Tag: Donald Trump

  • Why Trump’s trial doesn’t make America special – By Azu Ishiekwene

    Why Trump’s trial doesn’t make America special – By Azu Ishiekwene

    Donald Trump consolidated his record in demagoguery when he became the first former US president ever to be criminally indicted and arraigned in a Manhattan court on April 4.

    He was the first US president to complain about an election he won and also the first to openly express support for the body-slamming of a reporter. He has the distinction of introducing “shithole countries” into the presidential lexicon. And on top of this improbable political career, Trump is also the first US president to be impeached twice.

    With 34 counts of criminal conduct hanging around his neck, mostly charges of fraudulent bookkeeping, it appears that the days of Trump’s improbable political infamy are far from over.

    Others have come close. According to a report by TIME, President Ulysses S. Grant was technically the first US president to be arrested for speeding on a horse and buggy in 1872.

    Richard Nixon came very close too. He was forced to resign after the outbreak of Watergate but before he could face potential criminal prosecution, his successor, Gerald Ford, pardoned him.

    Bill Clinton also came quite close. He was impeached but was later acquitted, and escaped criminal charges by the seams of his pants, after negotiating for penance in civil damages.

    But Trump, the very epitome of improbability, trumps them all. He is on the verge of outdoing even his own record in demagoguery, yet it is only fair to presume him innocent as he gets his day in court.

    As prosecutors negotiated details of Trump’s arraignment with his lawyers, whether or not he would be handcuffed, mug-shot, finger-printed and so on, I kept wondering what would have happened if this surreal drama was playing out in an African country – any African country.

    Of course, the process in the US, so far, has been widely praised as the triumph of strong institutions, the model that developing democracies around the world should aspire to. That’s a fair point, even though the trial of former President Jacob Zuma in South Africa, though under different circumstances, was also a significant moment.

    Perhaps, it might be useful to inspect this playbook of American exceptionalism a little more. Let’s assume, for example, that on the eve of the 2019 general elections in Nigeria, the government of President Muhammadu Buhari pressed charges against the leader of the opposition Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), Atiku Abubakar.

    The smouldering embers from the spectacular row in 2003 between Abubakar (then the vice president and his boss, President Olusegun Obasanjo) was a big deal then.

    The details of that dispute, involving large amounts of public funds, were so messy that if Buhari wanted to embark on a fishing expedition, the government might have found grounds to bring charges.

    And indeed, as if in some form of rehearsal, close associates of Abubakar were questioned, briefly detained and released without charges. Also, whether or not Atiku could travel to the US on account of speculations that the FBI had a warrant of arrest against him in respect of a business transaction with US Congressman, Mr. Williams Jefferson, trended in the runup to the 2019 elections.

    It would have taken extraordinary nerve for the government under Buhari to formally bring charges against Abubakar, his main rival and leading opposition candidate on the eve of the elections. And even if Buhari’s government succeeded in doing so, it would have been interesting to hear what the US and other Western countries would have said.

    Would they have praised Nigeria as a good example in upholding the rule of law or would such a step have been deemed fraught and politically motivated, especially in light of the pending elections?

    I have nothing but contempt for Trump’s politics and style and would be pleased to pave him a road of thorns as he attempts to return to the White House. His presidency was a disaster.

    But fair is fair. It is difficult to imagine that the prosecution would come up with this raft of charges against him – and press them in court now – if he was not interested in running again in the 2024 elections.

    Those who think Nigeria’s scenario cited is far-fetched may wish to consider what is shaping up in Senegal, Nigeria’s western neighbour. In that country President Macky Sall who has been in power since 2012, has nearly perfected plans to run for a third term in next year’s presidential election in breach of the Constitution. To give the impression that the race against himself would still not be an easy one, however, he is also planning to create his own opposition candidate.

    He has slammed the main opposition leader, Ousmane Sonko, with charges of criminal libel and is determined to produce enough distractions to tie him up in court ahead of the polls.

    It may be convenient to argue that Sall is neither Biden, nor Ousmane, Trump. In any case, French-speaking West Africa has been more susceptible to instability and unconstitutional changes in government often triggered by flawed elections.

    Yet, it depends on who is making the argument. In the eyes of millions of Trump supporters, there’s hardly a difference between a Sall who fiddles with the Constitution to secure an illegal third term and a Biden on whose watch Trump is facing criminal charges even when President Biden’s private garage is littered with dozens of classified documents shipped off from the White House when he was vice president.

    How is the rule of law served when the Department of Justice sleepwalks over dozens of classified documents found in Biden’s garage from the Obama era, while Trump, the leading opposition candidate, is hobbled by criminal charges on the eve of the next general elections?

    Unlike obstructionist Trump, Biden has said he would co-operate fully with the Department of Justice. Still, it would be interesting to know how tons of classified documents got to his private think-tank at a time when he had no legal basis to move them out of the White House.

    If this were happening in an African country, would the US and its western allies accept that the incumbent has nothing to do with the trial of the leading opposition candidate; that it is simply the law taking its course?

    When matters get to a head in Senegal as may well be the case before the 2024 presidential election, would the US or France have the courage to call out Sall – or perhaps the increasingly authoritarian Sierra Leonean President Julius Maada Bio – for mounting road blocks in the way of opposition candidates?

    It’s easy to yield to the seduction of American exceptionalism. Yet, apart from well-documented, but carefully preserved dark secrets of US waywardness, we have seen, especially in the last 10 years, that the US is not the undimming beacon that it often pretends to be.

    The elections that brought Biden to office were marred by allegations of programmatic flaws. The US must therefore be held to the same standards that it holds the rest of the world.

    The trial of Trump on the eve of an election in which he would potentially be running against an incumbent who himself is not exactly smelling of roses, is interesting. It would give the world a good opportunity to see if America practises what it preaches.

