Tag: Donald Trump

  • US presidential election: Harris will beat Trump – By Tiko Okoye

    US presidential election: Harris will beat Trump – By Tiko Okoye

    By Tiko Okoye

    Several polls suggest that the economy and immigration are the major issues voters are concerned with – areas where Donald Trump seemingly has a competitive edge. Maybe, and maybe not. But even if they are, Trump hardly helps himself and GOP down-ballot candidates nationwide by his inability to stay on message, as he spends every waking hour whining about Kamala Harris’s ‘AI-induced’ larger crowd sizes and ancestry – just as he did in the birther controversy involving then-candidate Barack Obama.

    Let’s take the economy. An informed analysis would readily reveal that – except arguably for the Ronald Reagan and Richard Nixon administrations – the US economy tends to go into a deep recession whenever the GOP occupy the White House and control Congress. This is because they consistently grant massive tax rebates to their wealthy campaign donors, and not only does their trickle-down economic policy never pan out, but they end up ballooning the national debt – a paradox for a party that preaches frugality and ‘small government’ – leaving any incoming Dem administration with the onerous and unpleasant task of cleaning up their mess! On the other hand, Harris, a product of a working family, has been harping about rebuilding the middle class as the way to economically empower majority of Americans to live out the American dream. Majority of American voters prefer the Harris plan.

    As for immigration, commentators tend to forget that the border situation worsened rather than improved during Trump’s four years in office, and that he couldn’t even build the wall he had bragged. Besides, Sen. James Lankford (R-Okla.) painstakingly crystallised a bipartisan immigration bill reputed to be the first major overhaul of asylum and immigration law in more than 10 years. But it was rejected after Trump and GOP House leadership brought enormous pressure to bear on GOP senators to make a volte face, simply because Trump wanted to make immigration a major campaign issue. The character difference between Biden and Trump is so striking. Biden says, “I love this job, but I love my country more.” Trump clearly loves being president again far more than he loves his country, and American voters are now much wiser and won’t fall again for cheap stunts.    

    Truth is that the fault with the Biden administration is the messenger, not the message. Despite the booming economy, working-class Americans were feeling the pinch at the grocery stores. And while Biden was finding it near-impossible to connect with hard-pressed Americans on right messaging, GOP strategists successfully scripted a compelling narrative with their “too-old-and-too-senile-to-be-president” trolls. Which is very ironic considering that Biden is only three years older than Trump and the latter is notorious for his ranting and muddled-up identification of people, places and events, but his every misstep is conspiratorially attributed to “Trump is just being Trump”! 

    A new messenger is on the block, even though the message is practically the same. The Harris team has broken the traditional mould of Democrats always playing defence – a losing strategy exemplified by Michelle Obama’s campaign slogan of “When they go low, we go high.” This inability or incapacity to effectively return tit-for-tat has always allowed the well-oiled GOP propaganda machinery to ominously stereotype and label Democratic candidates. But not Harris and her folksy, do-me-I-do-you running mate, Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz. The result? A flummoxed and flabbergasted Team Trump is still searching for ways to effectively handle the Kamala-mania phenomenon! 

    With national polls revealing that Harris is leading by 4-6 points, and several pollsters now putting her ahead in as many as seven of eight swing states, there can be no doubting that the Trump campaign is in need of life support – and even this may be coming too late. With less than 10 weeks to go, Republicans and their foremost strategists are beginning to worry that Trump may already be out of runway. Two of Trump’s notable pollsters, Tony Fabrizio and Travis Tunis, who had earlier espoused that Harris’s “honeymoon with American voters” would be a short-lived affair have been forced to eat humble pie by reporting that “No one should be surprised to see Harris get an extended but still temporary 2 to 3-point bump post-DNC.” I make bold to declare that the bump will be more like 4 to 6 points, that there’s nothing ‘temporary’ with the Harris lead, and that it will extend all the way to November 5. 

    That the current scenario is eerily similar to that of 2016 is of little comfort to Team Trump. Yes, there’s a female contender who, like Hilary Clinton, is surging in the polls. But things are markedly different this time around. First, Trump now has a past record in office to be decomposed and can no longer claim to be the outsider coming to drain the Washington DC swamp. He is a convicted sex offender and fraudster while Harris is a former California attorney general who was tough on crime. Trump is fossilised in the past, spewing pessimism and hollering about vengeance and retribution and being a dictator as well as demarketing America as another shithole country. Meanwhile, Harris is preaching freedom, joy and optimism about a brighter future. The choice cannot be more striking. 

