some harsh words for Israel, calling the civilian casualties in Gaza "heartbreaking" and saying it had a "fundamental responsibility" to protect innocent lives.

Mr Biden's speech, because it was delivered without few significant stumbles or gaffes, is a hurdle cleared for the president - and its content could serve as a guide to how his campaign plans to sell the American public on another four years of Democratic governance.

At the very least, it will probably convince nervous Democrats that their presumptive nominee is ready to go toe-to-toe with his Republican opponent in November.

BBC
 

Biden's $7.3 trillion budget is campaign pitch for spending, tax goals​


WASHINGTON, March 11 (Reuters) - U.S. President Joe Biden sketched his policy vision for a potential second four-year term on Monday, unveiling a $7.3 trillion election-year budget aimed at convincing skeptical Americans that he can run the economy better than Donald Trump.

Biden wants to raise taxes by trillions on corporations and high earners, his budget wish-list showed, to help cut the deficit and pay for new programs assisting those who make less cope with high housing and childcare costs. Congress is unlikely to adopt the measures as proposed.

Biden's budget for the 2025 fiscal year, which starts this October, includes raising the corporate income tax rate to 28% from 21%, forcing those with wealth of $100 million to pay at least 25% of their income in taxes, and letting the government negotiate to bring more drug costs down.

Meanwhile, the government would bring back a child tax credit for low- and middle-income earners, fund childcare programs, funnel $258 billion to building homes, provide 12 weeks of paid family leave for workers, and spend billions on law enforcement.

"Do you really think the wealthy and big corporations need another $2 trillion tax breaks, because that's what he (Trump) wants to do," Biden said of Trump at an event in the competitive election state of New Hampshire. "I'm going to keep fighting like hell to make it fair."

Republican House of Representatives Speaker Mike Johnson quickly rejected the proposal, saying it reflected an "insatiable appetite for reckless spending" and a "disregard for fiscal responsibility."

 
President Joe Biden won enough delegates on Tuesday to seal the Democratic Party's nomination, with a face-off against former President Donald Trump looming in what would be the first U.S. presidential election rematch in nearly 70 years.

Biden needed 1,968 delegates to win the nomination and Edison Research said he passed that number on Tuesday night as results began to come in from the primary contest in Georgia, ahead of expected results from Mississippi, Washington state, the Northern Mariana Islands and Democrats living abroad.


Reuters
 
Biden blocks release of special counsel interview tapes

US President Joe Biden has blocked the release of audio recordings of his interviews from the investigation into his handling of classified files.

A letter from the justice department to Republicans in Congress said Mr Biden had asserted executive privilege.

Republicans had demanded the release of the president's interviews with Special Counsel Robert Hur.

Mr Hur's explosive report was released in February and it called Mr Biden's age and memory into question.

He declined to pursue a criminal case against the president, but wrote in his report that Mr Biden would likely be viewed as a "well-meaning, elderly man with a poor memory".

That prompted a strong response from the president, who said: "I know what the hell I'm doing. I don't need his recommendation".



 
Here is some more of Biden's statement just now at the White House.

He noted that Trump will have the ability to appeal the verdict (Trump said earlier he would).

"Just like everyone else has that opportunity," Biden said. "That's how the American system of justice works".

He also appeared to offer counterpoints to many of the statements Trump made in a speech earlier, noting, for example, that the case was in a state court, not a federal one.

"It's reckless. It's dangerous. It's irresponsible for anyone to say this was rigged," he said.

"Our justice system has endured for nearly 250 years."

He then took a more sombre tone, saying America's justice system should be "respected" and "we should never allow anyone to tear it down".

"It's as simple as that. That's America. That's who we are. That's who we will always be, God willing."


BBC
 
Biden apologises for delay in Ukraine military aid

US President Joe Biden has apologised to his counterpart Volodymyr Zelensky for delays in military aid to Ukraine and has pledged $225m (£191m) in support.

The pair met for talks in Paris, a day after they both attended the 80th anniversary commemorations of the D-Day landings in Normandy, France.

The US Department of Defense said the new aid package would include ammunition and anti-aircraft missiles.
Russia launched a full-scale invasion of Ukraine in February 2022.

Mr Biden said previous delays in aid had been caused by some Republicans in Congress, but reiterated US support for Ukraine.

"The United States will stand with you," Mr Biden told Mr Zelensky. "You haven't bowed down. You haven't yielded at all. You continue to fight in a way that is just remarkable, just remarkable."


BBC
 
What son's conviction means for President Biden

Hunter Biden’s conviction for lying about his drug use on a handgun licence application will be a devastating personal blow for his father, Joe Biden.

The US president doubles as the patriarch of a tight-knit family that has seen its share of personal tragedy and trauma.

Now his surviving son has been found guilty of three federal crimes that carry a potentially lengthy prison term.

But the verdict is unlikely to change how Americans vote in November's election.

His father's name will be on the ballot, not his. There's no evidence connecting the president to his son's offences. And there has been scant polling evidence that the public is following this trial closely.


 
White House does not rule out Biden reducing son's sentence

The White House has declined to rule out President Joe Biden commuting any criminal sentence for his son, a day after Hunter Biden was convicted in a federal gun trial.

When asked about a commutation, White House spokeswoman Karine Jean-Pierre told reporters she did not “have anything [to share] beyond” what the president had already said about the case.

A Delaware jury on Tuesday found Hunter Biden guilty of lying about his drug use when buying a revolver in 2018.

Ms Jean-Pierre, who emphasised she had not spoken to the president about commutation, instead pointed to an interview from last week when Mr Biden said he would not pardon his son.

US presidents have the power to commute sentences for defendants convicted of federal offences. They can also choose to outright pardon such convictions, vacating them entirely.

Commuting a sentence would leave the conviction intact, but replace a sentence given in court with a lesser one.

Presidents do not have the power of commutation or pardon in state-level cases.

Aboard Air Force One on Wednesday, Ms Jean-Pierre told a group of journalists: "He [President Biden] and the first lady love their son and they support their son, I just don't have anything... beyond that."

She added that she would not divulge anything about the time Mr Biden spent with his family on Tuesday evening, when the president unexpectedly travelled to Wilmington, Delaware, following the jury's guilty verdict in his son's case.

Ms Jean-Pierre's comments appeared to mark a shift since last September, when she was asked in a briefing if the president would "pardon or commute his son if he’s convicted".

“I’ve answered this question before," she responded at the time. "It was asked of me not too long ago, a couple of weeks ago. And I was very clear, and I said no.”

Flying on Wednesday to Italy, where the president is due to attend the G7 summit, Ms Jean-Pierre also read out a previous statement from Mr Biden about the conviction when he pledged to "accept the outcome of this case and... respect the judicial process".

Hunter Biden pleaded not guilty to two charges related to lying about his drug use on a federal background check, and one for possessing a gun while addicted to or using drugs.

The 54-year-old claimed he was in recovery when he purchased the gun in October 2018.

In total, Hunter Biden faces up to 25 years in prison, though legal experts say a sentence that long is very unlikely.

Constitutional scholars disagree on whether a president’s pardon power includes himself, though Donald Trump - if he won the presidency in November - could be the first to try if he were to be convicted in either of the two federal criminal cases he faces.

BBC
 
United States President Joe Biden’s administration has accused his opponents of spreading disinformation about his physical and mental fitness after a series of viral videos reignited concerns about the Democratic standard-bearer’s age

In a news conference on Monday, White House Press Secretary Karine Jean-Pierre said that the clips purporting to show Biden’s decline had been deceptively edited or misrepresented.

“It tells you everything that we need to know about how desperate Republicans are here,” Jean-Pierre told reporters, labelling the clips “cheapfake” videos.

Republican social media accounts and conservative media outlets have shared videos purporting to show Biden, 81, freezing up or wandering off on his own in recent days.

In one clip, Biden is shown appearing to wander away from other world leaders during a skydiving demonstration at the G7 summit in Italy.

However, versions of the clip circulated by right-wing social media accounts and the New York Post were cropped to obscure a parachutist that Biden was walking towards when appearing to wander off.

Another widely circulated clip shows Biden standing motionless while surrounded by people who are dancing to music at a Juneteenth celebration held last week at the White House.

“The president stood there listening to the music, and he didn’t dance… Excuse me, I didn’t know that not dancing was a health issue,” Jean-Pierre said.

“That is a weird thing to actually flag. If you look at the people around him… there were some folks who were not dancing either.”

In the most recent clip to go viral, Biden pauses in front of the crowd at a fundraising gala for about seven seconds before being led offstage by former President Barack Obama.

Deputy White House Press Secretary Andrew Bates said in a post on X on Monday that Biden’s critics were pretending that “taking in an applauding crowd for a few seconds is somehow wrong” to distract from the president’s achievements.

Former US President Donald Trump, who is running against Biden on the Republican ticket in November, has repeatedly attacked the president over his age and fitness, although, at 78, he is just three years younger.

Either Biden or Trump would be the oldest person to ever hold the office of the presidency by the end of his term.

While some videos of Biden appearing frail or confused have been deceptively edited, opinion polls have shown that voters view his age as a concern and are less worried about Trump’s health.

In a New York Times/Siena poll released in March, 73 percent of registered voters said that Biden was too old to be an effective president, compared with 42 percent who said the same about Trump.

Source: Al Jazeera
 

Biden to give legal status to 500,000 undocumented spouses​

President Joe Biden has announced a new policy that would protect hundreds of thousands of undocumented spouses of US citizens from deportation, according to administration officials.

The issue of immigration has proven an election-year headache for Mr Biden, who recently issued a sweeping executive action to curb record migrant arrivals at the US-Mexico border.

The new policy will apply to those who have been in the country for at least 10 years and will allow them to work in the US legally.

The White House believes more than 500,000 spouses will benefit.

Speaking at an event at the White House on Tuesday, Mr Biden said the move would help the US immigration system become less "unfair" and "unjust" for benefit of immigrants, married couples - and all Americans.

Polls show that the issue is a primary concern for many voters ahead of the presidential poll in November.

The White House also believes the new spouses policy will benefit 50,000 young people under 21 whose parent is married to an American citizen.

It marks the most significant relief programme for undocumented migrants already in the US since the Obama administration announced the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals, or Daca, in 2012.

"The action I'm announcing today will go into effect later this summer," Mr Biden said at the White House.

"The steps I'm taking today are overwhelmingly supported by the American people, despite what the other team says," he added, a reference to Republicans.

The White House announcement came as the US marked the 12th anniversary of Daca, which shielded over 530,000 migrants who came to the US as children - known as Dreamers - from deportation.

On Monday, senior administration officials said that undocumented spouses of US citizens would qualify if they had lived in the country for 10 years and been married as of 17 June.

Those who qualify will have three years to apply for permanent residency and will be eligible for a three-year work permit.
On average, the White House believes that those eligible for the process have been in the US for 23 years. A majority will have been born in Mexico.

They will be "paroled in place" and allowed to remain in the US while their status is changed.