    Who knows? The improbable Trump may well take demagoguery into the Guinness Book of Records by becoming the first US president to overcome criminal trial and defeat an incumbent. And even if he doesn’t, he would still have set the record as the first US president who went down trying.

     

    Ishiekwene is Editor-In-Chief of LEADERSHIP

  • Trump released after arrest by U.S. police

    Trump released after arrest by U.S. police

    U.S. former President, Donald Trump, and front-runner for the Republican nomination in 2024, has been released after an arrest by the Police hours before his arraignment.

    TheNewsGuru.com (TNG) reports how Trump was arrested on Tuesday, and how he pleaded not guilty to 34 felony counts of falsifying business records when he was arraigned in court.

    Trump appeared at Manhattan Criminal Courthouse in New York for approximately two hours total being processed and arraigned.

    Indicted last week, Trump is the first sitting or former president to face criminal charges, over a case involving a 2016 hush-money payment to porn star Stormy Daniels.

    Meanwhile, the White House Press Secretary on Tuesday refused to comment on the indictment and arraignment of Trump.

    Karine Jean-Pierre declined to answer any question on Trump’s arraignment during the media conference.

    According to Jean-Pierre, Joe Biden’s focus is on the American people today, not on his predecessor, and that they will not remark on legal proceedings.

    “This is playing on many of the networks … so, obviously, he will catch parts of the news … but this is not his focus for the day,” she said.

  • BREAKING: Ex-US president, Trump under arrest, pleads not guilty to 34 charges

    BREAKING: Ex-US president, Trump under arrest, pleads not guilty to 34 charges

    Former US President, Donald Trump has been arrested after surrendering himself to the police on arriving at the Manhattan district attorney’s office.

    TheNewsGuru.com (TNG) reports former President Trump pleaded not guilty to 34 counts of falsifying business records.

    Trump is not expected to be handcuffed following his arrest, as he will remain under constant law enforcement protection.

    Trump was indicted on criminal charges in New York for his role in organising hush money payments made to an adult film star during his 2016 campaign.

    “Not guilty,” Trump said when asked how he pleaded in court today.

    The history-making indictment by the Manhattan grand jury on Thursday marks the first time a president has been charged in a criminal matter.

    The event marks the first time in U.S. history a current or former president has ever been charged with a crime.

    Taken together, the charges against Trump carry a maximum sentence of 136 years in prison under New York law but an actual prison sentence if he is convicted would almost certainly be far less than that.

    Trump, a 76-year-old, served as U.S. President from 2017 to 2021. Last November, he announced a bid to regain the presidency in 2024 for a second term in the White House.

  • Donald Trump to turn himself in, faces day in court

    Donald Trump to turn himself in, faces day in court

    Donald Trump, the ex-president, and front-runner for the Republican nomination in 2024, will appear in court on Tuesday to be fingerprinted, photographed, and formally charged in a watershed moment.

    This will be coming ahead of next year’s presidential election.

    Indicted last week, Trump is the first sitting or former president to face criminal charges, over a case involving a 2016 hush-money payment to porn star Stormy Daniels.

    He has said he is innocent and is due to plead not guilty.

    Trump, 76, will surrender amid tight security and expected street protests.

    Police made plans to separate supporters and critics outside the barricaded courthouse, where news outlets had lined up overnight to get access.

    Although Trump has drawn tens of thousands of fervent supporters to rallies across the country, it was unclear how many would travel to his heavily Democratic home town, where automobile travel is difficult.

    “We have to take back our Country and, MAKE AMERICA GREAT AGAIN!” Trump wrote on social media shortly after arriving in New York from Florida on Monday.

    The arraignment, where Trump will be in court to hear charges and have a chance to enter a plea, was planned for 2:15 p.m. (1815 GMT) on Tuesday.

    “It won’t be a long day in court,” Joseph Tacopina, one of Trump’s lawyers, said on ABC.

    The specific charges reached by a grand jury were due to be disclosed on Tuesday.

    Yahoo News late on Monday said Trump would face 34 felony counts for falsification of business records.

    Any trial is at least more than a year away, legal experts said.

    An indictment, or even a conviction, does not legally prevent Trump from running for president.

    Judge Juan Merchan late on Monday ruled that five photographers will be admitted before the arraignment starts to take pictures for several minutes.

    Trump’s lawyers had urged him to keep them out, arguing they would worsen “an already almost circus-like atmosphere.”

    The District Attorney Alvin Bragg, a Democrat, who led the investigation, will give a news conference afterwards.

    Trump and his allies have portrayed the case as politically motivated.

    Trump will return to Florida and deliver remarks from his Mar-a-Lago resort at 8:15 p.m. on Tuesday (0015 GMT on Wednesday), his office said.

    Bragg has faced harsh criticism from Trump and his office has received bomb threats in recent weeks.

    Security officials say they were not aware of credible threats surrounding Trump’s courtroom appearance.

    Mayor Eric Adams warned potential rabble-rousers to behave.

    “Our message is clear and simple: Control yourselves. New York City is our home, not a playground for your misplaced anger,” he told reporters.

    President Joe Biden, a Democrat who is widely expected to seek re-election and face a potential rematch against Trump, said he had faith in the New York police.

    The case has divided people in New York, where Trump’s name is emblazoned on buildings related to his business ventures.

    “It’s a terrific day. I hope it goes well and that he is eventually found guilty,” said New Jersey resident Robert Hoatson, 71, outside Trump Tower, where Trump stayed on Monday.

    Susan Miller said she hoped the show of support would “give him a little strength.”

    “He’s honest as the day is long,” she said.

    Trump’s lead has widened over rivals in the Republican Party’s presidential nominating contest, according to a Reuters/Ipsos poll released on Monday, conducted after news broke that he would face criminal charges.

