Tag: Ex-US President Donald Trump

  • Trump-era policy: Almost 1,000 migrant families still separated

    Trump-era policy: Almost 1,000 migrant families still separated

    In a crackdown on border crossings between 2017 and 2021, more than 3,800 children were separated from their families.

    Nearly 1,000 children who were forcibly separated from their families at the US southern border as a result of a widely denounced US policy known as “family separation” have still not been returned.

    According to officials, a task force established by President Joe Biden has helped about 689 children find their families. Before the task force was established, 2,176 additional children were reunited with their family members in part as a result of legal action taken by organisations like the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU).

    However, out of an estimated 3,881 children taken from their families between 2017 and 2021, a total of 998 remain separated as of February 1, the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) said in a fact sheet on Thursday.

    But officials expressed optimism that the number would continue to decline as the task force uses governmental records and non-governmental organisations (NGOs) to locate fractured families.

    “The number of new families identified continues to increase, as families come forward and identify themselves,” the DHS said in its statement.

    Of the 998 children who have yet to return to their families, 148 are “in the process of reunification”, the fact sheet said. Another 183 families “have been informed of the opportunity to reunify” through an NGO.

    In a meeting with reporters on Thursday, DHS Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas recounted meeting a mother who was separated from her 13-year-old daughter under the policy, then reunited years later when she was 16.

    Mayorkas said the daughter “still could not understand how her mother would let her be separated. She didn’t understand the force behind the separation”.

    Some families split apart by the separation policy have been connected with mental health resources, DHS officials said. But under the Biden administration, the US Justice Department has argued that victims of the policy are not entitled to restitution.

    The family separation policy was initiated under former Republican President Donald Trump as part of a crackdown on unauthorised crossings along the US-Mexico border.

    It was one of several controversial immigration policies enacted under the Trump administration, including an executive order to ban people from various Muslims-majority countries from travelling to the US.

    Biden called the family separations a “human tragedy” and was highly critical of Trump’s hardline positions on immigration during his campaign for the presidency. Biden defeated Trump in the 2020 election and began his term in January 2021.

    Shortly after entering office, Biden reversed several key Trump policies, including the executive order critics had dubbed the “Muslim ban”. In February 2021, Biden also created the Interagency Task Force on the Reunification of Families to address the separation policy. Thursday’s statistics mark the task force’s second anniversary.

    However, Biden has come under fire from migrant and refugee rights groups as well as members of his own party for keeping some of his predecessor’s immigration policies in place.

    One of the most high-profile is Title 42, a Trump-era policy that allowed the government to turn back asylum-seekers in the name of combatting COVID-19.

    Immigrant rights groups have denounced the policy for infringing on asylum seekers’ right to due process, and the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has declared the policy “no longer necessary”.

    The Biden administration initially tried to end the programme but Republican politicians pressed for Title 42 to remain in place, pursuing the matter in court. In December, the Supreme Court upheld the policy and is set to hear arguments over it this month

    Under pressure from Republicans, as the number of border crossings surged, the Biden administration announced a plan in January to immediately turn away asylum-seekers from Cuba, Haiti and Nicaragua who arrived at the border – similar to a policy already in place for Venezuelans.

    Instead, the administration said it would accept up to 30,000 people per month from those four countries through an application system that requires background checks and US-based sponsorship for each asylum seeker.

    While the Biden administration maintains it “continues to prepare for the end of the Title 42”, critics of the new policy say it amounts to an expansion of Trump’s programme, with its automatic expulsions and rigid requirements.

    In a press release, the ACLU said Biden’s decision “further ties his administration to the poisonous anti-immigrant policies of the Trump era instead of restoring fair access to asylum protections”.

  • Trump New York trial: Organization found guilty of tax evasion

    Family real estate company of former US President Donald Trump has been found guilty of tax evasion.

    After two days of jury deliberation in New York, the Trump Organization was convicted on all counts on Tuesday.

    The business is synonymous with the former president, but neither he nor his family members were personally prosecuted.

    Mr Trump said he was “disappointed” with the verdict and called the investigation a “witch hunt.”

    For more than a decade, the company was convicted of enriching its top executives with off-the-books benefits.

    Prosecutors stated that untaxed perks included luxury cars and private school fees, which compensated for lower wages and thus reduced the amount of tax the company was required to pay.

    The company is expected to face a fine of around $1.6m (£1.3m) and may also face difficulty in securing loans and financing in the future.

    Mr Trump previously criticised the trial as being politically motivated. He also attacked his long-serving former chief financial executive Allen Weisselberg after he pleaded guilty in August and testified against the business.

    In his most recent statement, attacking the verdict, the former Republican leader asked why the Trump Organization should be prosecuted for Mr Weisselberg’s “personal conduct” – accusing him of “committing tax fraud on his personal tax returns”.

    “There was RELIANCE by us on a then highly respected and expensive accounting firm, and law firm, to do this work,” Mr Trump said in the statement issued by his office.

