What's new

US Elections 2020 : The Joe Biden vs Donald Trump Thread

It's like the Democratic party deliberately want to lose.

I've spent the last few days checking out this Joe Biden's videos and he doesn't stand a chance. Trump will DESTROY him in those 1v1 debates.

Actually things have turned around. Trump has been regularly shooting himself in the foot with how he handled the pandemic and also the aftermath of George Floyd shooting. His media machine is working hard and over time to put a positive spin on things but I don’t think it’s fooling anybody. So yes, while the Dems are largely looking docile, the people are getting increasingly sick of Trump’s shenanigans. His base would never change but the swing voters are the voters that matter and particularly the minorities are furious at the moment.

Biden has to pull up his socks and bare his teeth though. I am hoping he will be prepared for the debates.. I don’t think it takes much to rile Trump and force him to make mistakes. In 2016, he took everyone by surprise using his crass methods but we are seeing now that most people are wise to his acts.. pelosi in particular has shown how to handle him. He hates her guts.. haha..
 
I feel Democrats would've had a better chance with Sanders and even Pelosi.

Biden is unlikely to beat Trump but let's see.
 
Democrats will have a better shot with anybody IF they offer something counter to trump, that appeals to the masses, but they have not yet done so.
My biggest gripe is the divisiveness.. trump corner thrives on it.. more division he creates, better for him because it mobilized his base. Dems are trying *** for tat.. no.. it’s not right.. you need to reduce the divide and get people to see they are all Americans first. Right now they are right wingers, left wingers, whites, blacks, other minorities first.. it’s very reactive politics..
 
There is absolutely no way Biden is beating Trump, there is nothing about him that excites the masses, and he's got too much baggage (not to mention he's super creepy). Literally any of the other candidates running could have beaten Trump, and the Dems picked Biden of all people.
 
There is absolutely no way Biden is beating Trump, there is nothing about him that excites the masses, and he's got too much baggage (not to mention he's super creepy). Literally any of the other candidates running could have beaten Trump, and the Dems picked Biden of all people.

Creepier than Trump? Seriously? Haha
 
US President Donald Trump is scheduled to hold a rally on June 20, which experts warn could prove to be "extraordinarily dangerous" amid the coronavirus pandemic.
 
There is absolutely no way Biden is beating Trump, there is nothing about him that excites the masses, and he's got too much baggage (not to mention he's super creepy). Literally any of the other candidates running could have beaten Trump, and the Dems picked Biden of all people.

People will be voting against Trump not for Biden.
 
Trump campaign 'open' to moving rally outside

US Vice-President Mike Pence has said the Trump campaign is open to moving its campaign rally to an outdoor location, amid criticism that the large event, scheduled for Saturday in Tulsa, Oklahoma, would put people at risk of coronavirus.

The move would mark a second change for the event - Trump's first rally since the coronavirus crisis triggered lockdowns in March - after it was moved back a day to avoid clashing with the Juneteenth holiday marking the end of slavery.

The governor of Oklahoma said on Monday that he was trying to get the event moved from the 19,000 seat BOK Center in central Tulsa to a larger outdoor venue to allow for more social distancing. At least 20 Trump supporters have already started lining up outside the BOK Center.

The public health director for Tulsa has repeatedly stressed the danger of attending, as coronavirus cases in the region continue to climb daily.

“Regardless who is hosting this rally, we would recommend you not attend large events,” Dr Bruce Dart told the Daily Beast. “If you want to stay safe, don’t go.

Campaign rallies are considered vital for Trump to energise his voters for the November presidential election. The campaign says it will provide temperature checks and face masks to attendees, who also must sign liability forms saying they will not sue the Trump campaign if they fall ill.
 
There is absolutely no way Biden is beating Trump, there is nothing about him that excites the masses, and he's got too much baggage (not to mention he's super creepy). Literally any of the other candidates running could have beaten Trump, and the Dems picked Biden of all people.

He seems to have a significant poll lead already. All he has to do is not be Trump, I think.
 
All the republican governed states, who supported DT in reopening, are seeing massive surges in COVID-19 infection rates.

Yet there is no acknowledgment from the WH on the matter. The narrative is one of subterfuge, nothing to see here... all is well.. move along!


And then Bolton’s book!!!

These things can’t be good for Little Donnie!
 
He seems to have a significant poll lead already. All he has to do is not be Trump, I think.

All he has to do now, is bare his teeth during the debates and not let Donnie run all over him..


The elections will be very close, I feel.
 
There is absolutely no way Biden is beating Trump, there is nothing about him that excites the masses, and he's got too much baggage (not to mention he's super creepy). Literally any of the other candidates running could have beaten Trump, and the Dems picked Biden of all people.

There's nothing about him that excites the pro-Bernie Twitter and YouTube crowd. But the internet crowd ≠ the electorate. All that social media noise didn't stop Bernie getting hammered in the primary.

Look is Bernie's politics much closer to your's and mine's than Biden's ? Yes. Does that mean he'd be a better candidate to defeat Trump and attract the swing voters ? No. How would Bernie win the general when he couldn't even convince the Democratic Party base, having performed dismally with older voters and older African Americans, and even failing to turn out the youth in the same numbers as 2016 ?

True I've many concerns about Biden's track record from the 1994 Crime Bill, the Bankruptcy Bill and his closeness with financial companies while Senator of Delaware, support for Iraq War, and his delusional mantra of bipartisanship when the GOP has zero interest of doing deals with Democrats.

However, I feel many Bernie voters are driven by emotion instead of objective facts. They keep touting Bernie's electability when all head-to-head polling vs Trump in swing states showed Biden performed better. You trash Biden's electability when Biden's RCP average lead of 8% last week was higher than anything Clinton managed in 2016 or Obama in 2012. Clinton lost by 9% amongst over 65s (who make up 30% of the electorate), but Biden leads Trump amongst over 65s - presumably since they don't want to die from COVID-19 thanks to Trump's ineptitude.

Obviously that doesn't mean it's a wrap. Trump enjoys incumbency advantage and has a powerful, well funded GOP attack machine.
 
Hillary Clinton has accused Donald Trump of trying to "hijack" Christianity and the Bible after he posed with one outside a church during Black Lives Matter protests.

The US president was criticised after he apparently ordered security forces to fire tear gas at groups of peaceful demonstrators in order to clear a path for him to make his way from the White House to St John's in Washington DC.

Speaking to Sky News presenter Kay Burley, Mrs Clinton said "the outcry by religious leaders... demonstrated clearly that nobody was being fooled".

The former Democratic presidential candidate, who lost to Mr Trump in the 2016 election, also claimed he "mischaracterised" protesters who took to the streets in the US following the police killing of George Floyd in Minneapolis.

Mr Trump had wrongly lumped millions of non-violent demonstrators in with a "tiny, tiny minority" who had committed criminal acts, she added, after he hit out at "thugs".

She said the president's church visit on 1 June was a "photo opportunity" and she claimed he had never read the Bible.

"He can't tell you a single thing that's in it," she said.

George Floyd: 'Disgusting that black people still treated like animals,' says Trayvon Martin's mother
"That has been a pattern - he's tried to hijack Christianity and the Bible in ways that are deeply hypocritical and that was just another occasion."

She criticised the president for calling protesters during the anti-racism demonstrations across the US "thugs".

President Donald Trump displays an executive order on police reform during a signing ceremony in the Rose Garden at the White House in Washington, U.S., June 16, 2020.

Trump signs order restricting police chokeholds

She said: "They were totally peaceful protesters and what he was trying to do, as he often does, is to mischaracterise them and their behaviour and their goals.

"And lump them in with the tiny, tiny minority who took advantage of a tragic moment to loot and steal and vandalise - a tiny, tiny percentage - and he wanted to cast that over the millions of very thoughtful, non-violent peaceful protesters.

"There should be no tolerance for violent protest and certainly that was not at the core of the literally millions of people who have come out to protest peacefully over the last several weeks."

The programme is looking at the issues raised by the Black Lives Matter protests, examining institutional racism and how we fix it.

What should white people do to fight racism?

America's top military officer recently apologised for joining Mr Trump during his church visit.

"I should not have been there," said General Mark Milley, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, in a pre-recorded video address to the National Defense University.

https://news.sky.com/story/donald-t...oto-opportunity-hillary-clinton-says-12008878
 
There's nothing about him that excites the pro-Bernie Twitter and YouTube crowd. But the internet crowd ≠ the electorate. All that social media noise didn't stop Bernie getting hammered in the primary.

Look is Bernie's politics much closer to your's and mine's than Biden's ? Yes. Does that mean he'd be a better candidate to defeat Trump and attract the swing voters ? No. How would Bernie win the general when he couldn't even convince the Democratic Party base, having performed dismally with older voters and older African Americans, and even failing to turn out the youth in the same numbers as 2016 ?

True I've many concerns about Biden's track record from the 1994 Crime Bill, the Bankruptcy Bill and his closeness with financial companies while Senator of Delaware, support for Iraq War, and his delusional mantra of bipartisanship when the GOP has zero interest of doing deals with Democrats.

However, I feel many Bernie voters are driven by emotion instead of objective facts. They keep touting Bernie's electability when all head-to-head polling vs Trump in swing states showed Biden performed better. You trash Biden's electability when Biden's RCP average lead of 8% last week was higher than anything Clinton managed in 2016 or Obama in 2012. Clinton lost by 9% amongst over 65s (who make up 30% of the electorate), but Biden leads Trump amongst over 65s - presumably since they don't want to die from COVID-19 thanks to Trump's ineptitude.

Obviously that doesn't mean it's a wrap. Trump enjoys incumbency advantage and has a powerful, well funded GOP attack machine.
Never liked bernie I am extremely central in politics and Biden has literally nothing to offer
Same old same old

Trump is a better choice to vote imo but the whole racism thing makes it hard
 
He is nowhere close to winning by a landslide.. those who think that, will hopefully be around here in November.

He barely won in 2016 and now his popularity and reality is out there.. his approvals are the worst for any president. He might win still, but it won’t be a landslide win.

He might lose, but that would also be close.. I think it will be a close election..
 
Biden is leading in the polls for now, but you can't discount the 'shy Trump' supporters who won't publicly say who they will voting for, nor should you discount the middle-aged and elderly Republicans who actually come out to vote.

Fox has completely given up any semblance of unbiased reporting and is acting as the advertisement channel for Trump.
 
Amy Klobuchar has withdrawn from consideration to be Joe Biden’s running mate, urging the presumptive Democratic nominee to choose a woman of color instead.

The Minnesota senator’s prospects of running as vice president alongside Biden faded after the police killing of George Floyd in the state she represents sparked a nationwide reckoning over police brutality and systematic racism in the US.

“I think this is a moment to put a woman of color on that ticket,” Klobuchar said on MSNBC. “If you want to heal this nation right now, my party, yes, but our nation this is sure a hell of a way to do it.”

Biden had already signalled that he’s likely to choose a woman of color. And in April, more than 200 black women leaders and activists within the Democratic party signed an open letter calling on Biden to choose a black woman, noting that “the road to the White House is powered by black women and black women are the key to a Democratic victory in 2020”.

Klobuchar, a white, moderate Democrat, has recently had to contend with her past as a prosecutor in the county that includes Minneapolis, where George Floyd was killed. During her tenure, Klobuchar declined to prosecute police accused of using excessive force against black suspects. More than two dozen mostly black and minority people died during encounters with police.

Klobuchar, 60, was among a large field of Democrats who had sought the 2020 presidential nomination, running as a pragmatic Midwesterner who had passed over 100 bills. She dropped out and threw her support behind Biden before the crucial 3 March “Super Tuesday” contests after struggling to win support from black voters, who remain crucial to Democratic victories. Her best finish of the primary was in overwhelmingly white New Hampshire, where she came in third.

The senator had to cancel one of her final campaign rallies after Black Lives Matter and other activists took the stage in Minnesota to protest her handling as prosecutor of a murder case that sent a black teenager to prison for life.

Representative James Clyburn of South Carolina, a Biden ally and highest-ranking black person in Congress, said in the days after Floyd’s death that “this is very tough timing” for Klobuchar.

During the 11th Democratic presidential debate, after Klobuchar had dropped out, Biden explicitly committed to picking a woman as vice president and nominating the first African American woman to the supreme court.

Klobuchar, who has been an enthusiastic campaign surrogate for Biden, indicated she will continue to support him. In the interview with MSNBC, Klobuchar brushed aside the suggestion that her record as a prosecutor would have affected her ability to function as Biden’s running mate.

“I think I could have functioned fine,” she said. “There’s a lot of untruths out there about my record and now is not the time to debate them.”

After the interview aired, senior Biden adviser Symone Sanders indicated that she expected Klobuchar back on the campaign trail.

http://www.pakpassion.net/photopost/adm-index.php
 
Oklahoma's Supreme Court has ruled that President Donald Trump's rally on Saturday in Tulsa, his first since March, can go ahead.

A lawsuit to stop the 20 June event over concerns that it could increase the spread of Covid-19 in the community was filed this week.

Virus cases are rising in Oklahoma, and local health officials have expressed concerns over hosting the rally.

The Trump campaign says they received over 1m ticket requests for the event.

The queue for the event at the Bank of Oklahoma Center - which seats 19,000 people - began forming earlier this week.

Facing tough re-election prospects in November, the Republican president is hoping to reboot his campaign after a rocky week that has seen news of sinking opinion poll numbers, twin US Supreme Court defeats, two damning tell-all memoirs and a resurgence in coronavirus cases.

Four reasons why this was a bad week for Trump

The lawsuit to cancel his rally was filed by John Hope Franklin for Reconciliation, a nonprofit organisation that promotes racial equality, and a commercial real estate company, the Greenwood Centre.

They argued the venue should mandate social distancing guidelines in accordance with US public health officials' recommendations, or cancel the event.

But the Supreme Court said that as the state had begun to reopen, the regulations left social distancing decisions up to individual business owners. Oklahoma has seen a recent spike in coronavirus cases.

