Tag: Donald Trump

  • Trump told to ban corrupt Nigerian public officials from entering U.S

    Trump told to ban corrupt Nigerian public officials from entering U.S

    The American President-elect, Donald Trump and his incoming administration has been called on  “to promptly identify US-based proceeds of corruption traced to former and current Nigerian public officials and their associates and to ensure the full recovery and return of any such stolen assets to Nigeria.”

    The Socio-economic Rights and Accountability Project (SERAP) in the letter dated 18 January 2025 and signed by SERAP deputy director Kolawole Oluwadare, stated that “any return of proceeds of corruption from Nigeria must meet strict transparency and accountability standards to ensure the funds are used solely for the benefit of the Nigerian people.”

    The organisation further urged the incoming president to “direct the US Department of Justice to promptly initiate civil asset forfeiture proceedings against proceeds of corruption traced to former and current Nigerian public officials and their associates so as to fulfill several non-controversial commitments by the US to assist Nigeria in asset recovery matters.”

    SERAP also urged him “to identify and publish the names of former and current Nigerian public officials suspected to be responsible for corruption and the depositing of its proceeds in US banks, and to apply existing US presidential proclamations to temporarily ban such officials from entering the US.”

    The organisation said: “Diezani Alison-Madueke’s looted assets and other recently returned assets represent a tiny fraction of the over $500 billions that have been reportedly stolen from Nigeria and located in the US or otherwise subject to US jurisdiction.”

    SERAP said, “Our requests are brought in the public interest, and in keeping with the requirements of the UN Convention against Corruption to which both the US and Nigeria are states parties.”

    According to SERAP, “Proceeds of corruption from Nigeria continue to be deposited in US banks or in other locations subject to US jurisdictions.”

    The request followed the recently returned $52.88 million in forfeited corruption proceeds linked to former Petroleum Resources Minister Diezani Alison-Madueke.

    The letter, read in part: “We hope you and your incoming government address the legal impediments that have continued to allow corrupt Nigerian government officials to deposit and conceal their ill-gotten assets in the US and other locations subject to US jurisdiction.”

    “Returning proceeds of corruption to Nigeria is a development imperative. By returning proceeds of corruption to Nigeria, the US would be contributing to the efforts to address the growing poverty in the country and achieve the Sustainable Development Goals.”

    “The US has the obligations under the relevant provisions of the UN Convention against Corruption to trace, freeze and seize proceeds of corruption from Nigeria and located in the US or otherwise subject to US jurisdiction and to return the assets to the Nigerian people.”

    “A whole chapter of the Convention is devoted to international cooperation in the recovery and return of stolen assets including from Nigeria (chapter V, comprising 9 articles).”

    “SERAP is concerned that corruption remains a major obstacle to sustainable development, the rule of law and the effective enjoyment of socio-economic rights in Nigeria. Implementing the recommended measures would contribute to addressing these governance challenges.

    “Corrupt practices have long been accepted as a fact of life and an inalienable part of the country’s ministries, departments and agencies [MDAs] and the governmental power structures across several states.”

    “Nigeria’s auditor-general office annually documents widespread and systemic corruption in ministries, departments and agencies (MDAs) including in the petroleum, education, health and water sectors, plunging millions of Nigerians further into poverty. The auditor-general office has declared trillions of naira as missing or diverted.”

    “SERAP urges you to promptly share information with relevant Nigerian civil society organizations on stolen assets of Nigerian origin located in the US or otherwise subject to US jurisdiction, as required by Articles 46(4) and 56 of the UN Convention Against Corruption.”

    “Imposing a temporary travel ban on former and current Nigerian public officials suspected to be responsible for keeping proceeds of corruption in the US or in locations subject to US jurisdiction would not violate due process and presumption of innocence principles, as long as the reasons for the sanctions are communicated to those that may be affected.”

    “According to reports, the U.S. Government and the Federal Government of Nigeria recently announced an agreement to promptly repatriate approximately $52.88 million in forfeited corruption proceeds.”