NumbersUSA, an organisation that advocates for tighter immigration controls, slammed the new policy as “unconscionable”.

The organisation’s chief executive, James Massa, said in a statement: “Rather than stopping the worst border crisis in history, President Biden has overreached his executive authority to use an unconstitutional process, circumventing voters and their elected representatives in Congress, to send a message that amnesty is available to those who enter illegally into the United States."

Alex Cuic, an immigration lawyer and professor at Case Western Reserve University in Ohio, told the BBC that while the action affected a "narrow group", it marked a "start" for a segment of the US immigrant population that historically would face complications normalising their status in the country, even when eligible.

"A good majority of them [would have] to leave the country in order to come back lawfully," he said. "It's like they physically enter the US, but their immigration 'soul' doesn't come with them."

By allowing beneficiaries to parole in place, Mr Cuic added, officials "kill off the need to separate families" when one spouse needs to leave the country to apply for lawful permanent residence.

The application process is likely to be open by the end of summer, a senior administration official said on Monday.

The White House is also planning to ease and speed up the visa process for highly skilled undocumented immigrants who have received degrees from US universities or who have received a job offer in their field, including Dreamers.

Mr Biden's announcement comes two weeks after he issued a sweeping executive action that allows US officials to quickly remove migrants entering the US illegally without processing their asylum requests.

That will happen once a daily threshold is met and the border is "overwhelmed", the White House said in a statement.

The American Civil Liberties Union, or ACLU, sued the Biden administration last week, arguing that it violated US immigration law with the action.

At the time of the announcement, Mr Biden urged those who consider the measure "too strict" to "be patient".

"[In] the weeks ahead, I will speak to how we can make our immigration system more fair and just," he said.

Aaron Reichlin-Melnick, policy director at the American Immigration Council, said that while the two announcements "don't intersect with each other at all", the more recent action may help the administration "get some positive headlines after the pushback" they received over the border announcement.

"The Biden administration has been receiving a lot of flak from people saying that their focus has all been on new arrivals, when there are so many long-term undocumented immigrants stuck trying to navigate our complicated immigration system," he added.

"I think the actions you've seen the president taking over the last few weeks really go towards addressing both those concerns," Mr Reichlin-Melnick added.

Source: BBC
 

Supreme Court rejects challenge to Biden administration's contacts with social media companies​


The Supreme Court on Wednesday rejected a bid from a group of social media users and two states to curtail the Biden administration's efforts to pressure social media companies to remove content that officials said was misinformation.

The court determined that the users and the states, Louisiana and Missouri, did not have the legal right to seek an injunction against the Biden administration over its contacts with the platforms. The users had argued that their speech was unconstitutionally stifled when their social media posts were removed or suppressed after prodding by administration officials.

The Supreme Court ruled 6-3 in the case known as Murthy v. Missouri, with Justice Amy Coney Barrett writing for the majority. She was joined by Chief Justice John Roberts and Justices Sonia Sotomayor, Elena Kagan, Brett Kavanaugh and Ketanji Brown Jackson.

Murthy v. Missouri

The legal battle centered around the five social media users' claims that the Biden administration's communications with platforms violated their First Amendment rights. The challengers had accused federal officials of mounting a "sprawling federal 'Censorship Enterprise,'" through which they coerced social media companies into censoring or suppressing speech they disfavored.

The users and officials from Louisiana and Missouri urged the Supreme Court to limit how far the federal government can go in interactions with social media companies, arguing that the efforts from the Biden administration crossed the constitutional line from persuasion, which is allowed, to coercion, which is not.

The Supreme Court's ruling comes as the federal government prepares to combat misinformation online ahead of the November presidential election, while confronting sophisticated AI tools that are more readily available to the public. The case was one of several before the justices in its current term that stood at the intersection of social media and the First Amendment's free speech protections.

In this dispute, a federal district judge in Louisiana sided with the social media users, finding that White House officials and some federal agencies and their employees violated the First Amendment by coercing or significantly encouraging social media companies' content-moderation decisions. The judge issued a sweeping order restricting the Biden administration's contacts with platforms.

A federal appeals court agreed that certain White House officials and the FBI unconstitutionally coerced platforms to suppress content related to COVID-19 vaccines and the 2020 election. But the court narrowed the scope of the district court judge's order to cover a smaller group of federal officials.

The Supreme Court in October agreed to take up the case and consider whether the Biden administration impermissibly worked to suppress speech on Facebook, YouTube and X. Justices Clarence Thomas, Samuel Alito and Neil Gorsuch dissented from the court's decision to pause the lower court's injunction and said they would have maintained the limits on the Biden administration's contacts with platforms while the case proceeded.

The Biden administration had argued that they were using the bully pulpit to persuade platforms to address content it believed was problematic, especially in the context of its efforts to push Americans to get vaccinated during the pandemic. The administration warned that the limits put in place by the district court would hamper its ability to address national security threats or pass along public-health information.

Lawyers for the challengers, though, had claimed that the Biden administration was using social media companies to silence speakers and viewpoints and accused government officials of bullying the platforms.

 

Biden assures donors he can still win election​


US President Joe Biden has assured Democrat donors that he can still win November's presidential election against Donald Trump, after a poor debate performance fuelled concern about his candidacy.

The president, 81, attended a series of fundraising events in New York and New Jersey on Saturday, and defended his performance in CNN's Presidential Debate.

Speaking at one event, Mr Biden admitted, "I didn’t have a great night, but neither did Trump” on Thursday.

"I promise you we're going to win this election," he said.

Mr Biden's debate performance was marked by hard-to-follow and shaky answers - raising fresh fears among some Democrats over whether he is the right candidate to contest this high-stakes election.

Former Democratic House speaker Nancy Pelosi said Mr Biden's debate performance “wasn’t great” - while his former communications director, Kate Bedingfield, called it “really disappointing”.

The president said he understood the concern, but pledged to fight harder.

New Jersey's Democratic governor Phil Murphy attended the fundraiser alongside Mr Biden and the First Lady - and told Mr Biden that "we are all with you 1,000%".

The Biden campaign accepted that the debate had not gone as they had hoped, but said he would not step aside for another nominee.

Campaign chairwoman Jennifer O'Malley Dillon said on Saturday that internal post-debate polling showed "voters' opinions were not changed".

"It will not be the first time that overblown media narratives have driven temporary dips in the polls," she said.

Former President Barack Obama, a close friend of Mr Biden, said on social media that "bad debate nights happen".

"This election is still a choice between someone who fought for ordinary folks his entire life and someone who only cares about himself," Mr Obama wrote.

Hours after the debate, Mr Trump told his supporters that he considered the debate a "big victory" for his campaign.

"Joe Biden's problem is not his age," the 78-year-old Trump said. "It's his competence. He's grossly incompetent."

Mr Biden's performance was not only criticised by those in politics.

A prominent editorial in the New York Times described his determination to run again as a "reckless gamble", and urged him to do some soul-searching this weekend.

It said Democrats should "acknowledge that Mr Biden can’t continue his race, and create a process to select someone more capable to stand in his place".

Voters across the United States have also expressed concerns over voting for either candidate following Thursday's debate.
Long-time Democrat Lori Gregory told the BBC that she "could not handle" watching the debate, and asked, "is this the best our country can do?"

Republican Crystal Myers-Barber said it was "painful to watch", but added that she thought "Trump came across very level-headed and presidential and Biden came across very weak."

Democrat Shana Ziolko said she was "frustrated" watching the debate, and thought there was no clear winner.

A post-debate poll by liberal pollster Data for Progress found that 62% of likely voters who watched or read about the debate found Trump won. Only 30% of those polled said Mr Biden won the debate.

Until further polling is conducted, fundraising could be another indication of continued enthusiasm for Mr Biden's candidacy.

In a memo, chairwoman Jennifer O'Malley Dillon said the campaign had raised more than $27m (£21.3m) from the Thursday debate to Friday evening.

"Following Thursday night’s debate, the beltway class is counting Joe Biden out. The data in the battleground states, though, tells a different story," she said.

"This election was incredibly close before Thursday, and by every metric we’ve seen since, it remains just as close", she added.

 

Biden family urge him to stay in race​


Democratic President Joe Biden's family has urged him to ignore calls to step aside following his disastrous debate against Republican Donald Trump.

He spent Sunday with relatives at a presidential retreat where they encouraged him to keep fighting, according to the BBC's US partner CBS News.

Anxiety has gripped sections of his party following a rambling and at times incoherent performance in Atlanta.

Polls since then suggest concerns about his age - he is 81 - have increased.

A CBS News/YouGov poll released on Sunday indicated that 72% of registered Democratic voters believe the president does not have the mental and cognitive health to serve as president. Nearly half said he should step aside.

But the message from his campaign team and his family is that he remains the party's best hope to defeat Trump.

The family gathering at Camp David in Maryland had been previously scheduled as a photoshoot by celebrity photographer Annie Leibovitz. Mr Biden's wife Jill, his children and grandchildren were among those present.

The encouragement of the family to stay the course was first reported by the New York Times and later confirmed by CBS News.

Some relatives have reportedly blamed his poor performance on over-preparation by his aides. A person close to Jill Biden told CBS she was not among those criticising his team.

Concerns about the age of both candidates - Mr Biden is only three years older than Trump who is 78 - were present before Thursday's debate.

But Mr Biden's weak voice and muddled answers renewed concerns about his candidacy and left some calling for him to step aside.

The New York Times editorial board said in an opinion piece that the "greatest public service [Biden] can now perform is to announce that he will not continue to run for re-election".

Trump was also criticised for his performance - he made a number of false assertions including his long-held grievance that the 2020 election was stolen from him.

On Sunday, top Democrats appeared on the morning shows to defend the president.

"When you get knocked down, you get back up and you fight harder," said Senator Chris Coons.

Maryland congressman Jamie Raskin did entertain the notion that Mr Biden might not be the candidate come the Democratic convention in August when the presidential nominee will be crowned.

"Whether he's the candidate or someone else is the candidate, he's going to be the keynote speaker at our convention. He will be the figure that we rally around to move forward," said Mr Raskin.

Republicans said the debate showed why Trump was the right choice.

"Joe Biden had a disastrous performance, which is why they're talking about replacing him," Republican Senator JD Vance said on Fox News on Sunday.

If Mr Biden were to step aside, it is possible that the Democratic Party could find a new candidate in time for the convention but it is not straightforward.

 
Oh man Democrats are having a meltdown, not only have SC curtailed the government’s power they might not even remain in house with this man.

Easily the worst debate since Bush senior(who was a capable but cruel man) vs Clinton
 
Biden says court verdict on Trump undermines rule of law, Biden on Trump ruling: ‘There are no Kings in America’

Joe Biden has described as a "dangerous precedent" a Supreme Court ruling giving former President Donald Trump partial immunity from criminal prosecution.

The current US president said the judgement undermined the "rule of law" and was "a terrible disservice" to Americans.
Earlier, Trump hailed the court's decision as a "big win" for democracy.

