Tag: White House

  • Kamala Harris uses profanity in live White House broadcast

    Kamala Harris uses profanity in live White House broadcast

    The US Vice-President Kamala Harris used profanity on Monday while giving advice to young Asian Americans, Native Hawaiians and Pacific Islanders about how to overcome challenges.

    Harris was talking with actor and comedian Jimmy O Yang when he asked her what it’s like to be the first vice president of Asian descent and how her heritage affects her as a leader. Harris’ mom was from India, her dad was from Jamaica, and she’s the first woman to be elected as vice president.

    Harris talked a lot and told the young people to stay strong when they go to places where no one else is like them.

    “We need to understand that some people will open the door for you and keep it open,” Harris said. “Sometimes they will not. ” And then you have to forcefully open that door.

    The crowd cheered and clapped loudly. Harris laughed and said, “Sorry for my language. ”

    Bad language in politics is not very unusual. Last weekend, Donald Trump, who is expected to be the Republican presidential nominee, led a crowd at a rally in New York City. They were chanting a disrespectful word about his criminal trial.

    When Joe Biden was vice president, he was heard telling President Barack Obama that newly passed health care legislation was a very important deal. Harris usually doesn’t use that kind of language in public.

    The vice-president spoke about her thoughts at a meeting during the annual Asian Pacific American Institute for Congressional Studies Legislative Leadership Summit. The talk was shown live on the White House website.

    Harris talked on Monday at a party in the White House garden for Asian American, Native Hawaiian, and Pacific Islander Heritage Month, with President Biden and actor Lucy Liu.

    Liu said that Harris becoming the first female Black and Asian vice president shows that anything is possible in America.

    Biden said that people from Asian backgrounds, Native Hawaiians, and Pacific Islanders are the fastest-growing group in the US. He said they stand for people who come from other countries to live in America, young people who dream of a better future, and a country that cherishes freedom.

    The president started talking by saying, “I’m Joe Biden. ” I work for Kamala Harris.

  • US House Speaker Mike Johnson negotiating aid for Ukraine with White House

    US House Speaker Mike Johnson negotiating aid for Ukraine with White House

    US House Speaker Mike Johnson is arranging with the White House as he plans for the tricky errand of progressing wartime financing for Ukraine and Israel through the House, a best House Republican said Thursday.

    House Republican Pioneer Steve Scalise told columnists that Johnson had been talking with White House authorities almost a bundle that would veer off from the Senate’s US$95 billion remote security bundle and incorporate a few Republican requests. It comes after Johnson has deferred for months on progressing help that would give frantically required ammo and weaponry for Kyiv, attempting to discover the correct time to progress a bundle that will be a difficult political lift.

    “There’s been no understanding come to,” Scalise said. “Clearly there would ought to an assention come to not fair with the White House, but with our claim individuals.”

    Johnson, R-La., is being extended between a Republican conference profoundly separated in its bolster for Ukraine, as well as two presidential contenders at chances over the US’s pose towards the rest of the world. President Joe Biden has more than once chastised Republicans for not making a difference Ukraine, saying they are doing the offering of Russian President Vladimir Putin and harming US security. In the mean time, Donald Trump, the hypothetical Republican candidate, has said he would arrange an conclusion to the struggle as he tries to thrust the US to a more noninterventionist position.

    The Republican speaker is set to travel to the previous president’s Mar-a-Lago club in Florida on Friday to meet with Trump and has been counseling him in later weeks on the Ukraine subsidizing to pick up his bolster or at slightest avoid him from straightforwardly restricting the bundle.

    Sen. Markwayne Mullin, an Oklahoma Republican who regularly works closely with House legislators, said this week he and Trump have talked with Johnson “in profundity” almost how to development Ukraine aid. It isn’t clear whether Trump would loan any political bolster, but Mullin said he was trusting to induce the previous president behind the bundle, particularly presently that Johnson’s work is at stake.

    Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, a Georgia Republican, has undermined to undertake to remove Johnson as speaker and cautioned that progressing subsidizing for Ukraine would offer assistance construct her case that GOP officials ought to select a modern speaker.

    In the interim, Johnson has been in discussions with the White House approximately enactment that would structure a few of the financing for Kyiv as credits, clear the way for the US to tap solidified Russian central bank resources and incorporate other arrangement changes.

    Johnson has too been pushing for the Biden organization to lift a delay on endorsements for Melted Common Gas sends out. At times, he has moreover requested approach changes at the US border with Mexico.

    “This gets to be a more perilous world with Russia in Kyiv,” said Rep. Wear Bacon, a Republican who bolsters supporting Ukraine. “So we’re fair ought to discover a theshrewd way to induce a charge passed that we will get out and back to the Senate.”

    Still, Johnson is confronting a essentially open disobedience from a bunch of hardline House traditionalists who are disappointed with the way he has driven the House. With a limit and isolated larger part, Johnson has been constrained to work with Democrats to development for all intents and purposes any major enactment.

    House Equitable Pioneer Hakeem Jeffries said Thursday that the “as it were way forward” for the House was a vote on the Senate’s national security bundle. He moreover recommended that Democrats would offer assistance Johnson hold onto the speaker’s hammer in case he did so.

    Whereas Democrats have influenced Johnson to put the Senate bundle to a vote, they too may be isolated on a vote as a developing number restrict sending Israel hostile weaponry whereas it locks in in a campaign in Gaza that has slaughtered thousands of civilians.

    The Biden organization, which would regulate any military financing, has issued strict notices to Israeli Prime Serve Benjamin Netanyahu that future US bolster depends on the quick execution of modern steps to secure civilians and help laborers.

    “In the event that we want to anticipate giving Putin a triumph in Europe, the House ought to do the proper thing for vote based system and pass the Senate’s help bundle presently,” Senate Lion’s share Pioneer Chuck Schumer said Thursday in a floor discourse.

  • United States will not send soldiers to battle in Ukraine – White House

    United States will not send soldiers to battle in Ukraine – White House

    The White House has announced that the US will not be sending troops to Ukraine, even though it was suggested by the president of France.

    President Biden has stated clearly that the United States. “We will not send soldiers to Ukraine to fight,” said Adrienne Watson, who works for the National Security Council. She said this while President Biden talked with important lawmakers at the White House about giving money to Ukraine.

    This news story is still being updated. Come back later for more information.

  • White House contest heated up with calls for dictatorship

    White House contest heated up with calls for dictatorship

    In American politics this week, people have been talking a lot about dictatorship, or the possibility of it happening.

    Donald Trump is getting closer to being chosen as the Republican presidential candidate. People who disagree with him are criticizing him more.

    Neoconservative writer Robert Kagan wrote an essay in the Washington Post saying that the chances of the United States becoming a dictatorship have increased a lot. Former Republican congresswoman Liz Cheney, who has been critical of Mr. Trump, said on CBS that the US is heading towards a dictatorship without realizing it.

    The old president ignored these warnings and called them more proof of people being obsessed with criticizing Trump.

    Then, during a meeting in Iowa on Tuesday night, Trump, who often speaks highly of powerful leaders like Russia’s Vladimir Putin and North Korea’s Kim Jong-un, made the situation worse by behaving recklessly.

    Some US news headlines said that Trump made his critics’ worst fears seem true. They were worried he would become a “dictator” if he got re-elected as US president.

    But, the trade was more complicated than that.

    Fox News host Sean Hannity tried to get the ex-president to say he won’t use his power to hurt his enemies if he gets elected again next year. Trump has hinted at this in the past.

    “Are you promising America tonight that you won’t use your power to get back at anyone. ” Hannity asked

    “Other than the first day” of his next term in office.

    He said he will take action by himself to make the border safe and to get more energy out of the ground. He will also do more drilling for energy, as Trump said.

    “He said he’s not a dictator after that. ”

    These incomplete promises haven’t made Trump’s critics feel any better.

    They believe that democracy will face challenges in a second term because there will be fewer protections in place.

    They say the ex-president has talked about using the justice department as a weapon and replacing civil servants with loyal supporters. And they say this time he won’t have people in his group who will disagree with the extreme ideas.

    A Trump political action committee (PAC) said the real person with a lot of power is in the White House now.

    “Joe Biden is using his power to go after journalists, politicians, activists, and worried parents,” Make America Great Again Inc said in an email on Wednesday.

    One of Trump’s opponents, former Arkansas Governor Asa Hutchinson, told the BBC that a second term for Trump could be dangerously controlling, even though Trump may not openly admit to being a dictator.

    Hutchinson says that when an authoritarian president takes more power and ignores Congress and the court, it means that all the power is held by one part of the government. “Our country wasn’t meant to be run like this, and it’s too controlled by one person. ”

    This is what Hutchinson said next, and it might worry Joe Biden’s campaign for president. If Trump and Biden are the main candidates in 2024, the former Arkansas governor would search for a different choice.

    “I won’t choose Biden over Trump,” Hutchinson said. I will find other ways to help if that happens.

    In 2020 and at the start of his 2024 campaign, Biden wanted to appeal to Republicans who were unhappy, as well as people who are not affiliated with any political party, and his own party members.

    However, even though there are concerns about a possibly controlling candidate in the Republican party – someone who doesn’t take the term dictator seriously – Hutchinson still won’t consider supporting the current Democrat in office.

    One year before the election, polls may not be very accurate. But the most recent polls show that the race between Trump and Biden will be very tight. And if Hutchinson, who is not a fan of Trump, is looking for someone else to vote for in the presidential election, he is likely not alone.

    The new political group No Labels might choose a centrist candidate, and Liz Cheney and others are thinking about running for office on their own. This could give unhappy voters more choices when they vote.

    In an election where every vote counts, it’s not a good position for Biden to be in. According to Trump’s strongest critics on the right, it’s a risky situation for the country.

    In his essay in the Washington Post, Kagan says that Trump has a good chance of winning the presidency because of support from the Republicans and the mood of the country. He also thinks that Trump would be more dangerous if he became president.

    He says Trump and his friends will try to hurt people they don’t like, while many Americans do nothing to stop them.

    Many Americans, including a lot of people who support Trump, don’t see it that way, of course. And in November, most people might vote for the previous president again, even though experts like Kagan have advised against it.

    It’s starting to become clear that Biden and the Democrats will say this election is about protecting democracy. Trump is trying to provoke them with his strong and forceful language, whether he is joking or being serious.

  • Accidental drowning confirmed as what killed former White House Chef, Tafari Campbell

    Accidental drowning confirmed as what killed former White House Chef, Tafari Campbell

    The Office of the Chief Medical Examiner of Massachusetts has concluded that the manner of death for former White House sous chef Tafari Campbell was an accidental drowning resulting from being submerged in a body of water.

    According to Timothy McGuirk, a representative from the Executive Office of Public Safety and Security, Massachusetts does not make autopsy findings public. Nevertheless, the chief medical examiner determined that Campbell’s demise was accidental.

    The Massachusetts State Police’s preliminary inquiry yielded no indications of foul play in the death of 45-year-old Campbell, as reported by The Boston Herald. The investigators did not uncover any signs of external harm or injuries on the body, according to the same source.

    Campbell, a father of two who was a personal chef to former President Barack Obama and former first lady Michelle Obama, died in a paddle boarding accident near the Obamas’ Katama estate in Martha’s Vineyard on July 23.

    The chef, who was from Dumfries, Virginia, lost his balance while standing on a paddle board and fell into the water, another paddle boarder on the pond told police, reports the Herald. The other paddle boarder attempted to swim to Campbell, but could not reach him in time, per the Herald.

    Campbell’s body was recovered by divers from a pond on Edgartown Great Road shortly before 10 a.m. ET on July 24, Massachusetts State Police had said in a news release.

    Chef Tafari Campbell in 2008.

    AP Photo/Ron Edmonds

    “MSP Underwater Recovery Unit divers made the recovery after the victim’s body was located by Massachusetts Environmental Police Officers deploying side-scan sonar from a boat,” the department said in the release, noting the recovery was made “approximately 100 feet from shore at a depth of about eight feet.”

    MSP later told PEOPLE in a statement, “Mr. Campbell was visiting Martha’s Vineyard at the time of his passing. President and Mrs. Obama were not present at the residence at the time of the accident.”

    The Obamas shared a tribute to Campbell, who they called “a beloved part of our family”.

    “When we first met him, he was a talented sous chef at the White House — creative and passionate about food, and its ability to bring people together,” the Obamas said in a joint statement sent to PEOPLE. “In the years that followed, we got to know him as a warm, fun, extraordinarily kind person who made all of our lives a little brighter.”

    The statement continued, “That’s why, when we were getting ready to leave the White House, we asked Tafari to stay with us, and he generously agreed. He’s been part of our lives ever since, and our hearts are broken that he’s gone.”

    “Today we join everyone who knew and loved Tafari — especially his wife Sherise and their twin boys, Xavier and Savin — in grieving the loss of a truly wonderful man,” they added.

    In an Instagram post shared on July 24, his wife Sherise wrote: “My heart is broken. My life and our family’s life is forever changed. Please pray for me and our families as I deal with the loss of my husband.”

    In another post, Sherise — who owns a baking and catering company called Sweet Sage — said her company was putting orders on hold due to “the recent tragedy in our family.”

  • Cameroonian Journalist battles White House over press access

    Cameroonian Journalist battles White House over press access

    After bringing a lawsuit against the White House to challenge the cancellation of his press pass, Cameroonian journalist Simon Ateba has continued to battle the administration.

    In recent interviews and posts on social media, Mr. Ateba has alleged that the White House has discriminated against him because of his colour, for asking challenging questions, and because he works for a smaller news organisation.

    According to a lawsuit Mr. Ateba filed last Thursday against White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre and the Secret Service, the White House singled him out and instituted a credentialing process to prevent him from renewing his press pass.

    More than 400 additional White House reporters also lost their permits as a result of the rule change, including Mr. Ateba.

    According to the revised guidelines, Mr. Ateba is not eligible to receive a White House press pass since Today News Africa, the news organisation he owns and operates, is not seen as a reliable source of information.

    A protracted dispute between Mr. Ateba, Ms. Jean-Pierre, the White House press office, and several White House journalists who objected to Mr. Ateba’s repeated interruptions culminated in his ban and subsequent lawsuit.

    He received a warning from the White House last month that if he continued to disrupt the briefings, he would lose his press credentials.

    At least four times, he had interrupted briefings to chastise Ms. Jean-Pierre for consistently denying him the chance to ask questions.

  • Biden’s ‘ghost gun’ rules reinstated by the US Supreme Court

    Biden’s ‘ghost gun’ rules reinstated by the US Supreme Court

    While the White House’s appeal is pending, the US Supreme Court has permitted limits on untraceable “ghost guns” to remain in place.

    A Texas judge stopped a 2022 rule requiring serial numbers on self-assembled “ghost gun” kits, which would have made them legally a firearm, in July.

    To stop the new restriction, gun rights organisations and gun owners filed lawsuits.

    The choice is being made as pressure mounts on the White House to do more to combat gun violence.

    The policy will remain in effect while the White House challenges the Texas verdict, according to the 5–4 opinion of the Supreme Court on Tuesday. The Supreme Court might eventually hear that appeal again.

    Ghost weapons can be self-assembled and occasionally 3D printed, therefore they might not have a serial number and might be hard to track down. The purchase of the assembly kits has not previously been subject to background checks.

    The new regulations introduced by the Biden administration in August to control the spread of “ghost guns” went into force. The regulations mandated that “buy build shoot” kit producers obtain licences, stamp serial numbers on the kits’ frames or receivers, and require retailers of these kits to hold federal licences as well.

    However, US District Judge Reed O’Connor in Texas concluded that when the Biden administration classed “buy build shoot” kits as guns, it exceeded its legal power under the 1968 Gun Control Act.