    “These funds were forfeited to the United States as part of the Kleptocracy Asset Recovery Initiative of the U.S. Department of Justice. The forfeited assets had been illegally acquired using funds linked to money laundering and a conspiracy to bribe former Petroleum Resources Minister Diezani Alison-Madueke.”

    “In 2007, former Chairman of the Economic and Financial crimes Commission (EFCC) Mallam Nuhu Ribadu alleged that Nigerian politicians stole over $400 billion.  Former military dictator General Sani Abacha reportedly collected truck-loads of cash running into billions of naira from the Central Bank of Nigeria.”

    “According to the Stolen Asset Recovery Initiative (StAR) estimates, illicit funds associated with bribes received by public officials from developing and transition countries alone are estimated at USD 20 billion to USD 40 billion per year – a figure equivalent to 20 to 40 percent of flows of official development assistance.”

    “SERAP notes that Article 51 of the UN Convention against Corruption provides for the return of ‘corrupt’ assets to countries of origin as a fundamental principle. Article 43 provides likewise.”

    “Similarly, under Articles 47(3)(a) and (b) states parties have an obligation to return forfeited or confiscated assets in cases of public corruption, as here, or when the requesting party reasonably establishes either prior ownership or damages to the states.”

    “A resolution adopted by the Conference of States Parties to the UN Convention Against Corruption in Panama in November 2013 reaffirms this obligation, by requiring state to make ‘every effort’ to return such proceeds. to the victim state.”

  • Trump, again…. – By Azu Ishiekwene

    Trump, again…. – By Azu Ishiekwene

    On the eve of Donald Trump’s inauguration as the 45th President of the U.S., on January 19, 2017, I wrote an article I could easily write now. It was entitled “A Memory of America on Obama’s Last Day.” With minor edits, it’s worth repeating as Trump happens again as the 47th President of the U.S. 

    Only exceptionalism could have offered that opportunity. Only exceptionalism could produce a Barack Obama and, eight years later, bring forth a Donald Trump—one neoliberal and the other a neo-anything-is-possible.

    The peculiar aspect of the U.S. is that everything is extraordinary. If any doubt remains, the election of Donald J. Trump, who takes office on Friday as the 45th President of the United States of America, resolves the matter.

    Everything about Trump is unsettlingly peculiar. He has weakened his party, exploited voters’ most basic instincts, ignored the media, and mocked U.S. allies. Nonetheless, he has secured a victory that has made him even more powerful and audacious. Everyone else, including the party and the nation, seems weaker, more bewildered, and divided.

    In Trump versus the rest of the world, Trump is the indescribable enigma. The rest are demystified and stranded.

    As the new Trump world order emerges, exceptionalism – once a distinctly American concept – assumes a different significance. I grappled with that word when I first encountered it from my lecturer, Ayo Akinbobola, many years ago in school.

    Exceptionalism. How do I explain it? It’s that special quality for which most people love America; the idea that you can become whatever you wish to be, whoever you are, regardless of your background; that through hard work, persistence, and innovation, you can attain grace from grass; that America is the only place on earth that confronts its diversity with courage, not shying away from its own worst demons; that America is a land of both genius and demagogue, each pursuing their path, but within a system that also strives to protect the weak and vulnerable while, some would add, paradoxically creating its own weak and vulnerable.

    I learned from my US-trained teachers in school and saw from the cowboy movies I watched growing up that this made America unique.

    My first American friends embodied the generosity of spirit I had always heard about. Melvin and Paula Baker, whom my family and I met during a holiday in Florida over ten years ago, have consistently treated us like family, offering themselves and everything they have at our disposal whenever we visit.

    Melvin and Paula are white, but colour or creed has never been a concern—whether we or they are visiting. Occasionally, I’m amused to see them sweating over a meal of pepper soup, even when it contains the mildest spices.