The justices found on Monday that a president had immunity for "official acts" but was not immune for "unofficial acts", and referred the matter back to a trial judge. The judgement will further delay the criminal case against Trump for allegedly trying to subvert the 2020 election result that gave victory to Mr Biden.

In a televised statement late on Monday, President Biden said: "This nation was founded on the principle that there are no kings in America. Each of us is equal before the law. No one, no one is above the law. Not even the president of the United States.

"Today’s [court] decision almost certainly means that there are virtually no limits on what a president may do. "The man who sent that mob to the US Capitol is facing potential criminal conviction for what happened that day. The American people deserve to have an answer in the courts before the upcoming election." Mr Biden was referring to Trump being on trial for his alleged role in stirring up the riot.

"Now, because of today's [court] decision, that is highly, highly unlikely," Mr Biden said.

Following the Supreme Court's decision, the trial judge must now determine which actions were carried out in Trump's capacity as president, which could take months. Any trial is unlikely to start before the 5 November election.
This is a huge boost for Donald Trump - a "big win" as he put it on his social media platform Truth Social.

The Supreme Court ruled that all former presidents have partial immunity from criminal prosecution - total immunity applies to acts carried out as part of the president's official duties, but "unofficial acts," in a private capacity, are not covered. A lower court judge will now have to decide which aspects of the president's behaviour are relevant to the criminal prosecution where he is accused of trying to overthrow the result of the 2020 election. The majority opinion by the Supreme Court deemed his interactions with the Department of Justice (DoJ) immune from prosecution.

Trump is accused in his indictment of pressuring DoJ officials to launch investigations into voter fraud despite a lack of evidence.

The three liberal justices on the Supreme Court strongly dissented from Monday's decision. Justice Sonia Sotomayor said: "The president is now a king above the law."

Democratic Congresswomen Judy Chu said the fallout from the court's decision would be far-reaching.
“If a president says in any official capacity that they want to do something that we would consider to be improper and criminal, he could be immune from the actions that he takes," she said.

The court's six-three ruling will significantly delay any trial - if it is ever to go ahead - until well after the November election.
The ruling will also apply to the other outstanding criminal prosecutions facing Donald Trump, relating to the top secret documents found at his home in Florida, and the case in Georgia where he is accused of conspiring to overturn his narrow election defeat in the state.

According to BBC's news partner CBS, Trump's legal team is seeking to overturn his conviction in New York, where he was found guilty in May of 34 counts of falsifying business records related to concealing an alleged sexual encounter with former adult-film star Stormy Daniels.

Trump's legal team have sent the judge in the case a letter related to this effort and cited the Supreme Court's opinion, CBS reported, citing a source familiar with the matter. The letter in the case has not yet been made public.
The New York Times first reported these details. The case is one of four Trump is facing.

Source: BBC
 

Texas Democrat openly calls on Biden to leave presidential race​


A Texas congressman is the first sitting Democratic lawmaker to call for Joe Biden to step aside as the party's presidential nominee, after his disastrous debate performance last week.

"I am hopeful that he will make the painful and difficult to decision to withdraw," Rep Lloyd Doggett said in a statement.

President Biden appeared to struggle through some responses during a debate with former President Donald Trump last Thursday.

But despite intra-party panic over his mental fitness, Mr Biden has vowed to stay in the race.
His age has been a long-simmering issue this election, with voters in multiple polls saying they think he is too old to be effective.

But President Biden appears determined, and has not indicated that he will step down. He is currently the Democratic Party's presumptive nominee for the White House.

In his statement, Mr Doggett, 77, said the debate solidified his decision to urge Mr Biden to step aside.

"Instead of reassuring voters, the President failed to effectively defend his many accomplishments and expose Trump's many lies," said Mr Doggett, who was sworn in in 1995 and is running for reelection.

He said too much is at stake to risk Mr Biden losing to Trump over fears about his age.

"While much of his work has been transformational, he pledged to be transitional," the congressman said of Mr Biden.

"He has the opportunity to encourage a new generation of leaders from whom a nominee can be chosen to unite our country through an open, Democratic process."

"My decision to make these strong reservations public is not done lightly nor does it in any way diminish my respect for all that President Biden has achieved," Mr Doggett said.

Mr Biden will give a primetime interview to ABC News' George Stephanopoulos on Friday, his first since the debate.

Some prominent Democratic lawmakers voiced their concerns about Mr Biden's age and stamina this week, but none has called for him to step down as a candidate. Mr Doggett is the first sitting Democrat lawmaker to publicly call for Mr Biden to move aside.

Other top Democrats have acknowledged fears about Mr Biden's ability to win, but emphasised that the choice to leave the race is the president's alone.

Several have flocked to liberal-leaning network MSNBC to defend him.

"It's going to be up to Joe Biden" to do what he thinks is best, former US House Speaker Nancy Pelosi told MSNBC on Tuesday.

One of President Biden's most important backers, Congressman Jim Clyburn of South Carolina, said he would support Vice President Kamala Harris as the party's nominee if Mr Biden stepped down.

But he told the network, "I want this ticket to continue to be Biden-Harris."

Congressman Jamie Raskin, a Democrat from Maryland, told MSNBC this weekend that the debate created a"difficult situation".

He acknowledged that there were "very honest and serious and rigorous conversations taking place at every level of our party."

But he added, “Regardless of what President Biden decides, our party is going to be unified and our party also needs him at the very centre of our deliberations in our campaign."

The Biden campaign did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Source: BBC
 
Biden faces donor pressure as he digs in on re-election bid

President Joe Biden is facing pressure from some major Democratic donors as he faces a critical few days in his campaign for re-election.

A number of donors are publicly warning they will withhold funds unless Mr Biden is replaced as the party's candidate following his disastrous debate performance last week.

They include Abigail Disney, an heiress to the Disney family fortune, Hollywood producer Damon Lindelof, Hollywood agent Ari Emanuel, and philanthropist and entrepreneur Gideon Stein.

Mr Biden is seeking to shore up his candidacy this weekend, including with a rare primetime TV interview on Friday and a rally in Wisconsin.

Pressure on Mr Biden, 81, to step aside has grown following a debate marked by several instances where he lost his train of thought and was incomprehensible.

While he admitted that he "screwed up" that night, he has vowed to stay on as his party's standard-bearer taking on Donald Trump in the November presidential election.

"I'm not going anywhere," he said on Thursday at a White House gathering marking 4 July Independence Day in the US.

Ms Disney told the US business news channel CNBC that she did not believe that Mr Biden could win against Trump in November.

She said her intent to pull support was rooted in “realism, not disrespect”.

“Biden is a good man and has served his country admirably, but the stakes are far too high,” Ms Disney, who has supported a number of Democrats and Democratic causes over the years, said.

“If Biden does not step down the Democrats will lose. Of that I am absolutely certain. The consequences for the loss will be genuinely dire.”

With her warning, she joined a handful of other wealthy donors.

Mr Stein told the New York Times that his family was withholding $3.5m (£2.8m) to non-profit and political organisations active in the presidential race unless Mr Biden steps aside.

Mr Lindelof, who has donated more than $100,000 to Democrats this election cycle, wrote a public essay urging other donors to withhold their funds in what he dubbed a “DEMbargo”.

“When they text you asking for cash, text back that you’re not giving them a penny and you won’t change your mind until there’s change at the top of the ticket,” Mr Lindelof wrote in Deadline.

Mr Emanuel - the brother of Rahm Emanuel, a former Barack Obama chief of staff - told a conference in Colorado that withholding funding was the key to ensuring Mr Biden's exit from the race, the Financial Times reported on Thursday.

“The lifeblood to a campaign is money, and maybe the only way . . . is if the money starts drying up,” he said, according to the newspaper.

“You’ll see in the next couple weeks, if the money comes in . . . I talked to a bunch of big donors, and they’re moving all their money to Congress and the Senate.”

Some other major donors have not threatened to cut funding but are putting public pressure on the president to withdraw.

Reed Hastings, co-founder of Netflix and one of the biggest donors to the Democratic Party, told US media that Mr Biden "needs to step aside to allow a vigorous Democratic leader to beat Trump and keep us safe and prosperous”.

Others have expressed concerns about the possibility of a damaging and chaotic race to replace Mr Biden if he does leave.

Ramesh Kapur, a Massachusetts-based Indian-American industrialist, has organised fundraisers for Democrats since 1988.

“I think it’s time for him to pass the torch,” Mr Kapur told the BBC this week. “I know he has the drive, but you can’t fight Mother Nature.”

“What I know of him, he will decide what’s good for the country,” he added.

There are some who are worried there's not enough time left for a new candidate to join the race, and they have decided to back Biden if he stays on.

A mega-donor the BBC spoke to this week, who declined to be named, said he planned to go ahead with a fundraiser for the president scheduled for later this month at his Virginia home.

"We all want to keep Donald Trump out of the White House, and probably that will keep us together," he said.

The Biden campaign has said it raised $38m from debate day through to the weekend, mainly through small donations - and a total of $127m in June alone.

The Biden team and the president have conceded he had a difficult debate but have said he is ready to show the public he has the stamina for the campaign.

On Friday, he is scheduled to sit down with ABC - the first television interview after the debate - to help quell concerns about his age and mental faculties.

He will also travel to Madison, Wisconsin to campaign with Governor Tony Evers.

But the president is facing a series of negative polls which suggest his Republican rival’s lead has widened in the wake of the Atlanta debate.

A New York Times poll published on Wednesday suggested Trump was now holding his biggest lead yet at six points.

And a separate poll published by the BBC’s US partner CBS News suggested a slight shift towards Trump, who had a three-point lead over Mr Biden in the crucial battleground states.

BBC
 
Joe Biden vows 'I'm staying in the race' amid speculation over his future

Joe Biden has again vowed "I am staying in the race" at a rally as pressure mounts on him to quit the presidential election.

Doubts grew over the health and capability of the 81-year-old US president after a shaky performance in a debate with opponent Donald Trump last week.

Amid questions about whether he has the stamina to run against Trump, he held a rally in the key battleground state of Wisconsin, ahead of an interview with broadcaster ABC News.

Speaking to supporters, he said he is not letting the debate "wipe out years of work" and is "going to win again" in November.

"We had a little debate last week. Can't say it was my best performance. But ever since then there's been a lot of speculation," he said.

"What's Joe gonna do? Is he gonna stay in the race? Is he gonna drop out? Well here's my answer: I am running and gonna win again."


 
Only the 'Lord Almighty' could convince me to quit – Biden

US President Joe Biden has said only the "Lord Almighty" could convince him to end his bid for re-election, as he sat for a rare primetime interview in an effort to calm Democratic concern over his candidacy.

Speaking to ABC News on Friday, Mr Biden also declined to take a cognitive test and make the results public in order to reassure voters he is fit to serve another term.

"I have a cognitive test every single day. Every day I have that test - everything I do [is a test]," he told George Stephanopoulos.