    According to the White House, there were 20,000 suspected ghost guns discovered during criminal investigations in 2021, a ten-fold increase from five years earlier, and urgent action must be made against unregistered weapons.

    More guns are in civilian hands than there are US inhabitants, making Americans the nation with the highest per capita gun ownership in the world.

    In 2021, the most recent year for which complete statistics are available, more than 48,800 Americans died as a result of gun injuries, according to the US Centres for Disease Control and Prevention.

    Supreme Court decisions in recent years have primarily increased individual gun rights. The US Constitution protects a person’s right to carry a weapon in public for self-defense, the nation’s top court said last year.

    The court will hear a case in its upcoming session, which begins in October, regarding the issue of whether or not those who are the targets of domestic violence restraining orders are permitted to keep their firearms.

    Mr. Biden and Democrats are attempting to enhance gun regulations through methods other than establishing federal laws because to the intense partisanship on the subject in Congress.

    These include decisions made by the executive branch, such as the ghost gun regulations, and laws passed at the state and municipal levels, typically in districts with majorities of Democratic Party legislators.

  • Security intensified over Trump’s court appearance

    Security intensified over Trump’s court appearance

    At a court hearing on Thursday, former US President Donald Trump will be formally indicted on charges related to an alleged plot to overturn his defeat in the 2020 election.

    Scheduled for Thursday at 4:00 PM EDT (8:00 PM GMT), 77-year-old Mr. Trump is set to make an appearance at a federal courthouse in Washington DC.

    It is anticipated that he will enter a plea of not guilty. Despite having the possibility of opting for a remote video appearance, it is reported that he plans to attend in person.

    Since his departure from the White House, Mr. Trump has visited the city on just one occasion. In a scene that unfolded on Wednesday evening, a queue had already begun forming outside the courthouse building.

    In anticipation of the arraignment, Trump criticized the case as evidence of the “corruption, scandal, & failure” characterizing Joe Biden’s presidency.

    Tourists atop the National Gallery of Art look out over the news trucks in front of the federal courthouse where former U.S. President and Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump is expected to answer charges after a grand jury returned an indictment of Trump in the special counsel's investigation of efforts to overturn his 2020 election defeat In Washington, U.S. August 2, 2023.

    Image Source – Reuters; Image caption, News trucks are parked around the courthouse

    Concurrently, Mr. Trump is already confronting two additional criminal cases as he embarks on his White House campaign for the upcoming year.

    In Washington DC, security measures are being escalated in preparation for the scheduled hearing. Metal barricades have been erected outside the federal courthouse where the charges against Trump will be officially presented. Similar structures have also been established around the US Capitol buildings, the site of the January 2021 riots incited by Trump supporters in response to the election outcome.

    The Secret Service, responsible for safeguarding presidents and former presidents, issued a statement alerting the public to potential traffic disruptions in central Washington DC.

    Amidst these developments, a purported hoax 911 call concerning an active shooting at the Capitol led to a lockdown in three Senate office buildings and prompted a significant police emergency response on Wednesday.

    Addressing reporters during the incident, US Capitol Police Chief Tom Manger affirmed the preparedness of the police force that confronted the rioters two and a half years ago, noting their proficiency in active-shooter drills.

    Reportedly, security for the judges involved in the case has also been heightened.

    In an all-capital-letters post on his Truth Social platform on Wednesday, the former president, who was at his Bedminster, New Jersey, golf club, thanked his followers and said: “I never had so much support on anything before.”

    In previous social media posts, he launched critiques against his Republican rivals in the presidential race, which includes his former Vice-President, Mike Pence, and the Governor of Florida, Ron DeSantis.

    He reiterated his assertion that Mr. Pence had possessed the legal authority to halt the certification of Mr. Biden’s election triumph on January 6, 2021—a session that was marred by the disruption caused by Trump supporters at the US Capitol.

    The indictment lists four charges against Mr. Trump, encompassing conspiracy to defraud the US, witness tampering, and conspiracy against citizens’ rights. Among these, the “deprivation of rights” charge, instituted following the US Civil War to safeguard freed slaves integrating into society, stands out.

    This charge played a pivotal role in the 1967 trial of Ku Klux Klan members, which subsequently inspired the 1988 film “Mississippi Burning.” Legal analysts suggest its inclusion in the case against Mr. Trump stems from allegations that his attempts to undermine the electoral process targeted urban regions with significant African-American voter populations.

    Mr. Trump’s legal team has hinted at their defense strategy. Attorney John Lauro made an appearance on NBC’s Today show on Wednesday, outlining their intention to argue that Mr. Trump’s actions are shielded by the First Amendment’s protection of free speech enshrined in the US Constitution.

    Mr. Trump’s legal team is also pushing back against the prosecutors’ request for an expedited trial, citing the need for ample time to prepare a robust defense for their client.

    A spokesperson from the US Marshals Service, a federal law enforcement agency responsible for courthouse security, informed Reuters news agency that Mr. Trump will undergo fingerprinting and provide essential information like his birthdate and Social Security ID number.

    Numerous other individuals accused of involvement in the US Capitol riot have had their Thursday hearings rescheduled.

    Presently, Mr. Trump maintains a prominent lead in the Republican Party’s competition to designate its forthcoming presidential nominee.

    Congressional Republicans have rallied in support of him, contending that the recent indictment underscores a perception of the US devolving into a “banana republic.” They echo the former president’s assertion that these prosecutions amount to interference in elections.

    The 45-page election-related indictment against Mr Trump is based partly on contemporaneous notes that Mr Pence kept of their conversations in the days leading up to US Capitol riot.

    Mr Trump has already been charged in two other cases: with mishandling classified files and falsifying business records to cover up a hush-money payment to a porn star.

    Prosecutors in Georgia may bring a criminal case against Mr Trump this month over alleged efforts to subvert the 2020 election result in that state.

  • Emergency evacuation hit White House over suspected cocaine discovery

    Emergency evacuation hit White House over suspected cocaine discovery

    The White House experienced an emergency evacuation on Sunday night due to the discovery of a white substance that has tested positive for cocaine.

    The substance was found in a work area during a routine inspection conducted by the US Secret Service.

    Fire and law enforcement sources, as reported by the Washington Post, confirmed the preliminary positive test.

    It’s worth noting that President Joe Biden and his family were not present at the White House during the incident, as they were residing at the Camp David residence at the time.

    The White House complex was closed as a precaution around 20:45 local time (01:45 BST) on Sunday after Secret Service officers found the white powder “inside a work area” of the West Wing, Secret Service spokesperson Anthony Guglielmi told the BBC in a statement.

    Mr Guglielmi said the fire department was quickly called and found the substance to be “non-hazardous”.

    He did not confirm the preliminary test results, saying the item has been sent for additional testing and that an investigation is ongoing, including on how the substance entered the White House.

    The BBC’s US partner, CBS News, reported a senior law enforcement source as saying the substance was found in a storage facility in a cupboard routinely used by White House staff and guests to store mobile phones.

    CBS reported that two law enforcement officials and a recording of a radio dispatch from Sunday confirmed the substance tested positive for cocaine soon after it was found.

    Cocaine is a Schedule II drug under the Controlled Substances Act, meaning it has a high potential for abuse, according to the US Drug Enforcement Administration.

    The West Wing is a large, multi-level part of the White House that contains the offices of the president of the United States, including the Oval Office and the Situation Room.

    It also houses the offices of the vice-president, the White House chief of staff, the press secretary, and hundreds of other staff who have access.

  • Trump heard discussing secret documents on CNN tape

    Trump heard discussing secret documents on CNN tape

    US media has obtained an audio recording in which Donald Trump appears to acknowledge retaining a classified document after his departure from the White House.

    However, it should be noted that the recording has not been independently verified by the BBC or other sources.

    In the approximately two-minute clip, the former president can be heard going through papers and stating, “This is highly confidential.” Mr. Trump has entered a plea of not guilty to federal charges related to the mishandling of sensitive files.

    CNN was the first to publish the recording, stating that it originates from a July 2021 interview Mr. Trump conducted with individuals involved in the writing of a memoir by his former chief of staff, Mark Meadows.

    During the recording, Mr. Trump can be heard mentioning “these are the papers” and making reference to a document he describes as “highly confidential.” This aligns with an audio recording cited by federal prosecutors in their indictment of the former president.

    Prosecutors allege he showed classified documents to people without security clearance on two occasions, including a writer and two members of staff, in one instance in July 2021 at his golf club in New Jersey.

    Mr Trump is facing 37 counts of illegally retaining classified documents and obstructing the government’s efforts to get them back.

    He has denied any wrongdoing and has said that all documents he took with him from the White House were declassified.

    During the exchange, released by CNN and the Washington Post on Monday, Mr Trump is heard describing a document that he alleges is about possibly attacking Iran.

    “He said that I wanted to attack Iran. Isn’t it amazing?” Mr Trump says near the beginning of the clip.

    “I have a big pile of papers, this thing just came up. Look,” he says.

    “See as president I could have declassified it,” he says. “Now I can’t, you know, but this is still a secret.”

    In an interview last week with Fox News, Mr Trump denied that he provided secret documents to people unauthorised to view them.

    “There was no document. That was a massive amount of papers and everything else talking about Iran and other things,” Mr Trump said.

  • Donald Trump indicted over classified documents case

    Donald Trump indicted over classified documents case

    Former US President Donald Trump has been charged over his handling of classified documents after he left the White House.

    Mr Trump, 76, faces seven charges including unauthorised retention of classified files, US media reported. The charges are not yet public.

    It is the second indictment of Mr Trump and the first ever federal indictment of a former president.

    He is campaigning to make a return to the White House in 2024.

    Legal experts say the indictment will not limit Mr Trump’s ability to run for the presidency again.

    In a post on Truth Social on Thursday, Mr Trump said he was innocent and had been summoned to appear at a federal court in Miami, Florida, on Tuesday afternoon, where he will be arrested and hear the charges against him.

    “I never thought it possible that such a thing could happen to a former president of the United States,” he wrote.

    He added: “This is indeed a dark day for the United States of America. We are a country in serious and rapid decline, but together we will Make America Great Again!”

    Mr Trump’s attorney Jim Trusty told CNN the former president had received details of the charges in a summons document.

    He said they include conspiracy, false statements, obstruction of justice, and illegally retaining classified documents under the Espionage Act.

    The Department of Justice (DOJ) declined to comment and the indictment has not been publicly released.

    An indictment is a document that sets out details of charges against a person, ensuring they have notice of alleged criminal offenses.

    The Secret Service will meet Mr Trump’s staff and his security officers to plan his journey to the Miami courthouse.

    Special prosecutor Jack Smith has been considering evidence in the documents case since he was appointed to oversee it by Attorney General Merrick Garland in November.

    Last year, Mr Trump’s Florida resort Mar-a-Lago was searched and 11,000 documents were seized, including around 100 marked as classified. Some of these were labelled top secret.

    There were reports last week that prosecutors had obtained an audio recording of Mr Trump in which he acknowledged keeping a classified document after leaving the White House in January 2021.

    It is against US law for federal officials – including a president – to remove or keep classified documents at an unauthorised location.

    Legal experts say Mr Trump will still be able to enter the White House race.

    “He can be indicted any number of times and it won’t stop his ability to stand for office,” says David Super, a professor at Georgetown University Law Centre.

    Mr Super noted that Mr Trump could continue to run for office even if convicted in the documents case.

    The property and reality TV mogul is currently the frontrunner among Republican candidates for the White House, according to opinion polls.

    As Mr Trump issued a fundraising email with the subject line “BREAKING: INDICTED”, several leading Republicans voiced their support for him.

    Speaker of the House of Representatives, Kevin McCarthy, said it was “unconscionable for a president to indict the leading candidate opposing him”.

    “House Republicans will hold this brazen weaponisation of power accountable,” he wrote on Twitter.

    Mr Trump’s rival for the 2024 nomination, Florida Governor Ron DeSantis said: “We have for years witnessed an uneven application of the law depending upon political affiliation.

    “The DeSantis administration will bring accountability to the DOJ, excise political bias and end weaponisation once and for all,” he added.

    Vivek Ramaswamy, who is also in the running, said he would “commit to pardon Trump promptly on January 20, 2025, and to restore the rule of law in our country”.

    But another candidate, Asa Hutchinson, said Mr Trump’s alleged actions “should not define our nation or the Republican Party”.

    A separate probe into efforts to overturn the results of the 2020 election, which Mr Trump lost, is also being overseen by Jack Smith, a former war crimes attorney who is known as a dogged investigator.

    Mr Trump became the first former president to be charged with a crime this April, after he pleaded not guilty to 34 counts of falsifying business records over a hush-money payment to a porn star.

    He faces a trial in that case in New York next year.

  • Trump likely to be hit with new charges over classified documents

    Trump likely to be hit with new charges over classified documents

    Donald Trump has reportedly received notification of being a target in a criminal investigation regarding potential mishandling of classified files following his departure from the White House.

    The move by federal prosecutors to inform the former president about the probe suggests that he may soon face charges. This would mark the second indictment for Mr. Trump, who is currently campaigning for another presidential run.

    Since last year, prosecutors have been examining the transfer of files to Mr. Trump’s Mar-a-Lago estate in Florida. In August, the property underwent a search during which 11,000 documents were seized, including approximately 100 classified files, some of which were labeled as top secret.

    According to three sources familiar with the matter, Mr. Trump was informed about being under investigation. He has consistently denied any wrongdoing and dismissed the investigation as politically motivated.

    When asked by the New York Times if he had been told he is a target of a federal investigation on Wednesday, he said “you have to understand” that he was not in direct touch with prosecutors.

    CNN, ABC News, and Politico all reported on Wednesday night that Mr Trump had been notified by letter that he was the subject of a criminal investigation.

    All the outlets said the move signalled charges could happen soon, but that it was possible a person would not go on to be charged.

    The New York Times cited two people familiar with the matter as saying the notification came from the office of Jack Smith, a former war crimes attorney turned special prosecutor who is considering evidence.

    It comes after prosecutors obtained an audio recording of Mr Trump in which he acknowledges keeping a classified document after leaving the White House.

    The details of documents that may have been in Mr Trump’s possession remain unclear. Classified material usually contains information that officials feel could damage national security if made public.

    It is against US law for federal officials, up to and including a president, to remove or retain classified documents at an unauthorised location.

    Grand juries, set up by a prosecutor to determine whether there is enough evidence to pursue a prosecution, are believed to have met in both Miami and Washington to hear evidence.

    On Wednesday, the jury in Miami heard evidence from Taylor Budowich, a former aide and spokesman to Mr Trump.

    It raises the possibility that any criminal charges could be filed in Florida for procedural reasons, CBS reported.

    Earlier this week, members of Mr Trump’s legal team met with investigators at the Department of Justice in Washington.

    Mr Trump, who is leading in opinion polls to be the Republican Party’s 2024 candidate for president, has consistently denied wrongdoing and has criticised the justice department’s investigation as “politically motivated” and a “witch-hunt”.

    Any indictment over his handling of classified documents would come after Mr Trump became the first former president to be charged with a crime, after he pleaded not guilty to 34 counts of falsifying business records over a hush-money payment to a porn star.

    He faces a trial in that case in New York next year.

  • LGBTQ+ bill: US threatens Uganda with economic sanctions

    LGBTQ+ bill: US threatens Uganda with economic sanctions

    In the event that Uganda’s anti-LGBTQ+ legislation is passed into law, the United States has threatened to impose economic sanctions.

    Calls for Ugandan President Yoweri Museveni to veto the “appalling” anti-gay bill were spearheaded by the United Nations and the United States on Wednesday (March 22).