    Some 48 per cent of Republicans say they want Trump to be their party’s presidential nominee, up from 44 per cent last month.

    Second-place Florida governor, Ron DeSantis fell from 30 per cent to around 19 per cent.

  • Why Manhattan grand jury indicted US ex-president Donald Trump

    Why Manhattan grand jury indicted US ex-president Donald Trump

    America’s ex-president, Donald Trump has been indicted by Manhattan grand jury thereby becoming the first US former president to ever be indicted.

    The charges levied against Trump will soon be in the public face as the grand jury’s imputation of Trump are being gathered,

    A statement Thursday evening by the Manhattan District Attorney’s Office confirmed Trump’s attorney has been contacted.

    The office wants Trump, 76, to surrender to the Manhattan D.A.’s Office “for arraignment on a Supreme Court indictment”.

    Noting that it remains under seal, the prosecutors said guidance will be provided when the arraignment date is selected.

    Trump is accused of making hush-money payments, via lawyer Michael Cohen, to adult film actress Stormy Daniels, legal name Stephanie Clifford.

    The businessman allegedly paid Daniels not to go public with the claim that they had an affair. Trump has denies an amorous relationship.

    Reacting to the indictment, the former President said he was being persecuted by those against making America great.

    “This is Political Persecution and Election Interference at the highest level in history.

    “The Radical Left Democrats have been engaged in a witch-hunt to destroy the Make America Great Again movement,” Trump declared.

  • Stormy Daniels Scandal: Former U.S. President, Trump says he expects to be arrested Tuesday

    Stormy Daniels Scandal: Former U.S. President, Trump says he expects to be arrested Tuesday

    Former U.S. President Donald Trump has said that he expects to be arrested in connection with the yearslong investigation into an allegation that he allegedly orchestrated payments to silence women who claimed sexual encounters with him.

    TheNewsGuru.com (TNG) reports that the hush money scheme involves adult film actress, Stephanie Clifford, popularly known as Stormy Daniels, as Trump called on his supporters to protest any such move.

    In a social media post, Trump, referring to himself, said the “leading Republican candidate and former president of the United States will be arrested on Tuesday of next week” – though he did not say why he expects to be arrested. His team said after Trump’s post that it had not received any notifications from prosecutors.

    Stormy Daniels: Former U.S. President, Trump says he expects to be arrested Tuesday

    TheNewsGuru.com (TNG) learned on Friday that meetings have been going on throughout the week among city, state and federal law enforcement agencies in New York City about security preparations for a possible indictment of Trump.

    In an echo of Trump’s appeals to supporters in the wake of the 2020 presidential election, he called Saturday for action, writing: “Protest, take our nation back.”

    The former president has been said to have been agitating for his team to get his base riled up and believes that an indictment would help him politically.

    Any indictment of the former president, who is running for reelection in 2024, would mark a historic first and quickly change the political conversation around an already divisive figure.

    While Trump has an extensive history of civil litigation both before and after taking office, a criminal charge would represent a dramatic escalation of his legal woes as he works to recapture the White House.

    Another witness is expected to testify Monday before the grand jury investigating the hush money payments, according to a source familiar with the investigation. It is not clear whether this would be the final witness before it votes on a possible indictment.

    While Trump has an extensive history of civil litigation both before and after taking office, a criminal charge would represent a dramatic escalation of his legal woes as he works to recapture the White House. Another witness is expected to testify Monday before the grand jury investigating the hush money payments, according to a source familiar with the investigation. It is not clear whether this would be the final witness before it votes on a possible indictment.

    Trump’s legal team has been anticipating that an indictment will happen soon and has been preparing behind the scenes for the next steps.

    Joe Tacopina, an attorney for Trump, later said the former president had based his claims on press reports.

    “No one tells us anything which is very frustrating. President Trump is basing his response on press reports,” Tacopina said in a statement.

    A spokesperson for Trump said earlier Saturday that the former president has not received a notification from the Manhattan District Attorney’s Office regarding any potential indictment, but was “rightfully highlighting his innocence” in his post.

    While Trump has an extensive history of civil litigation both before and after taking office, a criminal charge would represent a dramatic escalation of his legal woes as he works to recapture the White House. Another witness is expected to testify Monday before the grand jury investigating the hush money payments, according to a source familiar with the investigation. It is not clear whether this would be the final witness before it votes on a possible indictment.

    Previewing a potential line of defense from Republicans on Capitol Hill, House Speaker Kevin McCarthy, a California Republican, tweeted Saturday that any potential indictment of the former president would represent “an outrageous abuse of power” from the Manhattan District Attorney’s Office.

    Mike Pence, who served as vice president under Trump, echoed McCarthy’s message on Saturday. “Well, like many Americans, I’m just – I’m taken aback”.

    The former vice president claimed the Manhattan district attorney’s investigation “reeks” of “political prosecution.”

    The Manhattan District Attorney’s Office declined to comment on Saturday.

    How the Stormy Daniels Scandal Could Bring Down Trump
    The problem is not that he allegedly had an affair with a porn star- it is that the $130,000 payoff could have violated campaign finance law.

    Recall that the porn star (Stormy Daniels) had earlier said that she was threatened in 2011 over an interview in which she claimed to have had unprotected s3x with President Trump- and that their relationship was like “a business deal”.

    In a widely anticipated sit-down with CBS’ “60 Minutes,” Daniels also said she was never physically attracted to Trump, but confirmed a report that she spanked him with a magazine that had his face on the cover.

    Daniels told interviewer Anderson Cooper that she sold her account of having sex with Trump to In Touch Weekly magazine for $15,000, but two former In Touch employees told “60 Minutes” that the story never ran because Trump’s longtime lawyer, Michael Cohen, threatened to sue.

    Daniels — whose film credits include “Busty Beauties 2” and “Hot Showers 6” — claims she never got paid, but was threatened a few weeks later by a mystery man who approached her in Las Vegas.