The 81-year-old once again pushed back on the idea, aired by some Democratic officials and donors, that he should stand aside for a younger alternative following his disastrous debate with Donald Trump last week.

Throughout the interview, Mr Stephanopoulos pressed the president on his capacity to serve another term, asking Mr Biden if he was in denial about his health and ability to win.

“I don’t think anybody’s more qualified to be president or win this race than me," Mr Biden said, blaming his poor performance last week on exhaustion and a "bad cold". In the 22-minute interview, he also:

  • Attempted to ease Democratic fears he had lost ground to Donald Trump since the debate, saying pollsters he had spoken to said the race was a "toss-up"
  • Rejected suggestions allies may ask him to stand aside. “It’s not going to happen," he said
  • Dismissed repeated questions about what would compel him to leave the race. "If the Lord Almighty came down and said, ‘Joe, get out of the race,’ I’d get out of the race,” he said. “The Lord Almighty’s not coming down”
The president answered questions more clearly than he did on the debate stage last week, but his voice again sounded weak and occasionally hoarse.

It was a sharp contrast to his performance at a rally in Madison, Wisconsin, on Friday, where an energised Mr Biden acknowledged his disastrous performance in last week's CNN debate. "Ever since then, there’s been a lot of speculation. What’s Joe going to do?” he told the crowd.

“Here’s my answer. I am running and going to win again,” Mr Biden said, as supporters in the crucial battleground state cheered his name.

The interview and the rally come at a critical moment for his campaign, with donors and Democratic allies considering whether to stick with him.

The campaign is aware that the next few days could make or break his re-election bid, according to various reports in US media, as Mr Biden seeks to regain ground that he lost to his Republican rival Donald Trump following the debate.

As he took the stage at the rally, Mr Biden passed one voter who was holding a sign reading "Pass the torch, Joe". Another voter who stood outside the venue held a sign that read "Save your legacy, drop out!".

"I see all these stories that say I'm too old," Mr Biden said at the rally, before triumphing his record in the White House. "Was I too old to create 15 million jobs?" he said. "Was I too old to erase student debt for five million Americans?"

“Do you think I’m too old to beat Donald Trump?" he asked, as the crowd responded "no".

Referencing Trump's criminal conviction in New York, and the other charges he is facing in separate cases, he called his rival a "one-man crime wave".

Pressure on Mr Biden to step aside has only grown following the debate which was marked by several instances where he lost his train of thought, raising concerns about his age and mental fitness.

Some major Democratic donors have begun to push for Mr Biden to step down as the party's nominee, publicly warning they will withhold funds unless he is replaced.

His campaign is planning an aggressive come-back. His wife, Jill Biden, as well as Vice-President Kamala Harris, are planning a campaign blitz to travel to every battleground swing state this month.

Mr Biden, who is due to speak at another rally in Pennsylvania on Sunday, thanked the vice-president for her support. She has emerged as the most likely candidate to replace him on the Democratic ticket if he were to step down.

The Washington Post has reported that Mr Biden's senior team is aware of the pressure coming from within the Democratic Party to make a decision on the future of his candidacy within the next week.

On Friday, reports emerged that House minority leader Hakeem Jeffries had scheduled a Sunday meeting with senior House Democrats to discuss Mr Biden’s candidacy.

Four Democrats in the House of Representatives in Congress have now called for him to withdraw from the race - Lloyd Doggett of Texas, Raúl Grijalva of Arizona, Seth Boulton of Massachusetts and Mike Quigley of Illinois.

“President Biden has done enormous service to our country, but now is the time for him to follow in one of our founding father, George Washington’s footsteps and step aside to let new leaders rise up and run against Donald Trump,” Mr Moulton told radio station WBUR on Thursday.

However, no senior Democrats have called on him to quit, as his campaign has pointed out to reporters.

On Friday, reports emerged that Senator Mark Warner was attempting to form a group of fellow Democratic senators to ask Mr Biden to drop out of the race. The reports, including one in the Washington Post, suggested Mr Warner had deep concerns following the CNN debate.

Speaking to reporters later on Friday, Mr Biden said he understood that Mr Warner "is the only one considering that" and that no one else had called for him to step down.

The same day, Massachusetts Governor Maura Healey, a Democrat and ally of Mr Biden, issued a statement urging the president to "carefully evaluate" whether he remains the Democratic nominee.

"Whatever President Biden decides, I am committed to doing everything in my power to defeat Donald Trump,” she said.

Some Democratic voters, too, have lost faith in Mr Biden's capacity to run. In a Wall Street Journal poll released on Friday, 86% of Democrats said they would support Mr Biden, down from 93% in February.

At the rally in Madison, multiple Biden supporters told BBC News that they supported his bid for re-election and were not concerned about the debate debacle.

"I’m not worried about his health. I think he can go all the way to the election and beyond," said primary school teacher Susan Shotliff, 56.

Some said that while Mr Biden struggled for words, more focus should be on his Republican rival. "During the debate, [Trump] told a bunch of lies. How is that any worse than what Biden did?" said Greg Hovel, 67.

Others expressed more concern. "I wanted to have a first hand look at how he’s like, his mannerisms, his energy," said Thomas Leffler, a health researcher from Madison. "I’m worried about his capacity to beat Trump."

"As he gets older, I think it’s going to increasingly be an issue. But I’ll vote blue no matter what," he said.

BBC
 
White House fights back against doubts on Biden fitness

The White House has pushed back on questions about Joe Biden’s mental fitness, with the US president daring doubters in the party to either challenge him or unite behind his candidacy.

Mr Biden, 81, took the highly unusual step of calling in to a cable news show, saying: "I am not going anywhere."

In a tense news conference later, the president's spokeswoman rejected suggestions that he might be suffering from an undisclosed illness.

Questions about his mental acuity have intensified since a poor debate performance against Donald Trump on 27 June.

The scrutiny is unlikely to fade this week as he hosts a summit in Washington for leaders of Nato countries.

In Monday afternoon's daily press conference, White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre rejected speculation that Mr Biden was being treated for Parkinson's disease, which can cause stiff movement and slurred speech.

"Has the president been treated for Parkinson's?" she said. "No. Is he being treated for Parkinson's? No."

She was responding to a question about a report in the New York Times that an expert on Parkinson's disease had visited the White House eight times since last year.

A letter released on Monday night from Mr Biden's doctor said the specialist in question, Dr Kevin Cannard, had been neurology consultant to the White House since 2012 and helps "thousands of active-duty members assigned in support of White House operations".

Physician to the President Dr Kevin O'Connor also said Mr Biden had not seen a neurologist outside of his annual physical, in which he is checked by specialists from a range of medical fields.

He noted that Mr Biden's last physical, in February, was "extremely detailed" and contained "no findings which would be consistent with any cerebellar or other central neurological disorder".

On Monday morning, the president called in to MSNBC's Morning Joe programme, laying down the gauntlet to critics to “challenge me at the convention” next month, or rally behind him against Trump.

It came as he sent an open letter to congressional Democrats, saying he "wouldn't be running again if I did not absolutely believe" that he could beat the Republican challenger in November's election.

Mr Biden's letter said Democratic voters in the primaries have "spoken clearly and decisively" that he should be the party's nominee.

"Do we now just say this process didn't matter?" the letter said. "That the voters don't have a say... I decline to do that. How can we stand for democracy in our nation if we ignore it in our own party? I cannot do that. I will not do that."

Mr Biden also phoned Democratic donors on Monday. One source familiar with the call told CBS News, the BBC's US partner, that the president said his strategy for the second debate against Trump in September will be "attack, attack, attack".

Several congressional Democrats have called for Mr Biden to drop out, but late on Monday, several others rallied round the embattled president.

Left-wing New York lawmaker Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez told reporters: "The matter is closed. Joe Biden is our nominee.

"He is not leaving this race. He is in this race and I support him."

Ayanna Pressley of Massachusetts, Maxine Waters of California, and Frank Pallone of New Jersey echoed that support for Mr Biden.

Earlier in the day, Adam Smith of Washington state became the sixth member of Congress to publicly urge Mr Biden to quit.

"We need a stronger messenger," he told the BBC, as he panned Mr Biden's debate performance.

"The president was completely incapable of doing something that any sort of relatively novice debater should have been able to do, and it hasn't gotten better since then," he added.

On Sunday, the Democratic minority leader in the House of Representatives, Hakeem Jeffries, held a group call in which several congressmen were explicit in urging Mr Biden to step aside, according to US news outlets.

They reportedly included Jerry Nadler of New York, Mark Takano of California, Joe Morelle of New York and Jim Himes of Connecticut.

Last week, Lloyd Doggett of Texas became the first Democrat in Congress to urge Mr Biden to step aside.

Trump, 78, has ridiculed Mr Biden over the debate, last week labelling his rival "broken-down". Biden allies have expressed exasperation about the media criticism he is facing, while his Republican challenger was recently convicted in a New York hush-money case.

Amid mounting speculation over Mr Biden's candidacy in November, the thoughts of some Democrats have turned to who could replace him.

Some party members have rallied around Vice-President Kamala Harris, who is Mr Biden's running mate in November.

Trump has suggested the vice-president would be "better" than Mr Biden, but still "pathetic".

During a pair of interviews last week, Mr Biden acknowledged that he had "screwed up" the debate, but later vowed that only the "Lord Almighty" could convince him to end his bid to win the White House again.

BBC
 
Biden forcefully defends Nato as he hosts summit leaders

US President Joe Biden has welcomed Nato leaders to Washington DC with a forceful speech that seemed pitched to reassure allies overseas and closer to home that he can fight off an election challenge from Donald Trump.

In brief but strongly delivered remarks at the opening of the summit, the president declared the military alliance "more powerful than ever" as it faced a "pivotal moment" with the war between Russia and Ukraine.

Warning that "autocrats" had overturned global order", Mr Biden announced more military aid for Kyiv.

The US president and the leaders of Germany, Italy, the Netherlands and Romania are donating Patriot missile batteries and other systems to bolster Ukraine's beleaguered air defences.

"The war will end with Ukraine remaining a free and independent country," Mr Biden said in remarks read from a teleprompter on Tuesday afternoon. "Russia will not prevail. Ukraine will prevail."

Mr Biden spoke for about 13 minutes in a clear voice, a marked difference from his fumbling tone during last month's presidential debate with Trump.

Meanwhile, congressional Democrats met privately to debate Mr Biden's leadership of the party and the mood was "sad", lawmakers told the Associated Press news agency.

Later on Tuesday, a seventh House of Representatives Democrat - Mikie Sherrill of New Jersey - publicly called on Mr Biden not to run for re-election, saying the stakes were "too high".

Visiting diplomats also expressed scepticism about Mr Biden's future, according to reports.

"We don't see how he can come back after the debate," one unnamed European envoy told Reuters news agency. "I can't imagine him being at helm of the US and Nato for four more years."

Mr Biden's team has responded by trying to show that the 81-year-old remains vigorous enough to handle the demands of the presidency.