    “We would have a look at whether or not there might be repercussions that we would have to take, perhaps in an economic way, should this law actually get passed,” John Kirby, spokesperson for the National Security Council is quoted to have said.

    Lawmakers in the East African country had by a majority voted on March 21 to pass the legislation, elements of which include:

    – A person who is convicted of grooming or trafficking children to engage them in homosexual activities faces life in prison.

    – Individuals and institutions which support or fund LGBT rights activities also face prosecution.

    A local media outfit, @ubctvuganda also reported a proposed 20-year jail term for ‘any entity that funds or promotes any form of homosexuality’.

    Uganda is a deeply traditional and religiously conservative country. The president is known to have harsh words for homosexuals and LGBTQ persons have routinely been raided.

    The final leg of making the bill into law is the signature of president Yoweri Museveni.

    A number of African countries have in the recent past rejected LGBTQ+ orientation. Uganda’s neighbours Kenya have had the president, first lady and deputy president openly speak out against LGBTQ+.

    Ghana is also in the process of passing an anti-LGBTQ+ law, a legislation that is believed to ave the backing of majority of lawmakers including the Speaker of Parliament, Alban Bagbin.

  • The iconic Tema ‘White House’ rots away

    The iconic Tema ‘White House’ rots away

    The ‘White House’, one of the iconic buildings in Tema, is rotting away.

    The building is falling apart and steps must be taken immediately to refurbish it to provide the needed office accommodation for the various decentralized departments under the Tema West Municipal Assembly (TWMA).

    The two-storey building which looks solid and attractive from afar has not seen any major renovation works since its construction many years ago.

    Checks from the Tema Metropolitan Assembly (TMA), the mother assembly of the TWMA, revealed that Tema ‘White House’ was named after the USA White House to mimic its importance and power when the revolutionary officers hijacked it in the early 1980 after it was built to house the TMA.

    The cadres of the 31 December Revolution used the space for summons, adjudication and other revolutionary activities.

    Mr. Frank Asante, Tema Metropolitan Public Relations Officer told the Ghana News Agency that, the edifice was constructed to house the TMA, as part of the Tema Ministry Enclave concept.

    He said the area also had the offices of the Ghana National Fire Service (GNFS), Audit Service, Labour, Rent Control, Health Directorate, Ghana Revenue Authority, Environmental Protection Agency, and Agric Department, among others.

    He said Nii Armarh Ashitey opted for the construction of the current office of TMA at the business central area to house the Assembly.

    When the revolutionaries vacated the building, some decentralized departments were accommodated in it.

    In 2010, the then Tema Metropolitan Security Council (MESEC) toured the building and took the decision to relocate the Electoral Commission, and the Tema Magistrate Court from the second floor which had serious structural cracks with the concrete ceiling falling off on workers.

    Thirteen years after, when the Ghana News Agency visited the ‘White House’ which is now under the TWMA, it was observed that even though the first and second floors have been vacated, the ground floor still houses the Tema Metro offices of the National Service Secretariat, Non-Formal Education, and Co-operative Department.

    Two of the offices have also been recently painted ready to house the Tema West Office of the Commission on Human Rights and Administrative Justice (CHRAJ).

    Climbing to the first and second floors of the ‘white house’, deep structural cracks and fungal-infested walls were what greeted the GNA. The offices have been long abandoned.

    Deep holes have been created in the ceiling as large parts of concrete have fallen off after long years of neglect. The iron rods holding the concrete roofs, are exposed and very rusty, an indication of corrosion due to contact with water, leaking from the roof.

    One of the offices had household items with the door locked with a small padlock. The GNA gathered that a lonely woman who was ejected from her room around the area took over the place and made it her home.

    Yousif, a Burkinabe haulage truck driver’s mate, who the GNA spotted charging his mobile phone in one of the most corroded and algae infested rooms which used to house the Magistrate Court, said the woman often goes out in the morning and returns at night to sleep.

    Ms. Afia Mansa, a food vendor, operating on the compound of the ‘white house’, said she was the unofficial caretaker of the building as she updates officials of the TWMA whenever they visited the place.

    Ms. Mansa said day in and day out prospective tenants came around to look at the possibility of renting the place.

    Meanwhile, checks at TMWA revealed that the Assembly’s engineers recently visited the White House.
    GNA

  • China says US has flown over 10 balloons over its airspace

    China says US has flown over 10 balloons over its airspace

    The rapid response from Washington to Beijing’s accusation widens the dispute that started last week after the US military allegedly shot down what it believes to be a Chinese spy balloon.

    More than ten times in the previous year, China has accused the US of illegally using high-altitude balloons to fly over its territory. Each time, the US government has responded with a denial.

    Days prior to the allegation on Monday, the US shot down a suspected Chinese spy balloon that had travelled from Alaska to South Carolina, igniting a fresh crisis in relations between the two largest economies in the world. Beijing has maintained that the object was a weather craft that had veered off course.

    “It is also common for US balloons to illegally enter the airspace of other countries,” Chinese foreign ministry spokesperson Wang Wenbin said at a news briefing.

    “Since last year, US high-altitude balloons have illegally flown over China’s airspace more than 10 times without the approval of Chinese authorities,” Wang said without giving details about how they had been dealt with or whether they had government or military links.

    The US should “first reflect on itself and change course, rather than smear and instigate a confrontation”, Wang said.

    The White House swiftly denied China’s assertions.

    “Not true. Not doing it. Just absolutely not true,” national security spokesman John Kirby said in an interview with MSNBC. “We are not flying balloons over China.”

    After the downing of the alleged Chinese airship last week, US Secretary of State Antony Blinken cancelled a visit to Beijing that many had hoped would put the brakes on the sharp decline in relations over Taiwan, trade, human rights and Chinese claims in the disputed South China Sea.

    The US has since placed economic restrictions on six Chinese entities it said are linked to China’s aerospace programmes.

    US Deputy Secretary of Commerce Don Graves has said his department “will not hesitate to continue to use” such restrictions and other regulatory and enforcement tools “to protect US national security and sovereignty”.

    The US House of Representatives also voted unanimously to condemn China for a “brazen violation” of US sovereignty and efforts to “deceive the international community through false claims about its intelligence collection campaigns”.

    Separately on Monday, the Philippines accused a Chinese coastguard ship of targeting a Philippine coastguard vessel with a military-grade laser and temporarily blinding some of its crew in the South China Sea. Manila called the incident a “blatant” violation of the Philippines’ sovereign rights.

    Wang said a Philippine coastguard vessel had trespassed into Chinese waters without permission on February 6 and that Chinese coastguard vessels responded “professionally and with restraint”. China claims virtually all of the South China Sea and has been steadily building up its maritime forces and island outposts in the strategic waterway.

    “China and the Philippines are maintaining communication through diplomatic channels in this regard,” Wang said.

  • Russia to USA: Respond to the Nord Stream accusations

    Russia to USA: Respond to the Nord Stream accusations

    The Russian foreign ministry responded to an article by American investigative journalist Seymour Hersh that claimed the US military was responsible for the attacks on Nord Stream 2.

    According to Russia’s foreign ministry, the United States needs to explain its alleged involvement in the explosions that destroyed the undersea Nord Stream gas pipelines last year.

    It was a response to a blog entry written earlier on Wednesday by renowned American journalist Seymour Hersh, who claimed that President Joe Biden had authorised the operation and implicated the US military in the explosions.

    Maria Zakharova, a spokeswoman for the Russian foreign ministry, urged the White House to respond to Hersh’s “facts.”

    Quoting one unnamed source with “direct knowledge of the operational planning”, Hersh detailed how “skilled deep-water divers” from the US Navy planted C-4 explosives during a training exercise last June, then detonated the payload remotely three months later.

    “President Joseph Biden saw the pipelines as a vehicle for [Russian President] Vladimir Putin to weaponise natural gas for his political and territorial ambitions,” Hersh wrote.

    Hersh is a Pulitzer Prize-winning investigative journalist who exposed the 1969 massacre of Vietnamese civilians by American forces. He also broke the story of US troops brutalising Iraqi prisoners at Abu Ghraib after the US invasion in 2003.

    Russia, without providing evidence, has repeatedly said NATO nations were behind last September’s explosions affecting the Nord Stream 1 and 2 pipelines – multibillion-dollar infrastructure projects that carried Russian gas to Germany under the Baltic Sea. Western officials have denied those accusations.

    “The White House must now comment on all these facts,” Zakharova said in a post on her Telegram page, where she summarised Hersh’s main claims regarding the alleged US involvement.

    The White House on Wednesday dismissed Hersh’s post. “This is utterly false and complete fiction,” said Adrienne Watson, a spokesperson for the National Security Council. A US Department of State spokesperson said the same.

    A Central Intelligence Agency spokesperson echoed the White House denial, calling the report “completely and utterly false”.

    ‘Something to hide’ The US and NATO have called the Nord Stream explosions “an act of sabotage“.

    Investigators from Sweden and Denmark – in whose exclusive economic zones the blasts occurred – have said the ruptures were a result of sabotage, but have not said who they believe was responsible.

    Russia said the countries “have something to hide” and are purposefully blocking Russia from the investigation. Its defence ministry previously accused British navy personnel of blowing up the Nord Steam pipelines.

    Construction of Nord Stream 2, designed to double the amount of gas Russia could send directly to Germany under the sea, was completed in September 2021. But the pipeline was never put into operation after Berlin shelved certification just days before Moscow sent its troops into Ukraine in February 2022.

  • US tracking alleged Chinese spy balloons

    US tracking alleged Chinese spy balloons

    The US is keeping tabs on a possible Chinese surveillance balloon that has recently been seen flying over important locations.


    Defense officials stated that they had no doubt that China was the owner of the “high-altitude surveillance balloon.” Most recently, it was spotted flying over Montana in the west.

    However, military authorities decided against shooting it down due to worries about the risk of falling debris.

    China is yet to respond.

    Canada announced on Friday that it was keeping an eye on “a possible second incident” involving a surveillance balloon, but it did not identify the possible perpetrator. According to the statement, it closely collaborates with the US to “protect Canada’s sensitive information from threats from foreign intelligence.”

    The object flew over Alaska’s Aleutian Islands and through Canada before appearing over the city of Billings in Montana on Wednesday, officials said.

    A senior defence official speaking on condition of anonymity said the government prepared fighter jets, including F-22s, in case the White House ordered the object to be shot down.

    Top military leaders, including Defence Secretary Lloyd Austin and General Mark Milley, chairman of the US Joint Chiefs of Staff, met on Wednesday to assess the threat. Mr Austin was travelling in the Philippines at the time.

    Montana, a sparsely populated state, is home to one of only three nuclear missile silo fields in the country, at Malmstrom Air Force Base, and officials said the apparent spy craft was flying over sensitive sites to collect information.

    But they advised against taking “kinetic action” against the balloon because of the danger falling debris might pose to people on the ground.

    The defence official, however, said there was no “significantly enhanced threat” of US intelligence being compromised because American officials “know exactly where this balloon is and exactly where it’s passing over”.

    He added that there was also no threat to civilian aviation as the balloon was “significantly” above the altitude used by commercial airlines.

    The official said the balloon is unlikely to give much more information than China can already collect using satellites.

    The US had raised the matter with Chinese officials in their embassy in Washington DC and in Beijing, the official added.

    During Thursday’s briefing at the Pentagon, officials declined to disclose the aircraft’s current location. They also refused to provide more details of the object, including its size.

    “There have been reports of pilots seeing this thing even though it’s pretty high up in the sky,” the unnamed defence official said. “So you know, it’s sizable.”

    They added that such surveillance balloons had been tracked in the past several years, but this one was “appearing to hang out for a longer period of time this time around”.

    It confused social media users in Montana, with some posting images of a pale, round object high in the sky. Others reported seeing US military planes in the area, apparently monitoring the object.

    Billings office worker Chase Doak told the Associated Press news agency that he noticed the “big white circle in the sky” and went home to get a better camera.

    “I thought maybe it was a legitimate UFO,” he said. “So I wanted to make sure I documented it and took as many photos as I could.”

    Chinese state media has not reported on the incident, but it is being widely discussed on Chinese social media, with many amused at the reported use of balloons for surveillance.

    “We have so many satellites, why would we need to use a balloon,” wrote one user on Weibo.

    Senator Marco Rubio, the top Republican on the Senate Intelligence Committee, slammed China’s alleged balloon.

    “The level of espionage aimed at our country by Beijing has grown dramatically more intense & brazen over the last 5 years,” he tweeted.

    Montana Governor Greg Gianforte, a Republican, said in a statement that he had been briefed on the “deeply troubling” situation.

    Speaking at an unrelated event in Washington DC on Thursday, CIA Director William Burns made no mention of the balloon, but called China the “biggest geopolitical challenge” currently facing the US.

    The alleged spy craft is likely to increase tensions ahead of US Secretary of State Antony Blinken’s visit to China next week. It will be the first visit to the country by a Biden administration cabinet secretary.

    The top US diplomat will be in Beijing to hold talks on a wide range of issues, including security, Taiwan and Covid-19.

    He will also meet Chinese President Xi Jinping, as the Financial Times reported on Thursday.

    Balloons are one of the oldest forms of surveillance technology. Compared to other airborne surveillance devices, they can be operated cheaply without personnel while remaining airborne for long periods of time.

  • White House calls Exxon record profit ‘outrageous’

    White House calls Exxon record profit ‘outrageous’

    Exxon CEO Darren Woods
    Image caption, Exxon said the profits were a vindication of the firm’s strategy

    Oil giant ExxonMobil reaped a record $55.7bn (£45.2bn) in profit last year as oil prices surged following Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.

    The total was more than double 2021’s figure, and is likely to renew pressure on the industry after some countries, including the UK, imposed special taxes on the profits last year.

    Exxon has criticised such measures as counter-productive.

    Last month, it sued the European Union over the new windfall tax.

    Exxon has also has spoken out against similar proposals in the US, where President Joe Biden has sought to focus blame for last year’s high motor fuel costs on companies failing to spend their profits to boost supply.

    A White House statement on Tuesday called it “outrageous that Exxon has posted a new record for Western oil company profits after the American people were forced to pay such high prices at the pump amidst [Russian President Vladimir] Putin’s invasion.

    “The latest earnings reports make clear that oil companies have everything they need, including record profits and thousands of unused but approved permits, to increase production, but they’re instead choosing to plough those profits into padding the pockets of executives and shareholders,” said White House spokesman Abdullah Hasan.

    In an interview with broadcaster CNBC, Exxon boss Darren Woods said the White House needed to “get its facts straight”, noting that the firm had continued to spend money on oil and gas projects despite pressure from investors and others to shift investments to renewable energy.

    He told investors on Tuesday that the profits were a vindication of the firm’s strategy.

    “Of course, our results clearly benefited from a favourable market but, to take full advantage of the undersupplied market, our work began years ago,” Mr Woods said in a conference call with investors. “We leaned in when others leaned out, bucking conventional wisdom.”

    Exxon’s shares sank sharply in 2020, when demand for oil tumbled, leading the firm to report its first loss in decades.

    But the price of the shares has soared since 2021, especially since oil prices jumped when the war in Ukraine disrupted energy supplies last year.

    The firm said it had been working hard to reduce costs, and profits would have been even higher without the windfall taxes in Europe.

    The company said it took a hit of $1.3bn in the final months of 2022, mainly from extra European taxes.

    It also reported a $3.4bn charge for the year stemming from the expropriation of its investments in Russia.

    Exxon said it increased investment by about 38% last year. In some key areas, such as Guyana and the Permian Basin, production was up more than 30%, offsetting output lost due to divestments and the change in Russia, the company said.