    Virtually all editions of the newspapers published nationwide the morning after the Democratic National Convention ended carried screaming headlines that chorused: “A New Way Forward!”  Those still doubting the credentials of Harris should just think of the way and manner she seamlessly grooved into the position of a change agent; a candidate who is a senior partner in a much-maligned incumbent administration is successfully rebranding herself as “similar in many ways but equally dissimilar in several key ways.” This is a stroke of genius – a trait she also exhibited in her choice of running mate when everyone else – including Trump, Republicans, Democrats and this writer – was betting on her picking Pennsylvania Gov. Josh Shapiro because of the pricey 19 electoral votes at stake in the swing state. 

    Harris’s momentum has seen her outraising Trump in fresh donations. Last month alone, she raised $204 million, dwarfing Trump’s $48 million, bringing the total amount she has raised within such a short period of time to about $500 million! Many have described Harris as the leader of a political movement, not just a political party, as her big tent now houses Democrats, Independents and Republicans who are disenchanted with Trump.

    If the race were strictly based on a one-man-one-vote format, Harris would be winning by a landslide. The only reason why several analysts and pundits are still calling it a very tight race is because POTUS is elected by an Electoral College that is heavily skewed in favour of GOP-leaning rural mid-western states at the expense of Democratic-leaning populous and wealthy states on the eastern and western coasts. Trump is hoping that his MAGA supporters would upset the applecart.  

    And ever since the GOP super-majority in the Supreme Court, created by Trump when was 45th POTUS, upended the over-50-year Roe v Wade decision, pro-choice has been a rallying cry in a nation where female voters outnumber their male counterparts. It has seen candidates running on Democratic pro-choice tickets defeat their GOP opponents in deep-red states such as Louisiana, Ohio and Tennessee – to mention a few; and every proposed legislation restricting reproductive rights has been defeated in various referendums. It must be worrisome to Trump and GOP down-ballot candidates that referendums are scheduled to hold on the same subject in several states on the same day presidential election is to be conducted, including swing states, when it is known that Americans are not split-voters. 

    It’s also pertinent to note that while Trump was in the White House, his mannerisms and utterances caused the GOP to lose the Presidency and Senate in 2020 and saw a much-touted red wave go up on smoke in the 2022 mid-term elections. Trump has never been a majority-candidate nor a winner, and history will keep repeating itself as long as he hos presence or shadow looms large in any election. 

    Trump and GOP aficionados must be ruing the missed opportunity to nip Harris’s gravitas in the bud. Harris contested a state-wide election for the very first time in 2010, and was struggling to shed the same San Francisco far-left liberal label that Trump has resuscitated to no effect. Back then, officials of the Republican National Committee (RNC) foresaw the threat a diamond-in-the-rough Democrat like Harris could pose in the future, and commenced a counter-strike against her. 

    The gambit was codenamed “Killing Hercules in the crib” in their dirty tricks playbook, a reference to an ancient Greek folklore in which Hera, the wife of Zeus, the mythical king of the gods, knew that Hercules (original Greek version is Herakles) was her husband’s illegitimate son with a mortal female and tried every way possible to kill him as soon as he was born. The plan centred around a brutal testimonial of the mother of a slain police officer who criticised Harris as a far-left liberal who refused to seek the death penalty for the gang member who killed her son. 

    The moral of the story is that there’s no killing the beetle. If Republicans couldn’t do it when she was cutting her teeth in politics, they won’t be able to stop her ‘Big Mo’ going forward or kill a Hercules who has since overgrown his crib. America has surely had enough of the chaos as well as the race-baiting, narcissistic, misogynistic attitudes as well as the mischief-making, misogynistic, disruptive and corrosive proclivities of Trump in their polity. It’s time to finally retire him from national politics and give the surviving rump of the GOP rebuild their party.  

    Most Americans are ready to witness another African-American – and a female to boot – break the invisible glass ceiling to become the 47th POTUS. As for Trump, it will finally be good riddance to bad rubbish and a nightmarish memory!

     

    Ichie Okoye, a Boston University Hubert H. Humphrey Fellow, investment banker, microfinance expert, newspaper columnist and public affairs analyst, wrote in from Abuja

  • Kamala Harris launches verbal attack against Donald Trump   

    Kamala Harris launches verbal attack against Donald Trump  

    US presidential candidate, Kamala Harris, has launched a verbal attack against Donald Trump.