The White House has credited Mr Biden's leadership for the expansion of Nato since Russia invaded Ukraine two years ago, with Finland and Sweden joining the alliance.

Leaders from the 32 member countries are converging on the US capital for the summit.

Joining them is the UK's new Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer. Before leaving for Washington, he said he was pleased to "confirm and reaffirm Labour's strong support, unshakeable support for Nato".

Asked by reporters travelling with him to the summit for his message to Russian President Vladimir Putin, Sir Keir said the gathering “should be seen as a clear and united resolve by Nato allies… to stand with Ukraine and stand up to Russian aggression”.

He said a deadly attack on a children’s hospital in Kyiv earlier this week “strengthens the resolve and that is a very important if tragic backdrop to this summit”.

Sir Keir added the package of support for Ukraine the UK was seeking to advance at the summit “goes beyond the support that's been put in before".

Sir Keir is due to meet Mr Biden on Wednesday, as well as Democratic and Republican leaders in Congress.

Tuesday's event was steeped in the alliance's history.

It was held in the very venue where the original treaty was signed decades ago, which Mr Biden invoked in his speech.

Near the conclusion of his speech, Mr Biden called Nato Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg on to the stage to award him the Presidential Medal of Freedom, America's highest civilian honour.

On Tuesday evening, Trump, 78, criticised Nato allies during a campaign rally at his golf club in Doral, Florida.

The event was attended by all three of his sons, including his youngest, Barron, who was at his first ever Trump rally, according to his father, and received more applause from the audience than his brothers, Eric and Don.

Trump has repeatedly lambasted Nato member states for failing to meet an agreed goal of spending at least 2% of gross domestic product on defence. Many more Nato countries now meet that benchmark since Russia invaded Ukraine.

Trump told supporters that these countries were contributing “hundreds of billions of dollars” more because when he was president he had warned them “No, I will not protect you from Russia” unless they paid more to the alliance.

When Trump made similar remarks at a rally in February this year, Mr Stoltenberg said such talk "undermines all of our security".

But the Nato chief remained tight-lipped on the Republican candidate as the summit began on Tuesday.

Ukrainian President Vlodymyr Zelensky said at an event held elsewhere in Washington DC that the whole world was "waiting for November", when the US general election takes place, and he urged American voters to stand by Ukraine.

Mr Zelensky is due to meet Mr Biden on Thursday.

BBC
 
First Democratic senator challenges Biden candidacy

The first Democratic senator has publicly questioned President Joe Biden's election chances, after seven congressman broke cover and urged the 81-year-old to step aside.

Senator Michael Bennet told CNN he expected the president to lose to Donald Trump by a "landslide", but stopped short of telling him to end his candidacy.

Questions have been raised about Mr Biden's fitness for office after a stumbling presidential debate performance against Trump late last month.

The president insists he can beat his adversary, and continues to hold support among key allies after congressional Democrats met to debate his leadership on Tuesday.

The US president is in an even brighter spotlight this week as he hosts a meeting of world leaders for a Nato military summit, with the issue of Ukraine aid on the table.

He is expected to face intense global scrutiny when he delivers a press conference at the meeting in Washington on Thursday afternoon.

Speaking briefly to reporters after Tuesday's congressional discussions, Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer repeated the message: "I'm with Joe."

Others have emphasised the importance of party solidarity. Speaking to BBC Radio 4's World Tonight programme, Hank Johnson, a congressman from Georgia, said it was time to "break the circular firing squad" around Mr Biden.

Mr Johnson is a member of the influential Congressional Black Caucus. While admitting Mr Biden had a "horrible" debate with Trump, he said the overwhelming majority of voters of colour wanted him as their candidate.

The caucus - a group of about 60 lawmakers - reportedly backed the president during a call on Monday.

On Tuesday, Mr Biden gave brief but vociferous remarks to open the Nato summit, declaring the alliance to be "more powerful than ever". Observers said he struck a markedly different tone to his fumbling performance in the 27 June debate.

Elsewhere in Washington, congressional Democrats emerged from their private talks. Some chose to speak to reporters, touting Mr Biden's record in the White House or speaking of Democratic unity.

But the same day, a seventh House Democrat - Mikie Sherrill of New Jersey - publicly called on Mr Biden not to run for re-election, saying the stakes were "too high".

She joined other dissenting voices in Congress that include Adam Smith, who told the BBC earlier this week that the party needed to install a "stronger messenger" as its candidate.

In his comments to CNN, Mr Bennet said the question of whether to carry on in the race was "something for the president to consider". But he said Trump was "on track, I think, to win this election and maybe win it by a landslide".

The Colorado Democrat framed the issue as "a moral question about the future of our country".

Two other senators are reported by CNN to believe that Mr Biden cannot win the White House again, although neither has publicly broken ranks.

Mr Biden reportedly also faces doubts from diplomats visiting Washington for the Nato meeting, one of whom anonymously told Reuters they could not see him staying in post for another four years.

As the debate lingers - and the White House faces questions about its approach to disclosing information about Mr Biden's health - speculation continues to grow over who would replace Mr Biden if he chose to step down.

Vice-President Kamala Harris is earning some high-profile backers, despite her ongoing vocal support for the president. During a rally in Las Vegas on Tuesday, Ms Harris insisted her boss was a "fighter".

Mr Biden himself has dared his doubters to either challenge him or unite behind his candidacy, although he has admitted he "screwed up" in the Trump debate.

His performance in the head-to-head has been ridiculed by his rival, who has suggested Ms Harris would be a "better" competitor for the White House.

But in his latest comments on the matter, Trump said he expected his adversary to stay in the race: "He’s got an ego, and he doesn’t want to quit."

BBC
 
Joe Biden is considering backing a host of reforms to the US Supreme Court including ending lifetime appointments, according to US media

Backing such changes would mark a major reversal for the Democratic president. It comes after the high court made a series of decisions including the removal of the federal right to abortion and a ruling that gave Donald Trump immunity from prosecution for "official acts" as president.

CBS News, the BBC's partner in the US, reported that Mr Biden was examining establishing term limits for justices, which are currently lifetime appointments, and bolstering the court's ethics code. However, changes would be difficult to pass in a divided Congress.

On a weekend call, Mr Biden told Democrats in the Congressional Progressive Caucus that he was working with experts on and reforms would be announced soon, a source familiar with the call told CBS News.

White House Press Secretary Karine Jean-Pierre declined to elaborate when asked about the proposed changes, or when an announcement might be made.

In a post on Truth Social, Trump attacked what he called an "illegal and unConstitutional attack on our SACRED... Supreme Court".

Mr Biden has long resisted calls from his party to reform the court. Some Democrats had argued change was needed after his predecessor Trump appointed three right-wing justices to shape a 6-3 conservative majority.

There have also been questions about ethics on the high court with Justice Clarence Thomas accepting luxury trips from a billionaire Republican donor, and questions about his wife's support for overturning the 2020 presidential election when Trump lost.

Mr Biden created a commission to issue recommendations early in his presidency. The advice was never acted upon.
Democrats would face a huge challenge to get any reform through a divided Senate and a Republican-controlled House of Representatives.

The high court's opinions this term displayed the sharp political shift, with the conservative majority issuing a series of high-profile rulings that affected abortion rights, gun laws, the environment and Trump's criminal trials.

The high court also threw out Mr Biden's student loan forgiveness plan - which would have wiped off billions in debt for Americans.

On its last day of opinions, the court ruled Trump and other presidents have a wide (but not absolute) immunity from criminal prosecution for their actions in office.

One of the four criminal cases against Trump has since been dismissed and sentencing has been delayed in another.
Along with the reforms, Mr Biden is also examining backing a constitutional amendment that would eliminate the broad immunity cited by the court.

Mr Biden's reported plan, if announced, would at least give him a new campaign issue in the runup to November's election.
The president repeatedly cites the Supreme Court and its rulings on the campaign trail. He made mention of the high court Tuesday during an interview with BET, bringing up the court's ruling in 2022 that eliminated the right to an abortion by overturning Roe v Wade.

Mr Biden noted Trump could have the option of appointing another justice or two if he wins. "Just imagine if he has two more appointments," Biden said.

Source: BBC
 
U.S. President Joe Biden, under fire from fellow Democrats to drop his re-election campaign, tested positive for COVID-19 while on a trip to Las Vegas on Wednesday and is experiencing mild symptoms, the White House said.

White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre announced the positive test for the 81-year-old Democrat after the president of UnidosUS, a Latino civil rights organization, said Biden would not be able to speak at a scheduled event due to the diagnosis.


Reuters
 
PM Shehbaz, President Zardari extend wishes for Biden's speedy recovery from Covid-19

Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif and President Asif Ali Zardari have extended their good wishes to United States (US) President Joe Biden following his positive Covid-19 diagnosis.

Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif took to his official timeline to wish President Biden a swift and complete recovery, stating, "Wishing President Biden swift and complete recovery from Covid. Good wishes."

In a separate statement, President Asif Ali Zardari conveyed his sincere hopes for President Biden's health and well-being. The President's House issued a statement expressing President Zardari's sentiments for President Biden's early recovery.

President Biden's Press Secretary Karine Jean-Pierre confirmed that the president tested positive for Covid-19 after attending an event in Las Vegas, where he was slated to address a crucial election campaign event ahead of the November presidential polls.

Despite being fully vaccinated and boosted, President Biden is experiencing mild symptoms. He will self-isolate at his home in Rehoboth and continue to fulfil his duties, assured Karine Jean-Pierre.

According to the latest medical update from the White House, President Biden's symptoms remain mild, with normal respiratory rate, temperature, and pulse oximetry readings. He has received his first dose of Paxlovid to manage the illness effectively during his self-isolation period.

EXPRESS TRIBUNE
 
Hunter Biden set to be sentenced on gun charges in November

Hunter Biden is set to be sentenced on felony firearms charges in November under an order signed by a judge on Friday.

The president’s son could face up to 25 years in prison at sentencing set for Nov. 13 in Wilmington, Delaware, but as a first-time offender he is likely to get far less time or avoid prison entirely.

Hunter Biden is also facing another trial on tax charges in California set to begin in September. He’s charged in that case with failing to pay $1.4 million in taxes.

President Joe Biden, who dropped his reelection bid last month, has said he will not use his presidential powers to pardon his son or lessen his sentence. Hunter Biden was convicted of three felonies after lying on a federal form to purchase the gun by saying he wasn’t a drug user in 2018, a period when he has acknowledged struggling with addiction.


 
'America, I gave my best to you': Biden eyes legacy in emotional farewell

It was not the speech Joe Biden wanted to give. At least, not this year, under these circumstances.

But if anyone knows how quickly fortunes can change, it’s this president – whose personal and professional life has been scarred by tragedy and adversity.

Speaking to a packed arena in Chicago on the first night of the Democratic National Convention, Mr Biden offered a full-throated defence of his presidency – touching on many of the themes that he campaigned on in 2020 and again this year before abandoning his re-election bid in mid-July, a few weeks after a catastrophic debate performance.