    “This case is unprecedented and… is a continuation of the Greatest Political Witch Hunt in the History of our Country,” he said, adding that New York City was now a “hard place to be a Trump”.

    Prosecutors accused the Trump Organization – which operates hotels, golf courses and other properties around the world – of having a “culture of fraud and deception” during the six-week trial.

    They said it ran a scheme that allowed some executives to “understate their compensation” so that their taxes “were significantly less than the amounts that should have been paid”.

    “The smorgasbord of benefits is designed to keep its top executives happy and loyal,” prosecutor Joshua Steinglass told the jury during closing arguments.

    Two subsidiaries of the Trump Organization – Trump Corp and Trump Payroll Corp – were convicted on all 17 charges of tax fraud and falsifying business records.

    Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg praised the verdict on Tuesday, saying the case was “about greed and cheating”.

    “For 13 years the Trump Corporation and the Trump Payroll Corporation got away with a scheme that awarded high-level executives with lavish perks and compensation while intentionally concealing the benefits from the taxing authorities,” he said.

    Trump Organization former chief financial officer Allen Weisselberg looks on as then-U.S. Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump speaks
    IMAGE SOURCE,REUTERS Image caption, Allen Weisselberg, who worked for Donald Trump for decades, pleaded guilty to tax crimes in August (file image)

    Mr Weisselberg, 75, testified against the company as part of a plea deal he struck with prosecutors that will mean he spends no more than five months in jail.

    He will be jailed at the notorious Rikers Island prison and must pay back more than $1.7m (£1.4m) in concealed income.

    Following the verdict, the judge set a sentencing date of 13 January.

    Mr Trump and his three eldest children are facing a separate civil lawsuit which could see them banned from doing business in the state.

    New York Attorney General Letitia James, who is leading that civil case, issued a statement hailing Tuesday’s verdict as a “big victory”.

    “[It] shows that we will hold individuals and organisations accountable when they violate our laws to line their pockets,” she said.

  • Donald Trump calls for end of US Constitution

    Donald Trump has proposed the “termination” of the United States Constitution, spurring a sharp rebuke from the White House as the former president revisits debunked conspiracy theories about the 2020 election, which he lost.

    Mr Trump took to his social media platform two years ago to declare himself “the rightful winner” after steering largely clear of his election defeat in a speech on November 15 when announcing his intention to run for president again in 2024.

    He stated that it was time to “throw out” the results of the 2020 presidential election or hold a “new election.”

    “A Massive Fraud of this type and magnitude allows for the termination of all rules, regulations, and articles, even those found in the Constitution,” Mr Trump wrote in a post on Truth Social.

    “Our great ‘Founders’ did not want, and would not condone False & Fraudulent Elections!”

    Later on Saturday, White House spokesman Andrew Bates slammed Mr Trump’s statement, calling the US Constitution a “sacrosanct document”.

    A man in a suit waves his right hand as he stands before a large banner that says: "Make America Great Again".
    Mr Trump announced on November 15 that he’d be running for president for a third time, almost two years ahead of the 2024 election.(AP: Andrew Harnik)

    “Attacking the constitution and all it stands for is anathema to the soul of our nation and should be universally condemned,” Mr Bates said.

    “You cannot only love America when you win.”

    In a subsequent post on Truth Social, Mr Trump doubled down on his comments and distanced himself further from leadership within his own Republican Party, baiting Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell to weigh in.

    “I wonder what Mitch McConnell, the RINOS (Republicans in name only), and all of the weak Republicans who couldn’t get the Presidential Election of 2020 approved and out of the way fast enough, are thinking now?” Mr Trump wrote.

    A pinkish Mediterranean-style villa sits on a manicured green lawn surrounded by palm trees under a bright blue sky.
    Mr Trump dined with rapper Kanye West and White supremacist Nick Fuentes at Mar-a-Lago on November 22. (AP Photo: Pablo Martinez Monsivais)

    Mr McConnell has infuriated the former president by indirectly criticising him after hosting a dinner on November 22 at his Mar-a-Lago resort with rapper Kanye West — who had made a series of anti-Semitic remarks — and Holocaust-denying White nationalist Nick Fuentes.

    Mr Trump has since denied inviting Mr Fuentes or being aware of his background, saying that Mr Fuentes just followed Mr West — now known by the name of Ye —  into the resort as an extra guest.

    At the dinner, Mr West reportedly berated Mr Trump for not doing enough to help the January 6 rioters who wanted to stop then vice-president Mike Pence from certifying the 2020 election results that would confirm Joe Biden as the 46th US president.

    Nine days later — last Thursday — Mr Trump came out vigorously in support of those convicted in the attacks on the US Capitol in a message to a right-wing political group.

    In a video played at a fundraiser held by the Patriot Freedom Project, Mr Trump said the January 6 rioters were being dealt with “very unfairly” by the courts.

    “People have been treated unconstitutionally in my opinion and very, very unfairly, and we’re going to get to the bottom of it,” he said in the video, shot in his office in front of a framed photo of him and North Korean leader Kim Jong Un.