    “I was in a parking lot, going to a fitness class with my infant daughter. Taking, you know, the seats facing backwards in the back seat, diaper bag, you know, gettin’ all the stuff out,” she said.

    “And a guy walked up on me and said to me, ‘Leave Trump alone. Forget the story. And then he leaned around and looked at my daughter and said, ‘That’s a beautiful little girl. It’d be a shame if something happened to her mom.’ And then he was gone,” she added.

    Daniels said the incident left her so rattled that she feared she might drop her daughter because her hands were shaking so much.

    And while she said she would “instantly” recognize the thug if she saw him again, Daniels said she was so scared, she never reported the incident to the cops.

    How Stormy Daniels met Trump

    In Touch eventually published Daniels’ entire interview in January, and she repeated many of her claims to “60 Minutes,” describing how she met Trump at a celebrity golf tournament in July 2006, accepted his invitation to dinner and went to his hotel suite.

    Daniels — who wore a fuchsia shirt, black, mid-thigh skirt and black, peep-toe pumps with stiletto heels — laughed while recalling how Trump was “just talking about himself” and showed her a copy of Fortune with his photo on the cover.

    “And I was like, ‘Someone should take that magazine and spank you with it,’” she said.

    After initially being taken aback, Trump “turned around and pulled his pants down a little — you know, had underwear on and stuff, and I just gave him a couple swats.”

    Stormy Daniels Scandal: Former U.S. President, Trump says he expects to be arrested Tuesday

    She added that “from that moment on, he was a completely different person,” telling her: “You remind me of my daughter. … You’re smart and beautiful, and a woman to be reckoned with, and I like you.”

    Daniels said Trump floated the idea of her appearing on his NBC TV show, “The Apprentice,” and said she thought he was both serious about the offer and using it to get involved with her.

    She also said she asked about his 2005 marriage to his third wife, first lady Melania Trump, and the recent birth of their child, his youngest son, Barron.

    “And he brushed it aside, said, ‘Oh yeah, yeah, you know, don’t worry about that. We don’t even — we have separate rooms and stuff,’” she said.

    The two of them had dinner in the hotel room, after which she used the bathroom, which was off the bedroom, and emerged to find Trump perched on the edge of the bed.

    “I realized exactly what I had gotten myself into. And I was like, ‘Ugh, here we go,’” she said.

    Daniels, who was 27 at the time, told Cooper she was not at all attracted to Trump, then 60, and didn’t want to have sex with him, but that their ensuing romp- during which he didn’t wear a condom-“was entirely consensual.”

    “This is not a ‘Me Too.’ I was not a victim. I’ve never said I was a victim,” she said.

    They never had s3x again, Daniels said, although Trump phoned her several times, inviting her to “get together” to discuss her appearing on “The Apprentice,” about which she said, “that part I never believed.”

    “I mean, I’m not blind. But at the same time, maybe it’ll work out, you know? … I thought of it as a business deal,” she said.

    Daniels said they finally met in July 2007 in his bungalow at the Beverly Hills Hotel in Los Angeles, where Trump “made me watch an entire documentary about shark attacks” that was part of the Discovery Channel’s annual “Shark Week.”

    After about four hours, she said, Trump made his move and sat next to her, touched her hair and “referenced back to how great it was the last time.”

    But when Daniels asked about “The Apprentice,” she said, Trump told her, “I’m almost there. I’ll have an answer for you next week.”

    “And I was like, ‘OK, cool. Well — I guess call me next week.’ And I took my purse and left,” she said.

    Trump denies Daniels’ claims

    At one point in the interview, Cooper confronted Daniels with a previous statement in which she denied having an affair with Trump and said “it never happened.”

    She called that statement a lie, and said she made it because she feared legal fallout and was told, “They can make your life hell in many different ways.”

    Stormy Daniels Scandal: Former U.S. President, Trump says he expects to be arrested Tuesday
    Former U.S. President, Donald Trump

    Daniels agreed to appear on “60 Minutes” despite accepting what she claims was $130,000 in hush money from Cohen 11 days before the election.

    In court papers, Cohen recently said Daniels was already liable for more than $20 million in damages for violating the non-disclosure agreement.

    Her lawyer, Michael Avenatti, told “60 Minutes” that was an attempt to intimidate Daniels, saying: “You threaten someone — with a $20 million lawsuit, it’s a thuggish tactic. It’s no different than what happened in the parking lot in Las Vegas.”

    The Daniels segment aired just days after former Playboy centerfold model Karen McDougal was interviewed by Cooper on CNN and detailed her own claims of a 10-month affair with Trump during 2006 and 2007.

    Stormy Daniels Scandal: Former U.S. President, Trump says he expects to be arrested Tuesday

    McDougal, Playboy’s 1998 Playmate of the Year, alleged that Trump tried to give her money following their first romp, and that they went on to have s3x “many dozens of times” — including in his family’s apartment in Manhattan’s Trump Tower.

    Trump, who married third wife Melania Trump in 2005, has denied both women’s claims.

  • Trump reacts to panel vote to press criminal charges against him

    Trump reacts to panel vote to press criminal charges against him

    Donald Trump former president of the United state has reacted to a panel vote, enabling the Justice Department to press criminal charges against him, for the role he played in instigating the attack on Capitol building by his supporters on January 6, 2021.

    Reacting to the move by the Panel, Donald Trump stated that the actions of the panel strengthen him.

    According to him, he said “these folks don’t get it that when they come after me, people who love freedom rally around me. It strengthens me,” Trump said on Truth Social.

    He added that the Democrats on the panel recommended that the Justice Department charge him with criminal charges because they want to stop his presidential campaign for 2024.

    Trump also compared the panel’s move to charge him with the crimes to his second impeachment, which ended with the US Senate failing to obtain enough votes to convict him.