    Overall oil production increased about 3% in 2022, to 2,354 thousands of barrels per day from 2,289 thousands of barrels per day in 2021.

  • White House confirms additional classified documents were found at Biden’s Delaware home

    White House confirms additional classified documents were found at Biden’s Delaware home

    Joe Biden is facing a classified documents scandal.

    The White House confirmed Saturday that five additional pages with classification markings were found at POTUS’ home in Wilmington, Delaware. Richard Sauber, special counsel to the president, said the discovery was made earlier this week as Biden’s personal lawyers were searching the property. Sauber claimed the attorneys came across one classified document on Wednesday, but had to stop the search because they didn’t have security clearance.

    Sauber, who has security clearance, reportedly arrived at the residence on Thursday to facilitate the transfer of said document to the Justice Department; however, during his stop, Sauber reportedly discovered five more classified documents in Biden’s home.

    “While I was transferring it to the DOJ officials who accompanied me, five additional pages with classification markings were discovered among the material with it, for a total of six pages,” Sauber said in a statement. “The DOJ officials with me immediately took possession of them.”

    The announcement came just days after the White House confirmed a number of classified documents were found in Biden’s private garage as well as his old offices at the Penn Biden Center in Washington. The documents, which were from Biden’s time as Barack Obama’s vice president, were reportedly discovered in early November, just days before the midterm elections. A source claimed that a total of 20 classified files were recovered between the two locations.

    “Has ABC ever used the morals or conduct clause to fire or discipline 2 consenting adults at equal levels when both were white?” the lawyers will reportedly ask.

    “The President’s lawyers have acted immediately and voluntarily to provide the Penn Biden documents to the Archives and the Wilmington documents to DOJ,” Sauber said. “We have now publicly released specific details about the documents identified, how they were identified, and where they were found.”

    Though Biden has denied knowing that he had the files, the Department of Justice is looking into the matter and will determine whether the president mishandled sensitive material. On Thursday, Attorney General Merrick Garland announced the probe will be led by Robert Hur, a Trump appointee who served as the chief federal law enforcement officer for the District of Maryland between 2018-2021.

    Sauber said the Biden team is fully cooperating with the DOJ.

    “We are confident that a thorough review will show that these documents were inadvertently misplaced, and the President and his lawyers acted promptly upon discovery of this mistake,” Sauber said in a statement.

    The findings may complicate a similar DOJ probe involving former president, Donald Trump. In summer 2022, FBI agents raided Trump’s Mar-a-Lago estate and discovered dozens of empty document folders marked “CLASSIFIED.” Biden addressed the matter during a September interview on 60 Minutes.

    “How that could possibly happen, how one anyone could be that irresponsible,” Biden said. “And I thought what data was in there that may compromise sources and methods. By that, I mean, names of people helped or et cetera. And it’s just totally irresponsible.”

    Source: Complex.com

  • Biden visitor logs under scrutiny after classified files found

    Biden visitor logs under scrutiny after classified files found

    Congressional Republicans are demanding to see visitor logs for US President Joe Biden’s homes, arguing that the discovery of classified files at one of his residences is a national security risk.

    Mr Biden acknowledged on Thursday that sensitive material was found in the garage of his house in Delaware.

    The White House deflected when asked if the visitor logs would be provided.

    The justice department has appointed an investigator to look into the files.

    News that sensitive documents dating from Mr Biden’s time as vice-president had been found in a private office at the Penn Biden Center, a think tank in Washington, emerged earlier this week.

    That was followed by a disclosure that a second cache was discovered at Mr Biden’s home.

    The first batch was found on 2 November, just before the US midterm elections, but only became public on Monday.

    Mr Biden kept an office at the think tank after he left the White House in 2017 until he launched his presidential campaign in 2019.

    On Thursday, US Attorney General Merrick Garland revealed in a news conference that the second cache had been found on 20 December at Mr Biden’s private home in Wilmington, Delaware.

    He added that Mr Biden’s lawyers had called investigators on Thursday morning to notify them of an additional document, also found at the same residence.

    Citing the “extraordinary circumstances”, the attorney general appointed Robert Hur, a former senior justice department official during the Trump presidency, to lead an investigation in the Biden files.

    Kevin McCarthy, the newly elected Republican Speaker of the House, questioned the timing of the first disclosure and accused Mr Biden of knowingly mishandling the sensitive papers.

    “He knowingly knew [sic] this happened going into [the] election, going into interviews. This is what makes America not trust their government,” Mr McCarthy said on Thursday.

    Other Republicans on Thursday demanded the president release a log of all the people who had visited Mr Biden’s Delaware home.

    James Comer, a Kentucky congressman and chairman of the House Oversight Committee, told Fox News: “We need to know who all has had access to the president.”

    Colorado Republican Ken Buck wrote a letter to the White House calling on Mr Biden to “release all visitor logs”.

    Elise Stefanik, the number three House Republican and a New York congresswoman, said that the visitor logs were “a clear matter of national security”.

    Mr Biden’s predecessor, Donald Trump, is also under investigation by the justice department after more than 300 classified files – including some marked with Secret and Top Secret designations – were discovered by FBI agents executing a search warrant last year at his Mar-a-Lago estate in Florida.

    Speaking to reporters on Thursday, Mr Biden again said that his lawyers had notified officials of the discovery and that he took the matter seriously.

    The president – who previously described Mr Trump’s alleged mishandling of classified material as “totally irresponsible” – added that the documents were found locked in a garage next to his 1960s Chevrolet Corvette sports car, “not sitting out in the street”.

    Lawyers also searched Mr Biden’s home in Rehoboth Beach, Delaware, but said they found no additional files.

    An attorney for the president, Richard Sauber, said they were co-operating closely with the justice department.

    He predicted the investigation would show “these documents were inadvertently misplaced, and the president and his lawyers acted promptly upon discovery of this mistake”.

    Asked whether the Delaware visitor logs would ever be released, White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre countered that the Biden administration had restored public disclosure on White House visitor logs that had been restricted under Mr Trump.

    In 2017, the Trump administration also refused to reveal the names of most of the visitors to Mr Trump’s Mar-a-Lago golf club in Palm Beach during his presidency.

    On Thursday, Mr Trump posted on his Truth Social platform that the attorney general should “immediately” end the investigation he faces over the Mar-a-Lago cache, claiming the special counsel “hates” him.

    According to a CNN analysis in October, Mr Biden had spent more than a quarter of his presidency working from his houses in Wilmington or Rehoboth Beach.

    Source: BBC

  • Biden’s private office has potentially classified documents

    Biden’s private office has potentially classified documents

    President Joe Biden’s former office at a think tank had records that, according to the White House, the US justice department is investigating as potentially classified.

    About 10 of the files were discovered in a locked closet at the Penn Biden Center in Washington in November by Mr Biden’s legal team, said his lawyer.

    The batch has been handed over to the National Archives.

    Mr Biden’s predecessor, Donald Trump, is facing a probe for taking classified files to Florida after his presidency.

    According to the BBC’s US partner CBS News, the FBI is involved in the inquiry into classified documents found at the Penn Biden Center, and US Attorney General Merrick Garland has been asked to review the papers.

    A source familiar with the matter told CBS News the batch did not contain nuclear secrets and had been contained in a folder in a box with other unclassified papers.

    Richard Sauber, special counsel to President Biden, said in a statement to CBS on Monday that the files were discovered just before the midterm elections by Biden attorneys who were clearing out the office space.

    Mr Biden kept an office at the think tank, which is about a mile from the White House, from 2017 to 2020.

    Mr Sauber said: “Since that discovery [of the documents], the president’s personal attorneys have co-operated with the [National] Archives and the Department of Justice in a process to ensure that any Obama-Biden Administration records are appropriately in the possession of the Archives.”

    Mr Trump reacted on Monday on his social media site, Truth Social, asking: “When is the FBI going to raid the many homes of Joe Biden, perhaps even the White House?”

    Mr Trump is under investigation for allegedly resisting requests to give back about 300 classified documents that he took to his Florida estate, Mar-a-Lago, after leaving office. The National Archives tipped off the authorities in that case.

    The Biden files were discovered shortly before the justice department announced it would appoint an independent lawyer to decide whether to criminally charge Mr Trump over the files found at his golf club.Media caption,

    Watch: Trump supporters upset with FBI search

    Congressman James Comer, the new Republican chairman of the House Oversight Committee, said on Monday that the handling of the Biden papers raised questions about the justice department’s neutrality.

    He told reporters: “This is further concern that there’s a two-tier justice system within the DoJ [justice department] with how they treat Republicans versus Democrats, certainly how they treat the former president versus the current president.”

    Neither the Penn Biden Center nor National Archives immediately commented.

    In September, President Biden appeared on CBS and was asked for his reaction to a photo showing the documents recovered at Mar-a-Lago.

    “How anyone could be that irresponsible?” the president said.

    Source: BBC

  • Thousands of government JFK assassination files released in their original form

    The White House has mandated the first-ever full disclosure of thousands of documents pertaining to the assassination of US President John F. Kennedy.

    More than 97% of the records in the collection are now accessible to the public, according to the White House, with the online publication of about 13,173 files.

    The papers aren’t expected to reveal anything incredibly shocking, but historians hope to learn more about the alleged assassin.

    On November 22, 1963, while visiting Dallas, Texas, Kennedy was shot.

    By October 2017, the government was required by a 1992 law to make all assassination-related records available.

    On Thursday, President Joe Biden issued an executive order authorising the latest disclosure.

    But he said some files would be kept under wraps until June 2023 to protect against possible “identifiable harm”.

    The US National Archives said that 515 documents would remain withheld in full, and another 2,545 documents would be partly withheld.

    A 1964 US inquiry, the Warren Commission, found that Kennedy was killed by Lee Harvey Oswald, a US citizen who had previously lived in the Soviet Union, and that he acted alone. He was killed in the basement of the Dallas police headquarters two days after his arrest.

    JFK’s death spawned decades of conspiracy theories, but on Thursday the CIA said the US spy agency had “never engaged” Oswald, and did not withhold information about him from US investigators.

    Long-time JFK academics and theorists have hoped the latest release would reveal more information about Oswald’s activities in Mexico City, where he met a Soviet KGB officer in October 1963.

    In its latest statement, the CIA said that all information held by the agency relating to his trip to Mexico City had previously been released, adding: “There is no new information on this topic in the 2022 release.”

    But researchers with the Mary Ferrell Foundation, a non-profit that sued to the government to release the files, said the CIA was withholding information about Oswald’s time in Mexico.

    The foundation said some CIA records were never submitted to the archives and therefore were not part of the batch just released.

    One newly revealed document shows the president of Mexico helped the US place a wiretap on the Soviet embassy in Mexico without the knowledge of other officials in the Mexican government.

    This nugget of information was hidden by redactions in a previously released version of the file, reports the BBC’s US partner CBS News.

    The White House said the release of the files would provide the public with greater understanding of the investigation into the assassination.

    President Biden wrote in his order that “agencies have undertaken a comprehensive effort to review the full set of almost 16,000 records that had previously been released in redacted form and determined that more than 70 percent of those records may now be released in full”.

    The Trump administration released thousands of pages over the course of his presidency, but withheld others on the basis of national security, despite the 1992 law forcing the release of all the information by 2017.

    In October 2021, Mr Biden released around 1,500 documents, but said he was keeping the others sealed.

    Philip Shenon, a former New York Times reporter and author of A Cruel and Shocking Act: The Secret History of the Kennedy Assassination, says the new files could shed light on whether the government may have known of Oswald’s intentions.

    “I suspect there may be information in these documents to suggest that other people knew before the Kennedy assassination that this man Lee Harvey Oswald was a danger and that he may have talked openly about his intention to kill the president,” he tells BBC News.

    “And the question has always been did the agencies of government, the CIA and FBI, have some sense that this man was a danger to President Kennedy, and if they had acted on that information could they have saved the president?”

  • US says that Russia and Iran are heading toward a ‘full defense partnership’

    White House has reported that Russia and Iran are forming a full-fledged defense alliance to support Russia in its conflict with Ukraine.

    John Kirby, a spokesman for the White House National Security Council, claimed that Russia is once more looking to Iran to replenish the Russian military with drones and surface-to-surface missiles.

    “Russia is offering Iran an unprecedented level of military and technical support that is transforming their relationship into a fully-fledged defence partnership,” Mr Kirby said.

    “I think it’s important for us to be clear this partnership poses a threat not just to Ukraine, but to Iran’s neighbours in the region.”

    Concerns about new weapon sales to Russia come after Iran sold hundreds of attack drones to Russian over the summer.

    The Biden administration recently unveiled sanctions against Iranian firms and entities involved in the transfer of Iranian drones to Russia for use in Putin’s ongoing invasion of Ukraine.

    In October, the White House accused Tehran of sending Iranian troops to Crimea to support Russian drone attacks on Ukraine’s power stations and other key infrastructure,

    The White House and British government said the relatively small number of Iranian personnel deployed to Crimea, a part of Ukraine unilaterally annexed by Russia in contravention of international law in 2014, were there to assist Russian troops in launching Iranian-made drones against Ukraine.

    “Supports flowing both ways,” said Mr Kirby.

    “Russia is seeking to collaborate with Iran on areas like weapons development and trade. As part of this collaboration, we are concerned that Russia intends to provide Iran with advanced military components.”

     

     

  • White House blasts Trump for meeting with white supremacist

    White House Deputy Press Secretary Andrew Bates said bigotry, hate, and anti-Semitism have no place in the United States.

    The White House has condemned former President Donald Trump for meeting at his Florida estate with a prominent white supremacist and rapper Kanye West, who is embroiled in a storm over anti-Jewish remarks.

    Trump acknowledged having dinner with West, who legally changed his name to Ye, on Tuesday night at Mar-a-Lago and said he brought along friends, one of whom was Nick Fuentes, an outspoken anti-Semite and racist.

    “I didn’t know Nick Fuentes,” Trump posted on his Truth Social account late Friday.

    White House Deputy Press Secretary Andrew Bates condemned Trump’s meeting with Fuentes.

    “Bigotry, hate, and anti-Semitism have absolutely no place in America – including at Mar-a-Lago. Holocaust denial is repugnant and dangerous, and it must be forcefully condemned,” Bates told CNN on Saturday.

    President Joe Biden, who is spending the holiday weekend in Nantucket, dodged a question about Trump’s dinner by saying: “You don’t wanna hear what I think.”

    Fuentes is a Holocaust denier whose YouTube channel was permanently suspended in early 2020 for violating the platform’s hate speech policy.

    Trump announced his plans in mid-November to seek reelection in 2024, and his embrace of a white nationalist unsettled some of his onetime administration officials.

    David Friedman, who was Trump’s former ambassador to Israel, blasted the dinner at Mar-a-Lago.

    “Even a social visit from an anti-Semite like Kanye West and human scum like Nick Fuentes is unacceptable,” Friedman said in one of several tweets.

    “Anti-Semites deserve no quarter among American leaders, right or left,” he said.

    Axios, a news website, cited what it said was a source familiar with the dinner as saying Trump “seemed very taken” with Fuentes, even though he didn’t seem to know anything about his background.

    Ye has lost major brand partnerships with the German sportswear company Adidas and US retailer Gap over recent anti-Jewish statements and associations with hardliners.

    Source: Aljazeera.com 

  • Naomi Biden: Biden’s granddaughter to marry at the White House

    The White House is set to host its first wedding in nearly a decade – just the 19th such celebration at the ultimate venue since 1812. The site has also hosted four wedding receptions.

    President Joe Biden’s eldest granddaughter, Naomi Biden – the daughter of Hunter Biden and his former wife Kathleen Buhle – is marrying fiancé Peter Neal at a ceremony on Saturday.