    In a September interview, Mr Trump said that he would consider issuing pardons and providing an official apology to January 6 defendants if re-elected president and was “financially supporting” those involved.

    Rapper Kanye West shows President Donald Trump a photograph on his phone of a hydrogen plane in the Oval Office.
    Kanye West, seen here at the White House in 2018, reportedly urged Mr Trump to do more for the January 6 defendants.(AP: Evan Vucci)

    According to this year’s January 6 hearings held by Congress, Trump supporters acted violently after believing “the big lie” that the 2020 election was “stolen”, despite a lack of evidence and a multitude of failed legal challenges.

    Mr Trump’s posts came after Twitter’s new owner, Elon Musk, announced that he would show how the social media platform had suppressed “free speech” in the run-up to the 2020 election by favouring the Democratic Party in blocking explosive content.

    That included reports of damaging material found on the laptop of Hunter Biden, the once-wayward son of the current US president, as first reported by the Rupert Murdoch-owned New York Post.

    Republicans hope that fresh revelations about Hunter Biden’s possible former links to Ukraine and his other salacious activities could give them a political edge when they retake the House of Representatives in early 2023, possibly leading to congressional hearings.

    But the Republican Party’s underwhelming performance in last month’s midterm elections — it narrowly won the House but was unable to retake control of the Senate because of the flop of so-called MAGA candidates — has weakened Mr Trump’s once unchallenged position as conservative kingmaker.

    Some of the losing candidates — including former TV anchor Kari Lake who was beaten by Democrat Katie Hobbs in the Arizona Governor race — have followed the Trump playbook by refusing to concede defeat while claiming widespread election fraud without evidence.

    Mr Trump is also fighting multiple legal challenges on state and federal levels, including an investigation into why he took classified government documents to his Florida property after leaving the White House in January 2021.

    He also saw the US Supreme Court last week reject his request to block a congressional committee from obtaining his federal income tax returns, which promise to inflict more political damage in the final days of the Democrat-held House.

    Even so, an Emerson College poll released on November 22 gave Mr Trump a 30-percentage-point lead over his potential challenger Ron DeSantis — the Florida governor — in a hypothetical 2024 Republican primary.

    But he trailed Mr Biden by 4 points in a possible presidential election rematch in 2024 when Mr Trump would be 78 years old and Mr Biden would be turning 82.

  • Trump taxes: Supreme Court clears Democrats to see returns

    The US Supreme Court has cleared the way for ex-President Donald Trump‘s tax forms to be released to a Democratic-controlled congressional committee.

    The justices rejected Mr Trump’s bid in October to block a lower court’s ruling that granted the panel’s request for his financial records.

    The move is a blow to Mr Trump, who has for years kept his returns sealed.

    Mr Trump became the first president in 40 years not to release his taxes after announcing his first presidential run.

    The House of Representatives Ways and Means Committee has been seeking access to his records since 2019.

    Mr Trump, who launched his third campaign for the White House last week, is facing several investigations related to his business practices. He denies any wrongdoing.

    The Supreme Court’s brief response on Tuesday did not note dissent from any of the judges.

    The decision means the US treasury department can deliver the tax returns from 2015-20 for Mr Trump and some of his businesses to the Democratic-controlled committee.

    It comes just before the Republicans take control of the House after this month’s midterm elections.

    Donald Trump was almost able to run out the clock on the congressional request to view his tax returns.

    Almost.

    With just over a month left of Democratic control of the House of Representatives, the Supreme Court has given the green light for the treasury department to provide the documents to the Ways and Means Committee.

    Given that the treasury department is run by the Biden administration, the process of handing over the documents should proceed expeditiously.

    Democrats won’t have long to review them before Republicans take over on 3 January, however.

    And coming up with any proposed changes to federal law regarding presidential tax returns – the stated purpose of the congressional request – seems a pointless effort with the little time remaining before congressional adjournment.

    But a few weeks may be long enough to unearth evidence of any unusual or potentially improper accounting by Mr Trump – and for those details to leak to the public.

    And that, many assume, was the real motive behind the request.

    Mr Trump has notched two other defeats this year from the conservative-dominated Supreme Court, three of whose justices he appointed.

    In October, the court refused to weigh in on the legal fight over the FBI search of Mr Trump’s Mar-a-Lago home. Agents served a warrant at the estate in August on suspicion that the former president improperly handled classified documents.

    In January, the court refused to act to stop the National Archives from handing over documents to the committee investigating the 6 January 2021 riot by Trump supporters at the US Capitol.

    Mr Trump has rejected the Ways and Means Committee’s hunt for his taxes as politically motivated.

    The chairman of the committee, Congressman Richard Neal, said in a statement that lawmakers “will now conduct the oversight that we’ve sought for the last three and a half years”. He did not say whether the committee plans to publicly release Mr Trump’s tax statements.

    Last year, a Trump-appointed judge on the court of appeals in Washington DC ruled that the House did have a legitimate need to review the forms.