    During her acceptance speech at the Democratic National Convention (DNC) – four days of a star-studded and super-charged convention in Chicago, the vice-president reminded Americans of the “chaos and calamity” her Republican rival oversaw when he was in office.

    She said: “We know what a second Trump term would look like.

    “In many ways, Donald Trump is an unserious man. But the consequences of putting Donald Trump back in the White House are extremely serious.”

    Harris depicted her opponent as a liar, a cheat and a threat to democracy who would ban abortion nationwide, cut taxes for billionaires and cozy up to dictators.

    She said: “Consider not only the chaos and calamity when he was in office but also the gravity of what has happened since he lost the last election.

    “Consider his explicit intent to set free the violent extremists who assaulted those law enforcement officers at the Capitol. His explicit intent to jail journalists, political opponents, anyone he sees as the enemy. His explicit intent to deploy our active-duty military against our own citizens.

    “Consider the power he will have — especially after the United States supreme court just ruled that he would be immune from criminal prosecution. Just imagine Donald Trump with no guardrails.

    “How he would use the immense powers of the presidency of the United States not to improve your life, not to strengthen our national security, but to serve the only client he has ever had — himself.”

     

  • Why Donald Trump would win Kamala Harris – By Magnus Onyibe

    Why Donald Trump would win Kamala Harris – By Magnus Onyibe

    The Democratic National Convention (DNC), starting on Monday, August 19, in Chicago, is set to see Vice President Kamala Harris officially accept her nomination as the party’s presidential candidate. Harris has secured over the necessary 1,976 delegate votes needed to represent the DNC in the presidential election against former President Donald Trump from the Republican National Convention (RNC) on November 5, 2024.

    Through a virtual roll call, Harris had already received the endorsement of the DNC stakeholders before the convention began. However, this development did not immediately alleviate the pressure on President Biden, who was forced to end his re-election campaign following a poor debate performance against Trump. But his traducers did not stop there as they initially also demanded that he should resign and exit the White House effective immediately.

    This situation echoes the tale of Oliver Twist, who perpetually asks for more. That is because not a few  Republicans had been calling for Biden to resign from the presidency since he had conceded his re-election bid to Harris, suggesting he was unfit to continue in office.

    Fortunately, the initial calls for Biden’s resignation, fueled by the notion that withdrawing from re-election indicated his incapacity, have subsided. Although he has about five months left in his presidency, Biden has recovered from a recent bout with COVID-19 and even participated in a joint campaign event with Harris in Maryland on August 15.

    President Biden’s decision not to seek re-election on Sunday, July 21, 2024, led to calls for him to step down from the presidency, an unprecedented move, particularly because he was pressured by his party members and allies.This decision mirrors President Lyndon Johnson’s choice in 1968 to forgo re-election, although Johnson completed his term rather than resigning.

    In a twist of fate, the COVID-19 pandemic, which initially helped Biden win the presidency in 2020, seemed to have undermined his re-election bid less than 90 days before the November 5 election. The pandemic was crucial to Biden’s 2020 victory and Trump’s exit from office, but it now appears to be Biden’s Achilles’ heel. His poor debate performance against Trump, which he admitted was dismal, intensified calls for him to withdraw from the race, and he eventually succumbed to pressure from allies like former Speaker Nancy Pelosi.

    Ironically, the same pandemic that boosted Biden’s 2020 campaign is now contributing to his inability to seek re-election, potentially aiding Trump’s return to the White House. Although Biden did not specifically cite COVID-19 as the reason for his withdrawal, the pandemic’s negative impact on his campaign, including his abysmal debate performance when he faced- off with former President Trump in a CNN-organized TV debate and the resulting criticism for his subpar output, influenced his decision to step aside.

    Several factors contributed to President Biden’s declining approval ratings and his decision not to seek re-election. Public opinion soured over his foreign policy, particularly due to the chaotic withdrawal of U.S. troops from Afghanistan, the surge of illegal migration into the U.S., and perceived excessive U.S. support for Ukraine and Israel in their respective conflicts. The recent escalation in the Middle East, including the assassination of key figures such as Hamas leader in lran and Hezebah commander in Lebanon , the potential for broader conflict involving Russia and Iran in what might stretch into a third world war, has further strained the situation and democrats under pressure to end the two conflicts-lsraeli/Hamas and Russia/Ukraine wars before they degenerate into a  conflict of global dimension.