    “The people understand that the Democratic Bureau of Investigation, the DBI, are out to keep me from running for president because they know I’ll win and that this whole business of prosecuting me is just like impeachment was – a partisan attempt to sideline me and the Republican Party,” he said.

    He also defended himself and claimed that he “pushed for 20,000 troops to prevent violence on January 6, and that I went on television and told everyone to go home.”

  • Twitter executives interfered with US election – Elon Musk

    Twitter executives interfered with US election – Elon Musk

    Elon Musk has revealed that evidence showed top Twitter executives suppressed and censored former US President Donald Trump, days before the 2020 election.

    Independent journalist and author Matt Taibbi shared the “Twitter Files Part 3″, saying there was erosion of standards within the company in months before January 6, decisions by high-ranking executives to violate their own policies, and more, against the backdrop of ongoing, documented interaction with federal agencies”.

    Musk replied to him, saying “election interference by social media companies obviously undermines the public’s faith in democracy and is wrong”.

    Fitton added that “Twitter activist employees, without basis, suppressed and censored the President of the United States, @realDonaldTrump in the days before the 2020 election. This is damning evidence of election interference.”

    “Unequivocally true. The evidence is clear and voluminous,” Musk replied.

    See Photos below:

  • The Donald Trump Magnus Onyibe Doesn’t Know – By Magnus Onyibe

    The Donald Trump Magnus Onyibe Doesn’t Know – By Magnus Onyibe

    For the sake of transparency,I need to be upfront about the origin of the title of this essay.
    It is not coined by me but by an angry reader of my last article on the immediate past United States of America,USA president,Donald J Trump.

    The piece was titled: “The Donald Trump That Africans Don’t Know” and it was first published in my column on the back page of Daily Independent newspaper on Tuesday 22 and subsequently on the back page of Thisday newspaper of Friday 25th November,2022 as well as across multiple online media platforms.

    Perhaps,owing to the fact that a stereotype opinion had long been formed about the 45th President of the US following several years of unmitigated public relations faux pax on the part of Mr Trump who never bothers to correct some misrepresentation of facts about him,my presentation of the persona of the former president of the US which is inconsistent with the mindset already shaped and propagated by a session of the Western media about Mr Trump, generated a mixed bag of vile and vicious attacks as well as enlightening and encouraging comments.

    The anti Trump sentiments expressed against the article and my further comments are the subject of this follow up opinion piece.

    So basically,the purpose or raison detre for this further intervention is to shed more light on the areas of contention via the reproduction of the points of view of those that vehemently disagree with me on the need to engage with the 45th president of the US who is poised to be the 47th by contesting for the office next year when the incumbent president,Joe Biden’s first tenure would be over.

    As earlier stated,one particular critic made a case that l do not know Mr Trump well enough to warrant my trying to market him to blacks in the US and Africans on the continent,simply because they have already formed the opinion that Mr Trump is a racist and anti Africa.

    It is a notion that l had tried to,and l am still aiming at changing by throwing more light on my good intentions which is to create a rapport between the former US president Trump and black Americans in particular and Africans in general for future mutual benefits to Nigeria and Africa as a whole.

    In embarking on the mission,l am drawing on the conventional wisdom that the road to power is via diplomacy.That is why l have set for myself the task of working assiduously to mend the broken fence between the probable president of the US from next year via disabusing the minds of those who have literally declared him a persona-non-grata in Africa simply owing to the vile comment about Africa attributed to him.

    These gentlemen and perhaps ladies that read the original article in which l tried to correct some myths about Mr Trump’s comments on Africa and Africans by putting things in context,strongly disagree with my submissions.
    Their dissension was expressed in writing via the feedback platform of Thisday newspaper-Disqus.

    Is it not astonishing that none of the commentators contradicted the fact that former president Trump’s policies and programs (2016-2020) had positively impacted the lives of African Americans in the US and people from the continent of Africa?
    l had elaborated on the policies and programs implemented by Mr Trump in the article in question.

    But rather than dwell on the former president’s pro African American policies that have positively impacted the black race in the course of Mr Trump’s four (4) years tenure ,the aggrieved responders to my last article in which l was advocating for the shifting of the relationship between ex president Trump from winter to summer modes,were apparently too piqued by his alleged negative comment about Africa that they were only prepared to judge Mr Trump on that basis,while blocking their minds to whatever good outcomes that his policies might have engendered.

    What that suggests is that the critics are more interested in squaring up on the basis of bruised ego of Africans in light of the alleged demeaning comment about the continent by the 45th president of the US,than pursue the goal of befriending the likely president of the richest and most politically and economically strategic country in the world for the progress of Africa.

    In fact,my agenda for proposing a thawing of the frosty relationship between the 2024 presidential hopeful,Donald Trump and American blacks in particular as well as Africans in general is self evident,so it can not be overemphasized.

    Now,I am not unaware of the possibility that it may be a long shot for the former president to return to the White House next year in light of the political and legal battles currently staring the 45th US president in the face.

    But no other candidate except Mr Trump has thrown his hat into the ring for the presidency in 2024.And given his high capacity to surprise pundits as no one gave him any chance to win the presidency in 2016,Mr Trump in my estimation remains the front runner in the 2024 presidential race in the US.

    Thirteen (13) number of comments had been recorded on Thisday newspaper Disqus platform in response to my article as at the cut-off point of last Friday December 2,2023.

    Six (6) number of comments were one or two sentences or concurrence of previous comments which l would not respond to because they do not merit such attention.

    So l am sharing with readers seven (7)comments,some of which were copious and enlightening.

    And l have reproduced them below along with my additional comments with the expectation that they would help to further illuminate the points that l tried to convey in my piece which has elicited a good dose of criticisms and accolades.

    Off course the commentators did so anonymously,meaning that their true identifies are hidden.