"Like many of you, I gave my heart and soul to this nation,” he said, towards the end of a nearly hour-long address punctuated by raucous shouts of "Thank you, Joe".

Mr Biden had walked out onto the stage after being introduced by his daughter Ashley and wife, Jill, who told the audience she "saw him dig deep into his soul" when he decided to exit the presidential race.

After hugging Ashley, he put a tissue to his eyes to dab away the tears.

The president touched his heart, and stood a little straighter at the lectern, flashing a toothy smile as the crowd continued to cheer.

His speech had a keen eye on his place in history but he spent time singing the praises of his vice-president - the woman he hopes will succeed him in the White House.

“Selecting Kamala was the very first decision I made when I became our nominee and it's the best decision I made my whole career,” he said. “She's tough, she's experienced, and she has enormous integrity.”

Unlike his Oval Office address four weeks ago, Mr Biden did not speak directly of passing the torch to a new generation - but the message was clear enough. After the president concluded his remarks, Ms Harris and her husband Doug Emhoff came out to embrace Mr Biden and his wife, Jill.

“I love you,” the vice-president mouthed to Mr Biden after their hug.

While Mr Biden spent much of the end of his speech focusing on Ms Harris – a tacit acknowledgment that how she fares against Donald Trump in November's vote could make or break how history, and his party, remembers him - many of the evening’s earlier speakers directed their tributes to the current White House resident.

It started with a planned – but unannounced – appearance by Ms Harris herself, who took the stage to thunderous applause.

“Joe, thank you for your historic leadership and for your lifetime of service to our nation and for all you continue to do,” she said. “We are forever grateful to you.”

Later, Delaware Senator Chris Coons – one of Mr Biden’s closest allies – took his turn singing the president’s praises.

“I’ve never known a more compassionate man than Joe Biden,” he said. “I’ve never known a man who has taken from his own loss and his own faith and delivered so much for the future of so many others.”

Hillary Clinton offered her own tribute when she appeared on stage earlier in the evening, telling the crowd that Mr Biden had "brought dignity, decency and competence back to the White House".

The 2016 Democratic nominee received an extended ovation, and she noted that while she did not break the “highest, hardest glass ceiling” by becoming the first woman president, “on the other side of that glass ceiling is Kamala Harris taking the oath of office”.

The reception Mr Biden received from the packed Democratic convention hall was equally electric. The Democrats here in Chicago have been jubilant all day. But the cheers for the president could be as much a sign of gratitude for his grudging decision to step aside as it was a tribute to a storied political career that began in 1972 when he was first elected to Congress at the age of 29.

Tomorrow, Barack Obama will address the convention crowd. On Wednesday, Bill Clinton will have his turn. Both are former presidents who stood for – and won – re-election.

Mr Biden will not have that opportunity. Instead, he was left to define and defend his legacy as a one-term president in a speech that, barring a major national event in the next five months, will be his final address to a massive American television audience.

Toward the end of the speech, he quoted a line from a song, American Anthem.

“Let me know in my heart when my days are through, that America, America, I gave my best to you,” he said.

The crowd erupted in another round of applause.

Eight years ago, Mr Biden passed up a presidential bid in favour of Mrs Clinton – under some not so subtle pressure from Mr Obama. Four years ago, he won the nomination, but the Covid pandemic denied him an opportunity to bask in adulation of a packed Democratic convention hall and the celebratory post-speech balloon drop.

This, then, was as close to a Democratic convention moment in the spotlight Mr Biden will get.

After his speech concluded – past midnight on the US east coast - the president left the arena and headed to Air Force One for a flight to California for a holiday. His time in Chicago, at this Democratic National Convention, was measured in hours, not days. And despite his desires just a few months ago, his remaining time as president will be measured in months, not years.

BBC
 
US sharply lowers number of jobs added in year ending in March

Economists are divided on the extent of the rate cuts that the US Federal Reserve should undertake this year in light of the latest employment data.

The United States economy added 818,000 fewer jobs from April 2023 through March this year than were originally reported, the government says. The revised total adds to evidence that the job market has been steadily slowing and likely reinforces the US Federal Reserve’s plan to start cutting interest rates soon.

The Department of Labor estimated that job growth averaged 174,000 a month in the year that ended in March — a drop of 68,000 a month from the 242,000 that were initially reported. The revisions released Wednesday were preliminary with final numbers to be issued in February.

The downgraded estimate follows a jobs report for July that was much worse than expected, leading many economists to suggest that the Federal Reserve had waited too long to begin cutting interest rates to support the economy. The unemployment rate rose for the fourth straight month to a still-low 4.3 percent, and employers added just 114,000 jobs.

The Federal Reserve raised its benchmark rate 11 times in 2022 and 2023 to fight inflation, which hit a four-decade high more than two years ago. Year-over-year inflation has since plummeted — from 9.1 percent in June 2022 to 2.9 percent, clearing the way for the central bank to begin cutting rates when it next meets in mid-September.

The revised hiring estimates are intended to better account for companies that are either being created or going out of business.

“This doesn’t challenge the idea we’re still in an expansion, but it does signal we should expect monthly job growth to be more muted and put extra pressure on the Fed to cut rates,’’ said Robert Frick, economist at the Navy Federal Credit Union.

Pressure on the Fed
In the revisions, new professional and business services jobs, a broad category that includes managers and technical workers, were reduced by 358,000 in the 12 months that ended in March. Leisure and hospitality employers, including hotels and restaurants, added 150,000 fewer jobs than first reported.

“Odds are that recent job growth is overstated, something that the Federal Reserve will worry about as the labour market might be a little more vulnerable,” Ryan Sweet, chief US economist at Oxford Economics, wrote in a note emailed to Al Jazeera. “Even with the revisions, the economy has created a boatload of jobs and trend job growth is strong, just not sufficient to keep up with growth in the working-age population.”

This is less threatening than if the labour market was weakening because of rising layoffs, Sweet said.

“For the central bank, prudent risk management is to begin cutting interest rates or risk pockets of weakness in the labour market becoming something worse. The preliminary employment revisions don’t alter our forecast for a [quarter of 1 percentage point] rate cut in September, but we will focus on the pace of interest rate normalization beyond next month, which could be a little brisker than we anticipate,” he said.

Source: Al Jazeera
 
You can clearly tell Biden is not happy facing the coup he was subjected too. Serves him right as well for the number of coups he has helped stage in other countries as VP and President.
 
Texas judge blocks Biden plan for migrant spouses

A federal judge in Texas has issued an order temporarily halting a new immigration programme from the Biden White House that officials say could protect hundreds of thousands of undocumented spouses of US citizens from deportation.

The 14-day stay issued on Monday comes in response to a lawsuit from 16 Republican-led states that sued the Biden administration over the programme.

The "Keeping Families Together" programme, which took effect last week, would apply to those who have been in the country for at least 10 years and allow them to work in the US legally.

Polls show that the immigration is a primary concern for many voters ahead of November's presidential election.

When the White House announced the new programme in June, officials said that more than 500,000 spouses would be eligible.

They said the policy will also benefit 50,000 people under 21 whose parent is married to an American citizen.

The announcement marked the most significant relief programme for undocumented migrants already in the US since the Obama administration announced the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals, or Daca, in 2012.

Under the now-temporarily suspended programme, the undocumented spouses of US citizens would qualify if they had lived in the country for a decade and been married as of 17 June.

Those who qualify will have three years to apply for permanent residency and will be eligible for a three-year work permit.

Unlike the old system, in which applicants must leave the US to apply, the new plan would allow them to remain in the country as they seek legal status.

Judge J Campbell Barker's order on Monday puts the plan on hold for two weeks as the court considers the case, but has the option to be extended.

The Department of Homeland Security can continue receiving applications in the meantime but cannot process them.

“The claims are substantial and warrant closer consideration than the court has been able to afford to date,” Judge Barker, who was appointed to the bench by former President Donald Trump, wrote in his order.

Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton applauded the order, writing on social media: “This is just the first step. We are going to keep fighting for Texas, our country, and the rule of law.”

Critics of the Biden plan argue that it offers amnesty for migrants who entered the country illegally.

Proponents argue that it will allow families to remain together, and that the old system "separates families".

BBC
 
Hunter Biden pleads guilty in federal tax case

Hunter Biden, son of U.S. President Joe Biden, pleaded guilty to federal tax charges on Thursday, a surprise move that avoids a potentially embarrassing trial weeks before the U.S. presidential election.

Biden had been set to stand trial in a Los Angeles federal courthouse on criminal charges of failing to pay $1.4 million in taxes while spending lavishly on drugs, sex workers and luxury items.

Instead, he pleaded guilty to all nine counts he faced.

Judge Mark Scarsi told Biden he faces up to 17 years in prison and up to $450,000 in penalties. He set sentencing for Dec. 16.

Defendants who plead guilty in criminal cases typically work out an agreement with prosecutors beforehand, hoping to receive a lower sentence in exchange for avoiding trial.

That did not appear to be the case here.

Earlier in the day, Biden had offered to plead guilty to the charges but avoid admitting wrongdoing, an unusual legal maneuver called an "Alford plea." Prosecutors opposed that move.


 
Biden wears Trump hat as 9/11 unity gesture, says White House

President Joe Biden briefly wore a red Trump campaign hat at an event commemorating the 23rd anniversary of the 9/11 attacks.

He was visiting firefighters in Pennsylvania near where one of the four hijacked planes crashed, and the White House said he donned the cap as a gesture of unity.

Video recording the incident shows the president having a friendly conversation with a Trump supporter before they swap headwear.

Donald Trump's campaign was quick to see the funny side. "Thanks for the support, Joe!" one post read with a photo of Biden in the trademark Republican hat.

Another said "Kamala did so bad in last night's debate, Joe Biden just put on a Trump hat".

The event in Shanksville commemorated Flight 93, which was hijacked by terrorists in 2001.

Passengers aboard the flight fought back and prevented a plan by al-Qaeda to crash the plane into a government building in Washington, DC. All 40 aboard died.

Biden greeted firefighters and paid respects at a cross made from the broken fusilage.

Footage inside the fire station posted to social media shows Biden chatting with people and interacting with a man wearing a red hat with "Trump 2024" emblazoned on the front.

Biden offers the man a hat with the presidential seal on it, saying he would autograph it.

After some joking about his age, Biden hands the man the autographed cap and offers to trade it for the Trump hat.

Several of those gathered call on him to put it on, to which he shouts: "I ain't going that far!" before putting it on, to loud cheers.

The White House later explained it was a way to underline the unity theme of the day.

"As a gesture, he gave a hat to a Trump supporter who then said that in the same spirit, POTUS should put on his Trump cap," deputy Press Secretary Andrew Bates wrote on X, formerly known as Twitter.

The daughter of the man who swapped hats with the president said Biden kept the Trump hat after the interaction.

"My pap don't care who it is," Kelsey Simmers told the BBC. "He likes to joke and have fun."