    Although Biden initially received praise for his handling of foreign policy during his 2019-2020 campaign, however his approval rating had dropped to about 38% by February this year. While COVID-19 was not the only reason for his withdrawal, it significantly impacted his presidency and political environment. Consequently, Biden decided to step aside for Vice President Kamala Harris, whose nomination has rejuvenated the Democratic National Convention (DNC) and restored enthusiasm for the party’s 2024 campaign.

    Coincidentally, the RNC candidate, Donald Trump, has also gained momentum. This boost followed President Biden’s poor performance in their first debate and Trump’s ability to maintain a strong public profile despite ongoing legal issues, including a failed assassination attempt. The would-be assassin’s bullet merely grazed Trump’s ear, which many supporters and undecided voters interpreted as divine protection, especially as Trump instinctively moved his head away from the shot aimed at his forehead.

    As Trump celebrated these developments, President Biden stepped down, leading to a surge in support for Vice President Kamala Harris and reinvigorating the DNC. Recent polls show Harris in a tight race with Trump. While Harris’s campaign slogan, “We are not going back,” suggests a commitment to preventing Trump’s return to the White House, some analysts argue it lacks impact compared to Trump’s “Make America Great Again” (MAGA), which may not be as effective as in previous elections.

    Despite the current enthusiasm for Harris, some pundits caution that the excitement may be short-lived. Historical patterns suggest that the political landscape can shift rapidly, and the initial boost for Harris might not last beyond the convention, which started on August 19.

    In 2016, few predicted that Donald Trump would make it to the White House, with most polls favoring Hillary Clinton. Despite Clinton winning the popular vote by about 3 million votes, Trump won the presidency by securing 307 electoral college votes to Clinton’s 227. The US electoral system is so complex that although Clinton received 65,853,514 popular votes, while Trump received 62,984,514 of the popular votes, Trump won the contest.

    That 2016  election marked the fifth time in U.S. history that the winning candidate lost the popular vote, and Trump’s victory in that contest against all odds suggests he might repeat that success in 2024. There is a conspiracy theory that Clinton’s loss was influenced by key electoral college voters who were opposed to the idea of a Clinton presidential dynasty, akin to the Kennedy family or the Bushes.

    Had Clinton won, it would have added a husband-and-wife presidential pair to the list of political dynasties, including the Kennedys and the Bushes. Given the political dynamics and underlying racial and gender biases in the U.S., some argue that while there is public support for Kamala Harris, there may be underlying resistance due to her being a female and a Black candidate, reflecting deeper societal biases.

    In summary, there are likely many voters in the U.S. who may harbor latent racial biases and might not vote for Kamala Harris due to her being both a woman and a person of color. While former President Barack Obama successfully engaged younger voters in 2008 through social media—who judged candidates by their abilities rather than race—Harris’s campaign relies on this demographic to support her. The challenge remains whether these younger voters can influence their parents, who may hold biases against Harris. Plus how many of the youths, particularly university students are willing to overlook the administration’s support for the ongoing massacre of Palestinians in Gaza by Israel even though Hamas is the agent provocateur?

    Obama faced the challenge of being a Black man, and despite extensive efforts by previous Black leaders like Rev. Al Sharpton and Rev. Jesse Jackson, Obama was the first to succeed in winning the presidency. Hillary Clinton, the first female nominee from a major party, also failed to win despite being Caucasian.

    Given these factors which still exist as formidable barriers, it’s doubtful that Harris will overcome the same obstacles. Her bid for the presidency in 2024 may face significant hurdles, akin to the proverbial difficulty of a camel passing through the eye of a needle. Although Harris has gained momentum since Biden’s withdrawal, this enthusiasm is expected to wane after the current convention.

    The concern arises from the fact that Kamala Harris will face realpolitik challenges when she steps out of her scripted, teleprompter-driven comfort zone into unscripted interactions with news reporters. These journalists will likely press her on various aspects of her tenure as Attorney General of California, her time as a senator, and her current role as Vice President. Apart from young democrats who are on her side because she did not want Biden due to his old age,  there is no evidence that blacks or women who should be natural constituents are with her in significant numbers.