    The most likely reason for allowing folks to make comments on Disqus platform under a smokescreen is because it allows the authors the boldness to bare their fangs in no holds bared manner.

    That way,since the proverbial ox that they may be gored would not know their identify,they would have no fear of consequences for their often mean comments.

    Usually,vulgar words are deployed.So l would like to forewarn or make readers aware of the graphic nature of the language employed by placing a sort of caveat emptor on the comments being reproduced.

    To maintain the originality,there is no editing of the comments and they are also reproduced in the order in which they were posted in Disqus platform.

    The first (1) commentator identifies his /herself as ‘fakindum’
    Below is his/her point of view:

    “This is a load of shit.A failed apologia for Donald Trump. This animal said to my hearing that he preferred immigrants from “Norway” to those from “shit hole countries”. Now this hired writer is slicing and dicing his statements to show he loves Africa. How can it be a (sic) honour to be loved by this regrettable human?”

    MY RESPONSE:
    The piece is not an apologia for Mr Trump as the angry man has alluded.It is aimed at enlightening Africans about former US president Trump and also bringing him up to date about Africa.
    As the saying goes: it is the light that the host brings to see the pilgrim in the dark that also enables the pilgrim see his host.
    In other words,shinning the light on ex president Donald Trump would enable the potential president of the US understand Africa and indeed Nigeria better and vice versa.

    I need not emphasis the infinite number of positive developments that could accrue to Nigeria if Mr Trump were to return to the White House in 2024 after gaining a better understanding of Nigeria and indeed Africa.

    Worryingly,going by his comment,this fellow appears to have met Mr Trump face-to-face and has an axe to grind with him.
    And the assumption above is derived from the choice of words used against him,which makes it obvious that the commentator is very bitter.

    Yes,Mr Trump stated that he would prefer immigrants from Norway to those from ‘shit hole countries’.
    But it is critical that we put into context the comparison between African and Norway,so that it can be better understood.

    The truth is that Mr Trump had just hosted the prime minister of Norway the previous day in the White House before senator Dick Durbin led a team to the White House to discuss a sort of amnesty for undocumented Africans already in the US.

    And his meeting with the Norwegian prime minister who he was very likely impressed by,might still have been fresh on his mind,hence he made the comparison which portrayed him in bad light because he should have controlled his emotions. But Mr Trump is like an open book and an unconventional president.

    Being a Freudian slip,the White House walked back the comment.
    That indicates to me that former president Trump might have been remorseful when he realized how offensive the utterance turned out to be.

    Arising from the above,suggesting that Africa should be bellicose after an apology had been tendered even though it was not made directly,is stretching the concept of self assertion too far.

    Rather than take a dog-in-the-manger posture,I would prefer to be guided by the wise counsel intrinsic in the book: Warrior Of Light by Paulo Coelho, a Brazilian novelist.
    “A Warrior of Light values a child’s eyes because they are able to look at the world without bitterness. When he wants to find out if the person beside him is worthy of his trust, he tries to see him as a child would”

    In any case ,which country in the world would welcome the rejects of other societies into their country as Mr Trump has categorized the illegal immigrants into the US?

    To buttress my point about the universality of xenophobia or racism,l referenced how Ghana and Nigeria that are supposed to be Sister countries have been expelling and counter expelling each other’s nationals since the mid 1960s on multiple occasions depending on the economic fortunes or misfortunes of both countries.

    With respect to the other allegation against me by the commentator “Now this hired writer is slicing and dicing his statements to show he loves Africa.”, it needs to be emphasized that the article in question “ The Donald Trump Africans Do Not Know”was written in the collective interest of Africa and Africans.

    And it is a pity that fellow Nigerians find it impossible to believe that some people can do things altruistically.

    The underlying reason for the negative mindset of most Nigerians on corruption may be because graft has become such a major issue in our society. In fact it has become so suffused with brazen acts of graft by leaders in public offices from the top of the ladder to the followers at the bottom of the rung,to the extent that the long suffering masses have had no option than to become obsessed with the suspicion that every action or motive by anyone must be dubious.

    Which is why I would like to remind the angry fellow that decided to assail my integrity and personality,that in the nearly thirty years that I have engaged in writing and publishing in the mass media critical analysis of policies of government and the society at large,the public officers and private sector practitioners that l have focused on,ranging from president Olusegun Obasanjo ,Umar Yar’dua of blessed memory,Goodluck Jonathan to Mohammadu Buhari,former senate president Bukola Saraki to my former boss and brother,James lbori,ex governor of Delta state;l have never solicited or received gratifications from anyone of them.

    The same applies to Godwin Emefiele Central Bank of Nigeria,CBN governor, Aliko Dangote,the richest man in Africa,Jim Ovia who is the founder of Zenithbank group and Mike Adenuga ,founder of GLO telecoms as well as Tony Elumelu,chairman of Heirs holdings and founder of UBA.

    And I have at some point or the other,had the privilege of writing personality profiles about the aforementioned eminent personalities which are featured in my soon to be released book: Leading From The Stteets.Media Interventions By A Public Intellectual (1999-2019) which is a compendium of seventy seven (77) of my published articles since the return of multi party democracy in Nigeria,plus afterwords on the topics discussed in each of the seven (7)chapters of the book written by renown authorities on the issues covered in the respective chapters.

    And none of identified Very Important Personalities,VIPs has offered me gratification,neither have l solicited such from them.

    It needs being emphasized that my interest in trying to mend the broken fence between former president Trump of the US and Africa is a patriotic gesture aimed at serving the best interest of all.

    As the saying goes: it is the same light that is shined to see a stranger that also enables he/she see his host.
    In other words,shinning the light on Donald Trump would enable the potential president of the US understand Nigeria and Africa better and vice versa.