In response to safety concerns, the Trump campaign has said they will check attendees' temperatures and offer hand sanitiser and masks.

But people buying tickets for the Tulsa rally online also have to click on a waiver confirming they "voluntarily assume all risks related to exposure to Covid-19" and will not hold the president's campaign responsible for "any illness or injury".

The president himself has pushed back against guidance around masks, calling them a personal choice.

In an interview with political news outlet Axios released on Friday night, he was asked if he recommended rally attendees wear facial coverings.

"I recommend people do what they want," he replied.

Mr Trump also said: "We're going to have a wild evening tomorrow night at Oklahoma."

White House Press Secretary Kayleigh McEnany has said attendees will be given masks, but they will not be instructed to wear them - and told reporters on Friday that she will not be wearing one either.

Tulsa's health department director Dr Bruce Dart told the Tulsa World paper: "I wish we could postpone this to a time when the virus isn't as large a concern as it is today."

Is the pandemic getting worse in the US?

Tulsa's mayor imposed a curfew on Thursday around the venue, declaring a civil emergency, but the president says the city leader has assured him the measure will not apply to the rally itself.

Mayor GT Bynum, a Republican, cited recent "civil unrest" and potential opposition protests as he slapped an exclusion zone on a six-block radius near the arena.

But on Friday afternoon, Mr Bynum said that the Secret Service had asked the city to lift the curfew.

"Last night, I enacted a curfew at the request of Tulsa Police Chief Wendell Franklin, following consultation with the United States Secret Service based on intelligence they had received," the mayor said in a statement.

"Today, we were told the curfew is no longer necessary so I am rescinding it."

The mayor also said law enforcement had intelligence that "individuals from organised groups who have been involved in destructive and violent behaviour in other states are planning to travel to the city of Tulsa for purposes of causing unrest in and around the rally".

Meanwhile, a high metal fence was put up to barricade the Trump rally venue.

Earlier on Friday, President Trump posted a warning on Twitter to demonstrators.

"Any protesters, anarchists, agitators, looters or lowlifes who are going to Oklahoma please understand, you will not be treated like you have been in New York, Seattle, or Minneapolis," the president tweeted.

"It will be a much different scene!"

Mr Trump originally planned to hold the rally on Friday, but changed the date last week after learning it fell on Juneteenth, the celebration of the end of US slavery.

The president told the Wall Street Journal on Thursday that a black Secret Service agent had told him the meaning of the anniversary.

On Friday, Ms McEnany said the president "routinely commemorated" the day and "he did not just learn about Juneteenth this week".

Tulsa was the site of one of the worst racial massacres in US history.

https://www.bbc.com/news/world-us-canada-53116623
 
Six of Donald Trump's campaign team have tested positive for coronavirus ahead of his first election rally since lockdown, which will be attended by 10,000 supporters.

While some parts of the world are experiencing a second COVID-19 spike, much of America is still ascending the first curve.

And this has led many to question the safety of a mass gathering in Tulsa, Oklahoma, even if social distancing and masks are encouraged.

These fears are unlikely to have been assuaged by a statement from Tim Murtaugh, communication director for the Donald Trump Campaign, hours before the president was due to appear.

"Per safety protocols, campaign staff are tested for COVID-19 before events," it said. "Six members of the advance team tested positive out of hundreds of tests performed, and quarantine procedures were immediately implemented.

"No COVID-positive staffers or anyone in immediate contact will be at today's rally or near attendees and elected officials.

"As previously announced, all rally attendees are given temperature checks before going through security, at which point they are given wristbands, facemasks and hand sanitiser."

Large crowds gathered hours before the president was due to appear, around midnight UK time.

Those in attendance were asked to agree to take liability should they catch coronavirus.

Oklahoma and the city of Tulsa are still experiencing a daily upward trend of cases.

At least 10,037 people have tested positive for coronavirus in the state and 368 people have died.

The American president suspended his early campaign rallies for the November election in April because of the pandemic.

But tweeting about tonight's rally, he said: "Big crowds and lines already forming in Tulsa. My campaign hasn't started yet. It starts on Saturday night in Oklahoma!"

The city's BOK stadium has a capacity of 19,000. Organisers have said 10,000 people will be permitted to enter. A temperature check will be made on entry. Sanitiser will be on offer as will masks, but they will not be compulsory.

Many thousands more are expected to gather outside where they have been queuing since Wednesday.

https://news.sky.com/story/coronavi...st-rally-with-10-000-people-in-tulsa-12011483
 
<blockquote class="twitter-tweet"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">BREAKING: President’s campaign announcing Trump is not going to be speaking outside. <a href="https://twitter.com/kfor?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">@kfor</a> <a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/TulsaTrumpRally?src=hash&ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">#TulsaTrumpRally</a> <a href="https://t.co/BcXGeGPnUN">pic.twitter.com/BcXGeGPnUN</a></p>— Cassandra Sweetman (@CassandraOnTV) <a href="https://twitter.com/CassandraOnTV/status/1274455290994360322?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">June 20, 2020</a></blockquote> <script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>
 
<blockquote class="twitter-tweet"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">As others are reporting, looks like attendance here in Tulsa is well below campaign's expectations. Here's the main floor at the arena currently <a href="https://t.co/EASfSHL5nN">pic.twitter.com/EASfSHL5nN</a></p>— Steadman™ (@AsteadWesley) <a href="https://twitter.com/AsteadWesley/status/1274465912951844866?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">June 20, 2020</a></blockquote> <script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>
 
<blockquote class="twitter-tweet"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">I’m briefly inside the BOK Center. There is precisely zero social distancing and most people aren’t wearing masks. It’s about 1/3 full at the moment. <br><br>I won’t be staying inside for the rally due to public health guidance: <a href="https://t.co/sDJfAzoPUx">pic.twitter.com/sDJfAzoPUx</a></p>— Oliver Laughland (@oliverlaughland) <a href="https://twitter.com/oliverlaughland/status/1274450700307763201?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">June 20, 2020</a></blockquote> <script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>
 
US President Donald Trump has held his first campaign rally since the US coronavirus lockdown began, in front of a smaller than expected crowd.

Mr Trump had boasted earlier this week that almost a million people had requested tickets for the event at Tulsa's Bank of Oklahoma Center.

But the 19,000-seat arena was far from full and plans for him to address an outside "overflow" area were abandoned.

There had been concerns about holding the rally during the pandemic.

Those attending the rally had to sign a waiver protecting the Trump campaign from responsibility for any illness. Hours before the event began, officials said six staff members involved in organising the rally had tested positive.

However, it is unclear why attendance was lower than initially anticipated. Mr Trump, who spoke for almost two hours on a range of topics, referred to those in the stadium as "warriors", while blaming the media and protesters for keeping supporters away. There were some volatile scenes outside the venue but no serious trouble was reported.

Mr Trump's re-election campaign event was one of the biggest indoor gatherings held in the US since the country's Covid-19 outbreak began, and came at a time when Oklahoma is seeing a rise in confirmed cases.

More than 2.2 million cases of Covid-19 and 119,000 associated deaths have been reported in the US, according to data from Johns Hopkins University.

What did Trump say?
In his opening remarks, Mr Trump said there had been "very bad people outside, they were doing bad things", but did not elaborate.

On the coronavirus response, Mr Trump said he had encouraged officials to slow down testing because it led to more cases being discovered. He described testing as a "double-edged sword".

"Here is the bad part: When you do testing to that extent, you are going to find more people, you will find more cases," he told the cheering crowd. "So I said 'slow the testing down'. They test and they test."

A White House official later said the president was "obviously kidding".

Taking aim at his Democratic presidential rival, Mr Trump described Joe Biden as "a helpless puppet of the radical left".

The Trump campaign event in Tulsa had all the colour and character of one of his typical rallies.

The "Make America Great Again" hats, the Hillary Clinton "lock her up" chants, the ear-piercing soundtrack - squint, and it felt like the kind of raucous celebration that powered Trump to the White House in 2016 and buoyed the president through the ups and downs of his presidency.

The only thing missing was the capacity crowd, as vast swathes of blue upper-deck seats remained empty even as Trump entered the stage.

Blame the coronavirus for discouraging people from attending. Blame phantom protesters - as the Trump campaign did in a statement - for blocking access to the rally site. Blame mischievous liberals for flooding the campaign with fake ticket requests, encouraging the campaign to prepare for massive overflow crowds.

Whatever the reason, those massive crowds simply didn't materialise. It wasn't a bad turnout, but when your campaign boasts of more than a million RSVPs, it's an embarrassing look to hit way below that mark.

For a campaign struggling to steady itself amid sagging polls and a public increasingly uneasy about the direction of the nation, the president may have needed more than a comfort-blanket rally that harkens back to better days.

What's the background?
The rally was held amid fears it could become a coronavirus "super spreader" event.

In a Facebook post, Tulsa Mayor GT Bynum acknowledged that Tulsa's residents were divided over it being the first city to host such an event.

"We do this as our positive Covid-19 cases are rising, but while our hospital capacity remains strong. Some think it is great, some think it is reckless. Regardless of where each of us falls on that spectrum, we will go through it as a community," he wrote.

Emotions have also been running high following the killing of an unarmed black man, George Floyd, by police in Minneapolis last month, which sparked widespread anti-racism protests.

Mayor GT Bynum declared on Thursday a curfew covering the area around the BOK Center, citing the risk of "civil unrest". But on Friday, Mr Trump announced that the curfew had been lifted for "our many supporters".

Mr Trump had initially planned to hold the rally on Friday. But he changed the date last week after learning it fell on 19 June, known as Juneteenth, which marks the end of slavery in the US.

The choice of location is also controversial. In 1921, Tulsa was the scene of a massacre in which white mobs attacked black people and businesses, killing an estimated 300 people.

At a peaceful Juneteenth rally in Tulsa on Friday, the civil rights activist Al Sharpton said campaigners could "Make America Great" for everybody for the first time.

https://www.bbc.com/news/world-us-canada-53121488
 
Trump urges slowdown in COVID-19 testing

US President Donald Trump told thousands of his supporters that he had asked US officials to slow down testing for the novel coronavirus, calling it a "double-edged sword" that led to more cases being discovered.

Trump said the United States had now tested 25 million people, far more than other countries.

"When you do testing to that extent, you're gonna find more people you're gonna find more cases. So I said to my people slow the testing down, please," Trump told a campaign rally in Tulsa, Oklahoma, where many supporters were not wearing face masks.

A White House official said Trump was joking about his call for a slowdown in testing.
 
Well the rally saw a much lower than expected turnout..

Either they don’t believe trump or don’t support him.. either way, it doesn’t sound good for the Divider in chief!
 
US President Donald Trump has told a rally in Oklahoma that he asked officials to slow down testing for coronavirus because so many cases were being detected in the country.

"Here is the bad part: When you do testing to that extent, you are going to find more people, you will find more cases," he told the cheering crowd. "So I said 'slow the testing down'. They test and they test."

The coronavirus, Trump said, had many names, including "Kung Flu", a xenophobic term that appears to be a reference to China, where Covid-19 originated.

Almost 120,000 people have died with Covid-19 in the US since the pandemic began, a number that health experts say could have been much higher had testing not been ramped up.

Trump’s remarks were later described as a joke by a White House official, who said he was "only kidding"
 
Donald Trump: TikTok users and K-pop fans said to be behind poor Tulsa turnout

Tik-Tok users and K-Pop fans were behind the smaller than expected numbers at US President Donald Trump's first campaign rally in months, social media users have claimed.

Mr Trump's campaign manager had blamed "radical" protesters and the media.

But political strategist Steve Schmidt said teenagers across the US ordered tickets without intending to turn up to ensure there would be empty seats.

The campaign had reported at least one million ticket requests for the event.

Mr Schmidt, a critic of the president, said his 16-year-old daughter and her friends had requested "hundreds" of tickets.

A number of parents responded to Mr Schmidt's post saying that their children had done likewise.

Despite Mr Trump's campaign anticipating large crowds, the 19,000-seat arena at at Tulsa's Bank of Oklahoma Center was far from full and plans for him to address an outside "overflow" area were abandoned.

Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, a leading progressive figure, praised the young people and K-pop fans she said had "flooded the Trump campaign w/ fake ticket reservations".

It is unclear how many of the hundreds of thousands of ticket reservations touted by the Trump campaign were fake, but one TikTok video from 12 June encouraging people to sign up for free tickets to ensure there would be empty seats at the arena has received more than 700,000 likes.

The video was posted after the original rally date was announced for 19 June.

The news had sparked angry reaction because it fell on Juneteenth, the celebration of the end of US slavery. The location of the event, Tulsa, was also controversial, as it was the site of one of the worst racial massacres in US history.

After news of the smaller crowd numbers emerged, the account's owner Mary Jo Laupp praised the response, telling young people who were too young to vote: "Remember that you, in doing one thing and sharing information, had an impact."

If true, it would not be the first time social media users have shown their political impact in recent weeks.

Fans of K-pop, South Korea's popular music industry, have been active in drowning out hashtags used by opponents of Black Lives Matter (BLM) in recent weeks, and raised money following the death of African-American George Floyd last month.

https://www.bbc.com/news/world-us-canada-53129524
 
<blockquote class="twitter-tweet"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">Actually you just got ROCKED by teens on TikTok who flooded the Trump campaign w/ fake ticket reservations & tricked you into believing a million people wanted your white supremacist open mic enough to pack an arena during COVID<br><br>Shout out to Zoomers. Y’all make me so proud. ☺️ <a href="https://t.co/jGrp5bSZ9T">https://t.co/jGrp5bSZ9T</a></p>— Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (@AOC) <a href="https://twitter.com/AOC/status/1274499021625794565?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">June 21, 2020</a></blockquote> <script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>
 
The family of late singer Tom Petty has issued Donald Trump with a cease and desist notice after he played one of his songs at a rally.

The family said the president was not authorised to use the singer's music, and that Petty "would never want a song of his used for a campaign of hate".