    While Harris’s team has preemptively addressed potential questions through social media, this structured approach may not shield her from direct questioning by reporters. The upcoming television debate between Harris and former President Trump on September 10 could be a critical moment. If Harris fails to perform effectively, especially given her background as a former prosecutor, it could significantly damage her campaign, much like Biden’s poor performance against Trump on June 27, 2024, which led to the end of his re-election bid.

    How would she defend the multiple conflicting political positions that she has taken in her two decades-long political career which make her look like a chameleon that’s always changing its color to blend with the environment it finds itself in?

    The key question is whether a debate between Trump and Harris could mark a political downfall for Harris, the first female, and woman of color to become Vice President and a major party’s presidential candidate. Trump’s supporters, who view him as divinely chosen to return to the White House, are driven by his continued popularity despite being the most criticized and vilified presidential candidate since his 2020 loss. This popularity persists even amidst criticisms of his handling of the COVID-19 pandemic and the numerous court cases that he has been slammed some of which he has received judgement in his favor.

    Ron Klain, former Chief of Staff to President Biden, recently highlighted that the White House did not effectively promote Kamala Harris, potentially by design. Biden’s body language had suggested he might not seek re-election due to concerns about his age during the 2019 campaign against Trump.

    Although it was anticipated that Harris would replace Biden in the 2024 race, this created friction between them after they assumed office in 2020 and Biden’s intentions to run again became evident.

    Ultimately, COVID-19 and former Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s concerns about the DNC not being able to take control of the House if Biden remained as the candidate led to Biden’s decision to withdraw from the race.

    Harris now faces the challenging task of securing the presidency against the formidable Donald Trump, who has experience from the 2016 and 2020 campaigns and remains a strong contender. Despite Harris’s boost from Biden’s endorsement, she is not inheriting strong voter support from a president whose approval ratings had plummeted to around 38% before he stepped down. Meanwhile, Trump, known for his ability to come from behind, is likely to leverage his support from evangelicals and MAGA supporters to mount a strong campaign.

    Given that Kamala Harris has not faced the rigorous challenges of a presidential campaign like Donald Trump, who is running for the third time, and that she did not go through the traditional party primaries but was selected by President Biden, her optimism about winning the election is puzzling. That is more so because she is not enjoying overwhelming support of her natural constuents -women folk and blacks or colored who nurse the grudge that as District Attorney in San Francisco she is alleged to have the penchant for jailing blacks on crimes that could have ordinarily been deemed unserious .

    According to PEW Research, 63% of Americans find that televised debates help them assess a presidential candidate’s capabilities. However, Harris has not participated in debates or unscripted media interviews since her ascent to the top of the ticket roughly a month ago, which did not involve the usual primary process. Her reaction to tough questions, such as when she was confronted by a Democrat during one her campaign events about the Gaza conflict and how the U.S. is complicit , suggests she may struggle with probing questions from journalists, especially given her record of shifting positions. This could undermine her rising popularity before the November 5 election.

    Moreover, despite the DNC’s portrayal of Trump as a threat to democracy and accusations of racist comments (which he denies), swing voters are increasingly seeing Trump as a candid politician who speaks plainly about issues. Trump’s straightforwardness may help him regain momentum, as he provides clear positions on various topics, in contrast to more evasive politicians. This directness is a double-edged sword: it appeals to some voters but alienates others due to his blunt demeanor.

    An often-overlooked fact is that while President Biden has been involved in politics for about fifty years, former President Trump has been active in the political arena for only about a decade.

    Remarkably, since launching his presidential bid against Senator Hillary Clinton in 2016 and winning the presidency, Trump has become the RNC’s presidential candidate for a third time. His charismatic leadership has given him greater influence over the party than any other figure, including Ronald Reagan, and surpasses even the Bush family’s influence with its father-and-son presidential dynasty.

    In contrast, Kamala Harris began her political career in 2002 when she ran for District Attorney of San Francisco and won. This marks about twenty-two years of political experience, double the time Trump has spent in politics.

    If Kamala Harris does not win the presidential election on November 5, which in my reckoning seems quite probable, she still has time to try again in the future. Unlike Hillary Clinton, who was 68 when she ran for president, Harris is only 59, giving her a decade more to pursue another presidential bid before she becomes too old to run.

    Harris can leverage the goodwill she’s building now as a foundation for a future campaign. After all, President Biden, who has just concluded his 50-year political career, made several attempts after being a senator and vice president before finally winning in 2020, partly due to the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic which helped him take over the White House from then President Donal J.Trump who would likely return as the 47th president of the USA.