    The White House is clearly a desired wedding location – and one not available to the average citizen.

    Sarah Fling, with the White House Historical Association, explained to the BBC how often such events take place – and who even gets to throw a White House wedding.

    Nixon and daughterImage source, Getty Images
    Image caption, Tricia Nixon’s Rose Garden wedding was nearly ruined by rain
    Wedding ceremonyImage source, Getty Images
    Image caption, Richard Nixon’s daughter Tricia Nixon gave out 700 press credentials according to the White House Historical Association

    There are very few people who can sign off on hosting nuptials at the official residence and workplace of the president of the United States, said the historian.

    “It’s exciting because really there’s no hard and fast rule about who can or cannot be married at the White House. It’s essentially up to the President and First Lady.”

    Couple cutting cakeImage source, Getty Images
    Image caption, Lyndon Johnson’s daughter, Luci, held her reception at the White House. The ceremony was held at a Catholic church
    Wedding guestsImage source, Getty Images
    Image caption, In December 1967, Lynda Johnson, Lyndon Johnson’s daughter, married Captain Charles S. Robb in the East Room.

    While most past weddings have been held for close family members of the president, some White House staff members have had the rare privilege.

    “In 1942, Harry Hopkins, who was a really close adviser to President Franklin Roosevelt, was able to have his wedding on the second floor of the White House in the Oval Room, which was at that time, President Roosevelt’s private study,” Ms Fling said.

    Most recently in 2013, Barack Obama allowed White House photographer Pete Souza to get married in the Rose Garden, which borders the building’s West Wing.

    Woodrow Wilson's youngest daughterImage source, Hulton Archive
    Image caption, Woodrow Wilson’s youngest daughter, Eleanor, married the Secretary of the Treasury in 1914
    Bride and birdesmaidsImage source, Library of Congress
    Image caption, Jessie Wilson (middle), the eldest daughter of Woodrow Wilson, with her bridesmaids. She married in the East Room in 1914

    The size of the wedding – and the publicity surrounding it – is up to the couple getting married.

    There is no size cap, but different White House rooms accommodate different size events.

    For instance, the Blue Room, which has hosted receptions since the early 1800s, is on the smaller side.

    The first and only president to get married at the White House was Grover Cleveland, who said his vows in that room to the much younger – by 27 years – Frances Folsom in 1886.

    Newspaper illustrationImage source, Library of Congress
    Image caption, Grover Cleveland was the first and only US president to get married at the White House

    The South Lawn, where Naomi Biden’s wedding will be held, has more space, so expect a potentially longer guest list. The White House kitchen is able to serve 140 dinner guests and hors d’oeuvres for up to 1,000 people.

    This will be the first wedding at the South Lawn location – the same site as the famous White House Easter Egg Roll – but the very first outdoor wedding at the executive mansion was in 1971 for Tricia Nixon, President Richard Nixon’s daughter.

    It was a rainy day, but the sun came out in time and the ceremony continued in the Rose Garden.

    Teddy Roosevelt and daughterImage source, Print Collector
    Image caption, Alice Roosevelt, Theodore Roosevelt’s daughter, had quite the guest list – nearly 800-1,000 people were invited. She was married in the East Room

    In the 19th Century, weddings at the White House were often quite private affairs.

    The first media event was Alice Roosevelt’s wedding in 1906, which was front page news in all the papers and had people lining up at the White House for a glimpse.

    There were between 800 and 1,000 guests, according to Ms Fling.

    Still, the amount of desired privacy varies.

    Tricia Nixon gave out 700 press credentials for her wedding. Ms Fling says Naomi Biden’s will probably be a more intimate affair.

     

    Source: BBC

  • Virginia McLaurin, who famously danced with the Obamas at the White House, dies at 113

    The centenarian, who shared oral histories about her life and was honored for her volunteerism, died peacefully in Maryland on Monday, according to a friend

    Virginia McLaurin, the centenarian who went viral for her dance with the Obamas in 2016, has died at 113.

    McLaurin died Monday after spending “a few days in hospice,” according to a statement posted on her official Facebook page.

    Her friend Deborah Menkart said in a statement that McLaurin died peacefully in Maryland, where her son Felipe Cardoso currently lives, per The New York Times.

    Barack and Michelle Obama honored McLaurin in a tweet featuring the viral video of them dancing with McLaurin at the White House.

    “Rest in peace, Virginia,” the former president and first lady said on Twitter. “We know you’re up there dancing.”

    A video of the dance shared on the White House’s Facebook page has been viewed over 70 million times in the last six years.

    “I thought I would never live to get in the White House. And I tell you, I am so happy,” she told the Obamas in the video. “And I’m here to celebrate Black history.”

    McLaurin grew up as a sharecropper in South Carolina before making her way north amid the Great Migration, according to Monday’s Facebook post.

    The centenarian gained attention from the White House after recording short oral history clips about her life, according to a GoFundMe campaign started “to help her family with memorial services.”

    She also volunteered as a UPO foster grandparent and advocated for “quality living conditions” with other tenants, the fundraiser says.

    106 year-old Virginia McLaurin in Busboys and Poets on Feb 22, 2016 in Washington, DC
    KATE PATTERSON FOR THE WASHINGTON POST VIA GETTY IMAGES

    In 2013, McLaurin was honored in Washington D.C. for her volunteer work with students that have severe mental and physical disabilities, according to The Guardian and NBC affiliate WRC-TV. She was 104 years old at the time.

    According to Monday’s Facebook post, McLaurin “spent decades volunteering 40 hours a week at schools after she retired.”

    McLaurin was also “devoted” to church and watched services “regularly” on YouTube during the COVID-19 pandemic, according to the fundraiser.

    The centenarian had spent most of her time inside over the last few years due to the COVID-19 pandemic, according to Monday’s statement on Facebook, but continued to connect with her fans and followers on social media.

    “She lived an incredibly full life and appreciated all the love she received from people on this FB page and everywhere she went,” Monday’s post said.

    Source: People.com 

  • Biden is the first president in 20 years to hold the Senate at the midterms

    Only three other presidents were able to grow support in the midterms in the past century.

    Defying political gravity, Democrats have avoided defeat in the Senate and could even score a victory.

    President Joe Biden’s party flipped Pennsylvania and held on to every other seat (bar Georgia, where the Senate race is headed for a runoff on Dec. 6), a result that few other presidents have enjoyed in the past.

    The Republicans are currently projected to win a slim majority in the House of Representatives, although 20 races remain too close to call. Still, Democrats’ losses in the lower chamber are fewer than forecast, scoring one of the best midterm results for the party in the last century.

    Typically, the political party in the White House loses popularity, and therefore seats, in the midterm elections. There are a number of reasons for this: an overall lower voter turnout compared to presidential elections, those dissatisfied with the status quo being more likely to head to the ballots than those who support it, and swing voters switching their vote away from the ruling party depending on how economic and social conditions have fared.

    Ahead of the Nov. 8 vote, Biden recorded low popularity rates in the polls as inflation touched 40-year highs. The odds appeared to be in Republicans’ favor, but the conservative party ultimately failed to get a leg up in the Senate races. Voters showed up for abortion rights, and against Donald Trump and candidates who doubted or rejected the outcome of the 2020 election .

    Time Capsule: When presidents’ parties gained in Senate races

    Only on three occasions since 1922 has the president’s party gained (or lost no) Senate seats.

    On Saturday Nov. 12, Mark Kelly’s re-election in Arizona put the Democrats one vote away from clinching the Senate. The former NASA astronaut, who won a second term in a state that has historically voted red, has at times criticized Biden on issues such as immigration.

    Later that day, the Nevada race results cemented the Democrats’ held of the Senate. When the tight race was called in Catherine Cortez Masto’s favor, Republicans’ 1994-like “red wave” talk fell flat on its head.

    Now, Masto’s win over Trump-backed Adam Laxalt gives Democrats an opportunity to clinch an outright Senate majority if they win in Georgia’s December runoff.

    All eyes on Georgia’s runoff election

    Neither candidate in the Georgia Senate race won an outright majority, so the top two, Democrat Raphael Warnock and Republican Herschel Walker, will face off in a runoff election on Dec 6. (Ironically, two black contenders will face-off with a tradition that was originally designed to keep Black voters away from the polls.)

    Independently, a Warnock win would make history considering there has never been a midterm where every incumbent who sought another term won their primary and general elections since the popular vote for US senators were established in 1913.

    In the context of the Senate, Warnock’s win would give Democrats a clear majority, so vice president Kamala Harris wouldn’t have to be the tie-breaker.

    Democrats are eyeing a Georgia win, president Biden says

    “I’m incredibly pleased by the turnout. And I think it’s a reflection of the quality of our candidates. And they’re all running on the same program. There wasn’t anybody who wasn’t running on what we did. They’re all staying, sticking with it. And so, I feel good. I’m looking forward to the next couple years.” —President Joe Biden, speaking to reporters on Nov. 13

    Person of interest: Mitch McConnell

    Many members of the Republican party, including Trump and his former White House senior adviser Stephen Miller, are blaming Minority Leader of the US Senate Mitch McConnell for losing the Arizona election. The Senate Leadership Fund, led by McConnell, withdrew broadcast ad spending from Arizona candidate Blake Masters to the tune of $9 million, and instead gave it to Lisa Murkowski, who was up against another Republican-backed nominee in Alaska. McConnell also spent more on Colorado than he did on Arizona, to little avail.

    As the tense Arizona race trotted on, Masters said: “The people who control the purse strings, Senate Leadership Fund, Mitch McConnell—McConnell decided to spend millions of dollars attacking a fellow Republican in Alaska instead of helping me defeat Senator Mark Kelly. Had he chosen to spend money in Arizona, this race would be over, we’d be celebrating a Senate Majority right now.”

    A disgruntled Masters said McConnell does not deserve to be a majority or minority leader, highlighting growing divisions regarding the future of the Republican party leadership.

    Source: Quartz.com

  • CIA chief Burns in Turkey for talks with Russian counterpart: Reports

    US Central Intelligence Agency Director William Burns has travelled to Turkey to speak to his Russian counterpart and warn Moscow of the consequences of any use of nuclear weapons in Ukraine, according to several reports citing an unnamed White House official.

    The Reuters news agency quoted the White House official as saying that Burns, a former US ambassador to Russia, was not conducting negotiations of any kind on Monday with Sergey Naryshkin, the head of Russia’s Foreign Intelligence Service.

    Ukraine was briefed in advance about Burns’s trip to Turkey, the official added.

    The official provided no details regarding the timing of Burns’s meeting, and it was not immediately clear whether his talks with Naryshkin had already concluded.

    Turkey’s state-run Anadolu news agency also reported the meeting, citing unnamed intelligence sources as saying it was being hosted by Turkish intelligence officials.

    Source: Aljazeera.com 

  • What’s going on with Taiwan?

    As we’ve been reporting, one of the main items expected to be on the agenda for the Chinese and American leaders during their ongoing talks is the thorny topic of Taiwan.

    The key thing to understand here is that there’s a debate over the status of the island.

    China views Taiwan as a renegade province which is destined to one day be reunited with the mainland – by force if needed.

    However, Taiwan has many characteristics of an independent state. It’s a self-ruled democracy, and people there see themselves as being separate from Beijing – whether or not independence is ever officially declared.

    The United States has long tried to walk a tightrope. Officially, it only recognises the government in Beijing. However, President Biden has repeatedly said the US would defend Taiwan if Beijing’s troops ever invaded. The White House has always looked to walk back his comments.

    Tensions have been building recently – and peaked in August when Nancy Pelosi, the speaker of the US House of Representatives, visited Taiwan. China responded with large-scale military drills nearby.

    Source: BBC.com 

  • Why is Joe Biden becoming highly unpopular?

    Democrats are concerned about Joe Biden’s record-low approval rating, as we’ve previously reported.

    His approval rating is the lowest of any president ahead of their first midterm elections, at 40%.

    While most presidents experience some loss of support in their first two years, his ratings have fallen lower than those of his recent predecessors; what is the cause of this?

    It’s impossible to point to just one issue, but dissatisfaction with the economy seems to be among one of the biggest contributors.

    Not all of this was in Mr Biden’s control, as countries are dealing with the aftermath of the pandemic and a spike in gas prices caused by the war in Ukraine.

    Asked about this previously, former White House press secretary Jen Psaki offered a similar explanation.

    “People are fatigued across the country. It’s impacting how they live, how they work. There are worries about their kids, their ability to experience joyful things in life like concerts and going to restaurants and seeing friends,” she said, describing the impact of the pandemic and rising costs.

    But other factors are at play too.

    Mr Biden has also seen slipping support among young voters angry about inaction on climate change, healthcare and student debt.

    Meanwhile, black voters have been disappointed by a lack of progress on voting rights and police reform.

    Then there was the chaotic withdrawal from Afghanistan. 

    Although a majority of Americans supported withdrawing US troops, the desperate scenes in Kabul undercut Mr Biden’s authority as a foreign policy expert.

  • US confirms ‘communications’ with Kremlin amidst Ukraine war

    US National Security Adviser Jake Sullivan has confirmed that the communication channels between Washington and Moscow remain open.

    It comes as the White House refuses to deny reports that Mr Sullivan has been leading talks with Russia to prevent a nuclear escalation in Ukraine.

    Speaking in New York, Mr Sullivan said it was “in the interests” of the US to maintain contact with the Kremlin.

    But he insisted officials were “clear-eyed about who we are dealing with”.

    The Wall Street Journal reports that Mr Sullivan has held confidential discussions with his Russian counterpart, Security Council secretary Nikolai Patrushev, and senior Kremlin foreign policy aide Yuri Ushakov, over the past several months.

    Senior officials told the paper the men had discussed ways to guard against the risk of nuclear escalation in the war in Ukraine, but had not engaged in any negotiations around ways to end the conflict.

    Last month, Mr Sullivan said any use of nuclear weapons would have “catastrophic consequences for Russia“. He told the US broadcaster NBC that senior officials had “spelled out” the scope of the potential US response in private discussions with Russian officials.

    US National Security Council spokeswoman Adrienne Watson refused to confirm the story, telling the paper that “people claim a lot of things”, while Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov accused Western newspapers of “publishing numerous hoaxes”.

    But White House Press Secretary Karin Jean-Pierre said on Monday that the United States reserved the right to hold talks with Russia.

    And Mr Sullivan – who is said to be one of the most senior advisers to US President Joe Biden still pushing for discussions with Russia – said maintaining contact with Moscow was in the “interests of every country who is affected by this conflict”.

    Last week, the Washington Post reported that senior US officials were urging Kyiv to signal an openness to hold negotiations with Russia and drop their public refusal to discuss an end to the war while President Vladimir Putin remained in power.

    But Mr Sullivan told a public event in New York that the Biden administration had “an obligation to pursue accountability” and pledged to work with international partners to “hold the perpetrators of grave and grotesque war crimes in Ukraine responsible for what they have done”.

    “I was just in Kyiv on Friday. and I had the opportunity to meet with President [Volodymyr] Zelensky and my counterpart Andriy Yermak, with the military leadership and also to get a briefing on just what level of death and devastation has been erupted by Putin’s war on that country,” Mr Sullivan said.

    Concerns have been heightened in recent months that Russia could resort to using nuclear weapons in a desperate attempt to defend four regions of eastern and southern Ukraine that it illegally annexed.

    Meanwhile, Ukraine has invoked its war-time martial laws to take control of the assets of five strategically important companies.

    Some of the companies – which include two energy companies and firms that make engines, vehicles and transformers – are linked to oligarch Vyacheslav Bohuslayev, who was arrested on suspicion of collaborating with Russia.