The 1989 rock song I Won't Back Down was reportedly played at President Trump's comeback rally in Tulsa, Oklahoma, on Saturday.

Criticising Mr Trump's re-election campaign, the family said he "leaves too many Americans and common sense behind".

The one-page statement went on: "Both the late Tom Petty and his family firmly stand against racism and discrimination of any kind.

"Tom Petty would never want a song of his used for a campaign of hate. He liked to bring people together."

It was shared on the singer's official Twitter page, and signed Adria, Annakim, Dana and Jane Petty.

Adria and Annakim are Petty's daughters from his first marriage to Jane Benyo, and Dana York was his second wife.

Petty died in 2017 from an accidental overdose, just days after completing a 40th anniversary tour.

Tom Petty of Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers performs during their 40th Anniversary Tour at Bridgestone Arena on April 25, 2017 in Nashville, Tennessee

The statement added that the while the song was written "for the underdog, for the common man and for everyone…. the Petty family doesn't stand for this".

It said that everyone is free to vote and think as they like, but added: "We believe in America and we believe in democracy. But Donald Trump is not representing the noble ideals of either."

The Petty estate is not the first to hit out at the Trump administration for using music without permission.

Prince, Rihanna, The Rolling Stones, Pharrell Williams, Aerosmith and Neil Young are among a long list of stars who have previously criticised the president for using their tracks.

The Tulsa rally was the president's first since March due to the coronavirus lockdown, however, it received a lower-than-expected turnout.

Only around 10,000 people turned up at the 19,000-seat BOK Center arena.

Teenage TikTok users and K-pop (Korean pop music) fans have since claimed they are responsible for potentially hundreds of thousands of no-shows after registering for tickets for days, with no intention of turning up.

https://news.sky.com/story/tom-pett...th-cease-and-desist-notice-over-song-12011823
 
<blockquote class="twitter-tweet"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">Actually you just got ROCKED by teens on TikTok who flooded the Trump campaign w/ fake ticket reservations & tricked you into believing a million people wanted your white supremacist open mic enough to pack an arena during COVID<br><br>Shout out to Zoomers. Y’all make me so proud. ☺️ <a href="https://t.co/jGrp5bSZ9T">https://t.co/jGrp5bSZ9T</a></p>— Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (@AOC) <a href="https://twitter.com/AOC/status/1274499021625794565?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">June 21, 2020</a></blockquote> <script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>

This is incredible.
 
Just under 6,200 people attended Trump's rally in Tulsa last night, well below the BOK Center's total capacity of 19,200, according to a public information officer for the Tulsa Fire Department
 
President Donald Trump's re-election campaign has rejected claims that a social media campaign by Tik-Tok users and K-Pop fans was behind lower-than-expected turnout for Saturday night's Oklahoma rally.

Teenagers are said to have booked tickets without intending to turn up so as to produce empty seats.

But the Trump 2020 team said it had weeded out bogus reservations.

Mr Trump had said he expected one million to come.

The Bank of Oklahoma Center venue in Tulsa seats 19,000. The event was also planned to extend outside, though that part of it was cancelled.

The Tulsa fire brigade is quoted as saying more than 6,000 attended, but the 2020 campaign suggested the figure was much higher.

The team's campaign director said in a statement that "phony ticket requests never factor into our thinking" as entry to rallies is on a first-come first-served basis. Brad Parscale blamed the media and protesters for dissuading families from attending.

"Leftists and online trolls doing a victory lap, thinking they somehow impacted rally attendance, don't know what they're talking about or how our rallies work," Mr Parscale said.

"Registering for a rally means you've RSVPed [confirmed attendance] with a cellphone number and we constantly weed out bogus numbers, as we did with tens of thousands at the Tulsa rally, in calculating our possible attendee pool."

Former Republican strategist and a critic of Mr Trump, Steve Schmidt, said teenagers across the US had ordered tickets without intending to turn up. His 16-year-old daughter and her friends had requested "hundreds" of tickets.

A number of parents responded to Mr Schmidt's post saying that their children had done likewise.

Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, a leading progressive figure, praised the young people and K-pop fans she said had "flooded the Trump campaign w/ fake ticket reservations".

It is unclear how many of the hundreds of thousands of ticket reservations touted by the Trump campaign were fake, but one TikTok video from 12 June encouraging people to sign up for free tickets to ensure there would be empty seats at the arena has received more than 700,000 likes.

The video was posted after the original rally date was announced for 19 June.

The news had sparked angry reaction because it fell on Juneteenth, the celebration of the end of US slavery. The location of the event, Tulsa, was also controversial, as it was the site of one of the worst racial massacres in US history.

After news of the smaller crowd numbers emerged, the account's owner Mary Jo Laupp praised the response, telling young people who were too young to vote: "Remember that you, in doing one thing and sharing information, had an impact."

If true, it would not be the first time social media users have shown their political impact in recent weeks.

Fans of K-pop, South Korea's popular music industry, have been active in drowning out hashtags used by opponents of Black Lives Matter (BLM) in recent weeks, and raised money following the death of African-American George Floyd last month.

The BBC's Anthony Zurcher, who was in Tulsa, says rally organisers always approve more tickets than there is space, so pranksters filling out reservations would not have stopped legitimate supporters from attending.

However, it appears they convinced the Trump campaign that more people were interested in going than actually were.

The campaign had boasted of about one million RSVPs but if even half of those reservations had been legitimate the rally would have seen a far greater attendance, he adds.

There had been health concerns about holding the rally, the first of its kind since lockdown measures began in many US states.

Those attending the rally had to sign a waiver protecting the Trump campaign from responsibility for any illness. Hours before the event began, officials said six staff members involved in organising the rally had tested positive.

The pandemic was one issue Mr Trump touched on in his wide-ranging, almost two-hour-long speech to cheering supporters in Oklahoma, a Republican heartland.

There had been fierce opposition, including a legal challenge rejected by Oklahoma's Supreme Court, against holding the rally during the pandemic on health grounds.

Some feared the rally could become a coronavirus "super spreader" event.

More than 2.2 million cases of Covid-19 and 119,000 associated deaths have been reported in the US, according to data from Johns Hopkins University.

https://www.bbc.com/news/world-us-canada-53129524
 
During the final Democratic primary debate in March, Joe Biden pledged that if he were to win the party's presidential nomination, he would choose a woman as his vice-presidential candidate.

A lot has happened since then, not the least of which is Biden securing the required Democratic Convention delegates to become his party's presumptive nominee. Even before that point, however, speculation swirled around a dozen or so contenders to be Biden's running mate.

Buzz around the various candidates has risen and fallen as the nation has been buffeted by a viral pandemic, economic disruption and mass protests and racial tension.

If the former vice-president follows through with his pledge, it would mark only the third time a major party has selected a woman for the number two spot - four years after Hillary Clinton became the first woman to be a presidential nominee.

The move would suggest the Democrats are looking to secure the advantage they have among female voters according to polls, and perhaps insulate Biden from allegations that he engaged in unwanted physical contact with women.

Biden has said he will announce his choice in early August. In the meantime, here are the current top contenders - and how they stack up.

Kamala Harris is widely considered the front-runner for Biden's vice-presidential slot. She has a resume that includes time in the US Senate and as California's attorney general, as well as San Francisco's district attorney. She has a diverse background, with a mother from India and father from Jamaica. She's at least been somewhat vetted by the national media, given that she ran for president last year and was considered, for a time, as a top-tier candidate.

She did have a dust-up with Biden in the first primary debate last June, where she suggested his past views against desegregating schools through mandatory busing was hurtful, but that was a lifetime ago in modern US politics.

Harris brings access to California money (she raised $2m for Biden in a recent virtual event), she's quick on her feet, and she would satisfy those who are calling for Biden to add a black woman to the ticket. She has won praise from a wide range of Democrats for being an outspoken advocate for police reform during the recent mass demonstrations. Biden-Harris felt like the obvious ticket a year ago - and it still does.

Just a few months ago, there wasn't a lot of buzz around Gretchen Whitmer, a former state legislator in her second year as Michigan's governor. Then the coronavirus pandemic hit, and she became the face of her state's response, which included occasional criticism of what she viewed as the federal government's lacklustre handling of the outbreak. That made her a target for Donald Trump's vitriol - and elevated her national profile.

Her decision to enact sweeping social distancing and business-shutdown measures as Michigan became one of the top US hotspots of the coronavirus outbreak also led to several angry conservative-organised protests in her state, boosting her standing among Democrats.

In 2016 Hillary Clinton narrowly lost Michigan to Donald Trump - one of the upsets that helped decide the election. If Biden hopes to avoid a similar outcome, he might decide to put a Michigan native on the ticket.

Tammy Duckworth, the junior senator from Illinois, has a CV that jumps off the page. She lost both her legs when the Army helicopter she was piloting was shot down by insurgents in Iraq. She stayed in the military and retired with the rank of lieutenant colonel, before becoming an assistant secretary in President Barack Obama's Department of Veteran Affairs.

Duckworth served in the House of Representatives and then won her Senate seat in 2016. She is the first Thai-American woman elected to Congress, as well as the first double-amputee woman. In 2018 she became the first woman to give birth while serving in the Senate.

Illinois is a safe Democratic state, but its proximity to key Midwest battlegrounds - as well as her middle-of-the-road politics - could make her an attractive pick for Biden.

Elizabeth Warren's campaign for the Democratic presidential nomination is a story of what might have been. Her "I have a plan for that" mantra seemed to strike a chord with Democrats, and she led the polls for months in mid-2019, drawing enthusiastic crowds and cruising through the early debates with seeming ease. Then her support faded, as many progressives drifted back to Bernie Sanders, while moderates opted for younger candidates like Pete Buttigieg.

Many progressives expected her to endorse Sanders when she dropped out of the race in early March, so her decision to hold back may have earned her some appreciation from the Biden team.

Now they have the opportunity to return the favour by offering Warren the running-mate spot. While there was some friction between the Sanders and Warren camps, Warren would still be a significant signal that Biden wants to reach out to his party's left wing - and govern as more of a progressive than he let on during the campaign.

With the nation facing a serious economic crisis, Warren could lend some liberal policy heft to the Democratic ticket.

Four years ago, Hillary Clinton was lambasted for never campaigning in Wisconsin during the general election, then losing the pivotal state to Donald Trump as her Midwest Democratic "blue wall" crumbled. Democrats have pledged not to repeat that mistake, going so far as to pick Milwaukee as the site of their (now delayed) national convention.

If Biden wants to lean into the whole "don't ignore Wisconsin" theme, he couldn't do much better than to pick an actual Wisconsinite as his running mate. Tammy Baldwin is in her second term as one of the state's senators, having served in the House of Representatives for 14 years prior to that.

Her selection would also be historic, as she would become the first openly gay person to serve on a major party's ticket - just as she became the first openly gay member of the Senate. In a season where Pete Buttigieg, who is also gay, proved to be a potent electoral force in Democratic politics, there may be particular appeal for such a move.

There's a line of thought among Democrats that this election's Wisconsin is not, in fact, Wisconsin, it's Arizona. The desert state, they say, will be the "tipping point" that delivers the election to Biden, freeing him from worrying about fickle Wisconsin voters. Polls suggest Biden's brand of political moderation, combined with Donald Trump's divisive rhetoric on immigration, have the state leaning toward the Democrats. One strategy for securing that lead would be to put an Arizonan on the ticket.

In 2018, Kyrsten Sinema became the first Democrat to win an Arizona Senate seat in 30 years. She's young, telegenic and politically centrist - perhaps too centrist, according to the party's left-wing activists.

She is a bit quirky - turning heads recently when she wore a purple wig on the floor of the Senate. It could present a beneficial contrast with the often staid Biden.

If Biden picks her as his running mate, she would make history as the first openly bisexual person on a presidential ticket.

Last year, Val Demmings was a little-known Democratic back-bencher in Congress. Then House Speaker Nancy Pelosi gave her a high-visibility role as one of the impeachment managers - the congressional equivalent of prosecutors - during Donald Trump's January Senate trial.

Even before the mass protests over the death of George Floyd made racial justice a top issue among voters, the black former chief-of-police from Orlando, Florida, was on the Biden team's radar as a possible vice-presidential pick. Now she's getting more than just a passing mention.

Cutting against her is her relative lack of political experience and low name recognition. But if Biden feels she can hold up under the intense scrutiny of being on a national ticket, she could be the woman for this particular national moment - and a signal that Biden is serious about making tackling racism and police reform his top issues.

During the primaries, Hispanics were consistently one of Biden's weakest voting blocs. In states like California, Texas and Nevada, liberal champion Bernie Sanders outpaced Biden among a demographic that is well represented in numerous states that will be battlegrounds in the November general election.

If Biden decides he needs to shore up his support among one of the fastest-growing segments of the US electorate, New Mexico's first-term governor Michelle Lujan Grisham is the most obvious choice for a running mate now that Senator Catherine Cortez Masto has said she's not interested.

Unlike Masto's Nevada, New Mexico is a reliable Democratic state in presidential races, with few electoral votes. Lujan was comfortably elected governor after Republicans held the office for two terms, however. The 60-year-old Lujan previously served in Congress and as her state's health secretary - a helpful CV entry in the pandemic age.

Stacey Abrams doesn't have much of a traditional political CV for a vice-presidential pick. She spent 10 years as a member of the Georgia House of Representatives. She ran and narrowly lost the 2018 race to be the state's governor - a defeat she attributed, in part, to what she alleges was voter suppression by her Republican opponent.

What Abrams has, however, is a voice that has resonated powerfully with much of the Democratic base. Her activism on voting rights has helped boost it as an issue for the party. She gave the Democratic response to Donald Trump's 2019 State of the Union Address, making her the first black woman chosen for the task.

Unlike her rivals, Abrams has actively campaigned to be Biden's vice-presidential pick - a move that has elicited cringes from some, while others see it as refreshing honesty. Abrams is a rising star within the party, the face of a demographic segment of the Democratic Party that has traditionally been underrepresented in leadership positions. Even if she doesn't become the pick, the early buzz around her has helped advance the prospects of all the black women under Biden's consideration.