    The committee argued it needed to see Mr Trump’s records to determine if tax officials were properly auditing presidential candidates, and whether any new legislation was necessary.

    They had argued to the lower court that Mr Trump’s refusal blocked Congress from conducting oversight of the executive and judicial branches.

    Source: BBC.com 

  • US midterms: Millions of Americans will vote, with the fate of Congress at stake

    On Tuesday, millions of Americans will vote in the midterm elections, which will determine the balance of power in Congress.

    The entire United States House of Representatives, roughly one-third of the United States Senate, and key state governorships are all up for grabs.

    In opposing rallies, President Joe Biden, a Democrat, and ex-President Donald Trump, a Republican, made their closing arguments.

    Mr. Biden’s ability to pass legislation will be hampered if Republicans win the House, as most projections predict.

    Democrats currently control both chambers of Congress and the White House by razor-thin margins.

    The party in power typically sheds an average of two dozen or so seats in the midterms, which fall midway through a president’s four years in office.

    While Mr Biden himself is not up for re-election on Tuesday, midterms are often seen as a referendum on a president’s leadership.

    Despite delivering on promises to lower prescription drug prices, expand clean energy and revamp US infrastructure, Mr Biden has seen his popularity suffer following the worst inflation in four decades, record illegal crossings at the US-Mexico border, and voter concerns about crime.

    A political thumping for Democrats on Tuesday could embolden murmurs within the party about whether Mr Biden, who turns 80 this month, should run for re-election in 2024.

    He went to Maryland on Monday night to campaign for Wes Moore, who is expected to make history as the third black governor ever elected in the US.

    Wes Moore (centre) would become only the third black governor in the US if elected
    IMAGE SOURCE,GETTY IMAGES Image caption, Wes Moore (centre) looks set to become the third black governor ever elected in the US

    “Today we face an inflection point,” Mr Biden told a cheering crowd at a historically black university outside Washington.

    “We know in our bones that our democracy’s at risk and we know that this is your moment to defend it.”

    According to a tally by the BBC’s US partner, CBS News, more than half of Republican midterms candidates have raised doubts about the integrity of the 2020 White House election, echoing Mr Trump’s false claims of widespread fraud.

    Mr Trump spent the eve of election day holding a final rally in Ohio alongside Republican Senate candidate JD Vance.

    The former president, who has been teasing a 2024 White House comeback bid, said he would make a “very big announcement” at his Florida estate Mar-a-Lago on 15 November.

    He told the crowd: “If you support the decline and fall of America, then you must, you absolutely must vote for the radical left, crazy people.

    “If you want to stop the destruction of our country, then tomorrow you must vote Republican in a giant red wave.”

    Mr Trump’s party needs to net only five seats to flip the House and a single seat to take over the evenly divided Senate.

    Non-partisan election observers project the Republicans will pick up roughly 15-25 seats in the 435-seat House.

    Supporters of Donald Trump await his arrival for a rally in Vandalia, Ohio
    IMAGE SOURCE,GETTY IMAGES Image caption, Supporters of Donald Trump await his arrival for Monday’s rally in Vandalia, Ohio

    But the battle for the upper chamber of Congress could go either way, according to most political forecasts, and is expected to come down to hotly fought races in Pennsylvania, Georgia, Nevada and Arizona.

    Should Republicans win the House, they have vowed to shut down the Democratic-led inquiry into last year’s Capitol riot and launch investigations into the Biden administration.

    Kevin McCarthy, who would probably become Republican speaker of the House – placing him second in line to the presidency – has refused to rule out impeachment proceedings.

    Mr Biden’s power to appoint judges or administrative posts for the next two years would be severely curtailed if Republicans win the Senate.

    More than 43.5m early votes have already been cast, according to the US Elections Project.

    But it might be days or weeks before the outcome of the midterms is clear if races are close, as some states allow ballots to be posted on election day, and there could be recounts.

  • US midterms: Biden, Trump to make final appeals day before crucial elections

    On the final day of campaigning, President Joe Biden will hold a rally in Maryland, while his predecessor, Donald Trump, will be in Ohio.

    An election year that has unfolded against the backdrop of economic turmoil, the elimination of federal abortion rights, and widespread concerns about the future of democracy is coming to a close with a final full day of campaigning in which leaders from both parties will make urgent appeals to their supporters.

    President Joe Biden is holding a Monday evening rally in Maryland, where Democrats have one of their best opportunities to reclaim a Republican-held governor’s seat. The appearance is in line with Biden’s late-campaign strategy of sticking largely to Democratic strongholds rather than stumping in more competitive territory, where control of Congress may ultimately be decided.

    Biden’s predecessor Donald Trump will hold his final rally of the campaign in Ohio. As he readies another run for the White House, Ohio holds special meaning for the former president because it was one of the first places where he was able to prove his enduring power among Republican voters.

    His backing of JD Vance was crucial in helping the author and venture capitalist – and one-time Trump critic – secure the GOP’s nomination for a Senate seat.