    Many Nigerians have formed prayer groups to support Trump’s return to the White House, believing he is more favorable to legal immigrants and anti-abortion policies, as seen in his support for overturning Roe v. Wade. With the election still several months away, the wait feels long, and many are anxiously anticipating the outcome.

     

    Magnus Onyibe, an entrepreneur, public policy analyst, author, democracy advocate, development strategist, alumnus of Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy, Tufts University, Massachusetts, USA, and a former commissioner in Delta State government, sent this piece from Lagos, Nigeria. To continue with this conversation and more, please visit www.magnum.ng.

  • US Elections: Iran blamed for hacking Trump campaign, exposing internal documents

    US Elections: Iran blamed for hacking Trump campaign, exposing internal documents

    Donald Trump’s presidential campaign has reported that some of its internal communications were hacked, attributing the breach to the Iranian government due to previous hostilities between Trump and Iran, though no direct evidence was provided.

     

    The campaign’s statement came after Politico reported receiving emails from an anonymous source in July, offering authentic documents from within Trump’s operation, including a report on running mate JD Vance’s “potential vulnerabilities.”

     

    “These documents were obtained illegally from foreign sources hostile to the United States, intended to interfere with the 2024 election and sow chaos throughout our Democratic process,” said Trump campaign spokesperson Steven Cheung.

     

    Trump posted on his Truth Social app that Microsoft had informed the campaign that Iran had hacked one of its websites. He blamed Iran, adding they were “only able to get publicly available information,” without further elaboration.

     

    Reuters has not independently verified the identity or motivation of the alleged hackers. The Trump campaign referred to a recent report by Microsoft researchers, which said Iranian government-tied hackers tried to breach the account of a “high-ranking official” on a U.S. presidential campaign in June. The hackers reportedly took over an account belonging to a former political advisor and used it to target the official.

    A Microsoft spokesperson declined to name the targeted officials or provide additional details.

  • US Elections: Harris, Trump set for debate ahead November polls

    US Elections: Harris, Trump set for debate ahead November polls

     

    Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump announced late Friday that he has agreed with Fox News to debate Democratic Vice President Kamala Harris on September 4.

    “I have agreed with Fox News to debate Kamala Harris on Wednesday, September 4th,” Trump wrote on his Truth Social platform. However, it was not immediately clear if Harris had agreed to the debate.

    Trump’s announcement came just hours after Harris secured the Democratic Party’s presidential nomination for the upcoming November election.

    Trump’s campaign took a significant turn on July 21 when President Biden, 81, withdrew his candidacy due to growing concerns about his age and declining poll numbers, and endorsed Harris.

    Biden decided to bow out following a poor debate performance against Trump in June on CNN.

    A second Trump-Biden televised debate had been scheduled for September 10 on ABC television. It was expected to proceed with Harris replacing Biden, but Trump’s spokesman Steven Cheung last week called it “inappropriate” to schedule it before Harris was formally the Democratic nominee.

    In his post, Trump provided details of the debate venue and moderators, stating that it would be held before a full audience.

  • US Elections: Trump speaks on WWIII

    US Elections: Trump speaks on WWIII

    United States Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump pledged on Saturday to prevent World War Three if he is elected president.

     

    Speaking at a Bitcoin event in Nashville, Tennessee, the former president emphasized the consequences if he is not elected. Trump stated, “America will become the Bitcoin mining hub, and you won’t need to relocate your family to China.”

     

    He further promised, “If elected president, I will prevent World War Three because we are very close to it. Americans will face dire consequences if they fail to elect me as president. I will end all wars; there will be no new wars under my presidency.”

  • US Elections: Trump launches controversial attack on Kamala Harris in controversial speech

    US Elections: Trump launches controversial attack on Kamala Harris in controversial speech

    In a speech intended to galvanize religious supporters on Friday, U.S. presidential candidate Donald Trump falsely accused his election rival Kamala Harris of being an anti-Semite and suggested she plans to permit the murder of newborn babies.

    This controversial statement came after Trump claimed on Wednesday in North Carolina that Harris “is totally against the Jewish people.”

     

    This rhetoric marks an escalation in Trump’s incendiary statements, occurring just days after his campaign cited an attempt on his life as a reason for focusing on unity.