The nationwide protests over George Floyd's death while in the custody of Minneapolis police gave a handful of big-city mayors a national platform, as they dealt with difficult issues of racism, law enforcement and civil unrest in their jurisdictions. Atlanta Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms, in particular, proved particularly adept at balancing official responsibilities while expressing her personal experiences as a black woman raising four children in these turbulent times.

A heartfelt Vice interview, in which she explained the challenge of having to tell her 12-year-old son not to play with toy guns lest he provoke an incident with police, was praised as both raw and powerful.

A first-term mayor would be an unconventional pick for Biden, but Bottoms is from Georgia - a traditionally conservative state that is trending toward being an electoral battleground. She's also won praise from Democrats for waging political battles with the state's Republican governor over when and how to ease business closures and shelter-in-place orders during the coronavirus pandemic.

Susan Rice is a bit of a surprise entry on this list, given that she has no experience holding elected office or campaigning in general, and is a relative unknown for most Americans. The diplomat is well-known to Biden, however, as she served in the Obama White House with him as national security adviser after a stint as the US representative to the United Nations.

If Rice is the pick, she could play a key role in a Biden foreign policy team, suggesting that international relations will be a focus for his administration.

Rice was a lightning rod for criticism during her Obama years, however. Republicans accused her of deceiving the American public about the reasons behind the 2012 attack on the US consulate in Benghazi that resulted in the death of the US ambassador to Libya and three other Americans.

Reports that the Biden team has already vetted Rice for the vice-presidential slot suggests the campaign is casting a wide net in looking for a black woman running mate.

The traditional first rule for selecting a vice-president is to do no harm. Given that the choice doesn't offer much of a boost to the ticket, the theory goes, it is better to pick someone safe, who minimises the risk of embarrassment and won't overshadow the presidential nominee.

Most of the other candidates on this list fall somewhere on the "very safe" to "mostly safe" spectrum. Former US First Lady Michelle Obama is in a category by herself.

She's beloved by a large swathe of the American public and is a near universally recognisable figure. Yes, she might steal the stage from Biden, but what better way for Biden to cast himself as the continuation of Obama's presidential legacy than to put his wife on the ticket?

A Biden-Obama ticket would electrify the Democratic base - particularly black voters who turned out in record numbers for Obama-Biden in 2008 and 2012.

The only kink in such a bold plan is that Michelle Obama has shown less than zero interest in entering politics. In her autobiography she frequently complained about the toll her husband's political career took on her life and marriage - and she seems very happy to have those travails in the rear-view mirror.

https://www.bbc.com/news/world-us-canada-53088353
 
I hope this is a sign of things to come.. most sensible people have had it with the divisive outlandish and untrue rhetoric coming from the trump camp. He has adopted gangster like methods to keep his critics at bay, firing people at the justice department for investigating him, fired people in the state department for disagreeing with him, fired his press secretaries for quoting him correctly but making him look bad, fired people at the FBI, fired ambassadors to put his yes men in those positions, had abandoned critical allies, has sided with dictators and oppressive regimes, has supported racists and bigots and adopted bigoted and racist policies alienating minorities.

He lies, cheats then lies about his cheating and it’s absolutely ridiculous how immoral, unethical and weak of a man he is..
 
Donald Trump’s campaign manager, Brad Parscale, was under pressure on Sunday after claiming hundreds of thousands of people had applied for tickets to the president’s return to the campaign trail in Tulsa, only for the rally to attract a sparse crowd.

At the BOK Center in the Oklahoma city on Saturday night, as the president took the stage to give his first campaign speech since the Covid-19 pandemic put large parts of America under lockdown, vast banks of empty seats could be seen.

The Tulsa fire department said 6,200 people attended. The Trump campaign claimed 12,000. The arena holds 19,000.

The campaign had built an “overflow” stage outside the BOK Center, to host brief remarks by Trump and Mike Pence. Those speeches were cancelled.

Trump’s demeanour on returning to Washington was widely scrutinised. He was initially quiet on Twitter on Sunday but the president was reported to be “furious” at the “underwhelming” event, which followed a week of controversy about whether it should even be held. According to NBC, Trump was “particularly angry that before he even left DC, aides made public that six members of team in Tulsa tested positive for Covid-19”.

CNN reported that the president’s daughter and son-in-law, Ivanka Trump and Jared Kushner, were “******” that Parscale had promised huge crowds. Trump also claimed this week that more than a million people wanted to attend his rally.

In a statement, Parscale blamed the low attendance on “a week’s worth of the fake news media warning people away from the rally because of Covid and protesters”, which he said “coupled with recent images of American cities on fire, had a real impact on people bringing their families and children to the rally”.

He then appeared to threaten to rescind accreditation for journalists critical of the Trump campaign.

“For the media to now celebrate the fear that they helped create is disgusting, but typical,” he said. “And it makes us wonder why we bother credentialing media for events when they don’t do their full jobs as professionals.”

Parscale has been widely credited for his work on the 2016 campaign but pressure has increased as the re-election campaign heats up, with reports of a president furious about polling results and pondering a reorganisation.

Trump trails Joe Biden nationally and in most polls in battleground states.

Rick Wilson, a bestselling author, former Republican consultant and co-founder of the Lincoln Project, an anti-Trump super pac, was critical of Parscale’s approach.

Donald Trump walks on the South Lawn of the White House after returning from the Tulsa rally. Photograph: Patrick Semansky/AP
“Brad broke the first rule of American politics: under promise and over deliver,” he told the Guardian. “Brad’s survival now depends on the good offices of his patrons inside the Trump camp, and [Ivanka and Kushner] are already signaling their displeasure to the media.

“The only X factor is whether anyone else in Trump’s crew of skells [and] grifters … has offered to keep the scam running.”

It has been reported that the number of applicants for tickets to Saturday’s rally was inflated by young users of the social media platform TikTok applying but then deliberately not attending.

“Trump has been actively trying to disenfranchise millions of Americans in so many ways, and to me, this was the protest I was able to perform,” Erin Hoffman, an 18-year-old New Yorker, told the New York Times.

The Trump campaign said protesters blocked entrances and metal detectors, preventing people from entering the rally. However, reporters on the ground including the Guardian’s Oliver Laughland said they saw no evidence of such tactics.

As Covid-19 cases in Oklahoma rise, public health officials had warned against holding a large indoor gathering. The Trump campaign did not require attendees to wear masks. Some observers speculated fear of Covid-19 may have stopped some supporters from attending the rally.

https://www.theguardian.com/us-news...-tulsa-rally-covid-ivanka-kushner-rick-wilson
 
Democrats sold it, with the civil unrest, people crippled by lockdowns and inequality exposed, bernie would have walked this election
 
Black challengers confront establishment Democrats in NY, KY

United States Congressional candidates Amy McGrath and Eliot Engel live hundreds of miles apart in states with dramatically different politics.

Yet they are the preferred candidates of the Democratic Party's Washington establishment as voters in Kentucky and New York decide their congressional primary elections on Tuesday.

And both may be in trouble.

On the eve of their elections, Engel, a 16-term House incumbent who represents parts of the Bronx and New York City's wealthy suburbs, and McGrath, a former military officer and fundraising juggernaut running in her first Kentucky Senate campaign, arefacing strong challenges from lower-profile Black candidates. The challengers have tapped into the wounded progressive movement's desire for transformational change suddenly animated by sweeping civil rights protests across America.

Engel's challenger, 45-year-old former public school principal Jamaal Bowman, and McGrath's opponent, 35-year-old state Representative Charles Booker, speak openly about their personal experience with police brutality and racism as they promote progressive plans to transform the nation's healthcare system and economy. And both accuse their white opponents of being absent from the front lines of the civil rights debate.

Bowman and Booker have also won the endorsement of Bernie Sanders. The Vermont senator failed to win the Democratic Party's presidential nomination, but he continues to shape congressional primaries - even if it puts him at odds with House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, who's backing Engel, and Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, who helped recruit McGrath.

The story of Bowman and Booker's rise extends well beyond the years-long tug-of-war between the progressive and pragmatic wings of the Democratic Party. They did not gain traction until after George Floyd's death last month triggered nationwide outrage about racial inequality.

In New York, the progressive pushback against Engel's re-election was somewhat surprising given his status as one of the Democratic Party's most liberal members. He has also drawn overwhelming support from African Americans in Congress and establishment leaders such as Hillary Clinton.

https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2020...lishment-democrats-ny-ky-200622150537639.html
 
President Donald Trump visited the US-Mexico border Tuesday and tried to credit his new wall with stopping both undocumented immigration and the coronavirus.

In the blazing heat, Trump briefly stopped to inspect a new section of the concrete and rebar structure where the president and other officials took a moment to scrawl their signatures on the wall.

"It stopped COVID, it stopped everything," Trump said.

Trump was looking to regain campaign momentum after his weekend rally in Tulsa, Oklahoma, which was supposed to be a sign of the nation's reopening. Low turnout for the rally, however, sharpened the focus on Trump's visit to Arizona, which doubles as both a 2020 battleground state and a surging coronavirus hot spot.

By visiting the border, Trump sought to change the subject to an issue he believes will help electrify his base in November.

"Our border has never been more secure," Trump declared as he met with Arizona Republican Governor Doug Ducey and federal Border Patrol officials.

Later in the day, Trump addressed a group of young Republicans at a Phoenix megachurch. The "Students for Trump" event at the Dream City Church is part of a special project of Turning Point Action, a group chaired by Trump ally Charlie Kirk.

Campaign officials stressed that such rallies would remain a staple of the president's re-election strategy but allowed that they may, in certain states, need to change slightly. Discussions were under way about having them in more modest venues or outdoors, perhaps in aeroplane hangars and amphitheatres, or in smaller cities away from likely protesters.

Trump's visit to the Phoenix church comes on the same day that Vice President Mike Pence kicked off a faith-centred tour, highlighting the central position that religious conservatives - particularly white evangelicals, but also right-leaning Catholics - continue to occupy in the president's base. Yet, even as Trump's campaign overtly courts religious voters, there are signs of softening support among voting blocs the president cannot afford to lose.

Trump's focus on construction of his long-promised border wall also is meant to shore up support with his most loyal supporters.

His administration has promised to build 450 miles (724 kilometres) by the end of the year, but that seems unlikely. The government has awarded more than $6.1bn in construction contracts since April 2019 for various projects along the border. It has also waived procurement rules that critics say make the process of awarding multimillion-dollar contracts secretive and opaque.

Throughout the trip, the COVID-19 pandemic is shadowing Trump. Since late May, Arizona has emerged as one of the nation's most active hot spots for the spread of COVID-19, with disturbing trends in several benchmarks, including the percentage of tests that prove positive for the virus, which is the highest in the nation.

The state reported a new daily record of nearly 3,600 additional coronavirus cases Tuesday as Arizona continued to set records for the number of people hospitalised, in intensive care and on ventilators for COVID-19. Arizona's total caseload in the pandemic has reached at least 58,179, with 42 more deaths reported Tuesday, raising the death toll to 1,384.

https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2020...wall-stopped-coronavirus-200623225522009.html
 
Progressive supporters of Palestinian rights in the United States are urging both presidential candidates - and especially the presumptive Democratic nominee, Joe Biden - to rethink the country's policies toward Israel and the Palestinians in light of increasing evidence that political sands are shifting under one of the thorniest foreign policy issues of the day.

More than 100 US-based organisations this week signed letters to Biden and President Donald Trump urging them both to adopt a "just and principled" policy in the Middle East.

Organised and initiated by CODEPINK, a women-led grassroots organisation focused on human rights, the letter urged the candidates to adopt a policy that respects international law and explicitly opposes the Israeli occupation of the West Bank and East Jerusalem and its blockade of the Gaza strip.

Citing increased US support for Palestinians' rights - especially among young American Jews - the almost identical letters urged Trump and Biden to end what they called a one-sided American Middle East policy that enables Israel to violate Palestinians' human rights and allows for the continued occupation of their territories.

The letter calls for the US to withdraw its recognition of Jerusalem as the capital of Israel and relocate the US embassy back to Tel Aviv, and supports conditioning US military funding to Israel on an end to its violations of Palestinian human rights.

"The United States should affirm the right of every human being to live with dignity, equality, freedom, and respect for human rights - and that should include Palestinians and Israelis," the letter said.

The letters were signed by a diverse group of religious, political and community organisations, including the Jewish Voice for Peace, Methodist Federation for Social Action, the Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR) and the Presbyterian Church, USA, Israel Palestine Mission Network (IPMN).

The groups are seeking to take advantage of the renewed clout of the Democratic Party's progressive wing following the strong showing of independent Bernie Sanders during the primaries. Sanders, whose campaign captivated many younger voters in the US, was and is an outspoken supporter of Palestinian rights.

Doug Bandow, a senior fellow at the libertarian Cato Institute and former special assistant to President Ronald Reagan, told Al Jazeera that younger and more left-wing activists within the Democratic Party are more willing to challenge the establishment on the Palestinian issue.

"I do think we are seeing an important shift generationally and ideologically within the Democratic Party," he said.

An old guard

Former Democratic Congressman Jim Moran, from Virginia, told Al Jazeera that the party is indeed "slowly and gradually changing toward supporting Palestinian rights", but the struggle is still an uphill one.

"Part of the current problem within the Democratic Party as far as change toward more pro-Palestinian policy approach is that many of the senior leadership - especially chairpersons of committees - are the senior members and older and more dependent on groups like AIPAC for organisation and funding," Moran said.

Biden, Moran said, is one of those Democrats standing in the way.

Ariel Gold, the National co-director of CODEPINK, also told Al Jazeera that Biden is out of touch with public opinion among younger Democrats on the Palestinian issue.

"Biden does not know where the Democratic Party is now," she said. "He still thinks the Democratic Party is the party of AIPAC."

Joshua Cooper, a professor of mathematics at the University of South Carolina and a member of Jewish Voice for Peace, one of the letter's signatories, told Al Jazeera that, "It is particularly disturbing that Biden should claim his espoused agenda reflects the values of the Jewish Community."