    America is exceptional not because it is perfect but because, despite its flaws, people like Melvin and Paula made it extraordinary.

    Then 9/11 happened. Fear took hold, and exceptionalism faced its most significant test since Vietnam. The political elite and the military leaders started a catastrophic war in Iraq by dressing up fear and suspicion as facts.

    That changed everything. Al-Queda, the Taliban, ISIL and other terror franchises around the world were born by the mother of all wars from which America and the world have not recovered.

    I felt the change around this time seven years ago when I visited the U.S. before Christmas. A young Nigerian man, Umar Farouk Abdulmutallab, had planted a bomb in his pants to bring down a commercial plane over Detroit. Coming at America’s vulnerable moment, there was a severe backlash from that incident. 

    During my visit in January 2010, many U.S. airports and border posts opened a black book for Nigerian travellers. The intrusive body searches at these airports and the cold, hostile stares at non-whites left me in no doubt that something was changing in America.

    But Barack Obama’s election was supposed to halt the tide; it was supposed to send a message that America had not wholly forsaken exceptionalism, that if a black guy with a funny Muslim-sounding name could become president in America, you could be what you want to be – no matter who you are – if you work at it.

    That’s Obama’s story, which he calls “the audacity of hope.” How else could someone born to a Kenyan father and raised by an Indonesian stepfather become a senator and then the 44th president of the United States?

    Yet, some say that it is precisely this exceptional quality that is the trouble with America. They say it is exceptionalism that produced an Obama who is not black enough to meet black expectations, not white enough to be accepted by whites, and not brown enough to attract the sympathy of those in between.

    Evangelicals regard him as the anti-Christ for endorsing stem cell research and despise him for his late remarks on gay rights. Millions of Nigerians will also not forgive him for never once visiting the world’s most populous black nation during his eight years in office, opting instead to throw stones from Ghana, the country’s backyard.

    It’s a deep bucket, but who can deny that America’s exceptionalism produced a miracle that Martin Luther King could only dream of?

    Eight years ago today, America was on its knees, broken by a catastrophic terror war and greedy Wall Street.

    Globalisation was also taking its toll and would become a significant factor in U.S. politics. To think that this was the moment when the country elected its first black president –when the lines of failure seemed to have fallen in the most unpleasant places – is hard to imagine now.

    But it happened, and Obama made the most of his lemons. In several ways, he’s leaving America better than he found it: jobs growing, the country cured of its addiction to oil, its economy in better shape, and its youth unleashed and innovating.

    Obama is leaving without the scars of scandals that marred many of his predecessors. The dignity of his office is intact.

    Only exceptionalism could have provided that chance. Only exceptionalism could produce an Obama and eight years later produce a Trump – the one neo-liberal and the other neo-anything-is-possible.

    In the days ahead, no one is exactly sure what to expect – not pollsters, pundits, or even members of Trump’s cabinet. But we’ll see, one tweet at a time, just what is left of what has made America exceptional.

     

    Ishiekwene is Editor-In-Chief of LEADERSHIP and author of the book Writing for Media and Monetising It.

  • Trump considering executive order to save TikTok – Report

    Trump considering executive order to save TikTok – Report

    United States President-elect Donald Trump is considering using an executive order to prevent the TikTok app from being blocked in the U.S.

    The Washington Post reported on Thursday, citing people familiar with the matter.

    The order would suspend enforcement of the law, which required TikTok to be either blocked or sold on January 19, for 60 to 90 days.

    This will be giving Trump’s administration time to negotiate a sale or find another solution.

    However, from a legal perspective, this action is rather disputable, the report said.

    Meanwhile, U.S. President Joe Biden’s outgoing administration is also looking for ways to keep the app available in the U.S., NBC News reported, citing people familiar with the discussions.

    The White House is reportedly seeking to apply the law banning TikTok in a way that would allow U.S. users to access the app when the law goes into effect on Sunday.