    President Zelensky said the move would help Ukraine’s defence sector meet the needs of the military, which is currently engaged in counteroffensives in southern and eastern Ukraine.

    Source: BBC

  • 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.

  • No indications Russia is preparing to use nuclear weapons: White House

    White House spokesman, the US does not perceive any indications that Russia is getting ready to use nuclear weapons.

    Spokesman John Kirby declared: “We have been clear from the beginning that Russia’s comments about the potential use of nuclear weapons are deeply concerning, and we take them seriously.”

    “We continue to monitor this as best we can, and we see no indications that Russia is making preparations for such use.”

    Kirby’s remarks came after the New York Times newspaper reported earlier on Wednesday that senior Russian military leaders had recently held discussions about when and how Moscow might deploy a tactical nuclear weapon in Ukraine, citing multiple unnamed US officials.

     

  •  White House, intelligence suggests North Korea is providing Russia with artillery shells

    White House national security spokesman John Kirby says, the United States has information that suggests North Korea is clandestinely supplying Russia with a “significant” amount of artillery shells for use in Ukraine.

    North Korea was trying to conceal the shipments by routing them through nations in the Middle East and North Africa, Kirby said in a virtual briefing.

    “Our indications are that the DPRK is covertly supplying, and we are going to monitor to see whether the shipments are received,” Kirby said, referring to the country by the acronym of its official name, adding that the US would consult with the United Nations on accountability issues over the shipments.

    “It is not an insignificant number of shells, but we don’t believe they are in such a quantity that they would change the momentum of the war,” he said.

    North Korea said in September that it had never supplied weapons or ammunition to Russia and has no plans to do so.

     

  • Brittney Griner: Russian court rejects her appeal against her prison sentence

    A Russian court has rejected Brittney Griner’s appeal against her nine-year prison sentence on drug charges.

    The sentence was upheld by a court near Moscow, with the state prosecutor calling it “fair.”

    The double Olympic winner apologized for her “honest mistake” in her appeal hearing via video link, saying it had been “very, very stressful”.

    Griner, 32, was convicted in August of smuggling and possessing cannabis oil.

    It was not immediately clear whether all her legal routes had been exhausted. She is due to serve her sentence in a penal colony.

    The sportswoman’s lawyer, Alexander Boykov, said his team hoped that a prisoner exchange would be possible.

    In August, the Kremlin posed the possibility of a prisoner swap between the US and Russia involving the basketball player.

    Reports in US media suggest imprisoned Russian arms trafficker Viktor Bout – known as the Merchant of Death – could be transferred by Washington to the Russian authorities as part of the deal.

    Mr Boykov said: “No judge, hand on heart, will honestly say that Griner’s nine-year sentence is in line with Russian criminal law.

    He added his legal team would be in talks with Griner as to whether she would want to pursue a further appeal.

    The White House called the legal proceedings a “sham”.

    In a statement, a US national security adviser, Jake Sullivan, said Griner was being “wrongfully detained under intolerable circumstances” and that President Joe Biden had called for her release immediately.

    A top US diplomat, who attended the hearing, called the sentence “excessive and disproportionate”.

    The sports star spoke to the appeals court of three judges remotely from her detention centre in a town near Moscow.

    “I really hope that the court will adjust this sentence because it has been very very stressful and very traumatic,” she had told the court.

    “People with more severe crimes have gotten less than what I was given,” she added.

    Considered one of the world’s top players, she was detained on 17 February at an airport near Moscow when vape cartridges containing cannabis oil were found in her luggage.

    She had come to Russia to play club basketball during the US off-season.

    Her case has become subject to high-profile diplomacy between the US and Russia, whose relations plummeted after Russia invaded Ukraine on 24 February.

  • US President Joe Biden praises the ‘groundbreaking milestone’

    Rishi Sunak’s victory in the Conservative leadership election has been described as a “groundbreaking milestone” by US President Joe Biden.

    After meeting King Charles today, Mr Sunak is set to become Britain’s first black prime minister. On Monday, Mr. Biden made the remark at a White House event commemorating the Indian holiday of Diwali.

    Mr Sunak, a 42-year-old multimillionaire former hedge fund boss, won the race to lead the Conservative Party on Monday and will become the UK’s youngest leader in modern times.

    His family migrated to Britain from India in the 1960s, a period when many people from Britain’s former colonies moved to the country to help it rebuild after World War Two.

    “We’ve got the news that Rishi Sunak is now the prime minister,” Mr Biden said. “He’s expected to become the prime minister I think tomorrow when he goes to see the King.

    “Pretty astounding. A groundbreaking milestone and it matters.”

    White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre had earlier said Mr Biden would call Mr Sunak in the coming days, noting that it was protocol for the US president to wait to offer his congratulations until after an incoming British prime minister had met with the monarch and been formally invited to form a new government.

     

  • No new intelligence behind Biden nuclear war remarks says, White House

    The US does not have any new intelligence that sparked Joe Biden’s remarks about nuclear “Armageddon”, the White House has said.

    President Biden had said the world is closer to nuclear war than at any time since the Cuban missile crisis.

    In statements this afternoon, the White House said the US has seen no reason to change its own nuclear posture.

    Its spokesperson said Russia’s talk of using nuclear weapons was irresponsible, but added that it has no indications that Moscow is preparing to imminently use them.

    President Biden’s comments show how seriously he takes the threats, the spokesperson added.

     

  • Russia-Ukraine war: Your threats are being taken ‘seriously’ – US to Putin on nuclear threats

    A top White House source told the BBC that Vladimir Putin’s veiled threats to use nuclear weapons to defend territory in Ukraine are being taken “seriously” by the US.

    John Kirby said the US was not changing its “strategic deterrent posture”, but that Mr Putin spoke irresponsibly.

    On Wednesday Russia’s leader warned his country would use all the means at its disposal to protect its territory.

    It came as four Ukrainian regions part-occupied by Russian forces are about to stage snap votes on joining Russia.

    Ukraine and its allies call these votes a sham exercise, designed to give spurious legitimacy to an illegal annexation.

    “It is a dangerous precedent for Mr Putin to be using this kind of rhetoric in the context of a war clearly that he’s losing inside Ukraine,” National Security Council spokesman Mr Kirby told the BBC.

    “We have to take these threats seriously and we do… We’ve been monitoring, as best we can, his nuclear capabilities, I can tell you that we don’t see any indication that we need to change our strategic deterrent posture at this point.”

    He dismissed plans for Russia to annex further parts of Ukraine as “nothing more than a ploy by Vladimir Putin to try to gain… through politics and electoral issues, that which he cannot gain militarily”.

    “But it’s not going to work,” he said. “No one’s going to recognise it. And what needs to happen is Mr Putin needs to leave Ukraine. He needs to stop this war.”

    Russia’s conduct in Ukraine was strongly condemned at a special meeting of the UN Security Council in New York on Thursday.

    “This week, President Putin said Russia wouldn’t hesitate to use ‘all weapon systems available’ in response to a threat to its territorial integrity – a threat all the more menacing given Russia’s intention to annex large swaths of Ukraine in the days ahead…” said US Secretary of State Anthony Blinken.

    “This from a country that in January of this year joined the other permanent members of the Security Council in signing a statement affirming that ‘nuclear war can never be won and must never be fought.”

    Former Russian leader Dmitry Medvedev said in a statement on social media on Thursday that the means by which Russia would defend itself included “strategic nuclear weapons”.

    But Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov accused some Security Council members of trying to impose a false narrative on Moscow’s operations in Ukraine and restating allegations that ethnic Russians had been persecuted by Ukrainian government forces.

    “There’s an attempt today to impose on us a completely different narrative to show Russian aggression as the origin of all the tragedy,” Mr Lavrov said.

    “This ignores the fact that for over eight years the Ukrainian army and fighters from the nationalist formations killed and continue to kill inhabitants of [the east Ukrainian region of] Donbas with impunity simply because they refused to recognise the results of the coup d’etat in Kyiv. They decided to uphold their rights, which were guaranteed by the Ukrainian Constitution, including the right to freely use Russian, their mother tongue.”

    Russia attempts to justify its invasion by saying it is fighting neo-Nazis, a claim widely dismissed by the international community, as well as resisting Nato expansion.

    In his speech on Wednesday, President Putin also announced a call-up for reservists in a move analysts say is a sign that Russia’s forces in Ukraine are struggling to hold on to the strip of the territory they occupy in the east and south.

  • Ramaphosa and Biden to hold talks at White House

    On September 16, South African President Cyril Ramaphosa and the US President Joe Biden will engage each other at the White House.

    Issues to be discussed will hover around trade and energy.

    In a statement on Thursday, the White House wrote “The leaders, building on their productive call in April and the US-South Africa Strategic Dialogue in August, will discuss opportunities to deepen our cooperation on trade and investment, infrastructure, climate and energy, and health.”

    It added that the presidents would also reaffirm the partnerships between their two countries.

    They will also “discuss our work together to address regional and global challenges”.

  • 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”.

  • Syria denies holding journalist Austin Tice after White House claims otherwise

    The Syrian government on Wednesday denied it is holding or has any information on the whereabouts of Austin Tice, an American journalist who vanished a decade ago while reporting on the Middle Eastern nation’s civil war.

    Syria’s foreign ministry said in a rare statement that the country “denies that it has kidnapped or is hiding any American citizens who entered its territory or resided in areas under the sovereignty and authority of the Syrian government.”

    The comments come a week after US President Joe Biden said that Washington knows “with certainty” that Tice is being held by the Syrian government.

    The Syrian government has denied on multiple occasions that it’s holding Tice, but before its statement Wednesday, it had not addressed the journalist’s whereabouts publicly since 2016.

    Tice disappeared in Damascus, the Syrian capital, while he was working as a freelance journalist for CBS, The Washington Post and The McClatchy Company.

    Tice’s family said Austin was traveling in the Damascus suburb of Darayya to work on one of his final pieces for the summer on August 13, 2012, when he was detained at a checkpoint. He was supposed to leave for Lebanon the following day. The Texas native and veteran of the US Marine Corps was supposed to come home to finish his final year of law school at Georgetown University.

    Since then, the only information Tice’s family has received from his captors was a 43-second video that surfaced five weeks after his disappearance. It was titled “Austin Tice is Alive” and showed Tice and a group of armed men, but contained no other information.

    In its statement Wednesday, the Syrian government denied it had ever arrested Tice.

    10th anniversary of disappearance

     

    Tice was among the first journalists to disappear after Syria’s peaceful pro-democracy protests, sparked by the Arab Spring, were violently crushed by Bashar al-Assad’s government.

    Successive US administrations have contended that Tice was alive and being held captive somewhere in Syria. There was no indication he was abducted or held by ISIS, which executed multiple American journalists it kidnapped, including James Foley and Steven Sotloff.

    Though the FBI offered a reward of $1 million for information on Tice’s whereabouts, his case has languished for years.

    Tice’s parents have worked diligently to bring government and media attention to their son’s disappearance. During a meeting with Biden at the White House in May, the President “reiterated his commitment to continue to work through all available avenues to secure Austin’s long overdue return to his family.”

    The Biden administration has had direct engagements with the Syrian government in an effort to secure the release of Tice, according to a source and a senior administration official. There have been a number of direct interactions — none of which took place in Damascus — but they have thus far yielded no progress, the source familiar said.

    Last week marked the 10th anniversary of Tice’s disappearance, which his family and the White House used to reiterate their demands for information.

    “We know with certainty that he has been held by the Syrian regime,” Biden said in a statement last week. “We have repeatedly asked the government of Syria to work with us so that we can bring Austin home.

    “Tice family deserves answers, and more importantly, they deserve to be swiftly reunited with Austin.”

    Debra Tice, Austin’s mother, told CNN on Thursday, her son’s 41st birthday, she is happy the President mentioned his name and that it is a sign the administration is ready to negotiate his release.

    “I’m just so glad that President Biden has said Austin’s name publicly,” Debra Tice told CNN’s John Berman on “New Day.” “I think that it’s an indication from the President that the United States government is ready to engage with Syria to bring Austin home.”

    In a separate statement Wednesday, Secretary of State Antony Blinken said Washington “will continue to pursue all available avenues to bring Austin home and work tirelessly until we succeed in doing so.”

    Among those tasked with bringing Tice home is Special Presidential Envoy for Hostage Affairs Roger Carstens, who secretly traveled to Damascus and met with Assad regime officials in 2020 under the Trump administration. In May of this year, he met with Abbas Ibrahim, a top Lebanese security official, in Washington “to discuss US citizens who are missing or detained in Syria,” State Department spokesman Ned Price said at the time.

    Ibrahim, the chief of Lebanon’s General Security Directorate, has played a role in securing the release of American detainees in the past, including Sam Goodwin from Syria and Nizar Zikka from Iran.

    Source: CNN

  • Senator Joe Manchin suddenly backs Biden climate and tax bill

    A US Democratic senator who has proved a political thorn in the White House’s side has stunned Washington by announcing sudden support for President Joe Biden’s top agenda item.

    Joe Manchin says he now backs a bill to raise corporate taxes, fight climate change, and lower medical costs.

    The West Virginians previously objected to the proposal, citing fears more spending could worsen inflation.

    Passage of the bill would be a major legislative victory for Mr. Biden.

    Salvaging a key plank of his domestic agenda could also grant a much-needed electoral boost for his fellow Democrats, who are battling to retain control of Congress as midterm elections loom in November.

    “If enacted, this legislation will be historic,” said the president.

    It is not clear what prompted the senator’s dramatic reversal to support the new bill. He is something of a political anomaly, representing a conservative state that voted overwhelmingly for former President Donald Trump.

    Earlier this week, the 74-year-old tested positive for Covid. He is fully vaccinated and wrote on Twitter that he was experiencing mild symptoms.

    In a joint statement on Wednesday evening with Senate Democratic leader Chuck Schumer, Mr. Manchin provided a few specifics about his change in position on the bill which:

    • Is said to be much more modest than the $3.5tn (£2.9tn) version Democrats originally put forward
    • Would arguably help the US lower its carbon emissions by about 40% by the year 2030
    • Would devote $369bn to climate policies such as tax credits for solar panels, wind turbines, and electric vehicles, and to tackling the impact of pollution on low-income communities.

    “By a wide margin, this legislation will be the greatest pro-climate legislation that has ever been passed by Congress,” Mr. Schumer said.

    Mr. Manchin and Mr. Schumer also maintained the measure would pay for itself by raising $739bn (£608bn) over the decade through hiking the corporate minimum tax on big companies to 15%, beefing up Internal Revenue Service tax enforcement, and allowing the government to negotiate prescription drug prices.

    President Biden needs the support of all 50 Democratic senators, along with Vice President Kamala Harris’s tiebreaking vote, to get the bill through the Senate and send it to the House of Representatives – where Democrats hold a razor-thin majority.

    If passed, the legislation would mark a major breakthrough for the president, enshrining a number of his major policy goals into law and offering to salvage a domestic economic agenda that has in recent months stalled under failed negotiations.

    The bill still amounts to significantly less than what the White House had hoped to achieve in its original $1.9tn Build Back Better agenda – an ambitious plan to comprehensively rewrite the US’s health, education, climate, and tax laws.

    That earlier plan, which for months has floundered in the Senate with an uncertain future, is now “dead”, Mr. Manchin said on Wednesday.

    Barely a fortnight ago, the senator exasperated the White House by saying he could only back the portions of the proposal relating to pharmaceutical prices and healthcare subsidies.

    “I have worked diligently to get input from all sides,” Mr. Manchin said on Wednesday evening.

    He had previously expressed concern that policies boosting the development of clean energy without also increasing fossil fuel production could hurt the US by making it more dependent on foreign imports.