Marie Newman, a Democrat who ran for Congress in Chicago's 3rd District - home of the largest Palestinian-American community in the US - represents the direction Gold and other signatories of the letter would like to steer the Democratic Party.

After losing to Democratic incumbent Dan Lipinsky in 2018, Newman defeated pro-Israel Lipinsky in the March primary and is expected to win the general election. During the campaign, she put Palestinian rights at the forefront of the debate in the district and called Trump's policies in the region "alarming".

Newman told Al Jazeera that violations of the human rights of the Palestinian people during the Trump administration and the president's support for Israel's annexation of land in the occupied West Bank and the water-rich Jordan Valley will hinder peace-building efforts in the region.

"It is critically important that our leaders work in a peace and justice seeking coalition to build a path forward for a viable two-state solution that gives self-determination and equality for the Palestinian and Israeli people side by side," Newman said.

https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2020...ats-push-israel-policies-200622175233507.html
 
US Democrats, Republicans far apart on police reform

Facing a watershed political moment, a divided United States Congress is struggling to respond to massive nationwide public demonstrations for police reform as Democrats in the Senate rejected a Republican policing proposal.

The Republican bill was opposed by a broad coalition of US civil rights groups and fell short of a 60-vote threshold needed to advance in the Senate by a 55-45 vote largely on party lines.

At the same time, a Democrat-backed police reform bill is moving rapidly towards passage in the Democrat-controlled US House of Representatives over the opposition of Republicans and President Donald Trump.

Whether Republicans and Democrats can find enough common ground to reach a bipartisan legislative agreement is unclear. Political pressure from the protests is building and public opinion is swinging in support of the Black Lives Matter movement. But the two US parties are far apart on policy and there is a lack of trust between key leaders who have been trading angry rhetoric.

President Trump mocked the Democrats in a campaign speech in Arizona on Tuesday for sympathising with the Black Lives Matter protesters.

"It's crazy what's going on. Defund and abolish the police, how is that a good idea?" Trump told an audience of conservative college students assembled in a megachurch in Phoenix.

When Trump first heard the protesters' slogan "Defund the Police", Trump said his first thought was: "Oh great, I just won the election."

Trump and most members of Congress face re-election in November. More than 1,000 Americans are shot and killed each year by police in the US.

Trump said the "20 most dangerous cities in America" are run by Democrats who, he implied, are weak on crime. Murder rates in Chicago and Baltimore are "tougher than Afghanistan, all run by Democrats", Trump said.

"They want to abolish borders and abolish every police department in the country," the president claimed.

The question of funding for police is one of the core points of departure between Democrats and Republicans in Congress, and the protesters and civil rights groups.

The Senate Republican bill would authorise nearly $7bn over five years in federal funding for training and grants to state and local police departments. By contrast, the House Democrats' bill imposes new oversight conditions on federal monies for police and authorises more than $2.5bn for independent investigations of police abuse and federal oversight.

"The large amount of funding that is poured into policing in this country could be better spent on social services, including more community-based social workers, and investment in programs that address the problems that communities face," said Alphonso David, president of the Human Rights Campaign.

"We have to transform the system, not provide the system with more money and more power," David said in a conference call with reporters on Tuesday.

The Human Rights Campaign, the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, the Leadership Conference on Civil and Human Rights, People for the American Way and the National Urban League are among 138 civil rights groups that have come out strongly against the Senate bill.

"It is time now to reimagine public safety in a way that prioritises upfront investments in community-led solutions and resources that centre [around] dignity and respect for everyone," said Vanita Gupta, president of the Leadership Conference.

"That means not just changing policing practices and culture, but also shrinking the footprint of the criminal legal system in Black and brown communities' lives and investing in areas that truly make us safer," Gupta said.

Democrats in the Senate said on Tuesday with civil rights groups vehemently opposed to the Republican bill, they could not agree to go forward with the debate. Instead, they want to use the House bill as a starting point.

"The truth as we know it is that people by the thousands are marching in the streets of America, of every race, every age and gender, in every geographic location, in all the 50 states, unified, demanding we act, demanding that finally something is actually done," Senator Kamala Harris said at a news conference on Tuesday.

"There is an opportunity in this moment," said Harris, who is one of three African Americans in the Senate. But she added: "I do not intend to be part of a discussion where some might suggest Democrats are trying to stand in the way of police reform."

And yet that is what Republicans are saying as they lamented the unwillingness of Democrats to support even debating their proposed measure.

"The only thing that's blocking this right now is the Senate Democrats," said Republican leader Mitch McConnell. Democrats just "want to use this opportunity for nothing more than to score political points."

Civil rights groups hope that after Democrats reject the Republican bill in the vote on Wednesday, that "McConnell will come back with another bill that has more accountability and things that the protesters want", Ed Chung, vice president for criminal justice reform at the Center for American Progress, told Al Jazeera.
https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2020/06/democrats-republicans-police-reform-200624133908760.html
 
Many Secret Service agents who attended President Trump's rally in Oklahoma last weekend have been quarantined as a precaution after some tested positive for coronavirus, US media report.

The story was first reported by the Washington Post, and an unnamed law enforcement official told CNN that the number of those in quarantine was in the "low" dozens.

Before the event, the president’s campaign team said six staffers - including two Secret Service agents - had tested positive after travelling to Tulsa, where the rally was held. Another two staffers tested positive afterwards.

An unnamed source told CNN that the recent decision to quarantine Secret Service agents was made after two tested positive - but it is unclear if they are the same pair whose infections were confirmed before the rally.

President Trump drew criticism after going ahead with the election rally despite rising cases in Oklahoma. Attendees were given temperature checks and hand sanitiser, but were not required to wear masks.

The campaign said it had received a million ticket requests, but only 6,200 people turned up at the 19,200-seat stadium.
 
Yearning for change, a group of progressive Black Democratic congressional hopefuls in the United States is rushing towards the national stage, igniting rank-and-file enthusiasm in a party dominated by ageing white leaders.

Charles Booker, 35, a first-term Kentucky state legislator who grew up poor, is vying for a Senate nomination against a rival who has outraised him 40 to one with the backing of national Democratic leaders. There is also Jamaal Bowman, 44, an educator and political neophyte seeking a New York congressional seat by trying to topple the House Foreign Affairs Committee chairman, who has been endorsed by Hillary Clinton and House Speaker Nancy Pelosi.

They and others were on display in Tuesday's Democratic primaries in New York, Kentucky and Virginia, and it remains unclear how many of them will win. But the day's message was clear: A fresh set of candidates of colour wants to join the US Congress and steer Democrats leftward, even as presumed presidential nominee Joe Biden sets a more centrist course to woo moderate voters this November.

"The leadership of the party has to catch up with public opinion, which is largely progressive," said Mondaire Jones, who is fighting for a vacant seat from a tony district in New York City's northern suburbs.

Jones said in an interview with the Associated Press news agency he enthusiastically backs Biden, but the former vice president must "advance a vision of America that is more progressive than what he's set forth" if he wants to energise liberal voters.

"The world has changed," Bowman said in a statement. "Congress needs to change, too."

As election officials count boatloads of mail-in ballots prompted by the coronavirus pandemic, many US media outlets have not declared winners in Tuesday's close primaries. But one victor was Cameron Webb, a Black physician and lawyer who defeated three white rivals in a central Virginia district.

Tuesday's primaries occurred in a Democratic Party whose presumed presidential nominee, Biden, is 77 years old. Pelosi is 80 and Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer is 69. Vermont Senator Bernie Sanders, a self-described democratic socialist and progressive leader who lost his bid for the presidential nomination this year, is 78.

But another hero of the left, Congresswoman Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez of New York is only 30. And in one indication of the party's sensitivities, Biden has already said he will choose a woman as his vice presidential running mate, and he faces pressure to choose a person of colour.

Booker, Bowman and Jones have gained momentum from the Black Lives Matter movement and the nationwide protests following last month's killing of George Floyd, a Black man, by a white police officer in Minneapolis. Their strong campaigns have spotlighted that candidates who can tap into that movement may be able to translate its energy into votes from African Americans and white progressives.

But they and others say their appeal goes beyond race. Each, for example, has supported the Green New Deal and Medicare for All proposals dear to progressive voters.

Sean McElwee, a political analyst for progressive candidates, says liberal-leaning millennials are entering the age when people tend to vote more often. That naturally produces increasingly successful progressive candidates, especially people of colour, who can appeal to liberal and minority voters, he said.

"We're a little bit over" white male progressive candidates, McElwee said.

Sochie Nnaemeka, New York state director of the progressive Working Families Party, said candidates of colour also gain appeal from their authenticity.

"They have lived experiences," Nnaemeka said. "There's no translation needed for Jamaal Bowman to talk about the crisis of police brutality." Bowman, challenging 16-term veteran Congressman Eliot Engel in a district covering parts of the Bronx and Westchester County, grew up in public housing in New York.

Many moderates dispute that the Democratic Party is increasingly becoming controlled by progressives and that Black voters inevitably skew to the left.

They note that the moderate Biden decisively clinched the presidential nomination over Sanders with lopsided support from African American voters. They say the dozens of Democratic freshmen elected in 2018, giving them House control, included centrist legislators of colour such as Representatives Colin Allred of Texas and Xochitl Torres Small of New Mexico.

"There is a new generation coming that's very diverse," said Jim Kessler, an executive vice president of the centrist Democratic group Third Way. "But it would be a mistake to say the next generation only represents the far left of the party."

According to AP VoteCast, a survey of voters, about two in 10 people who voted for Democratic candidates in 2018 were Black and about one in 10 was Hispanic. About half identified as liberal, including two in 10 who said they were very liberal, with most of the rest moderates.

Booker is seeking the Democratic nomination for Senate in Kentucky against former Marine combat pilot Amy McGrath. Schumer has backed the centrist as his party's best chance to defeat Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell in the Republican stronghold state.

Other candidates of colour seeking Democratic congressional nominations on Tuesday included Ritchie Torres, a New York City council member running for an open seat from a diverse Bronx district. Suraj Patel is a businessman trying to overthrow 14-term Congresswoman Carolyn Maloney in New York City.

Former Congressman Steven Israel of New York, who ran House Democrats' campaign committee, largely attributed progressives' energy to the antipathy in the party to President Donald Trump.

"I don't subscribe to the argument that one day of primaries defines the national mood," Israel said. "But it's clear something is happening, and a new, aggressive generation of activists is impacting the Democratic Party."

Source Al Jazeera
 
In his speech on healthcare, Joe Biden criticized Trump for calling coronavirus testing a “double-edged sword” during his Saturday rally in Tulsa.

“Testing unequivocally saves lives, and widespread testing is the key to opening up our economy again — so that’s one edge of the sword,” Biden said in Lancaster, Pennsylvania.

“The other edge: that he thinks finding out that more Americans are sick will make him look bad. And that’s what he’s worried about. He’s worried about looking bad.”

The presumptive Democratic presidential nominee also urged Americans to socially distance and wear masks to limit the spread of coronavirus.

“We’re going to have to wear masks. And I know as Americans it’s not something we’re used to. But it matters,” Biden said. “We’re going to have to socially distance. It’s not easy. It seems so strange to us. ... But for now, we have to socially distance. It matters.”
 
Responding to questions from reporters, Vice-President Mike Pence defended President Trump's decision to hold two campaign rallies, one of them in Phoenix, Arizona, one of the two US states now leading the country in positive virus tests.

"We have an election coming up this fall," Pence says. "We still want to give people the freedom to participate in the political process."

The vice-president adds that the right to assemble and the right to free speech are enshrined in the US Constitution.

"People are using common sense, they're being responsible," he says, insisting that, between states, "one size doesn't fit all".
 
Pence repeats Trump's message on testing and cases

Vice-President Pence echoed President Donald Trump's message that the number of cases had been increasing because testing had been stepped up.

Last weekend, the president told a rally in Oklahoma he had asked his team to reduce testing to keep case numbers down.

The White House said at the time that Trump was "in jest" but the president said on Tuesday: "I don't kid."
 
Responding to questions from reporters, Vice-President Mike Pence defended President Trump's decision to hold two campaign rallies, one of them in Phoenix, Arizona, one of the two US states now leading the country in positive virus tests.

"We have an election coming up this fall," Pence says. "We still want to give people the freedom to participate in the political process."

The vice-president adds that the right to assemble and the right to free speech are enshrined in the US Constitution.

"People are using common sense, they're being responsible," he says, insisting that, between states, "one size doesn't fit all".
“We are being responsible by encouraging people to gather in large numbers without masks in the middle of a pandemic in a city which could be the new ground zero!”

Just wow!!!’
 
The Rolling Stones have warned US President Donald Trump that he could face legal action if he continues using their songs at his campaign rallies.

A statement from the band's legal team said it was working with the performing rights organisation, the BMI, to stop the unauthorised use of their music.

The Trump campaign used the song You Can't Always Get What You Want at last week's rally in Tulsa, Oklahoma.

The same song was used by the Trump campaign during the 2016 US election.

"The Rolling Stones do not endorse Donald Trump," the band tweeted in 2016.

In a statement released on Saturday, representatives for the group said that "further steps to exclude" Mr Trump from using Rolling Stones material in future presidential campaigning was necessary after previous "cease and desist directives" had been ignored.

The BMI has reportedly notified the Trump campaign on behalf of the Stones that the use of their songs without permission will constitute a breach of its licensing agreement, and would be subject to legal action.

Tulsa rally fails to draw expected crowds amid virus fears
Rolling Stones release their first new song in eight years
In April, the Rolling Stones - fronted by 76-year-old singer Sir Mick Jagger - released their first new single in eight years, Living In A Ghost Town.

Earlier this month, the family of rock musician Tom Petty issued a cease and desist letter to the Trump campaign over the unauthorised use of his song I Won't Back Down at the Tulsa rally.

In a statement posted on Twitter, the family said that the late artist would "never want a song of his used for a campaign of hate".