    Earlier this week, The Information news portal reported that TikTok was preparing to shut down its app for U.S. users on Jan. 19.

    In April 2024, Biden signed a law forcing TikTok owner ByteDance to find an American owner for the app.

    If this does not happen by Jan. 19, the app will be banned in the U,S

    However, U.S. President-elect Donald Trump has appealed to the U.S. Supreme Court to delay the implementation of the ban so that he has time to resolve the dispute after his inauguration on Jan. 20.

    This is according to a document obtained by RIA Novosti.

    TikTok, launched in 2018, remains under scrutiny by U.S. authorities, who fear the app may be sharing user data with the Chinese government or spreading propaganda.

    TikTok has consistently denied the allegations. The app has about 170 million users in the U.S. alone.

  • EU jittery as Trump moves to take control of Greenland

    EU jittery as Trump moves to take control of Greenland

    French Foreign Minister Jean-Noel Barrot said on Wednesday that the European Union would not allow its borders to be attacked.

    This came after U.S. President-elect Donald Trump refused to rule out using military or economic coercion to take control of Denmark’s autonomous territory of Greenland.

    “Obviously, it is out of the question that the EU will allow other countries in the world, regardless of which country it may be to attack their sovereign borders,” Barrot told France Inter radio.

    The top French diplomat said the United States is not imperialistic, despite statements made recently by Trump regarding U.S. claims for the Panama Canal, Canada, and Greenland.

    The minister added that although Europe is a strong continent, additional measures needed to be taken to strengthen the EU.

    Greenland was a colony of Denmark until 1953. It remained part of the kingdom after receiving autonomy in 2009.

    Trump first announced his claims for the island in 2019, when he was serving his first presidential term. Soon after winning the 2024 U.S. presidential election, he reiterated his bid to buy the territory, calling it “an absolute necessity” for the United States to own Greenland.

    On Tuesday, Trump told a press conference in Mar-a-Lago that he was not considering deploying military force to acquire Canada but could not guarantee the same for Greenland or the Panama Canal.

  • Trump asks Canada to merge with U.S. after PM resigned

    Trump asks Canada to merge with U.S. after PM resigned

    President-elect Donald Trump has called on Canada to merge with the U.S. as the 51st State of the United States of America (USA).

    TheNewsGuru.com (TNG) reports Trump made the call on Monday shortly after Canada’s Prime Minister, Justin Trudeau announced his resignation from office.

    Trump stressed that if Canada should join the U.S., they would be totally secure from the threat of the Russian and Chinese Ships that are “constantly surrounding them”.

    He also said that if Canada should merged with the U.S., there would be no tariffs and that taxes would go way down.

    “Many people in Canada LOVE being the 51st State. The United States can no longer suffer the massive Trade Deficits and Subsidies that Canada needs to stay afloat. Justin Trudeau knew this, and resigned.

    “If Canada merged with the U.S., there would be no Tariffs, taxes would go way down, and they would be TOTALLY SECURE from the threat of the Russian and Chinese Ships that are constantly surrounding them.

    “Together, what a great Nation it would be,” the U.S. President-elect wrote on social media.

  • Mixed reactions as Nigeria’s Nathaniel Bassey set to minister at Donald Trump’s inaugural

    Mixed reactions as Nigeria’s Nathaniel Bassey set to minister at Donald Trump’s inaugural

    Renowned Nigerian gospel minister and pastor Nathaniel Bassey has been invited to minister at the prestigious Presidential Inaugural Prayer Breakfast of US President-elect, Donald Trump.

    TheNewsGuru reports that Bassey confirmed his participation via his Instagram social media page on Saturday, 4th January 2025, saying, “Let’s raise a sound in America. And let the King of Glory come in. See you 20th January 2025.

    “The Presidential Prayer Breakfast is a non-official and non-governmental event. It is a faith-based platform where intercessory prayers and worship are offered to God on behalf of the office of the president and the government of the nation.