She said that her father ended up getting another cap from the Trump campaign after they reached out.

The incident happened hours after Trump had joked on the debate stage about sending Vice-President Kamala Harris a Make America Great Again hat.

BBC
 
Biden: 'I don't know' if Netanyahu is trying to sway US election

President Joe Biden has said he is unsure whether Israel's Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu is holding off on agreeing a Gaza ceasefire deal in order to influence next month's US election.

He was asked the question during a surprise appearance at a White House press briefing on Friday, telling reporters: "Whether he’s trying to influence the election, I don’t know - but I’m not counting on that.”

Biden then directed some terse words at his longtime ally: “No administration has helped Israel more than I have. None, none, none," he said. "And I think [Netanyahu] should remember that."

Some Democrats have voiced concern that Netanyahu is ignoring the US president's calls to negotiate a ceasefire and hostage release deal in order to harm the party's chances in November.

Earlier this week, Democratic Senator Chris Murphy told CNN: “I don’t think you have to be a hopeless cynic to read some of Israel’s actions, some of Prime Minister Netanyahu’s actions, as connected to the American election."

Polls suggest the escalating violence in the Middle East and the failure to secure a diplomatic agreement is hurting Biden and his replacement as the Democratic candidate, Kamala Harris.

The president's approval rating among Arab-Americans has plummeted over the past year, largely due to anger at US support for Israel’s military campaign, and this could damage the party's prospects in November.

Biden has been pushing for a diplomatic agreement between Israel and Hamas for months, and has indicated several times that one is close. A deal before the election would be a major boost for the president and the Democratic Party but appears increasingly unlikely.

While the Biden administration has mostly criticised Hamas for failing to reach an agreement, the president has also expressed increasing public frustration with Netanyahu, who he recently said was not doing enough to strike a deal.

Netanyahu, meanwhile, has rejected suggestions from Washington that an agreement is close.

"Hamas is not there with a deal. There’s not a deal in the making, unfortunately,” the Israeli prime minister said earlier this month just hours after a US official said it was 90% complete.

The increasingly fractious relationship between Biden and Netanyahu, who have known one another for decades, contrasts with the friendly relationship the Israeli leader had with former president Donald Trump, the current Republican nominee.

Israel, meanwhile, has continued strikes on Gaza and pushed ahead with a ground invasion in southern Lebanon. It has also vowed to respond to an Iranian ballistic missile attack this week.

At his appearance at Friday's press briefing, which came as a shock to reporters in the room as it was his first since becoming president four years ago, Biden responded to concern that Israel could strike Iranian oil fields in retaliation.

"The Israelis have not concluded what they are going to do in terms of a strike," he said. "If I were in their shoes, I'd be thinking about other alternatives than striking oil fields."

Biden caused oil prices to rise on Thursday when he said the US was discussing with Israel the possibility of strikes on Iran’s oil infrastructure.

BBC
 
Vulnerable time for Europe as clock ticks down for Biden

US President Joe Biden’s state visit to Germany on Friday was extremely brief.

But the US president used every minute in Berlin to try to make clear that he still has big ambitions on the world stage, these last weeks before he leaves office in January. Especially in the Middle East and Ukraine.

European defence has been a cornerstone of Biden’s foreign policy - a stark contrast to that of his predecessor, Donald Trump, now a 2024 presidential hopeful.

In recognition of his efforts, German President Frank-Walter Steinmeier awarded Biden his country’s highest honour, the special class of the Grand Cross.

The conflict in Ukraine, since Russia’s full-scale invasion, is the worst war this continent has experienced since World War Two.

And as it did 80 years ago, Europe has looked to the US for co-ordinated leadership and military support.

But Biden insisted far more needed to be done: "We must keep going until Ukraine wins a just and durable peace... We must sustain our support."

A lot will depend on who wins the November US election.

Europe has relied on US military aid to help Ukraine. Berlin is the second largest donor after Washington, though the volume pales in significance compared with its ally's across the Atlantic.

Those days of American largesse are expected to be over as soon as Biden leaves the White House.

Even if Democratic candidate Kamala Harris becomes the next US president, Congress is thought likely to pivot to other foreign policy priorities, such as China and Taiwan.

As for Trump, during his 2016-2020 administration, relations with Nato - the transatlantic military alliance in place since WW2 - were famously turbulent.

He is known for having admired "strongman" Russian President Vladimir Putin and he has not yet said in public if he wants Kyiv to emerge victorious from the conflict.

Despite lots of corridor talk in Nato circles about "Trump-proofing" European defence before the forthcoming US election, there is little sign that has actually taken place or that Europe would be able to successfully "go it alone" if it had to.

Following Russia’s full-scale invasion in 2022, the German Chancellor, Olaf Scholz, promised a "Zeitenwende", a historical turning point, where his country would jump over the shadow of its Nazi past and invest massively in its military to fully contribute to its allies’ shared defence.

This week, German intelligence chiefs warned Russia’s continued investment in its military would see it in a position to attack Nato by the end of the decade.

But Germany’s planned military revamp has got bogged down in bureaucracy. The government has not even agreed a future defence budget.

Diplomats say Biden worries about European resolve, with signs of spreading "Ukraine fatigue" as allies in Europe grapple with their own domestic challenges.

Scholz is under considerable pressure at home from the popular far right and far left, both sympathetic to the Russian narrative, ahead of a general election next year.

On Friday, Scholz and Biden were joined in Berlin by fellow major Ukraine donors the UK and France.

The "Quad", as these four big Nato powers are known, also discussed Iran and the wider Middle East. On Ukraine, their joint press statement reiterated a resolve to continue supporting Kyiv.

The UK Prime Minister, Sir Keir Starmer, said Russia was getting weaker and that the war was soaking up 40% of Moscow’s budget.

He said he and the other leaders had discussed "what further capability, what further equipment and what further resources" they could help Ukraine with. But he did not get into specifics.

Yet it is specifics the Ukrainian President, Volodymyr Zelensky, has asked for in his "victory plan". Specifics like an official invitation to join Nato and a free hand in using the long-range missiles supplied by the UK and France. A request that to date has been denied.

Critics of Joe Biden and his NATO allies accuse them of repeated feet-dragging for fear of escalation with Russia.

Kyiv – and Moscow – will have closely followed Biden’s "farewell trip" to Berlin this Friday.

They will have heard the repeated assurances from four Nato powers of ongoing, unwavering support for Ukraine – but what they will have also seen is a US president on his way out of office, a German chancellor expected to lose his country’s general elections, and a French president politically hobbled at home.

For Ukraine, extra help from its biggest backers cannot come fast enough. On the backfoot against Russia along its front lines, the country is in a particularly vulnerable moment. The rest of Europe is too.

BBC
 
Biden issues 39 presidential pardons and commutes 1,500 sentences

US President Joe Biden has issued presidential pardons to 39 Americans convicted of non-violent crimes, and commuted the sentences of nearly 1,500 other people.

The White House described it as the most acts of presidential clemency issued in a single day. It has not given the names of the people involved.

The US Constitution decrees that a president has the broad "power to grant reprieves and pardons for offences against the United States, except in cases of impeachment".

Earlier this month, Biden issued a controversial pardon to his son Hunter, which continued a recent trend of presidents pardoning people close to them.

Announcing the move, Biden said those pardoned had "shown successful rehabilitation and have shown commitment to making their communities stronger and safer". Their non-violent convictions included drug offences.

The commuted sentences were for hundreds of people who were placed in home confinement during the Covid-19 pandemic, and who were facing sentences which Biden deemed to be too long.

They have "shown that they deserve a second chance", Biden said.

Giving further details of the move, the White House said those receiving relief included a decorated military veteran and pilot who helped fellow church members, a nurse who helped with the Covid vaccine rollout, and an addiction counsellor.

Biden promised "more steps in the weeks ahead".

The president will leave the White House on 20 January 2025, when his successor Donald Trump is inaugurated.

Biden previously had a record of pardoning fewer people than most presidents in modern US history.

Trump granted 237 acts of clemency during his first term in the White House, according to the Pew Research Center. These included 143 pardons and 94 commuted sentences.

Many were in a flurry before he left office.

Biden's decision earlier this month to pardon his son, Hunter, continued a trend of presidents on both sides of the US political divide - including Trump - granting clemency to people close to them.

Biden Jr was facing sentencing for two criminal cases.

The move has proven controversial, since the outgoing president previously ruled out such a move. But he claimed the cases against his son were politically motivated.

BBC
 
Joe Biden delays order to end Nippon Steel bid for US Steel

The Biden administration has delayed until June an order for Nippon Steel to abandon its $14.9bn bid for US Steel, potentially giving the companies some time to revive the politically contentious deal.

Joe Biden blocked the acquisition on national security grounds on 3 January and the treasury secretary, Janet Yellen, said this week the proposed deal had received a “thorough analysis” by the Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States (CFIUS).

The delay will give the courts time to review a legal challenge the steelmakers brought against Biden’s order. The parties previously had 30 days to unwind their transaction.

“We are pleased that CFIUS has granted an extension to 18 June 2025 of the requirement in President Biden’s executive order that the parties permanently abandon the transaction,” the companies said in a statement.

“We look forward to completing the transaction, which secures the best future for the American steel industry and all our stakeholders.”

18 June is the expiration date of the current acquisition contract between Nippon Steel and US Steel, according to a spokesperson for the Japanese company.

Biden and his incoming successor, Donald Trump, both voiced opposition to the Japanese company acquiring the American steelmaker as the candidates courted union votes in the November election that Trump won.

US Steel and Nippon Steel alleged in their lawsuit on Monday that the CFIUS review was prejudiced by Biden’s longstanding opposition to the deal, denying them the right to a fair review. They asked a federal appeals court to overturn Biden’s decision, which would allow them a fresh review to secure another shot at closing the merger.

The treasury secretary chairs the CFIUS panel, which screens foreign acquisitions of US companies and other investment deals for national security concerns. CFIUS normally decides directly on cases or submits recommendations to the president, but in the US Steel-Nippon Steel case the panel failed to reach consensus, leaving the decision to Biden.

CFIUS has rarely rejected deals involving countries of the G7, which includes Japan.

The Japanese foreign minister, Takeshi Iwaya, said on Sunday he had told the outgoing US secretary of state, Antony Blinken, during a recent meeting that Biden’s decision to block the sale on national security grounds was highly regrettable.

“The broader context of the Japan-US alliance is extremely important and it is essential to handle this transaction appropriately to avoid disrupting it,” Iwaya told a talkshow on public broadcaster NHK.

“Japan is the largest investor in the United States. There is widespread unease within the business community and I will continue urging the US to alleviate these concerns.”

SOURCE: https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2025/jan/12/us-steel-nippon-biden
 
Biden warns 'dangerous' oligarchy taking shape in farewell address

Outgoing US President Joe Biden warned of a "dangerous" oligarchy taking shape in America, as he delivered his farewell address and brought a decades-long career in politics to an end.