Petty died in 2017 of an accidental drug overdose after taking painkillers, aged 66.

Campaigning will continue in the coming months as Mr Trump prepares to face Democratic Party nominee Joe Biden in November's presidential election.

https://www.bbc.com/news/world-us-canada-53208593
 
Social distancing stickers 'removed' before Trump rally

Staff at US President Donald Trump's rally in Tulsa, Oklahoma earlier this month removed stickers intended to maintain distance between attendees, the Washington Post has reported.

A video obtained by the newspaper shows workers removing stickers placed on seats and designed to ensure that the crowd followed social distancing measures.

There had been strong health concerns over Trump's rally on 20 June, which was the first of its kind since coronavirus lockdown measures were introduced in many US states.

People attending had to sign a waiver protecting the Trump campaign from responsibility for any illness, and six staff members involved in organising the rally tested positive for the virus hours before the event began.

However, attendance at the 19,000-seat stadium was far lower than anticipated.
 
Trump retweets video of supporter shouting 'white power'

_113130834_trump2.png


US President Donald Trump has retweeted a video showing one of his supporters loudly shouting "white power".

The supporter was among a group of senior citizens taking part in a pro-Trump rally at a retirement complex in Florida.

The footage showed the Trump supporters and anti-Trump demonstrators hurling abuse and swearing at one another.

President Trump has repeatedly been accused of inflaming racial tensions - accusations he denies.

In his tweet, the president thanked "the great people of The Villages" - referring to the retirement community north-west of Orlando where the rally took place. "The Radical Left Do Nothing Democrats will Fall in the Fall. Corrupt Joe is shot. See you soon!!!," he wrote.

The video included in the tweet showed a Trump supporter in a golf cart raising a clenched fist and shouting "white power". He appeared to be responding to a protester calling him a racist and using profanities. Other anti-Trump protesters shouted "Nazi" and other accusations at the rally-goers.

Tim Scott, the only black Republican in the US Senate, said in an interview with CNN on Sunday that the video was "offensive" and should be taken down.

"There's no question that he should not have retweeted it and he should just take it down," Mr Scott told the network.

The US Secretary of Health and Human Services, Alex Azar, was also asked about the tweet in an appearance on CNN.

"I've not seen that video or that tweet, but obviously neither the president, his administration nor I would do anything to be supportive of white supremacy or anything that would support discrimination of any kind," Mr Azar said.

It was not clear if the president was aware that the supporter in the video was shouting a white supremacist slogan.

President Trump has previously faced accusations of sharing or promoting racist content. In 2017 he retweeted three inflammatory videos from a British far-right group, prompting a rebuke from then UK Prime Minister Theresa May.

He was widely criticised in 2019 when he said in a tweet that four US congresswomen - Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, Rashida Tlaib, Ayanna Pressley and Ilhan Omar - should "go back and help fix the totally broken and crime-infested places from which they came". Three of the four congresswomen were born in the US and all four are US citizens.

In response to protests in recent weeks over the death of George Floyd, Trump warned on Twitter that "when the looting starts, the shooting starts" - a phrase used by Miami's confrontational police chief Walter Headley at the height of the civil rights movement in 1967.

The line prompted Twitter to restrict the president's tweet on the basis that it broke the platform's rules on glorifying violence.

And Mr Trump has faced accusations of racism in recent weeks for repeatedly using the phrase "kung-flu" to describe the coronavirus. The White House has denied president's use of the term is racist.

"What the president does is point to the fact that the origin of the virus is China," said White House Press Secretary Kayleigh McEnany.

https://www.bbc.com/news/world-us-canada-53212685
 
:)))

The looney left have some front. Bemoaning about Trump's election rallies due to the spread of C19, but will happily embrace BLM/Pride marches like the one today in Chicago.

Trump is spot on, the left are the problem, far greater than any terrorist threat known to man.
 
Beyoncé's BET speech: 'Vote like our life depends on it'

Beyoncé urged black communities to vote in the upcoming US elections, as she accepted an honour for her humanitarian work at the BET Awards.

Dedicating her award to protesters around the country, the star said: "You're proving to our ancestors that their struggles were not in vain."

"I'm encouraging you to continue to take action, continue to change and dismantle a racist and unequal system.

"We have to vote like our life depends on it, because it does."

Beyoncé was presented with her award by Michelle Obama, who praised the star's commitment to the black community.

"You can see it in everything she does, from her music that gives voice to black joy and black pain, to her activism that demands justice for black lives.

"And she's doing it all while staying devoted to her children and the loved ones she holds dear," she continued. "To my girl, I just want to say - you inspire me. You inspire all of us."

https://www.bbc.com/news/entertainment-arts-53217846
 
The economic impact of the coronavirus has taken a heavier toll on low-wage earners according to Tomas J Philipson, the chair of the White House Council of Economic Advisers.

In an exclusive interview with the BBC before his reported departure, he said: "There's a sort of unique impact of this shock in that its very regressive, hitting the low wage part of the economy. Low-wage workers take a bigger hit than higher wage".

The virus has derailed any progress the US was making in raising the living standards of those on low pay, Prof Philipson said in an interview for Coronavirus: The Economic Shock, in which some of the world's leading economists and business leaders look at how the gravest economic downturn in nearly a hundred years may change the way we live and work.

"We had enormous success in growing lower wages before the pandemic struck, so this has taken a very regressive toll on the economy," he argues.

This has political implications for the upcoming November election as President Trump enjoys far higher support among non-college educated voters - often used as a proxy for low vs high wage earners - than among those who have college degrees.

Prof Philipson also plays down the chances of a rapid economic recovery. "I'm not saying we are going to have a v-shaped recovery, in fact the data shows a sort of gradual response."

However, he also defends the United States' response to the pandemic and places some of the responsibility Covid-19 in the US at the doors of state governors.

"We were the first country to introduce travel bans from China and were criticised for that. Many state governments run by Democratic governors did not act before the federal government, even though they were free to do so."

He disagrees that a rise in US economic nationalism has been harmful to the world economy. "I think China was justifiably demonised in the sense that we treated them a lot better selling stuff here than they treated us selling stuff there. I think the president has done a lot to balance that".

https://www.bbc.com/news/business-53224752
 
‘Trump political base hit hardest by coronavirus'

The economic impact of the coronavirus has taken a heavier toll on low-wage earners according to Tomas J Philipson, the chair of the White House Council of Economic Advisers.

In an exclusive interview with the BBC before his reported departure, he said: "There's a sort of unique impact of this shock in that its very regressive, hitting the low wage part of the economy. Low-wage workers take a bigger hit than higher wage".

The virus has derailed any progress the US was making in raising the living standards of those on low pay, Prof Philipson said in an interview for Coronavirus: The Economic Shock, in which some of the world's leading economists and business leaders look at how the gravest economic downturn in nearly a hundred years may change the way we live and work.

"We had enormous success in growing lower wages before the pandemic struck, so this has taken a very regressive toll on the economy," he argues.

This has political implications for the upcoming November election as President Trump enjoys far higher support among non-college educated voters - often used as a proxy for low vs high wage earners - than among those who have college degrees.

https://www.bbc.com/news/business-53224752
 
As the US gears up for November's presidential election, Joe Biden has announced he won't hold campaign rallies.

"I'm going to follow the doc's orders - not just for me but for the country - and that means that I am not going to be holding rallies," the former vice-president and Democratic nominee said on Tuesday.

It's a stark contrast to the stance of his rival, President Donald Trump, who held his first campaign rally in Tulsa, Oklahoma, in June despite health warnings - although turnout was lower than expected and no new rallies have been announced.

The US has recorded more than 40,000 new coronavirus cases on four of the last five days.
 
:)))

The looney left have some front. Bemoaning about Trump's election rallies due to the spread of C19, but will happily embrace BLM/Pride marches like the one today in Chicago.

Trump is spot on, the left are the problem, far greater than any terrorist threat known to man.

There have been actual studies done that BLM protests did not cause an uptick in Covid 19

https://www.economist.com/graphic-d...sts-did-not-cause-an-uptick-in-covid-19-cases

But lying is second nature for trump supporters

And of course people like you dont see the difference between fighting for one's life and rights over an election rally. You need to act dumb because you have no morals and no principles

of course the left are a problem to racist sexist, bigots, they always have been




And the saddest thing? There are studies done to show how lonely young, gullible men mostly make up the Trump cult. Imagine admiring a person who asks people to drink bleach and cannot even speak his own language properly. I think history will study how people can be so dumb as to support this racist, sexist man child who only knows how to throw tantrums and has failed in every single venture in life and is dragging the greatest nation down with him
 
As the US gears up for November's presidential election, Joe Biden has announced he won't hold campaign rallies.

"I'm going to follow the doc's orders - not just for me but for the country - and that means that I am not going to be holding rallies," the former vice-president and Democratic nominee said on Tuesday.

It's a stark contrast to the stance of his rival, President Donald Trump, who held his first campaign rally in Tulsa, Oklahoma, in June despite health warnings - although turnout was lower than expected and no new rallies have been announced.

The US has recorded more than 40,000 new coronavirus cases on four of the last five days.

Goog for Biden, I doubt his rallies were going to attract substantial participation regardless of Covid
 
The US recorded more than 44,000 new coronavirus cases on Tuesday, a new all-time daily high as the nation struggles with the pandemic, while concerns mount over Donald Trump’s handling of the crisis and his recent silence on the issue.


Eight states reported new single-day highs of freshly diagnosed cases, and the dire numbers follow a warning by the public health expert Dr Anthony Fauci that the US is “going in the wrong direction” and infections could more than double, to reach 100,000 cases a day.

Rather than addressing the rise, however, and the European Union’s exclusion of most American travel there while the virus is not under control in the US, Trump spent Wednesday morning posting a series of erratic tweets, as he attacked media organizations and used a racial slur to target a Democratic politician.

Officials in Alaska, Arizona, California, Georgia, Idaho, Oklahoma, South Carolina and Texas announced single-day-high case numbers for Tuesday, according to the New York Times, while the paper reported that the number of new cases in the US has increased by 80% over the past two weeks.

The Covid Tracking Project said that the US’s seven-day average for new daily cases has doubled since 13 June, and that hospitalizations jumped by the highest number since 21 April, as the European Union confirmed on Tuesday it would bar Americans from non-essential travel to the bloc.

New York governor Andrew Cuomo excoriated Trump for his continued defense of the administration’s slow and chaotic response to the outbreak, saying at a press briefing: “The buck stops on the president’s desk”.

Cuomo said of Trump’s response to the virus not being brought under control in the US: “He was in denial. He has been denying what every health expert in America has been saying. Come clean with the American people. At least have the courage to admit what everybody else already knows: you were wrong!”

The governor went on to implore states to reject the president’s rhetoric and listen to the science, making a play on Trump’s former time as a reality TV host.

“Denying reality does not defeat reality. He has lived in denial, and he has been denying the scientific facts since day one,” he said. “Reality wins and reality won, and now the country is suffering because of the president”.

A number of states have been forced to roll back reopening efforts. Arizona’s governor, Doug Ducey, abruptly ordered bars, gyms, movie theaters and water parks to shut down this week, as the state became one of the worst hit in the US.

In Texas, which experienced a record number of new cases on Tuesday, elective surgeries in some counties were hastily abandoned, as the state grapples with more than 6,500 people hospitalized from Covid-19.

As the number of new coronavirus cases again breached 40,000, Fauci warned that without a more robust response, the daily number of cases could more than double.

“I would not be surprised if we go up to 100,000 a day if this does not turn around,” he said.

As the new details on the extent of the crisis emerged, Trump – whose press secretary said this week only “embers” of coronavirus remain in the US – launched a series of attacks on Joe Biden, CNN, the New York Times, Elizabeth Warren and MSNBC.

The president tweeted that the report his administration ignored intelligence about a Russian plot to offer bounties to Afghan militants to kill US troops was a “hoax”, and demanded that the Times, which first reported the story, reveal its source.

Trump has claimed he was not briefed on the bounty plot – although the New York Times and CNN have reported that the information was included in a daily intelligence briefing in February. The Washington Post has previously reported that Trump rarely reads those briefings.

The White House national security adviser, Robert O’Brien, said early on Wednesday morning that Trump was not verbally briefed on the reported Russian effort to pay the Taliban to kill US soldiers in Afghanistan because the allegations were not corroborated at the time.

O’Brien, however, declined to say whether the intelligence, which US ally Britain has said it was aware of, had been included in a written presidential briefing earlier this year, Reuters reported.

A little later, O’Brien told reporters in Washington that the president has now been fully briefed on the bounty reports.

In other tweets early Wednesday, as TV and newspaper headlines were focused on the coronavirus crisis, Trump said that Biden was “corrupt”, suggested people damaging federal statues and monuments could spend more than 10 years in prison, and again used the racist term “Pocahontas”, to criticize a plan by Warren to rename US military bases. Warren has claimed to have Native American ancestry.

Amid his frenzy of internet use, Trump also retweeted a post from himself, made a day earlier, which read: “THE LONE WARRIOR!” and lauded the conservative channel Fox News for having bested its rivals in TV ratings, adding “Thank you President Trump”.

Meanwhile, several Texas bar owners filed a $10m federal lawsuit against state governor Greg Abbott, in an attempt to void his executive order shutting down bars for a second time since the beginning of the coronavirus pandemic, as infections surge there.

https://www.theguardian.com/world/2...us-cases-record-one-day-increase-trump-silent
 
There have been actual studies done that BLM protests did not cause an uptick in Covid 19

https://www.economist.com/graphic-d...sts-did-not-cause-an-uptick-in-covid-19-cases

But lying is second nature for trump supporters

And of course people like you dont see the difference between fighting for one's life and rights over an election rally. You need to act dumb because you have no morals and no principles

of course the left are a problem to racist sexist, bigots, they always have been




And the saddest thing? There are studies done to show how lonely young, gullible men mostly make up the Trump cult. Imagine admiring a person who asks people to drink bleach and cannot even speak his own language properly. I think history will study how people can be so dumb as to support this racist, sexist man child who only knows how to throw tantrums and has failed in every single venture in life and is dragging the greatest nation down with him

Save it.