    It is needless emphasizing the infinite number of positive developments that could accrue to Nigeria and indeed Africa if Mr Trump were to return to the White House in 2024.

    The optimism for the good fortune alluded to above is reflected by the ground breaking achievements in boosting the relationship between the Jews and Arabs in the Middle East via assistance from his son-Inlaw (husband to Ivanka)Jared Kushner,during Mr Trump’s tenure as president in the white house.And I laid it all out in the original piece which l urge interested readers to read or conduct more research on the subject online.

    The veritable accomplishments in the Israeli /Arab relationship in the Middle East are verifiable pointers to the warm relationship that the US could have with Africa and indeed Nigeria in the event that Mr Trump becomes the 47th president.

    The second (2)commentator who identifies himself as ‘American Abroad’ made the following comment:
    “In all fairness, original first-person reports from the Oval Office meeting, as first revealed by Senator Dick Durbin of Illinois, was that President Donald Trump remarked, in reference to African immigrants, “Those shitholes send us the people that they don’t want.”

    He absolved Mr Trump by admitting that “He apparently did not specifically mention country, countries or continent. That precise quotation had been fact-checked contemporaneously several times in the past. To otherwise deny the obvious, or attempt to sugarcoat Mr Trump’s extensive history of racial instigation and crass misogyny is disingenuous.

    Furthermore, if you begin a serious intervention with an easily disprovable falsehood, it makes it extraordinarily difficult to give any credence to the rest of your homily, regardless of its underlying merits.”
    Thereafter he gave a caution note : “Journalist, kindly respect the intelligence of your readers- and your own claim to dignity, if not veracity.”
    MY RESPONSE:
    Clearly,this commentator did his homework.So he is not glib because he took time to ferret out the true and correct statement made by Mr Trump which has been misrepresented as: “Africa is a shithole country “.
    But he misunderstood me by assuming that l was making a case that Trump did not make a disparaging comment about Africa.That is far from the truth. I simply contextualized what Mr Trump said while also emphasizing that he was misquoted.

    Thankfully he acknowledged that there are merits in the case that l tried to make in the piece,but he was disdainful in his
    presumption that l was denying that Mr Trump made a disparaging comment about Blacks and Africans.
    ‘American Abroad’ if you are reading this, thank you for digging up the truth.
    We are both on the same page,but the only exception is that l disagree with you that Mr Trump should be crucified for being an unusual politician.We need to build bridges as opposed to burning them.

    The third(3) commentator goes by the name ‘Oparafo Ugakwu’ who wrote the following:
    “This level of low self esteem is stunning.It would be easier for Mr. Onyibe to lift the Olympus than to convince this forum that Donald Trump is not who he is. With this type of mentality from the so called Nigerian intelligentsia, the nation will continue to be ridiculed in the international community. Given his background,Mr. Onyibe could easily be made the Nation’s External Affairs Minister or an Ambassador, positions that would be readily exploited by demagogues and racists in power like Trump. Is there a better way to feed the beast?”
    MY RESPONSE:
    Again this a case of a victim of closed mind or mentality that is not willing or ready to see things beyond the jaundiced view that he has received.

    That is unlike the previous commentator ‘American Abroad’ who made the effort to look beyond the surface by digging up the correct comment made by former president Trump in the White House to a particular audience.

    What l have done is what a foreign affairs minister or ambassador does to build healthy and beneficial relationship between his country and strategic partners.The fact is that l seized an opportunity of meeting with the 45th president of the US planning to be the 47th by next year to see if l could build a bridge of friendship between him and my country and continent which he apparently knows pretty little about.

    What ‘Oparaku Ogakwu’ may not be aware of,is a principle called strategic engagement in international relations or diplomacy.It is less about bluster or self bloated image and fragile egos.

    But more about recognizing a challenge or opportunity and continuously engaging with the other party so that one can be abreast of the developments on their side with a view to taking proactive measures to forestall or embrace actions that could further jeopardize or strengthen existing relationships,as the case may be.

    Imagine the US not remaining engaged with North Korea or lran because of the so called “high self esteem’ of former president Trump or current president Joe Biden.
    It is a no brainer to figure out that the world would be under more serious threats of a nuclear Armageddon.

    The truth is that l have identified a window of opportunity for Africa to warm up to the potential next president of the US, Mr Trump and l am exploring it by trying to smoothen the current fractured relationship that some Africans have with him through illumination of the differences causing the friction and correcting the wrong impressions.

    The fourth (4) commentator who identifies as ‘Kawhi’ had the following to say:
    “Wow Magnus, you’re obviously star-struck! The arrogant presumption that you know someone after a casual encounter at your friend’s daughter’s wedding is mind-boggling and I think the title of your article should be ‘The Donald Trump that Magnus Onyibe Don’t Know’. That you needed most of the article to weave a narrative of Donald Trump’s mindset and supposed thoughts,based only on a casual comment that Nigeria has a lot of oil (which an average fool in the world knows), is a pointer to your own inclination. In describing him as a business titan, you even capitalized the letter T in the word titan!”
    He continued:
    “To know the Trump that most Americans know (after all they are his primary constituents), go read the submissions of his closest associates including his personal lawyers and those who served in the highest levels in his administration, and his family members.
    Perhaps no better words have been used to describe Trump’s extraordinary moral and character failings than those by his longest serving Chief of Staff,General John Kelly after the events of January 6, 2021 (the definitive and most consequential event of his presidency, which you did not even bother to mention);”

    And concluded with the admonition or wise counsel which l agree with:
    “We need to look infinitely harder at who we elect to any office in our land. At the office seeker’s character, at their morals, at their ethical record, their integrity, their honesty, their flaws,what they have said about women and minorities, why they are asking office in the first place, and only then consider the policies they espouse.”
    My RESPONSE:
    As readers might have noticed,he is the ‘copyright owner’ of the title of this article-“The Donald Trump That Magnus Onyibe Doesn’t Know”
    Obviously,he wants me to only see things from the prism of Trump,s enemies or traducers that he listed (sour grapes) and neglect the perspectives of the over 74,222,958 Americans who believe in his politics and voted for him in the 2020 presidential election which amounts to 46.8% of the votes cast compared to the 81,283,098 vote or 51.3% cast for the winner,president Joe Biden.