    “This event is held once every four years, preceding the inauguration ceremony, as a breakfast prayer meeting ahead of every new administration,” he said.

    The gathering, which is a non-governmental and non-political affair, will be hosted by Reverend Merrie Turner at the prestigious Waldorf Astoria Presidential Ballroom.

    Pastor Bassey will join a lineup of speakers and ministers, including Dr. Alveda King, Pastor Mario Bramnick, Revivalist Rebecca Macchi, and Dr. Dominiquae Bierman.

    Bassey, an acclaimed trumpeter and  convener of the Hallelujah Challenge, an online Christian worship movement, is known for his hit  songs, including  “Imela”, “Onise Iyanu”, and “Olowogbogboro.”

    Over the years, he has established himself as one of the prominent and most listened-to gospel ministers from  Nigeria as his  music spans across different genres such as jazz, worship, hymns and medley.

    In 2024, the Mayor of Albany, New York, honored him by declaring October 6 as “Pastor Nathaniel Bassey Day.”

    Meanwhile, the development has stirred mixed reactions on social media; while others hailed the gospel artist for taking the gospel of Christ abroad, others who felt different called the singer out for accepting the offer.

    Tomilola_beth: “Nathaniel bassey ministering at trump’s inauguration is revolting and a disgusting betrayal of everything christianity claims to stand for. and you christians applauding and celebrating it like some divine victory are even worse. Shameless, lacking common sense and morality.”

    thesandypreneur wrote: The gift of a man maketh way for him” stop playing and pray for grace!!!!

    nomso_njoku wrote: Let the person cry. Trump is a Christian. Even if he is not, Christian ministration is not only to Christians. Do you know the revival that can happen there

    joezihair wrote: So he has an opportunity to seat amongst kings and show his God and you are the judge of the jungle ???.

    udomereze wrote: You mad because someone is being recognised for his craft for praising God?? You need help bro

    simplyabde wrote: Politicians and Religion are in a romantic relationship!! The earliest people realise this the better.

  • Biden awards presidential medal to Republican Trump critic

    Biden awards presidential medal to Republican Trump critic

    U.S. President Joe Biden on Thursday awarded Republican Trump critic Liz Cheney one of the highest civilian honours in the United States – the Presidential Citizens Medal.

    Cheney, 58, a former Republican lawmaker for Wyoming in the House of Representatives, led, together with Mississippi Congressman Bennie Thompson, the Jan. 6 select committee that investigated President-elect Donald Trump’s attempts to overturn the 2020 election.

    Thompson and 18 others were also awarded the Presidential Citizens Medal.

    In a statement, Biden praised Cheney because she “has raised her voice – and reached across the aisle – to defend our Nation and the ideals we stand for: Freedom. Dignity. And decency.”

    Thompson, a Democrat, was honoured for his lifelong commitment to protecting the Constitution.

    Cheney is the daughter of former Republican U.S. vice president Dick Cheney, who was George W. Bush’s deputy from 2001 to 2009.

    After the storming of the parliamentary building in the capital Washington nearly four years ago, she distanced herself from Trump – not without consequences for her political career.

    She was ousted from top positions and lost her congressional seat due to the power of Trump and his followers, who put up a challenger who won.

    In the 2024 election campaign, Cheney – and her father – supported the Democrat Kamala Harris.

    According to the White House, the Presidential Citizens Medal is awarded to U.S. citizens who have exemplarily served their country or fellow citizens.

    There is speculation that Biden might grant Cheney a preventive pardon due to concern over potential legal actions Trump might take against her in his second term, which starts on January 20.

    During the campaign, Trump repeatedly vowed revenge against his adversaries and insulted them.

    He called Cheney a warmonger, saying she should face guns pointed at “her face.”

  • Sweet side of victory: Donald Trump says “everybody wants to be my friend”

    Sweet side of victory: Donald Trump says “everybody wants to be my friend”

    Apparently savouring his victory in the last US presidential election, President-elect, Donald Trump has said everybody suddenly wants to be his friend.