    With more than 41 million ballots already cast, Monday’s focus will be ensuring that supporters either meet early voting deadlines or make plans to show up in person on Tuesday. The results will have a powerful effect on the final two years of Biden’s presidency, shaping policy on everything from government spending to military support for Ukraine.

    In the first national election since the violent January 6 insurrection, the final days of the campaign focused on fundamental questions about the nation’s political values.

    Campaigning in New York for Governor Kathy Hochul on Sunday, Biden said Republicans were willing to condone last year’s mob attack at the US Capitol and that, after the recent assault on Paul Pelosi, husband of House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, some in that party made “light of it” or were “making excuses”.

    “There’s never been a time in my career where we’ve glorified violence based on a political preference,” the president said.

    Meanwhile, during a Sunday evening Trump rally in Miami, a reference to Nancy Pelosi prompted chants of “Lock her up!” – a stark reminder of the nation’s deep political divide.

    Former President Donald Trump speaks at a campaign rally in support of the campaign of Sen. Marco Rubio, R-Fla., at the Miami-Dade County Fair and Exposition on Sunday, Nov. 6, 2022, in Miami.
    Trump speaks at a rally in support of the campaign for Florida Senator Marco Rubio on Sunday in Miami [Rebecca Blackwell/AP Photo]

    Trump was campaigning for Florida Senator Marco Rubio’s re-election, but also focused on his own political future. After telling a crowd in Iowa last week that he is “very, very, very probably” going to run for president again, he again teased the possibility on Sunday and encouraged supporters to watch his Ohio rally.

    “I will probably have to do it again, but stay tuned,” Trump said, teasing the Monday event. “We have a big, big rally. Stay tuned for tomorrow night.”

    Not attending the Miami event was Florida’s Republican Governor Ron DeSantis, who is running for re-election against Democrat Charlie Crist and is widely considered Trump’s most formidable challenger if he also were to get into the White House race.

    DeSantis held his own, separate events on Sunday in other parts of the state where he stuck to the centrepieces of his re-election campaign, including railing against COVID-19 vaccine mandates. The governor’s counter-political programming avoided antagonising Trump – meaning it did not deliver the duelling 2024 events that could be in his and Trump’s near future.

    Trump said on Sunday that Florida would “re-elect Ron DeSantis as your governor”. But he was more confrontational during a Pennsylvania rally on Saturday, referring to Florida’s governor as “Ron DeSanctimonious”.

    It is a rivalry that has been simmering for more than a year as DeSantis has taken increasingly bold steps to boost his national profile and build a deep fundraising network – even as Trump remains unquestionably the party’s most popular leader.

    For national Democrats, meanwhile, the focus is on their narrow control of the House and the Senate, which could evaporate after Tuesday.

    Voters may rebuke the party controlling the White House and Congress amid surging inflation, concerns about crime and pessimism about the direction of the country. History suggests the party in power will suffer significant losses in the midterms.

    Biden has made the case that the nation’s very democracy is on the ballot and the first lady went to Texas on Sunday to sound a similar alarm. “So much is at stake in this election,” Jill Biden said in Houston. “We must speak up on justice and democracy.”

    Travelling in Chicago, Vice President Kamala Harris said, “These attacks on our democracy will not only directly impact the people around our country, but arguably around the world.”

    Trump has long falsely claimed he lost the 2020 election only because Democrats cheated and has even begun raising the possibility of election fraud this year. Federal intelligence agencies are warning of the possibility of political violence from far-right extremists.

    Ronna McDaniel, the Republican National Committee chairwoman, said Democrats were “inflation deniers”, trying to deflect the other side’s branding of her party as anti-democratic for rejecting the results of 2020’s free and fair presidential election simply because Trump lost it.

    “If we win back the House and the Senate, it’s the American people saying to Joe Biden, we want you to work on behalf of us and we want you to work across the aisle to solve the problems that we are dealing with,” McDaniel told CNN.

     

  • Metro Trump hints at contesting, returning to White House in 2024

    Former President of the United States, Donald Trump has hinted that he may contest for the office of the president in 2024 and stage a comeback to the White House.

    Trump disclosed this where a crowd gathered in Iowa on Thursday while speaking at the first of four rallies in five days in his campaigns for Republican candidates in next week’s midterm elections.

    The former Republican President has been subpoenaed by the January 6th Committee for not calling to order his alleged mob of supporters over the invasion of the Capitol Building on January 6, 2021, when he lost to President Joe Biden in the 2020 elections.

    He reiterated his baseless claim that he lost in 2020 because of widespread election fraud, as per Reuters.

    “I ran twice,” he said. “I won twice and did much better the second time than I did the first, getting millions more votes in 2020 than I got in 2016.

    “And likewise, getting more votes than any sitting president in the history of our country by far.

    “And now in order to make our country successful, and safe and glorious, I will very, very, very probably do it again. Very soon. Get ready,” Trump said to the cheering crowd.

    Reports revealed that Trump won the most votes ever – 72 million – for a sitting president in 2020, but still lost to his challenger then and now president, Biden, a Democrat, who polled 81 million.