    The hour-long speech, hosted by the far-right group Turning Point Action, brought up legitimate questions about Harris’s past positions on issues like policing, immigration, and the environment, which are seen as more progressive than current Biden administration policies. However, the speech was characterized by exaggerations and false claims.

  • Elon Musk denies supporting Trump campaign with $45m a month donations

    Elon Musk denies supporting Trump campaign with $45m a month donations

    Elon Musk has denied reports that he was donating $45 million a month to a fund backing former US president Donald Trump’s latest White House bid.

    In a post-Tuesday on X, Musk called the report he was funding a so-called political Super-PAC “ridiculous.” Super PACs are specially designed groups that can spend unlimited amounts on political candidates and causes.

    “I am making some donations to America PAC, but at a much lower level and the key values of the PAC are supporting a meritocracy & individual freedom.”

    “Republicans are mostly, but not entirely, on the side of merit & freedom,” he added.

    Musk’s comments came days after the democratic campaign for the presidential election was re-invigorated with Vice President Kamala Harris stepping in for Joe Biden.

    The Wall Street Journal had reported that Musk plans to donate $45 million monthly to America PAC, even though Musk stated just months ago that he would not donate to either Trump or President Joe Biden.

    The Tesla founder formally endorsed Trump’s candidacy for US president earlier this month immediately after the Republican survived a shooting at a political rally in Butler, Pennsylvania.

    Musk is one of several major backers of the new fund, with others reportedly including Palantir co-founder Joe Lonsdale, former US ambassador to Canada Kelly Craft and cryptocurrency investors Tyler and Cameron Winklevoss.

     

  • BREAKING: U.S. Secret Service Director resigns after failed assassination on Trump

    BREAKING: U.S. Secret Service Director resigns after failed assassination on Trump

    U.S. Secret Service Director, Kimberly Cheatle has resigned from her position following a failed assassination on former President Donald Trump.

    TheNewsGuru.com (TNG) reports Cheatle, who had described the shooting of Trump at a rally as the biggest failure of the Secret Service in decades, tendered her resignation on Tuesday.

    Addressing a congressional hearing on Monday, the Secret Service Director acknowledged that the agency failed in its mission to prevent the assassination attempt on Trump.

    Cheatle, who made her resignation known via an email to Secret Service employees, wrote: “I do not want my calls for resignation to be a distraction from the great work each and every one of you do towards our vital mission”.

    When she appeared before Congress, both Republican and Democratic lawmakers had called on the Secret Service Director to resign from her position.

    “Scrutiny over the last week has been intense and will continue to remain as our operational tempo increases.

    “I take full responsibility for the security lapse.

    “In light of recent events, it is with a heavy heart that I have made the difficult decision to step down as your Director,” Cheatle wrote.

    TNG reports Cheatle has been the Director of the U.S. Secret Service since September 2022. It’s unclear when her last day will be.

    Meanwhile, U.S. President Joe Biden has in a statement thanked Cheatle for her service.

    President Biden in the statement disclosed he will “soon” appoint Cheatle’s successor to lead the Secret Service.

    In response to the news of her resignation, Trump wrote on Truth Social, “The Biden/Harris Administration did not properly protect me, and I was forced to take a bullet for Democracy. IT WAS MY GREAT HONOR TO DO SO!”

  • US Election: Charly Boy vows to divorce wife if Trump wins

    US Election: Charly Boy vows to divorce wife if Trump wins

    Maverick singer Charles Oputa, popularly known as Charly Boy, has declared he will divorce his wife of 47 years if U.S. Vice President Kamala Harris does not win the upcoming presidential election. This announcement follows President Joe Biden stepping down as the Democratic Party candidate and endorsing Harris as the party’s nominee.

    Charly Boy, reacting on his X handle, expressed that after the first Black male President, Barack Obama, America should have its first Black female President. He stated his intention to divorce his wife if Harris, whom he refers to as his “crush,” does not win the election.

    He wrote in Pidgin: “If dis my crush, Kamala Harris no win the USA presidential election, I swear, I go divorce my wife of 47yrs. After the first Black Male President, America deserves the first Black Female President. Sorry rednecks. Dats how we Roll.”

    Kamala Harris has not yet been officially nominated as the Democratic Party’s candidate despite Biden’s endorsement. According to The Hill, she has secured over a quarter of the delegates needed to win the Democratic presidential nomination so far.