You are bascially saying above it's ok for C19 to spread when fighting for rights, but not for votes.

You lefty lot are hypocrits to the max.

Oh, heard of Lecister in the UK? In lockdown after BLM protests. Go figure.
 
Fearing an election loss, Trump allies push him to be less polarizing

Some of President Donald Trump’s Republican allies are urging him to ditch his divisive messaging and outline a clear vision for a second term, fearing his handling of a series of crises has dimmed his re-election hopes.

With four months to go before he faces Democrat Joe Biden in a Nov. 3 U.S. election, Trump’s opinion poll numbers have sunk as he struggles to manage the coronavirus pandemic, economic woes and protests over racial injustice.

Speaking on condition of anonymity, allies said Trump was often his own worst enemy. They pointed to him retweeting a video on Sunday that included a supporter shouting, “white power,” a slogan among white supremacists, and then deleting it.

“He has to go back and become an acceptable president and then take the wood to Biden,” said a Republican ally close to the White House.

“People are even actually saying, ‘Does he want this anymore?’” the ally said of fellow Republican supporters. “‘Is he looking for an exit strategy?’”

Trump’s falling poll numbers worry some fellow Republicans they will lose control of the U.S. Senate, having already lost leadership of the House of Representatives in 2018.

The source said perhaps as soon as August, Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell may have to advise Republican Senate candidates to distance themselves from Trump if needed to win election and keep their majority.

McConnell’s office did not respond to a request for comment.

Asked about the concerns, White House spokesman Judd Deere said the president “has shown time and again that he’s not afraid to take on the big challenges facing this country” and that Trump and his team are “engaged in an ongoing policy process for a bold second-term agenda.”

Another Republican close to the White House said Trump last week acknowledged privately that he was behind in his race against Biden after a raft of polls showed him losing nationally and in battleground states that will decide the election.

“He knows he’s in trouble,” the Republican source said. “He has no message.”

Hoping to end his slump, Trump is considering making staff changes and ways to broaden his message to draw support beyond his conservative base. Aides say he wants to focus on his ability to lead the country’s economic comeback, his one bright spot in polls.

The view inside the White House, however, is that it will be hard for Trump to gain ground until there is more scrutiny of Biden, who has mostly stayed off the campaign trail due to stay-at-home orders during the virus outbreak.

“Until the media starts calling out Joe Biden for just hanging out in his basement, I don’t know how we end this cycle we’re in because we’re the only ones out there taking shots,” said a Republican official familiar with the internal dynamics at the White House.

Biden has said he would prefer in-person campaigning but that relying on virtual events has allowed him to reach more people directly than he would have otherwise.

A DIVISIVE MESSAGE
During a presidency rife with controversy, Trump often has mastered changing the subject - but less so with the spotlight on a months-long pandemic that has killed more than 127,000 Americans and put millions of Americans out of work.

He has further divided the country with a “law-and-order” message that critics say fails to address the twin issues of police brutality and racial inequality at the heart of nationwide street protests.

At campaign events on Tuesday, Biden said the president was pitting Americans against one another instead of leading.

“They’re looking at this appeal to hate and how it’s divided the country. And they’re tired of it,” Biden said of the public’s changing mood.

Some supporters were disappointed last week when Trump did not directly respond when asked by Fox News Channel anchor Sean Hannity, a close friend, to share plans for his second term.

Trump has outlined his plans in broad strokes that include rebuilding the economy and taking on China, but he has yet to specify what he would do with another four years.

“He needs to articulate why he wants a second term,” said the Republican official familiar with internal White House dynamics.

In a memo on Sunday, deputy campaign manager Bill Stepien battled the poor poll numbers by arguing that Trump leads Biden in voter enthusiasm and remains strong in key states according to internal campaign data.

“We know the media loves to play the game of using their public polling to create an unfavorable scenario and to attempt to discourage President Trump’s supporters,” Stepien said. “As we can see from the obvious level of enthusiasm among Republicans, especially as compared to Joe Biden’s situation, it is not working.”

The latest Reuters/Ipsos poll, conducted this week online, gave Biden an advantage of 8 percentage points over Trump in support among registered voters. Biden had a 10-point edge in a similar poll last week.

With his signature, large-scale rallies sidelined by fears of COVID-19 infections, Trump has been considering doing media interviews beyond conservative Fox News, his usual venue, one ally said.

There have been some discussions of increasing the role of senior adviser Jared Kushner, Trump’s son-in-law, who is already heavily involved in the campaign, two officials said.

On Wednesday, a source confirmed that Michael Glassner, who organized Trump’s rallies, had been “reassigned” as a legal adviser for the campaign following the disappointing rally last month in Tulsa.

Trump’s 2016 Arizona chairman, Jeff DeWit, will join the campaign as chief operating officer to oversee the final stretch to Election Day, the source said.
https://uk.reuters.com/article/uk-u...-him-to-be-less-polarizing-idUKKBN2427GZ?il=0
 
US President Donald Trump has used a 4 July address to tout the country's "progress" against Covid-19, despite a nationwide spike in cases.

Amid criticism of his handling of the pandemic, he said China - where the virus originated - must be "held fully accountable".

The president also berated protesters who toppled monuments of US historical figures in recent anti-racism protests.

"Their goal is demolition," he declared.

In a combative tone that echoed his Friday night speech at Mount Rushmore in South Dakota, the president pledged to defeat the "radical left, the Marxists, the anarchists, the agitators, the looters".

He spoke from the White House lawn, flanked by his wife Melania, to a crowd that included US soldiers and frontline medical staff.

Praising "our nation's scientific brilliance," Mr Trump said the US "will likely have a therapeutic and/or vaccine solution long before the end of the year".

The head of the World Health Organization, Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, warned in June that scientists may never be able to create an effective vaccine against the coronavirus, observing: "The estimate is we may have a vaccine within one year. If accelerated, it could be even less than that, but by a couple of months. That's what scientists are saying."

The US has the world's highest number of coronavirus deaths and infections, and confirmed more than 43,000 new Covid-19 cases in 24 hours on Saturday, according to figures from Johns Hopkins University. Florida, where the outbreak is especially acute, saw 11,458 new cases.

The president made no reference to the nearly 130,000 US deaths linked to the pandemic. He said the US had tested almost 40 million people, adding that 99% of coronavirus cases were "totally harmless" - a claim for which he gave no evidence.

Mr Trump's comments were followed by a military flyover involving various aircraft, including B-52 bombers and F-35 fighter jets.

A massive firework display was later held in Washington DC, watched by spectators who gathered on the National Mall.

Ahead of Mr Trump's speech, Black Lives Matter protesters gathered outside the White House - the scene of many recent anti-racism demonstrations in the wake of George Floyd's killing in police custody.

What else did Trump say?
Addressing America's coronavirus battle, the president said his administration had "made a lot of progress" and "our strategy is moving along well", despite the nationwide surge in infections.

Mr Trump, who faces re-election this year and appears keen to fire up his conservative base with appeals to nationalism, accused China of trying to conceal the virus outbreak - a charge Beijing denies.

US-China battle over coronavirus
"China's secrecy, deceptions and cover-up allowed [the virus] to spread all over the world," he alleged.

Elaborating on his plan to create a "National Garden of American Heroes" featuring statues of renowned Americans, Mr Trump said the country's rich heritage belongs to citizens of all races.

"The patriots who built our country were not villains," he said. "They were heroes."

How did the US mark 4 July?
Many 4 July events were cancelled on public health grounds, with beaches in Florida and California closed, city parades cancelled and firework displays curtailed.

Joe Biden, the Democratic Party rival to Mr Trump in this year's presidential election, tweeted that "this Fourth of July, one of the most patriotic things you can do is wear a mask".

Firework displays are a traditional highlight of 4 July, but an estimated 80% of cities and towns have cancelled their shows.

New York City usually holds an hour-long extravaganza, but this year it was replaced by five-minute displays through the week, organised by Macy's department store, with a final televised one on Saturday - all at undisclosed locations.

Major League Baseball cancelled its 2020 All-Star Game for the first time since World War Two.

https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-us-canada-53293542
 
A top health official from US president Donald Trump’s administration said on Sunday it was not clear whether it will be safe to hold the Republican National Convention in Jacksonville next month, as Florida sees record numbers of coronavirus cases.

Stephen Hahn, the Food and Drug Administration commissioner, also refused to confirm president Trump’s claim that 99% of coronavirus cases were harmless and called the situation a “serious problem.”

With record numbers of people testing positive for the virus in Jacksonville and across Florida, Hahn was asked if it would be safe to hold the typically large RNC gathering in just seven weeks.

“I think it’s too early to tell,” Hahn said on CNN’s “State of the Union” program, Reuters reports.

“We will have to see how this unfolds in Florida and elsewhere around the country.”

The Republican Party moved most of the convention activities to Jacksonville from Charlotte after a battle over coronavirus safety concerns with North Carolina Governor Roy Cooper, a Democrat.

Jacksonville, led by Republican mayor Lenny Curry, began requiring masks in public last week after cases continued to rise.

https://www.theguardian.com/world/l...200000-as-australias-toughest-lockdown-begins
 
Joe Biden on Tuesday assailed Donald Trump for questioning the patriotism of Senator Tammy Duckworth – a combat veteran and Purple Heart recipient who lost both her legs while serving in Iraq.

At a virtual fundraiser attended by Duckworth last night, Biden called Trump’s comments “disgusting” and “sickening” and said they are a “reflection of the depravity of what’s going on in the White House right now.

Trump’s criticism followed a reprehensible monologue from Fox News’ Tucker Carlson, which claimed that the Illinois senator “despise America” because she said there should be a “national dialogue” on the removal of monuments to the founding fathers, including the nation’s first president, George Washington, who owned slaves.

Trump shared Carlson’s rant about Duckworth on Twitter and his campaign issued a statement accusing her of “using her military service to deflect from her support for the left-wing campaign to villainize America’s founding.”

Duckworth replied to Carlson on Twitter, challenging him to “walk a mile in my legs and then tell me whether or not I love America?”

Biden said he was “glad” that he “wasn’t standing next to President Trump”, implying he might have physically challenged the president over his attacks on Duckworth. But Biden quickly acknowledged that the war veteran and US senator could handle herself and needed no help from him in standing up to the president.

Duckworth is among several women Biden is considering as a running mate.

“While in fact he’s coddling Putin — Putin carries him around like a puppy in one of those little puppy cages,” Biden continued, attacking Trump for not taking action in response to the Russian bounty intelligence. “While that’s going on he attacks, he attacks the senator from Illinois who is a literal hero, combat veteran, lost both legs fighting for her country, and he says she’s not a patriot. Folks we cannot let this stand.”
 
Mexican president to hold first meeting with Trump as U.S. election looms

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Mexican President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador meets with his U.S. counterpart, Donald Trump, for the first time on Wednesday, in a potentially awkward encounter that has drawn flak from some U.S. Democrats unhappy it is coming so close to the presidential election.

The leftist leader has brushed off criticism at home to push ahead with plans to meet Trump, a Republican widely disliked in Mexico because of his incendiary remarks about its people.

The meeting is ostensibly meant to celebrate a new North American trade deal, but friction over illegal immigration and energy investment in Mexico could surface as the two men get together on Wednesday afternoon.

Lopez Obrador is being joined by a delegation of business officials, including Mexico’s richest man, telecoms magnate Carlos Slim. They will dine on Wednesday evening with Trump and American business executives at the White House.

Ongoing Mexican support for Trump’s immigration policies is likely to feature prominently on the agenda, as well as how to mitigate coronavirus disruptions and keep goods flowing between the neighbors, whose economies are deeply entwined.

It is unclear if Trump will address disputes between U.S. companies and Lopez Obrador’s government, which is rolling back a 2013-14 opening of the energy industry in favor of a state-led model, and has called a number of major contracts into question.

A senior Trump administration official said Mexico’s government had pledged to uphold those contracts.

“So, we are certainly hoping that they will keep their word,” the official said in a briefing with reporters.

The trip, Lopez Obrador’s first foreign visit since taking office in late 2018, saw him travel commercially to Washington. One video posted on Twitter on Tuesday showed him wearing a face mask and flying coach on a packed plane.

The summit was pitched to mark the July start of the United States-Mexico-Canada Agreement (USMCA), which replaced the North American Free Trade Agreement that Trump has called a “nightmare” that cost American jobs.

But the two-day gathering was scaled back to a single day after Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau declined to join, amid new U.S. threats of tariffs on Canadian goods.

Lopez Obrador’s critics and some U.S. Democrats say Trump wants to use the meeting to drum up support among Hispanic voters ahead of the Nov. 3 presidential election. Opinion polls show Hispanic voters favor Trump’s Democratic challenger, Joe Biden.

Lopez Obrador will not meet Biden during the trip.

https://www.reuters.com/article/us-...ith-trump-as-u-s-election-looms-idUSKBN2491MA
 
I feel Democrats would've had a better chance with Sanders and even Pelosi.

Biden is unlikely to beat Trump but let's see.

No chance. Pelosi is less liked than Hillary. She's an extremely skillful politician, but outside California she isn't liked by either centrist or leftist democrats. She would never have made it out of the primary... There a reason she has never run for President

Sanders had incredible support from the left-wing of the party, but that is only a loud minority. Majority of the democrats, and majority of the voting population in general are centrists who want to return back to 'normal' times. That's not who Sanders is.

Sanders also doesn't have support from the Latino population (who still have bad memories of socialism and associate Sanders with that), and the Black population (who have no history with Sanders, and can't connect with a candidate from Vermont [1.4% Black] the way they can with a candidate from Delaware [21% Black])

Biden may not be a great candidate from a policy perspective, and I'm not really sure what direction he will take the country in. But without a doubt he has the best chance of winning of any Democrat not names Obama
 
No chance. Pelosi is less liked than Hillary. She's an extremely skillful politician, but outside California she isn't liked by either centrist or leftist democrats. She would never have made it out of the primary... There a reason she has never run for President

Sanders had incredible support from the left-wing of the party, but that is only a loud minority. Majority of the democrats, and majority of the voting population in general are centrists who want to return back to 'normal' times. That's not who Sanders is.