     

    Source: Vanguard News

  • Trump makes a strong hint about running for President in 2024

    Donald Trump has dropped one of his most powerful hints yet that he may run for President again.

    Former US President George H.W. Bush told a crowd in Iowa that he will “very, very, very likely do it again” in 2024.

    Mr Trump was speaking at the first of four rallies he will hold in the next five days to campaign for Republican candidates in next week’s midterm elections.

    US Vice President Joe Biden is also touring the country to encourage people to vote.

    On Thursday night, Mr Trump, a Republican, repeated his unfounded claim that he lost in 2020 because of widespread election fraud.

    “I ran twice,” he said. “I won twice, and did much better the second time than I did the first, getting millions more votes in 2020 than I got in 2016.

    “And likewise, getting more votes than any sitting president in the history of our country by far.

    “And now in order to make our country successful, and safe and glorious. I will very, very, very probably do it again.”

    “Very soon,” he told the cheering crowd. “Get ready.”

    Mr Trump did win the most votes ever – 72 million – for a sitting president in 2020, but still lost to the challenger, Mr Biden, a Democrat, who pulled in 81 million.

    Mr Biden – who campaigned on Thursday in New Mexico and California – has reportedly been meeting senior advisers to plan his potential 2024 re-election campaign, setting up a possible rematch with Mr Trump.

    For his part, Mr Trump has teased for months about a potential third campaign for the White House.

    In October, he told a rally in Texas: “I will probably have to do it again.” In Pennsylvania in September, he said: “I may just have to do it again.”

    Mr Trump’s former senior counsellor, Kellyanne Conway, said earlier on Thursday at an event in Washington DC that her former boss would “announce soon” about his possible presidential plans.

    She said she gave Mr Trump credit for resisting the temptation to declare a White House run already this year, as it would have distracted from Republican candidates in the midterms.

    If he does run in 2024, he may not go unchallenged within his party.

    Potential Republican rivals include Mr Trump‘s former Vice-President Mike Pence and Florida Governor Ron DeSantis, among others.

  • Trump’s legal team trivialize sensitive files at Mar-a-Lago

    The storage of confidential documents at Donald Trump’s Florida residence, according to his attorneys, “should have never been cause for alarm.”

    The FBI search last month, according to his legal team, was “unprecedented, unnecessary, and legally unsupported.”

    Their filing comes on the eve of a court hearing about Mr Trump’s call for a third-party official to oversee the evidence taken from Mar-a-Lago.

    Officials say the search was necessary due to obstruction by the Trump team.

    The 19-page legal filing posted by the former president’s team on Wednesday night did not respond to the justice department’s claims of obstruction.

    Mr Trump’s legal team contended he had been engaged in a “standard give-and-take” with the National Archives over the return of his files when the search warrant was executed.

    “There is no question… that the matters before this court centre around the possession, by a president, of his own presidential records,” says the court filing.

    Apparently classified files on the floor of Trump's Mar-a-Lago officeIMAGE SOURCE,US DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE
    Image caption,

    Apparently classified files on the floor of Trump’s Mar-a-Lago office in the 8 August search, released by the Department of Justice

    His lawyers argue: “The notion that Presidential records would contain sensitive information should have never been cause for alarm.”

    The court filing came less than 24 hours after the justice department alleged that Mr Trump’s aides had probably tried to conceal secret documents inside the West Palm Beach estate.

    A National Archives team visited the seafront golf club in January and retrieved 15 boxes of White House records that contained “highly classified reports”, said the filing.

    The justice department began investigations which found evidence that “dozens of additional boxes” probably containing sensitive material still remained at Mar-a-Lago.

    On 3 June, three FBI agents and a justice department lawyer arrived at Mar-a-Lago to collect materials but were “explicitly prohibited” by Mr Trump’s representatives from searching any boxes inside a storage room at the property, according to the 54-page filing.

    Evidence was also found that records were “likely concealed and removed” from the storage area and that efforts were “likely taken” to obstruct the investigation, officials said.

    On Thursday, a judge will hold a hearing on whether an independent legal official known as a special master should be appointed to oversee the evidence and determine whether any of it is protected under executive privilege – a rule which shields some presidential documents.

    The justice department has argued that a special master is not necessary, given that it says most of the evidence has already been inspected by investigators.

    In Wednesday’s court papers, Mr Trump’s lawyers accused the justice department of “gratuitously” including a photograph in its Tuesday filing of “allegedly classified materials” that had been “pulled from a container and spread across the floor for dramatic effect”.

    “Left unchecked, the DOJ will impugn, leak, and publicize selective aspects of their investigation,” Mr Trump’s lawyers wrote, arguing why a special master was necessary.

  • Likely hidden: Officials on documents at Donald Trump’s Florida home

    Department of Justice officials has announced that former president Donald Trump may have hidden and removed papers from his residence during an FBI visit to it in June.

    The agency claimed in a court document that “efforts were probably made to hinder the government’s investigation.”