"Today, an oligarchy is taking shape in America of extreme wealth, power and influence that really threatens our entire democracy, our basic rights and freedom," he said on Wednesday.

Biden, 82, took aim at an ultra-wealthy "tech-industrial complex" which he said could wield unchecked power over Americans.

He also used his final televised speech from the White House to issue warnings about climate change and social media disinformation.

Speaking from the Oval Office where his family had gathered to watch, he touted his single-term administration's record, referencing job creation, infrastructure spending, healthcare, leading the country out of the pandemic, and making the US a safer country.

He added, however, that "it will take time to feel the full impact of all we've done together, but the seeds are planted, and they'll grow and they'll bloom for decades to come".

Biden wished Donald Trump's incoming administration success, but then issued a series of pointed warnings, with the president stating "so much is at stake right now".

On climate change, he said "powerful forces want to wield their unchecked influence to eliminate the steps we've taken to tackle the climate crisis to serve their own interests for power and profit".

On misinformation, Biden warned that "Americans are being buried under an avalanche of misinformation and disinformation, enabling the abuse of power".

He also took a swipe at social media companies such as Meta, which has recently announced it will get rid of independent fact checkers. "Social media is giving up on fact checking. The truth is smothered by lies told for power and for profit," Biden said.

And his attack on an ultra-wealthy "tech-industrial complex" was a veiled reference at Silicon Valley executives such as Elon Musk, the world's richest man who is close to Trump and provided huge financial backing to his campaign.

Other tech bosses such as Jeff Bezos and Mark Zuckerberg have made efforts to improve relations with Trump ahead of his return to the White House.

Closing his speech, Biden called on Americans to "stand guard" of their country: "May you all be the keeper of the flame."

His farewell address came on the same day he announced a ceasefire agreement between Israel and Hamas, which he referenced in his opening remarks.

Biden said the negotiations had been some of the toughest of his career, and took credit for helping get the deal over the line.

The deal will see a ceasefire take effect on 19 January, a day before Trump is due to take office. The incoming president has also taken credit for the agreement, saying it was only possible because he won the election in November.

BBC
 
The idiot didn't pardon Dr Afia Siddique though
====
Biden issues pre-emptive pardons to Dr. Fauci and other Trump targets in one of his final acts


President Joe Biden has issued pre-emptive pardons to Dr. Anthony Fauci, General Mark Milley, and the members of Congress who served on the House committee that investigated the attempted insurrection at the U.S. Capitol on January 6, 2021, in one of his final acts before leaving the White House, anticipating their political persecution by his incoming successor Donald Trump.

In a statement, Biden characterized each of the recipients as “dedicated, selfless public servants” on whom the nation relies “every day” and called them “the lifeblood of our democracy.”

Milley, he said, “served our nation for more than 40 years, serving in multiple command and leadership posts and deploying to some of the most dangerous parts of the world to protect and defend democracy,” while he also lauded Fauci as someone who’d helped “countless lives by managing the government's response to pressing health crises, including HIV/AIDS, as well as the Ebola and Zika viruses” during his half-century in government service.

Biden further praised the House January 6 panel as having fulfilled the mission of reporting on “facts, circumstances, and causes” of the Capitol attack by a riotous mob of Trump’s supporters “integrity and a commitment to discovering the truth.”

Source: MSN
 
Former US President Biden diagnosed with 'aggressive' prostate cancer

Former U.S. President Joe Biden has been diagnosed with an "aggressive form" of prostate cancer that has metastasized to the bone, his office said in a statement on Sunday.

Biden, 82, was diagnosed on Friday after experiencing urinary symptoms, and he and his family are reviewing treatment options with doctors, according to the statement.

"While this represents a more aggressive form of the disease, the cancer appears to be hormone-sensitive which allows for effective management," his office said.


 
What we know about Biden's prostate cancer diagnosis?

Former US President Joe Biden has been diagnosed with an aggressive form of prostate cancer that has spread to his bones.

Biden received the news on Friday after he saw a doctor last week for urinary symptoms.

Here's what you need to know about prostate cancer and its treatment options.



What is prostate cancer?

Prostate cancer affects tissue of the prostate gland, the part of the male reproductive system that helps make semen. It is located between the penis and the bladder.

According to the NHS, it usually develops slowly, so it can often grow unnoticed for years. That means some people can live for decades without needing treatment. But it also means symptoms often don't appear until the cancer is already advanced.

Biden was diagnosed following urinary symptoms, one of the most common signs of prostate cancer. That's because it is often detected only when the prostate is big enough to have impacted the urethra, the tube that connects the bladder to the penis.

Those symptoms can include needing to urinate more frequently, as well as a slow or weak urinary stream.

Screening for prostate cancer is part of routine presidential health inspections, according to Dr Jeffrey Kuhlman, former White House doctor under President Barack Obama.

Prostate cancer is the second-leading cause of cancer death in American men, according to the American Cancer Society, behind lung cancer.

There will be more than 300,000 new cases in the US this year, according to projections by the American Cancer Society. About one in 8 men will be diagnosed with prostate cancer during their lifetime.

While it is "not uncommon" for men in their 80s to be diagnosed with prostate cancer, the grade and stage of Biden's cancer are "more advanced than most men would encounter" at diagnosis, Dr Ryan Cleary, urologist at MedStar Health, told the BBC.

What is the Gleason score?
The former president's prostate cancer is "characterised by a Gleason score of 9", his office said in the statement announcing his diagnosis.

The Gleason score is the most common way of grading how likely the disease will advance and spread - also known as metastatic cancer.

Specifically, it refers to how abnormal the cancer cells look in a sample under a microscope. The scale runs from six to 10, with a higher number indicating a more aggressive cancer.

The scale starts at six because it is calculated by combining the two most common patterns of cancer cells found in a patient. The lowest score assigned to cancerous cells is three. That's why the lowest Gleason score for a cancer diagnosis is six.

A Gleason score of nine, such as Biden's, means it is a "high-grade cancer". Cancer cells with a score of nine look very abnormal and are likely to grow quickly.

What are Biden's treatment options?

In Biden's case, the cancer is aggressive in nature and has already spread to his bones.

According to Dr Jamin Vinod Brahmbhatt, a urologist at Orlando Health Medical Group, this level of spread does limit the treatment options.

While there are medical based treatments such as chemotherapy, steroids and hormone therapy available, none of them are "curative", he said.

"There are more medical options to stabilise the patient and control the cancer, but it never gets rid of the cancer completely."

Biden's cancer is also said to be hormone sensitive, which means the cancer uses hormones to grow or develop.

These types of cancers can be managed by drugs that block or lower the amount of hormones in the body.

Dr Brahmbhatt said while this "opens up the toolkit" of treatment options for Biden, it was going to take "weeks or months" to see how he responds.

Dr Kuhlman said Biden could also have the option of entering "clinical trials for advanced disease" if he meets the inclusion criteria.

Biden and his family are said to be reviewing treatment options.

What is his prognosis?

In Sunday's statement, Biden's office said since the cancer appeared to be hormone-sensitive, that "allows for effective management".

The full details of Biden's case is not known. Dr Cleary said: "Generally about a third of patients will still be alive after five years of metastatic prostate cancer."

Advanced stages of prostate cancer can limit a person's lifespan and lead to symptoms that make daily life harder.

Dr Kuhlman describes "10 to 15 years of function" when looking at aggressive cancer treatments and said it was important to consider treatments that maintain Biden's quality of life in the next few years.

"If there's any inspiration in this, it is to go and get yourself checked out whether you have symptoms or not," Dr Brahmbhatt said.

Source: BBC
 
Heard about it yesterday.
I think we all realized long ago he was very unwell. His last few years as President when he was not healthy shouldn’t be held against him for a stellar career as a politician. I think he is still the youngest ever Congressman? I hope he is able to cope with this. Situation is very bad evidently.
 
Cancer touches us all, says Biden after outpouring of support

Joe Biden expressed his gratitude for the words of support that have poured in from across the world, including a private letter from Britain's King Charles, after the former US president announced his cancer diagnosis on Sunday.

"Cancer touches us all," Biden wrote on social media on Monday morning. "Like so many of you, Jill and I have learned that we are strongest in the broken places. Thank you for lifting us up with love and support."

On Sunday, Biden's office disclosed that he was diagnosed with an aggressive form of prostate cancer that has spread to his bones.

The news comes as fresh questions are being raised about the former president's health while he was in office.

President Donald Trump posted that he was "saddened" by Biden's diagnosis but later questioned - without providing any evidence - whether Biden's team had known earlier about his illness and concealed the news from the public.

"I am surprised that the public wasn't notified a long time ago because to get to stage nine that takes a long time," he said at the White House on Monday afternoon.

"It could take years to get to this level of danger," he said, adding: "I feel very badly about it, and I think people should try and find out what happened."

Late-stage diagnoses for cancer are not unheard of, however. One UK study in 2014 found 46% of cancer diagnoses in that country were only made at an advanced stage.

Biden's office said that he was diagnosed on Friday with prostate cancer "characterised by a Gleason score of 9 (Grade Group 5) with metastasis to the bone".

"While this represents a more aggressive form of the disease, the cancer appears to be hormone-sensitive which allows for effective management."

A Gleason score of nine means his illness is classified as "high-grade" and the cancer cells could spread quickly, according to Cancer Research UK.

Biden said his diagnosis was made after he reported urinary symptoms which led doctors to find a small nodule on his prostate.

In the wake of the cancer diagnosis, many have offered Biden their support including former President Barack Obama and former Vice-President Kamala Harris.

King Charles has written privately to Biden offering his support and best wishes, Buckingham Palace said.

The king, 76, who has met Biden a number of times, is also receiving treatment for an unspecified type of cancer after his diagnosis in 2024.

Biden had then sent his best wishes, saying: "I'm concerned about him. Just heard about his diagnosis. I'll be talking to him, God willing."

Vice-President JD Vance offered well wishes, but questioned whether the American people had a clear picture of Biden's health while the former president was in office.

"We really do need to be honest about whether the former president was capable of doing the job," Vance said on Monday. "And that's that's … you can separate the desire for him to have the right health outcome with a recognition that whether it was doctors or whether there were staffers around the former president, I don't think he was able to do a good job for the American people."

Vance also said he blamed the people around him more than Biden himself.

"This is not child's play, and we can pray for good health, but also recognise that if you're not in good enough health to do the job, you shouldn't be doing the job," he added.

The announcement comes as Biden staves off criticism from a forthcoming book that claims he and his advisers hid his deteriorating health while he was in the White House.

Details revealed last week from the book entitled, Original Sin: President Biden's Decline, Its Cover-Up, and His Disastrous Choice to Run Again, include Biden not recognising actor and frequent Democratic donor George Clooney at a fundraiser last year and aides discussing putting the former president in a wheelchair.

The book will be released on Tuesday.

Nearly a year ago, the former president was forced to drop out of the 2024 US presidential election because of concerns about his health and age.

BBC
 
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