Sanders also doesn't have support from the Latino population (who still have bad memories of socialism and associate Sanders with that), and the Black population (who have no history with Sanders, and can't connect with a candidate from Vermont [1.4% Black] the way they can with a candidate from Delaware [21% Black])

Biden may not be a great candidate from a policy perspective, and I'm not really sure what direction he will take the country in. But without a doubt he has the best chance of winning of any Democrat not names Obama

You made some great points but I still can't see Biden beating Trump.

It seems like Democrats don't currently have a proper candidate. They need to return to centrism and focus on getting a better candidate.
 
You made some great points but I still can't see Biden beating Trump.

It seems like Democrats don't currently have a proper candidate. They need to return to centrism and focus on getting a better candidate.

Too late for another candidate for this cycle. And I do agree with you, defeating an incumbent president is incredibly difficult and rare regardless of how unpopular the sitting president is. But Biden has raised a ton of money, and trending positive for months now.

Covid-19 also adds a different dynamic - how will voter turnout be? will mail-in ballots be implemented nationwide? how will that handling of the virus impact Trump? how much can the economy and unemployment recover before November?

I think it can go either way. We are still almost 4 months away - lot can and will change in that time.
 
You made some great points but I still can't see Biden beating Trump.

It seems like Democrats don't currently have a proper candidate. They need to return to centrism and focus on getting a better candidate.

Biden was the centrist in the primary, which was one of the reasons he won. The other candidates like sanders and warren were too far left.

Had it not been for corona, i would say trump would most likely win, but with the economy down, trump will be hurt in the swing states. And with the George Floyd killing African American turnout should be high, so it will be hard for Biden to lose, even though he is an embarrassment.
 
Six taskforces designed to unify the Democratic party after a contentious primary have submitted policy recommendations to Joe Biden, pushing the presumptive nominee to adopt more ambitious proposals on issues from climate change to criminal justice reform.

The taskforces were appointed in April to forge a consensus between the party establishment and its activist base in six key policy areas: climate change, criminal justice reform, the economy, education, healthcare and immigration.

The working groups combined supporters of Biden’s rival, Bernie Sanders, with Biden allies and staff. Biden has remained opposed to many of the boldest policy demands from progressives, including Medicare for All, a Green New Deal and the Defund the Police movement. But he has signaled an openness to broadening his platform.

In response to the compounding crises of the coronavirus, its economic fallout and social unrest in response to police brutality against black Americans, Biden has expanded his policy ambitions – at least rhetorically – and insisted that the “blinders” have come off and more Americans are open to big ideas.

A 110-page policy document will be submitted to the Democratic National Committee to consider as it designs the platform ahead of the convention in August.

“For the millions of Americans facing hardship due to President Trump’s failed coronavirus response, this election offers the chance to usher in a stronger, fairer economy that works for our working families,” Biden said in a statement.

“I commend the taskforces for their service and helping build a bold, transformative platform for our party and for our country. And I am deeply grateful to Senator Sanders for working together to unite our party and deliver real, lasting change for generations to come.”

Sanders said: “While Joe Biden and I, and our supporters, have strong disagreements about some of the most important issues facing our country, we also understand that we must come together in order to defeat Donald Trump, the most dangerous president in modern American history.

“Though the end result is not what I or my supporters would have written alone, the taskforces have created a good policy blueprint that will move this country in a much-needed progressive direction and substantially improve the lives of working families.”
 
The rally by US President Donald Trump in Tulsa last month "more than likely" added to the surge in virus cases there, local authorities said.

Tulsa County this week recorded a record of daily new cases, with 266 on Wednesday.

"The past two days we've had almost 500 cases, and we know we had several large events a little over two weeks ago, which is about right," Tulsa health department director Bruce Dart said.

"So I guess we just connect the dots."

Neither Trump, nor many in the crowd, wore masks at the event - and several of the president's staff tested positive after the rally.

In response, a Trump campaign spokesman compared coverage of the rally to that of the recent Black Lives Matter protests.

"There were literally no health precautions to speak of as thousands looted, rioted, and protested in the streets," he said.

"It’s obvious that the media’s concern about large gatherings begins and ends with Trump rallies."
 
Biden blasts Trump's handling ahead of recovery plan

US Democratic presidential candidate Joe Biden has attacked President Donald Trump's handling of the coronavirus crisis after the number of confirmed infections in the country breached three million this week.

"While other countries safely reopen their economies and their citizens get back to work, businesses in America are being forced to shut down - again," Biden said, adding that Mr Trump's "failures make countless workers and families face an uncertain future".

On Tuesday, more than 60,000 new cases were reported in the US, a new daily record.

Trump, who has said that the US is recording a high number of infections "because we do the greatest testing", later said that America was "in a good place" regarding the pandemic.

Biden is due to outline a $700bn (£554bn) economic recovery plan later today to help tackle the impact of Covid-19.

The former vice-president's campaign earlier said the funds would be focused on US manufacturing and innovation.
 
Democratic presidential contender Joe Biden has laid out his rescue plan for the coronavirus-crippled US economy, while berating President Donald Trump as incompetent.

Mr Biden said his $700bn (£560bn) plan would be the biggest investment in the US economy since World War Two.

The "Build Back Better" agenda, he said, would spur a manufacturing and technology jobs boom.

The Trump campaign responded that the plan would inflict "catastrophe".

Mr Biden is all but guaranteed to face off with Mr Trump in this November's presidential election.

Speaking at a metalworks firm near his childhood hometown of Scranton, Pennsylvania, on Thursday, Mr Biden said the president's failures had "come with a terrible human cost and a deep economic toll".

"Time and again, working families are paying the price for this administration's incompetence," Mr Biden said.

November's election is expected to be dominated by the coronavirus pandemic and its economic fallout, which has pushed tens of millions of Americans into unemployment. More than 130,000 people have died with the virus.

Many voters are concerned by the Trump administration's handling of the pandemic. His divisive approach to the country's recent wave of anti-racism protests has also come under sharp scrutiny.

Opinion polls show Mr Biden with an almost double-digit lead over Mr Trump.

Analysts have urged caution in over-interpreting the polls, but Mr Biden's lead is far greater than that of Mr Trump's 2016 opponent Hillary Clinton at the same point in the campaign.

What else did Mr Biden say in his speech?

The former vice-president, who served under Barack Obama, struck an optimistic tone as he presented an economic programme, which he said would create at least five million jobs in manufacturing and innovation.

A key theme of his plan, Mr Biden said, was to "Buy American". He proposed a $400bn increase in government spending on US-made products, in addition to spending $300bn on the research and development of new technologies, including electric vehicles and 5G networks.

"When the federal government spends taxpayers' money, we should use it to buy American products and support American jobs," he said

Pennsylvania is a battleground state seen as critical to the outcome of the election. Mr Trump won it in 2016 by a thin margin.

The "Buy American" tagline has drawn comparisons to President's Trump's "American First" agenda.

But Mr Biden said Mr Trump had failed to "bring back jobs and manufacturing" and, during the pandemic, had protected wealthy "cronies and pals" instead of working-class families.

"The truth is throughout this crisis, Donald Trump has been almost singularly focused on the stock market, the Dow and NASDAQ. Not you. Not your families," Mr Biden said.

Joe Biden will not hold campaign rallies
The Trump campaign took a dim view of Mr Biden's economic proposals.

"Mr Biden's wilful attack on our jobs, our families, and the American way of life will reverse all the gains we've made together and plunge us into economic catastrophe," spokesman Hogan Gidley said.

Where are we in the election race?

Mr Biden, 77, officially secured the Democratic presidential nomination in June. He had been the effective nominee since left-wing Bernie Sanders withdrew from the race in April.

It is Mr Biden's third bid for the presidency, after failed runs in 1988 and 2008.

Mr Obama endorsed Mr Biden in April, saying in a video that his former vice-president had "all the qualities we need in a president right now".

A former US Senator from Delaware, Mr Biden is yet to choose his running mate - the person who would become vice-president should he be elected. Kamala Harris, a Democratic senator from California, is considered the front-runner.

Who could be Joe Biden's running mate?

Both the Democratic and Republican party conventions are scheduled for August. At those events, delegates will formally choose each party's nominees for president and vice-president in the 2020 election, due to take place on 3 November.

https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-us-canada-53358574
 
Trump postpones rally planned in storm-threatened New Hampshire

United States President Donald Trump is postponing his planned rally on Saturday in New Hampshire, the White House has said, citing a tropical storm threatening parts of the mid-Atlantic and southern New England.

Press secretary Kayleigh McEnany told reporters travelling to Florida with the president on Friday the event - slated to be held in an aircraft hangar in Portsmouth - would be delayed by a week or two. She cited the threat of Tropical Storm Fay, which is expected to bring rain to the region.

"The rally scheduled for Saturday in Portsmouth, New Hampshire has been postponed for safety reasons because of Tropical Storm Fay," Trump campaign communications director Tim Murtaugh said in a statement. "It will be rescheduled and a new date will be announced soon."

The event was to mark Trump's first political rally after a multiweek hiatus caused by a nationwide surge in coronavirus cases and after his planned comeback in Oklahoma turned into a debacle.

Trump, trailing in the polls, is eager to signal that "normal" life can resume despite a rampaging coronavirus pandemic that has killed more than 130,000 Americans. He is to hold his first in-person fundraiser in a month on Friday in Florida.

The Portsmouth rally was scheduled after aides spent weeks studying what went wrong in Tulsa three weeks ago. The Tulsa event was billed as a massive, defiant return to the political stage but instead produced a humiliating sea of empty seats and questions about the campaign's ability to attract people to large events in a pandemic.

Trump's Friday fundraiser takes him to a terrain where COVID-19's surge threatens his hold on a must-win state and raises questions about Republican aims to hold their nominating convention in Jacksonville next month. Trump will also hold a small event supporting the people of Venezuela and visit US Southern Command in Miami to highlight a reduction in the flow of illegal drugs into the US, though much of the credit belongs to the pandemic, which has paralyzed economies, closed borders and severed supply chains.

Unlike the one in Tulsa, which was held indoors where the virus more easily circulates, the rally in Portsmouth was to be partially outdoors, held in an aeroplane hangar open on one side with the crowd spilling out onto the tarmac before Air Force One.

"All of Donald Trump's rallies and all of his events are electric," said campaign spokesperson Hogan Gidley. "The president wants to go in there and talk about all the accomplishments he's done in his first term and how he's made people's lives better."

Despite the risks, the Trump campaign believes it needs to return to the road, both to animate the president, who draws energy from his crowds, and to inject life into a campaign that is facing a strong challenge from Democratic candidate Joe Biden.

"The campaign feels he needs to be out there, but every time he speaks in front of crowds, there is a chance the virus spreads," said Julian Zelizer, a presidential historian at Princeton University. "But it's just as bad if he comes out to an empty crowd, which could be a sign that people are not enthused or they are scared."

On Friday, Biden pointed to Florida's rising coronavirus cases, saying: "It is clear that Trump's response - ignore, blame others, and distract - has come at the expense of Florida families."

The Trump campaign has also been eager to return to the road to draw a contrast with Biden, whom it has painted as being marooned in the basement of his Delaware home. Biden has travelled by car around Delaware or nearby Pennsylvania for a handful of events, and, in a contrast to Trump, wears a mask and observes social distancing guidelines.

Biden has been unapologetic about following recommendations from public health officials amid the pandemic. He has conducted regular online fundraisers and campaign events from makeshift television studios at his house, while sitting for remote video interviews with national networks and local stations in battleground states. He holds regular telephone, video and some in-person meetings with advisers.
https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2020...orm-threatened-hampshire-200710145540313.html
 
Poll shows broad disapproval of Trump's coronavirus response

Nearly two-thirds of Americans disapprove of US President Donald Trump's handling of the coronavirus pandemic, according to a new ABC/Ipsos poll.

Some 67 percent of those surveyed said they disapproved of Trump's efforts - the highest level of dissatisfaction with his response since the pandemic began. The drop was driven by plunging support among independents and even waning support among Republicans, ABC News said
 
Roger Stone: Critics blast Trump for commuting ex-adviser's jail term

Leading Democrats have condemned US President Donald Trump's decision to commute the prison sentence of his former adviser and friend Roger Stone.

Presidential contender Joe Biden's spokesman accused Mr Trump of abuse of power and "laying waste" to US values.

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

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

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

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

The White House said Stone was the victim of an attempt by opponents to undermine the presidency.

The president has been accused by political critics of undermining the justice system by criticising criminal cases against Stone and other former aides.

Mr Trump has also publicly complained about the prosecutions of onetime campaign chairman Paul Manafort and former White House National Security Adviser Michael Flynn.

What has the reaction been?

Mr Biden's spokesman Bill Russo said Mr Trump could not be shamed and could only be stopped at the ballot box.

"President Trump has once again abused his power, releasing this commutation on a Friday night, hoping to yet again avoid scrutiny as he lays waste to the norms and the values that make our country a shining beacon to the rest of the world," he said.

House of Representatives Intelligence Committee Chairman Adam Schiff condemned Mr Trump's clemency.

"With this commutation," said the top Democratic lawmaker, "Trump makes clear that there are two systems of justice in America: one for his criminal friends, and one for everyone else."

Democratic Senator Elizabeth Warren said it showed Donald Trump was the most corrupt president in history.

But the president's personal lawyer, Rudy Giuliani, welcomed the news, saying Roger Stone's sentence was draconian.

Mr Stone himself told reporters that under the terms of the commutation he could now appeal against his sentence, and was confident that he could expose "an enormous amount of corruption" at his trial.
Read more: https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-us-canada-53373128
 
Back
Top