    Oil and gas companies employ tens of thousands of people in West Virginia and Mr. Manchin received $875,000 (£718,000) in campaign donations from the industry over the past five years.

    Mr. Schumer hopes to pass the bill with 51 votes through a budgetary maneuver that would allow him to circumvent rules requiring support from 60 out of 100 senators. If every Democrat backs the measure in the evenly split chamber, it would go through.

    Mr. Schumer said the Senate would take the bill up next week. The House of Representatives could then take it up later in August.

    However, Senator Kyrsten Sinema, a moderate Arizona Democrat who has in the past acted as a roadblock to President Biden’s agenda, could still scupper the plan. She declined to comment on news of the agreement on Wednesday night.

    In April, US media reported that Ms. Sinema had told Arizona business leaders she remained “opposed to raising the corporate minimum tax rate”.

    Republicans, who have previously tried to woo Mr. Manchin to join their party, slammed him.

    “I can’t believe that Senator Manchin is agreeing to a massive tax increase in the name of climate change when our economy is in a recession,” Senator Lindsey Graham of South Carolina said.

    Ahead of the Glasgow climate conference last year, Mr. Biden promised the US would provide $11.4 billion (£9.35 billion) a year in climate finance by 2024 – to help developing countries tackle and prepare for climate change.

    But in March he managed to secure just $1 billion of that from Congress – only a third more than the Trump-era spending.

  • US Capitol riot: Steve Bannon felt above the law, prosecutors say

    Former Trump strategist Steve Bannon felt “above the law” by defying a legal summons to testify about last year’s riot at the US Capitol, prosecutors said at the start of his trial.

    Mr Bannon, a key player in Donald Trump’s 2016 election win, faces two counts of contempt of Congress.

    He is accused of ignoring the “mandatory” summons to testify to a congressional panel investigating the riot.

    Mr Bannon, 68, says he is innocent.

    If convicted, he could face up to two years in prison.

    Mr Bannon served as campaign chief to Mr Trump in 2016 and became the White House’s chief strategist until he was ousted seven months later in the aftermath of a violent far-right rally in Charlottesville, Virginia, in August 2017. But he has remained in touch with Mr Trump and his top allies.

    Following the 6 January 2021 riot, the former Trump adviser did not comply with a summons, known as a subpoena, to testify – as well as submit relevant documents – about his efforts to challenge the outcome of the November 2020 presidential election and organise the protests that culminated in the storming of Congress.

    During opening arguments at his trial, federal prosecutor Amanda Vaughn said the subpoena was not “a request” or “an invitation”.

    “It was mandatory,” she said. “The defendant decided he was above the law.”

    A member of the defence team, Evan Corcoran, told the jury Mr Bannon was “innocent of the charges”.

    In his own opening statement, Mr Corcoran said negotiations over subpoenas are a “process” and that Mr Bannon – whom he described as a “political thinker” – had done nothing wrong.

    Outside court, Mr Bannon angrily accused the House of Representatives committee of staging a “show trial”.

    He argued that the congressional inquiry was being driven by the “total and complete illegitimacy” of Mr Biden, and he repeated false claims that Mr Trump won the election.

    Prosecutors in the case believe that Mr Bannon may be able to shed light on the events that led to the 6 January riot.

    The committee has been particularly interested in Mr Bannon’s communications with Mr Trump ahead of the incident, as well as the “war room” meetings held at a nearby hotel with other key figures, allegedly, as part of a last-ditch attempt to thwart certification of President Joe Biden’s win.

    After first being subpoenaed in September, Mr Bannon vowed to go “medieval” and become a “misdemeanour from hell” for the Biden administration.

    He also argued that his contacts with Mr Trump were covered by executive privilege, a legal principle that holds communications between presidents and their advisers to be protected from disclosure in order to allow for candid advice.

    The judge, however, had previously ruled that Mr Bannon could not claim he didn’t comply with the subpoena as a result of executive privilege.

    Source: CNN

  • investigation determined Chinese-made Huawei equipment could disrupt US nuclear arsenal communications

    On paper, it looked like a fantastic deal. In 2017, the Chinese government was offering to spend $100 million to build an ornate Chinese garden at the National Arboretum in Washington DC. Complete with temples, pavilions and a 70-foot white pagoda, the project thrilled local officials, who hoped it would attract thousands of tourists every year.

    But when US counterintelligence officials began digging into the details, they found numerous red flags. The pagoda, they noted, would have been strategically placed on one of the highest points in Washington DC, just two miles from the US Capitol, a perfect spot for signals intelligence collection, multiple sources familiar with the episode told CNN.

    Also alarming was that Chinese officials wanted to build the pagoda with materials shipped to the US in diplomatic pouches, which US Customs officials are barred from examining, the sources said.

    Federal officials quietly killed the project before construction was underway.

    The canceled garden is part of a frenzy of counterintelligence activity by the FBI and other federal agencies focused on what career US security officials say has been a dramatic escalation of Chinese espionage on US soil over the past decade.

    Since at least 2017, federal officials have investigated Chinese land purchases near critical infrastructure, shut down a high-profile regional consulate believed by the US government to be a hotbed of Chinese spies and stonewalled what they saw as clear efforts to plant listening devices near sensitive military and government facilities.

    Among the most alarming things the FBI uncovered pertains to Chinese-made Huawei equipment atop cell towers near US military bases in the rural Midwest. According to multiple sources familiar with the matter, the FBI determined the equipment was capable of capturing and disrupting highly restricted Defense Department communications, including those used by US Strategic Command, which oversees the country’s nuclear weapons.

    While broad concerns about Huawei equipment near US military installations have been well known, the existence of this investigation and its findings have never been reported. Its origins stretch back to at least the Obama administration. It was described to CNN by more than a dozen sources, including current and former national security officials, all of whom spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to speak publicly.

    F.E. Warren Air Force Base, a strategic missile base, is located in Cheyenne, Wyoming, an area near a host of cell towers using Huawei equipment.

    It’s unclear if the intelligence community determined whether any data was actually intercepted and sent back to Beijing from these towers. Sources familiar with the issue say that from a technical standpoint, it’s incredibly difficult to prove a given package of data was stolen and sent overseas.

    The Chinese government strongly denies any efforts to spy on the US. Huawei in a statement to CNN also denied that its equipment is capable of operating in any communications spectrum allocated to the Defense Department.

    But multiple sources familiar with the investigation tell CNN that there’s no question the Huawei equipment has the ability to intercept not only commercial cell traffic but also the highly restricted airwaves used by the military and disrupt critical US Strategic Command communications, giving the Chinese government a potential window into America’s nuclear arsenal.

    “This gets into some of the most sensitive things we do,” said one former FBI official with knowledge of the investigation. “It would impact our ability for essentially command and control with the nuclear triad. “That goes into the ‘BFD’ category.”

    “If it is possible for that to be disrupted, then that is a very bad day,” this person added.

    Turning doves into hawks

     

    Former officials described the probe’s findings as a watershed moment. The investigation was so secret that some senior policymakers in the White House and elsewhere in government weren’t briefed on its existence until 2019, according to two sources familiar with the matter.

    That fall, the Federal Communications Commission initiated a rule that effectively banned small telecoms from using Huawei and a few other brands of Chinese made-equipment. ”The existence of the investigation at the highest levels turned some doves into hawks,” said one former US official.

    In 2020, Congress approved $1.9 billion to remove Chinese-made Huawei and ZTE cellular technology across wide swaths of rural America.

    But two years later, none of that equipment has been removed and rural telecom companies are still waiting for federal reimbursement money. The FCC received applications to remove some 24,000 pieces of Chinese-made communications equipment—but according to a July 15 update from the commission, it is more than $3 billion short of the money it needs to reimburse all eligible companies.

    Absent more money from Congress, the FCC says it plans to begin reimbursing approved companies for about 40 percent of the costs of removing Huawei equipment. The FCC did not specify a timeframe on when the money will be disbursed.

    In late 2020, the Justice Department referred its national security concerns about Huawei equipment to the Commerce Department, and provided information on where the equipment was in place in the US, a former senior US law enforcement official told CNN.

    After the Biden administration took office in 2021, the Commerce Department then opened its own probe into Huawei to determine if more urgent action was needed to expunge the Chinese technology provider from US telecom networks, the former law enforcement official and a current senior US official said.

    That probe has proceeded slowly and is ongoing, the current US official said. Among the concerns that national security officials noted was that external communication from the Huawei equipment that occurs when software is updated, for example, could be exploited by the Chinese government.

    Depending on what the Commerce Department finds, US telecom carriers could be forced to quickly remove Huawei equipment or face fines or other penalties.

    Reuters first reported the existence of the Commerce Department probe.
    “We cannot confirm or deny ongoing investigations, but we are committed to securing our information and communications technology and services supply chain. Protecting US persons safety and security against malign information collection is vital to protecting our economy and national security,” a Commerce Department spokesperson said.

    US counterintelligence officials have recently made a priority of publicizing threats from China. This month, the US National Counterintelligence and Security Center issued a warning to American businesses and local and state governments about what it says are disguised efforts by China to manipulate them to influence US policy.

    FBI Director Christopher Wray just traveled to London for a joint meeting with top British law enforcement officials to call attention to the Chinese threats.

    In an exclusive interview with CNN, Wray said the FBI opens a new China counterintelligence investigation every 12 hours. “That’s probably about 2,000 or so investigations,” said Wray. “And that’s not even talking about their cyber theft, where they have a bigger hacking program than that of every other major nation combined, and have stolen more of Americans’ personal and corporate data than every nation combined.”

    Asked why after years of national security concerns raised over Huawei, the equipment is still largely in place atop cell towers near US military bases, Wray said that, “We’re concerned about allowing any company that is beholden to a nation state that doesn’t adhere to and share our values, giving that company the ability to burrow into our telecommunications infrastructure.”

    He noted that in 2020, the DOJ indicted Huawei with racketeering conspiracy and conspiracy to steal trade secrets.

    “And I think that’s probably about all I can say on the topic,” said Wray.

    Critics see xenophobic overreach

     

    Despite its tough talk, the US government’s refusal to provide evidence to back up its claims that Huawei tech poses a risk to US national security has led some critics to accuse it of xenophobic overreach. The lack of a smoking gun also raises questions of whether US officials can separate legitimate Chinese investment from espionage.

    “All of our products imported to the US have been tested and certified by the FCC before being deployed there,” Huawei said in its statement to CNN. “Our equipment only operates on the spectrum allocated by the FCC for commercial use. This means it cannot access any spectrum allocated to the DOD.”

    “For more than 30 years, Huawei has maintained a proven track record in cyber security and we have never been involved in any malicious cyber security incidents,” the statement said.

    In its zeal to sniff out evidence of Chinese spying, critics argue the feds have cast too wide a net — in particular as it relates to academic institutions. In one recent high-profile case, a federal judge acquitted a former University of Tennessee engineering professor whom the Justice Department had prosecuted under its so-called China Initiative that targets Chinese spying, arguing “there was no evidence presented that [the professor] ever collaborated with a Chinese university in conducting NASA-funded research.”
    And on Jan. 20, the Justice Department dropped a separate case against an MIT professor accused of hiding his ties to China, saying it could no longer prove its case. In February, the Biden administration shut down the China Initiative entirely.
    The federal government’s reticence across multiple administrations to detail what it knows has led some critics to accuse the government of chasing ghosts.

    “It really comes down to: do you treat China as a neutral actor — because if you treat China as a neutral actor, then yeah, this seems crazy, that there’s some plot behind every tree,” said Anna Puglisi, a senior fellow at Georgetown University’s Center for Security and Emerging Technology. “However, China has shown us through its policies and actions it is not a neutral actor.”

    Chinese tech in the American heartland

     

    As early as the Obama administration, FBI agents were monitoring a disturbing pattern along stretches of Interstate 25 in Colorado and Montana, and on arteries into Nebraska. The heavily trafficked corridor connects some of the most secretive military installations in the US, including an archipelago of nuclear missile silos.

    For years, small, rural telecom providers had been installing cheaper, Chinese-made routers and other technology atop cell towers up and down I-25 and elsewhere in the region. Across much of these sparsely populated swaths of the west, these smaller carriers are the only option for cell coverage. And many of them turned to Huawei for cheaper, reliable equipment.

    Beginning in late 2011, Viaero, the largest regional provider in the area, inked a contract with Huawei to provide the equipment for its upgrade to 3G. A decade later, it has Huawei tech installed across its entire fleet of towers, roughly 1,000 spread over five western states.

    As Huawei equipment began to proliferate near US military bases, federal investigators started taking notice, sources familiar with the matter told CNN. Of particular concern was that Huawei was routinely selling cheap equipment to rural providers in cases that appeared to be unprofitable for Huawei — but which placed its equipment near military assets.

    Federal investigators initially began “examining [Huawei] less from a technical lens and more from a business/financial view,” explained John Lenkart, a former senior FBI agent focused on counterintelligence issues related to China. Officials studied where Huawei sales efforts were most concentrated and looked for deals that “made no sense from a return-on-investment perspective,” Lenkart said.

    “A lot of [counterintelligence] concerns were uncovered based on” those searches, Lenkart said.

    By examining the Huawei equipment themselves, FBI investigators determined it could recognize and disrupt DOD-spectrum communications — even though it had been certified by the FCC, according to a source familiar with the investigation.

    “It’s not technically hard to make a device that complies with the FCC that listens to nonpublic bands but then is quietly waiting for some activation trigger to listen to other bands,” said Eduardo Rojas, who leads the radio spectrum lab at Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University in Florida. “Technically, it’s feasible.”

    To prove a device had clandestine capabilities, Rojas said, would require technical experts to strip down a device “to the semi-conductor level” and “reverse engineer the design.” But, he said, it can be done.

    And there was another big concern along I-25, sources familiar with the investigation said.

    Weather camera worries

     

    Around 2014, Viaero started mounting high-definition surveillance cameras on its towers to live-stream weather and traffic, a public service it shared with local news organizations. With dozens of cameras posted up and down I-25, the cameras provided a 24-7 bird’s eye view of traffic and incoming weather, even providing advance warning of tornadoes.

    But they were also inadvertently capturing the movement of US military equipment and personnel, giving Beijing — or anyone for that matter — the ability to track the pattern of activity between a series of closely guarded military facilities.

    The intelligence community determined the publicly posted live-streams were being viewed and likely captured from China, according to three sources familiar with the matter. Two sources briefed on the investigation at the time said officials believed that it was possible for Beijing’s intelligence service to “task” the cameras — hack into the network and control where they pointed. At least some of the cameras in question were running on Huawei networks.

    Viaero CEO Frank DiRico said it never occurred to him the cameras could be a national security risk.

    “There’s a lot of missile silos in areas we cover. There is some military presence,” DiRico said in an interview from his Colorado office. But, he said, “I was never told to remove the equipment or to make any changes.”

    In fact, DiRico first learned of government concerns about Huawei equipment from newspaper articles — not the FBI — and says he has never been briefed on the matter.

    DiRico doesn’t question the government’s insistence that he needs to remove Huawei equipment, but he is skeptical that China’s intelligence services can exploit either the Huawei hardware itself or the camera equipment.

    “We monitor our network pretty good,” DiRico said, adding that Viaero took over the support and maintenance for its own networks from Huawei shortly after installation. “We feel we’ve got a pretty good idea if there’s anything going on that’s inappropriate.”

    Scouring the country for Chinese investments

     

    By the time the I-25 investigation was briefed to the White House in 2019, counterintelligence officials begin looking for other places Chinese companies might be buying land or offering to develop a piece of municipal property, like a park or an old factory, sometimes as part of a “sister city” arrangement.