    Tech tycoons, US politicians, foreign leaders and even some in the media have been lining up to kiss the ring of the 78-year-old Republican ahead of his return to the White House in January.

    “In the first term, everyone was fighting me. In this term, everybody wants to be my friend,” Trump mused to reporters at his luxury Mar-a-Lago resort in Florida on Monday.

    “I don’t know, my personality changed or something.”

    In reality, Trump has shown few signs of a personality shift — but many of those who once criticized him are eager to cozy up to an administration that values loyalty above all else.

    “For now, folks are estimating that it is better to be on his good side than not — the problem for them is that his good side changes frequently,” Wendy Schiller, a political science professor at Brown University, told AFP.

    With Trump spending most of his time since the election at Mar-a-Lago, it has been up to others to make their pilgrimages to its gilded halls.

    The list of those who have done so reads like a who’s who of the global tech industry.

    In reality, Trump has shown few signs of a personality shift — but many of those who once criticized him are eager to cozy up to an administration that values loyalty above all else.

    “For now, folks are estimating that it is better to be on his good side than not — the problem for them is that his good side changes frequently,” Wendy Schiller, a political science professor at Brown University, told AFP.

    With Trump spending most of his time since the election at Mar-a-Lago, it has been up to others to make their pilgrimages to its gilded halls.

    The list of those who have done so reads like a who’s who of the global tech industry.

    Tech titans –

    Meta chief Mark Zuckerberg came in November as he sought to mend ties following Facebook’s banning of Trump after the US Capitol attack on January 6, 2021.

    Apple boss Tim Cook and Google’s Sundar Pichai and Sergey Brin have also visited, while Trump said Amazon founder Jeff Bezos — once a strong Trump critic — is due later this week.

    Meta, Amazon and Open AI chief Sam Altman are all reportedly donating $1 million to the fund for Trump’s inauguration on January 20.

    Trump meanwhile hosted TikTok CEO Shou Zi Chew on Monday, as the social network’s Chinese owner tries to block a looming US ban.

    “Honestly, in the first term — I don’t know what it was — it’s like a complete opposite,” Trump said.

    But their visits reflect a wider shift as the man shunned for his attempts to overturn his 2020 election loss now returns to the White House with a strong mandate for the next four years.

    Last week, the New York Stock Exchange welcomed Trump to ring its opening bell, on the same morning that Time Magazine announced that he was its “Person of the Year” for a second time.

    Republicans in Congress have been largely pliant, with signs of easing opposition towards controversial cabinet picks such as Pete Hegseth, Trump’s nominee to lead the Pentagon, and Robert F. Kennedy Jr., his vaccine-skeptic choice for health secretary.

    Trump had appeared to warn on Monday that those who did not toe the line could face election challenges by Republican loyalists.

    – ‘Power of the presidency’ –

    Even outgoing President Joe Biden has backed off from his previous warnings that Trump is a danger to democracy — apparently seeking the graceful transition that Trump denied him.

    Then there have been the world leaders who have beaten a path to Trump’s door. They range from right-wing allies like Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban to Canada’s Justin Trudeau, facing Trump’s threats of huge new tariffs.

    The media too have been trying to build bridges with the president who has repeatedly dubbed them the “enemy of the people.”

    The hosts of MSNBC’s “Morning Joe” show, Joe Scarborough and Mika Brzezinski, visited Mar-a-Lago in November despite being bitterly critical of him.

    In an opinion piece in The New York Times, columnist Michelle Goldberg described the mood as “The Great Capitulation.”

    The flip side is that those perceived as being against Trump are in for a tough time.

    This week, Trump sued a pollster and a newspaper over survey results published days before the US election showing him behind in Iowa — a state he ultimately won by a landslide.

    “Trump has indicated that he will make full use of the power of the presidency to go after anyone who challenges him, and now he appears to have a deeper understanding of how to do that,” said Schiller.