    The document was sent in response to Mr. Trump’s lawsuit seeking the appointment of a “special master” to oversee a portion of the ongoing litigation.

    Mr. Trump asserted that the materials were declassified while denying any misconduct.

    In the filing released on Tuesday, the Justice Department’s counterintelligence chief, Jay Bratt, gives the clearest picture so far of the department’s attempts to retrieve documents from the former president.

    Those attempts led to a National Archives team visiting his Mar-a-Lago home in January, an FBI team visiting in June, and the FBI searching the mansion on 8 August.

    The FBI is investigating whether Mr Trump improperly handled records by taking them from the White House to Mar-a-Lago after he left office in January 2021.

    US presidents must transfer all of their documents and emails to the National Archives.

    Who visited Mar-a-Lago, when, and why?

    In January, the National Archives retrieved 15 boxes of White House records from Mar-a-Lago, where they found highly classified records were “unfoldered” and “intermixed with other records” – some pages had been torn up.

    Upon learning the boxes contained “highly classified reports”, the Justice Department and the FBI began investigations which found evidence that “dozens of additional boxes” likely containing classified information still remained at his property.

    On 3 June, three FBI agents and a DOJ attorney arrived at Mar-a-Lago to collect materials. According to Mr Trump’s lawyers, he told them: “Whatever you need, just let us know.”

    But agents were “explicitly prohibited” by his representatives from searching any boxes inside a storage room at Mr Trump’s property, according to the latest filing.

    Mr Bratt, from the DOJ, said this gave “no opportunity for the government to confirm” that no classified documents remained at the property.

    Evidence was also found that the records were “likely concealed and removed” from the storage and that efforts were “likely taken” to obstruct the investigation, officials said.

    Following the June visit, FBI teams searched Mr Trump’s property again in August – where they found over a hundred classified documents.

    This was twice as many classified documents found “in a matter of hours” than by the “diligent search” that Mr Trump’s team claimed they had previously carried out.

    Mr Bratt said that this “casts doubt on the extent of cooperation in this matter”.

    At the time, Mr Trump rejected reports he had mishandled official records as “fake news”.

    He is suing for a detailed list of exactly what was taken from his estate and is asking for the government to return any item which was not in the scope of the search warrant.

    Mr Trump’s lawyers have asked that a “neutral” third-party attorney – known as a special master – be brought in to determine whether the seized files are covered by executive privilege, which allows presidents to keep certain communications under wraps.

    But the latest court filing said that any presidential records seized in the search warrant “belong to the United States, not to the former president”.

  • New York investigations : Trump refuses to answer questions

     Former US President Donald Trump has declined to respond to inquiries as part of a New York state investigation into the commercial dealings of his family.

    Mr. Trump had sued in an effort to block the interview at the New York attorney general’s office on Wednesday.

    State officials accuse the Trump Organization of misleading authorities about the value of its assets in order to get favorable loans and tax breaks.

    Mr. Trump denies wrongdoing and has called the civil probe a witch hunt.

    An hour after he was pictured arriving at the Manhattan office where he was questioned under oath, Mr. Trump released a statement in which he criticized New York Attorney General Letitia James and the broader investigation.

    “Years of work and tens of millions of dollars have been spent on this long-simmering saga, and to no avail,” he said. “I declined to answer the questions under the rights and privileges afforded to every citizen under the United States Constitution.”

    Ms. James’ office confirmed that the interview took place on Wednesday and that “Mr. Trump invoked his Fifth Amendment right against self-incrimination”.

    “Attorney General James will pursue the facts and the law wherever they may lead,” the statement added. “Our investigation continues.”

    His deposition comes just days after the FBI executed an unprecedented search warrant at his Florida estate, Mar-a-Lago, as part of a separate investigation that is reportedly linked to his handling of classified material.

    While the attorney general’s investigation is a civil one, a parallel investigation is being carried out by the Manhattan District Attorney’s office which could result in criminal charges.

    Legal analysts suggest Mr. Trump may have declined to answer questions on Wednesday because his answers could have been used against him in that criminal investigation. The former president invoked the Fifth Amendment, which protects people from being compelled to be a witness against themselves in a criminal case.

    Trump on people pleading the Fifth Amendment: ‘Disgraceful’

    The questioning lasted around four hours and included lengthy breaks, his lawyer Ronald Fischetti told US media.

    Mr. Trump began by reading a statement into the record condemning the attorney general and her investigation and invoking his Fifth Amendment rights.

    He proceeded to say “same answer” to every question he was asked.

    Ms. James’ office has said that the depositions – a legal term that means testimony not given in court – were among the last remaining investigative procedures to be carried out.

    Letitia JamesIMAGE SOURCE, GETTY IMAGES
    Image caption,

    New York Attorney General Letitia James

    Once the investigation concludes, the state attorney general could decide to bring a lawsuit seeking financial penalties against Mr Trump or his company.

    Ms. James had sought Mr. Trump’s deposition – and that of two of his children, Ivanka and Donald Trump Jr – for more than six months while the family resisted subpoenas through the New York court system.