    In one instance, officials shut down what they believed was a risky commercial deal near highly sensitive military testing installations in Utah sometime after the beginning of the I-25 investigation, according to one former US official. The military has a test and training range for hypersonic weapons in Utah, among other things. Sources declined to provide more details.

    Federal officials were also alarmed by what  sources described as a host of espionage and influence activities in Houston and, in 2020, shut down the Chinese  consulate there.

    US Attorney for the Eastern District of New York Richard P. Donoghue announcing indictments against China's Huawei Technologies Co Ltd, several of its subsidiaries and its chief financial officer Meng Wanzhou on January 28, 2019.

    Bill Evanina, who until early last year ran the National Counterintelligence and Security Center, told CNN that it can sometimes be hard to differentiate between a legitimate business opportunity and espionage — in part because both might be happening at the same time.

    “What we’ve seen is legitimate companies that are three times removed from Beijing buy [a given] facility for obvious logical reasons, unaware of what the [Chinese] intelligence apparatus wants in that parcel [of land],” Evanina said. “What we’ve seen recently — it’s been what’s underneath the land.”

    “The hard part is, that’s legitimate business, and what city or town is not going to want to take that money for that land when it’s just sitting there doing nothing?” he added.

    A complicated problem

     

    After the results of the I-25 investigation were briefed to the Trump White House in 2019, the FCC ordered that  telecom companies who receive federal subsidies to provide cell service to remote areas — companies like Viaero — must “rip and replace” their Huawei and ZTE equipment.

    The FCC has since said that the cost could be more than double the $1.9 billion appropriated in 2020 and absent an additional appropriation from Congress, the agency is only planning to reimburse companies for a fraction of their costs.

    Given the staggering strategic risk, Lenkart said, “rip and replace is a very blunt and inefficient remediation.”

    DiRico, the CEO of Viaero, said the cost of “rip and replace” is astronomical and that he doesn’t expect the reimbursement money to be enough to pay for the change. According to the FCC, Viaero is expected to receive less than half of the funding it is actually due. Still, he expects to start removing the equipment within the next year.

    “It’s difficult and it’s a lot of money,” DiRico said.

    Some former counterintelligence officials expressed frustration that the US government isn’t providing more granular detail about what it knows to companies — or to cities and states considering a Chinese investment proposal. They believe that not only would that kind of detail help private industry and state and local governments understand the seriousness of the threat as they see it, but also help combat the criticism that the US government is targeting Chinese companies and people, rather than Chinese state-run espionage.

    “This government has to do a better job of letting everyone know this is a Communist Party issue, it’s not a Chinese people issue,” Evanina said. “And I’ll be the first to say that the government has to do better with respect to understanding the Communist Party’s intentions are not the same intentions of the Chinese people.”

    A current FBI official said the bureau is giving more defensive briefings to US businesses, academic institutions and state and local governments that include far more detail than in the past, but officials are still fighting an uphill battle.

    “Sometimes I feel like we’re a lifeguard going out to a drowning person, and they don’t want our help,” said the current FBI official.  But, this person said, “I think sometimes we [the FBI] say ‘China threat,’ and we take for granted what all that means in our head. And it means something else to the people that we’re delivering it to.”

    “I think we just need to be more careful about how we speak about it and educate folks on why we’re doing what we’re doing.”

    In the meantime, the “rip and replace” program has remained fiercely controversial.

    “It’s not going to be easy,” DiRico said. “I’m going to be up nights worrying about it, but we’ll do what we’re told to do.”

    Source: CNN

  • Race for the White House narrows as votes are counted in key battlegrounds

    Vote counters worked all night in the crucial states that will decide the cliffhanger election with margins narrowing in Arizona, Georgia and Pennsylvania as former Vice President Joe Biden edged toward the 270 electoral votes needed to win and President Donald Trump pinned his hopes on a more uphill route back to the White House.

    Two days after Election Day, the slow churn of results is expected to offer more clarity Thursday on who will lead America for the next four years and when that final result will become known. Biden currently leads with 253 electoral votes to Trump’s 213. The race is coming down to tight vote counts in Arizona, Georgia, Nevada and Pennsylvania.

    If the former vice president wins Pennsylvania, the race will be over. Thousands of mostly mail-in votes remain uncounted so far, with Biden trailing by just over 160,000 votes. The Keystone State’s Lt. Gov. John Fetterman, a Democrat, told CNN that the result could come as early as Thursday and that he believed outstanding ballots in areas that favor Democrats would deliver a clear win for Biden.

    The Democratic nominee has also been making a run in Georgia, which has 16 electoral votes, where the President’s lead dwindled to about 18,500 votes overnight as results came in from Fulton County around Atlanta with 96% of the state vote count reported.

    The story was reversed in Arizona, where several tranches of votes from Maricopa County, which includes Phoenix, narrowed Biden’s lead to just under 69,000 votes with Trump’s team insisting the President will eventually prevail and keep his hopes of a path to 270 alive.

    There is also a close contest in Nevada, which released very little information on Wednesday with an estimated 200,000 ballots outstanding. The state is expected to report another batch of results around midday Thursday. Democrats had the state down as a likely win but it is closer than expected.

    The final result will come down again to mail-in votes, which could favor Biden since thousands are outstanding in Clark County, around Las Vegas which is usually Democratic territory. If Biden holds leads in Arizona and Nevada, he will get to 270 and will be able to claim the presidency.

    Trump’s team, seeking to keep his slim path to victory alive, has launched a flurry of sometimes contradictory legal challenges and political offensives, demanding vote counts continue in states where he is behind and wanting them shut down in those where he leads.

    Trump did not appear in public on Wednesday after accusing Democrats of trying to steal the election even though continuing vote counts are working through legally cast ballots.

    Biden did come before the cameras, and while stopping short of claiming victory, he sought to present an image of momentum and confidence and made a thematic pivot from the partisanship of the campaign trail to the calls for unity expected of an incoming president. He dismissed Trump’s attempts to undermine the results, stating that “the people rule. Power can’t be taken or asserted.”

    “There will not be blue states and red states when we win. Just the United States of America,” Biden said Wednesday afternoon as he promised to bring the country together. “We are not enemies. What brings us together as Americans is so much stronger than anything that can tear us apart.”

    CNN projects Biden will win at least three of Maine’s four electoral votes, plus Wisconsin, Michigan, Hawaii, Rhode Island, Minnesota, Virginia, California, Oregon, Washington state, Illinois, New Hampshire, New Mexico, Colorado, Connecticut, New Jersey, New York, Vermont, Delaware, Washington, DC, Maryland, Massachusetts and one of Nebraska’s five electoral votes. Nebraska and Maine award two electoral votes to their statewide winners and divide their other electoral votes by congressional districts.

    CNN projects Trump will win Montana, Texas, Iowa, Idaho, Ohio, Mississippi, Wyoming, Missouri, Kansas, Utah, Louisiana, Alabama, South Carolina, North Dakota, South Dakota, Arkansas, Indiana, Oklahoma, Kentucky, West Virginia and Tennessee and four of Nebraska’s five electoral votes.

    Trump mounts aggressive legal strategy to contest results

    As one piece of his legal strategy, the Trump campaign plans to ask the Supreme Court to intervene in a case challenging a Supreme Court decision that allowed Pennsylvania ballots to be counted after Election Day. The justices had refused to expedite the appeal before the election and are considering whether to take up the case.

    Trump and his campaign team also sought to raise doubts about how Biden made a late surge to victory in the vital state of Wisconsin, where the Democrat rose on the strength of mail-in and early votes that were counted after most of the ballots cast in person on Election Day.

    The Trump campaign said Wednesday that it will demand a recount in Wisconsin while mounting legal challenges in Michigan and Georgia.

    “The President is well within the threshold to request a recount (in Wisconsin) and we will immediately do so,” Trump campaign manager Bill Stepien said in a statement.

    Stepien noted that results show “a razor thin race as we always knew that it would be” and claimed that there were irregularities in several Wisconsin counties, but did not specify what the campaign believes those irregularities are.

    The campaign’s state-by-state approach revealed the glaring inconsistencies in its strategy: it appears to be trying to stop vote counts in states where Trump is trailing, like Pennsylvania and Michigan, while demanding that all the votes are counted in states where it believes the President has a chance of catching up to Biden, like Arizona and Nevada.

    Candidates can ask for a recount in Wisconsin if they are within 1% of the winner’s vote total — but the recount cannot be formally requested until completion of the canvass, which could be as late as November 17. It seems highly unlikely that a margin the size of Biden’s lead in Wisconsin, about 20,000 votes, could get reversed on a recount. But because the margin is less than 1%, the Trump campaign is well within its rights to request a recount.

    With CNN’s Kevin Liptak reporting that even Trump himself appears to skeptical of the thin basis for some of the challenges that his campaign is filing, the campaign said it plans to file a lawsuit in Georgia claiming that a Republican poll observer in that state witnessed 53 late absentee ballots “illegally added to a stack of on-time absentee ballots in Chatham County.”

    Trump offered a less-than-enthusiastic endorsement of his team’s legal strategy in phone calls with some of his allies on Wednesday, sounding resigned to the plan falling short and questioning why his team hadn’t successfully challenged voting rules before the election, even as he remained willing to see it through, CNN reported.

    The Trump campaign also said it is filing a lawsuit in Michigan asking the state to halt its count because it has “not been provided with meaningful access to numerous counting locations to observe the opening of ballots and the counting process, as guaranteed by Michigan law.”

    Ryan Jarvi, a spokesperson for Michigan Attorney General Dana Nessel, responded to the threat of the lawsuit by saying in a statement that “Michigan’s elections have been conducted transparently, with access provided for both political parties and the public.”

    Trump campaign officials said Wednesday afternoon that they believe the President can hold his lead in Pennsylvania, but they are also suing the commonwealth, claiming that Democratic election officials are “hiding the ballot counting and processing” from Republican poll observers.

    Trump Deputy Campaign Manager Justin Clark said the aim of the lawsuit is “to temporarily halt counting until there is meaningful transparency and Republicans can ensure all counting is done aboveboard and by the law.”

    The President is making baseless claims that the election, which had looked more favorable to him late on Tuesday before hauls of early votes started being tabulated, is being stolen from him and demanding that vote counting in some areas should stop. An appearance in the White House East Room in the early hours of Wednesday in which he falsely claimed victory represented his most brazen threat yet to the democratic principles that underpin the US political system.

    “As far as I’m concerned, we already have won it,” Trump said, painting a picture at odds with the true state of the race. Earlier, Biden had warned each side needed to wait for the votes to be counted, saying, “We’re going to have to be patient until we the hard work of tallying the votes is finished.”

    And while the President has long threatened legal challenges to the election, the voting itself largely went peacefully, without violence at polling places or intimidation of people casting their ballots as had been widely feared, especially given Trump’s attempts to discredit voting procedures ahead of time.

    But the election did not turn into the wholesale repudiation of the President and his wrecking ball presidency that Democrats had hoped for. Trump demonstrated a remarkable bond with his base of mainly White voters in rural areas and a new connection with groups of Latino voters in some states.

    A blue wave many Democrats were looking for to end Mitch McConnell’s GOP Senate majority has so far not been realized, though some key races are still undecided. And despite aiming to expand their House majority, Democrats lost several seats and some threatened Republicans clung to theirs.

    Source: edition.cnn.com

  • Livestreaming: Who wins the race to the White House?

    In what has been projected to be the highest turnout in a century, Americans choose their president today.

    Polls project a tight race to the White House between incumbent Republican President Donald Trump and Democratic candidate, Joe Biden.

    U.S. media report that some 100 million Americans have cast a ballot using early voting, which far outstrips the over 47 million voters that did so in 2016.

    Get full coverage of the U.S. elections in the live stream below.

    Source: www.ghanaweb.com

  • Trump escorted out of briefing as man shot near White House

    US President Donald Trump was escorted out of a news conference after Secret Service agents shot and wounded a man who claimed to be armed outside the White House.

    The Secret Service said the incident happened one block from the compound, when an officer fired on the suspect who had run “aggressively” towards him.

    An agent then walked on stage as Mr Trump was speaking and led him away.

    The president returned minutes later to say the situation was under control.

    The US Secret Service said the incident happened on Monday on the corner of 17th Street and Pennsylvania Ave – outside the White House perimeter.

    It said a 51-year-old man, who has not been identified, approached the officer, told him he had weapons and assumed a “shooter’s stance”, whereupon the officer shot him in the torso.

    The Secret Service did not say whether the man was armed. It added that “both the officer and the suspect were then taken to hospital”, and that “at no time during this incident was the White House complex breached”.

    After Mr Trump and his staff left, doors to the briefing room were locked with the journalists inside.

    When the president returned nine minutes later, he said: “Law enforcement shot someone, it seems to be the suspect.”

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

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

    A journalist asked Mr Trump if he was rattled by the events. He replied: “Do I seem rattled?”

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

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

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

    Source: bbc.com

  • Wilson Jerman: Ex-White House butler dies from coronavirus

    A former White House butler, who worked for 11 presidents in a career that spanned five decades, has died with coronavirus aged 91.

    It was Jackie Kennedy who noticed Wilson Roosevelt Jerman while he was working as a cleaner in the White House.

    The then First Lady had him promoted, and from then on he worked as a butler.

    “She was instrumental in ensuring that that happened,” his granddaughter, Jamila Garrett, told Fox 5.

    Decades later Mr Jerman was commemorated by another First Lady, appearing in a photo in Michelle Obama’s memoir Becoming.

    Paying tribute after his death, Mrs Obama said her family were “lucky to have known him”.

    “With his kindness and care, Wilson Jerman helped make the White House a home for decades of First Families, including ours,” she said in a statement to NBC News.

    “His service to others – his willingness to go above and beyond for the country he loved and all those whose lives he touched – is a legacy worthy of his generous spirit.”

    He died with coronavirus last weekend.

    Mr Jerman’s family members say he stood out not just to the Kennedys, who were in the White House during 1961-63, and the Obamas, who lived there from 2009 to 2017, but others he met in his roles.

    Mr Jerman’s career began in 1957 during the Eisenhower administration. In his last position, he served as a maître d’ in the Obama White House.

    He left his position in 2012, and President Obama honoured him with a series of plaques, one that represented each of the presidents he had served, Mr Jerman’s granddaughter Shanta Taylor Gay told CNN.

    He remains an important figure for those who study the history of African Americans and their role in political life.

    Like other African-American men of his generation, he showed dignity while serving in one of the few positions that was available to him at the time, said Ohio State University’s Koritha Mitchell, author of From Slave Cabins to the White House.

    She said he must have found it satisfying to end his career in the way that he did.

    He was working for Mr Obama, “a dignified president who was also African American”, she said, adding: “That must have felt like a victory.”

    Source: bbc.com

  • White House military aide tests positive for coronavirus

    A White House military aide reportedly part of a unit working closely alongside President Donald Trump — has tested positive for coronavirus, but Trump has not been infected, a spokesman said Thursday.

    “We were recently notified by the White House Medical Unit that a member of the United States Military, who works on the White House campus, has tested positive for Coronavirus,” Trump deputy press secretary Hogan Gidley said.

    “The President and the Vice President have since tested negative for the virus and they remain in great health.”

    According to a report by CNN, the military member in question is in the navy and works in a unit providing valet services to Trump.

    Trump, his immediate entourage and guests to the White House are regularly given tests that provide results within about 15 minutes.

    However, there are potential gaps in the screening, including journalists who may come within a short distance of the president but are not tested.

    The president has steadfastly refused to wear a mask in public, as do his top officials, although the practice is encouraged by his own government guidelines.

    Source: AFP