  • Handlifters group celebrate Donald Trump second coming as US President

    Handlifters group celebrate Donald Trump second coming as US President

    The Handlifters Praying Group has ended five-Thursdays from November 7th, 14th, 21st, 28th and 5th December, 2024 of an Intensive Praise, Worship and Thanksgiving with Prophetic Declarations over our Nations, to celebrate the second coming of Donald Trump as the 47th President of America.

    Speaking during the programme, the Visionary and Lead Pastor of the Handlifters Praying Group, Pastor Chinyere Adegboye said that with Donald Trump second coming as the US President the world will be a better place.

    She recalled that the Democratic Party candidate, Vice President Kamala Harris said that she would allow abortion, LGBT and child rights laws if elected into power, the Handlifters group prayed against it and asked God for the victory of Donald Trump and God did it.

    “America will be better under Trump. America will prosper under Trump. The church will rise again. Righteousness will be celebrated. Nations will bow down to America under Trump.

    “America status will rise and the richest people will come from America. Trump will do everything well. He will sanitize America, bring peace to the world and Nigeria. Africa and Nigeria will flourish under Trump”

    She said that the group is moving from Grace to Grace and from Glory to Glory, In Jesus Name. She added that the group has been using what God has blessed it with to buy land and to do charity.

    “We like to give to the less- privileged. It is lack of knowledge that has made so many people to become poor and less -privileged. We are going to do our end of the year charity programme by rendering assistance to the less privileged people of Mende Maryland, Lagos State.”

    “Nobody can stop you as a Christians, you must be prepared and be ready in season and out of all season. You have the upper hand and advantage. You must develop yourself and prepare ahead of time, If you are not IT compliance, go for training, in whatever area that you are disadvantaged and you need help, we are ready to support you. So you have to buckle up. We must be people who love to serve God.

    “Pastor Tayo Ohiku, who happened to be the Spiritual Mother of Pastor Chinyere Adegboye, spoke on the War in the Middle East and the victory of Israel.

    “Every power that rises against Israel would fall. God did it before and He’ll do it again. We speak peace to Israel. Israel will not go down. There shall be restoration. He that is mighty will do mighty things for us.”

    She said that the members of the group should be of good courage.

    “Whatever is making you afraid God will turn it into a miracle. It will be turned into testimony. Your peace has come. You will do greater things and the glory of God will be upon you.”

  • An abuse of justice – Trump reacts to Joe Biden’s pardon of son for tax, gun charges

    An abuse of justice – Trump reacts to Joe Biden’s pardon of son for tax, gun charges

    U.S. President-elect Donald Trump has reacted to the presidential pardon of outgoing president, Joe Biden, towards his son, Hunter, following a possible prison sentence for federal felony gun and tax conviction and reversing his past promises not to use the extraordinary powers of the presidency for the benefit of his family.

    TheNewsGuru.com(TNG) earlier reports that President Biden, in a statement released by the White House on Sunday, December 1, argued that his son had been singled out, selectively, and unfairly prosecuted because of his family name.

    Earlier this year, Hunter Biden was convicted of lying about his drug use when purchasing a firearm — a felony — and pleaded guilty in a separate tax evasion case.

    He was due to be sentenced on December 12 for his conviction on federal gun charges, and also scheduled for sentencing on December 16 in a separate case, after pleading guilty in September to federal tax evasion charges.

    “I believe in the justice system, but as I have wrestled with this, I also believe raw politics has infected this process and it led to a miscarriage of justice — and once I made this decision this weekend, there was no sense in delaying it further. I hope Americans will understand why a father and a President would come to this decision,” Biden said in his statement.

    Reacting, Trump, via the microblogging platform, X formerly Twitter, wrote: “Does the pardon given by Joe to Hunter include the J-6 Hostages, who have now been imprisoned for years? Such an abuse and miscarriage of Justice.”