    Lawyers for Mr. Trump had also attempted to sue Ms. James in a bid to prevent her from questioning the former president and his children.

    But in February, a New York Supreme Court judge ruled that all three must sit for depositions. Ivanka and Donald Trump Jr were questioned earlier this month.

    The judge said the investigation had uncovered “copious evidence of possible financial fraud” giving the attorney general a “clear right” to question under oath the former president and two of his children involved in the business.

    Ms. James hailed the judge’s decision as a victory, saying that “justice has prevailed”.

    The investigation, which was first opened in 2019, seeks to prove that Mr. Trump and the Trump Organization misrepresented the value of assets in order to obtain favorable loans and tax breaks. The alleged fraud is said to have occurred before Mr. Trump took office.

    “The mob takes the Fifth,” Donald Trump said at an Iowa campaign rally in 2016.

    His target? You’ve guessed it – Hillary Clinton. Some of her former staffers had exercised their right to silence during a congressional inquiry.

    The boot is now on the other foot, as they say.

    “I once asked,” said his statement on Wednesday – published while his deposition by the New York attorney general was still ongoing – “If you’re innocent why are you taking the Fifth Amendment?”

    “Now I know the answer to that question,” he concluded, suggesting that he had been left with no choice.

    There are parallels here – in terms of Mr. Trump’s response – with the separate investigation into his handling of official documents, thought to have been the reason for the recent search of his Florida estate.

    While his allies have been demanding answers from officials over the unprecedented action, he could choose to provide some himself. That’s because he’ll have a copy of the warrant and the inventory of material removed from his property.

    Yet his public statements suggest he’s been left in the dark, and he has repeatedly attacked the process.

    His supporters may believe the narrative that he is being persecuted. But – as Trump once did – others may see his refusal to answer questions as a sign of substance to the case against him.

  • Capitol riot: Trump ignored pleas to condemn attack, hearing told

    Ex-US President Donald Trump watched last year’s Capitol riot on TV at the White House, ignoring his children and aides who “begged him” to rebuke the mob, a congressional inquiry has heard.

    “He chose not to act,” said Adam Kinzinger, one of two Republicans on the Democratic-led committee.

    The prime-time hearing was told Mr Trump did not make a single call to law enforcement or national security staff.

    He was motivated by “his selfish desire to stay in power”, the inquiry alleged.

    On Thursday night, the House of Representatives select committee used its eighth hearing of the summer to draw a timeline of Mr Trump’s activities over 187 minutes on 6 January 2021 as a mob of his supporters raided Congress.

    The panel is seeking to build a case that Mr Trump, a Republican, acted illegally in a bid to overturn his defeat by Joe Biden, a Democrat, in the November 2020 presidential election.

    Members of the committee have suggested there might be enough evidence to charge Mr Trump with such counts as obstructing an official proceeding of Congress, conspiracy to defraud the American people or witness tampering.

    Any potential prosecution of Mr Trump would be led by the Department of Justice. But some commentators have suggested that advice issued by Attorney General Merrick Garland requiring prosecutors to obtain approval before embarking on politically sensitive investigations means it is unlikely Mr Trump will ever face trial.

    Mr Trump, who has been hinting he may run again for president in 2024, has dismissed the inquiry as a “kangaroo court” designed to distract Americans from the “disaster” of Democratic governance.

    The hearing was told that former President Trump had watched coverage of the riot on Fox News in the private dining room at the White House for more than two-and-a-half hours.

    Elaine Luria, a Virginia Democrat on the committee, said: “President Trump sat at his dining table and watched the attack on television while his senior-most staff, closest advisers and family members begged him to do what is expected of any American president.”

    The lawmaker also said the chief White House photographer had wanted to take pictures during the historic event, but was told not to.

    A former White House national security staffer, whose voice was obscured to conceal his identity, said officials in the executive mansion were “in a state of shock” over what was unfolding at the Capitol.

    The committee also played parts of a videotaped testimony by former Trump White House counsel Pat Cipollone, who said he had pushed for a strong statement from the president condemning the onslaught.

    “I said that people need to be told, there needs to be a public announcement, fast, that people need to leave the Capitol,” said Mr Cipollone.

    The president’s children, Ivanka Trump and Don Jr, had also wanted him to call off the rioters, the committee heard.

    But former press aide Sarah Matthews testified that an unnamed White House colleague had argued that if Mr Trump were to disavow the violence. it would be “handing a win to the media”.

    At 14:24 that day, Mr Trump sent a tweet attacking his Vice-President, Mike Pence, saying he “didn’t have the courage to” spurn his constitutional duty of certifying Mr Biden’s election win at Congress.

    Ms Matthews said the post amounted to “pouring gasoline on the fire”. She and Matthew Pottinger, who was deputy national security adviser to the president, testified that that tweet had prompted them both to resign.

    Three hours and seven minutes after the assault began, Mr Trump released a video at 16:17, recorded from the White House Rose Garden, in which he praised the rioters as “very special”, but asked them to disperse.

    Source: BBC