    He took umbrage at what he termed my casual meeting with Mr Trump and tried to savage me for assuming that such a casual encounter qualifies me to claim that l know him.

    Is Ogakwu aware that sometimes it takes only a game of golf between a job seeker and a potential employer for 
a top CEO to get hired ?

    In fact,most ministers in Nigeria are hardly previously known to the president and ditto for governors and their appointees as commissioners.

    It might also interest the fellow who identifies as Ogakwu to know that I first met President Trump at his golf course in West Palm Beach,and the second time at his Mar-a-Lago resort in Florida during which l had significant conversations with him.

    Ogakwu also stated that l was star-struck.
    Who would not be ?
    I have never met,wined and dinned with any president of the US,how much more a very charismatic and consequential one like Mr Trump. Before him,I had only attended an event where former president Bill Clinton was the keynote speaker and l didn’t have the privilege of having a conversation with him.

    After all when our president Buhari met then President Trump in the White House when he was on a state visit during which he sealed the contract for the supply of super Tucano jets in 2018,he is not on record to have wined and dinned with him.
    So why would l pretend that doing so with former president Trump did not excite me?

    ‘Bolovi’ is the name by which the fifth (5)commentator identifies himself.
    Below is what he wrote:
    “Thank you Mr. Onyibe. I was born in Nigeria and now a US citizen. President Trump did more for blacks than the first black President.The media went after him because they could not control him. The media made-up negative stories on him, and simple-minded, low information and emotional people believed it.”
    MY RESPONSE:
    Thank you too’Bolovi’ for your unbiased assessment.

    The reality that we must all come to terms with is the fact that Mr Trump is a non traditional politician and some Americans are still trying to wrap their heads around his unique way of playing politics.

    Evidently,his brand of politics is supported by at least 46.3 percent of US voters who elected Mr Trump as their president in 2016.

    And apparently,Mr Trump does not really care much about public opinion and that reality is a validation of the belief that he is an unconventional politician.

    Take for instance ,his recent invitation to lunch in his Mar-La-Go resort,the artist formerly known Kanye West now simply Ye who is an antisemite and Nick Fuentes a widely known antisemite and holocaust denier. That action basically validates the fact that Mr Trump is a none conformist.

    Also,it would seem as if Mr Trump courts controversy. And if experience teaches us anything,that approach to politics works for him because all these hooplas may not count against him on the day elections.

    The sixth (6)commentator that goes by the name:’Mystic mallam’ wrote the following:
    “Mr. Magnus Onyibe,what’s your point – are you trying to persuade us that Trump loves Africa and Africans, that he’s not a rabid and bigoted racist? If that’s your objective, you have failed woefully, why? You have no idea whom Trump is, or what he represents to America’s Alt-right. Is hero-worship what they taught you at the Fletcher School you never stop touting as suffix to your name?”
    MY RESPONSE:
    I am not making a case that Mr Trump loves Africans.Rather my objective is to bridge the gap between Trump and African/blacks in the US through dialogue that could engender a more cordial relationship for mutual benefits.

    The justification for my intervention has been made in my earlier responses.
    Nevertheless,as we all know,racism against blacks in the US and neo colonialism against Africans did not start with Trump.It commenced with the enslavement of Africans by the Europeans and indeed the Western world over 400 years ago.

    As a way of healing the wounds of the past,some states and cities,in the US have started to pay reparations to black Americans.

    That indicates that racism is not a Trump creation,but he prefers to deal with it frontally than the old ways of pretending in Washington,DC to love Africans by traditional political actors via tokenism in the public,while working against blacks during closed door policy meetings.
    lt is an attitude that Trump does not subscribe to hence he expressed his views about illegal African immigrants publicly.

    The commentator also went low and cheeky by writing :”is hero worship what they taught you in Fletcher school that you never stop touting as suffix to your name”

    Well,I am a proud alumnus of Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy which is my alma mater.

    Instead of being offended by the snide comment,l would like to enlighten my traducer that Fletcher is also the alma mater of former foreign affairs minister of Nigeria,Professor Bolaji Akinyemi who attended the school for his masters degree in 1966 before heading to the university of Oxford,United Kingdom,Uk for his PhD degree.
    And the erudite professor never seizes to identify with his Fletcher pedigree in his public appearances.

    And my good friends,Dr Rueben Abati ,Thisday newspaper columnist and AriseTv anchorman,as well as Mr Segun Adeniyi,Editorial board chairman of Thisday newspaper who is also a columnist,also identify themselves in similar fashion.

    As a matter of fact,Dr Abati takes exception to being addressed without prefixing his name as an academic doctor and Adeniyi clearly states his role as chairman of Thisday newspaper editorial board under his name.
    Same also applies to Dr Mike Ozekhome,who also writes a column for LAWYER,a Thisday newspaper weekly pull out with all his academic titles in array.

    So it is a matter of style or branding if you like.

    Is it not curious that the commentator who scoffed at me for using the suffix of my alma mater in my media Interventions did not express reservations about the fact that l also include that l was a cabinet member of delta state government (2003-2007) and that l am an entrepreneur.?
    Apparently’Mystic Mallam’ is ready to live with that.

    As for ‘Reem Haak’ who is the seventh (7)commentator, his view is:
    “Donald Trump hates the way the Democrats patronise Africans and black people generally.What is the point of selecting a few blacks into Democrat’s government to convey the impression that Biden loves black people.Other African Americans keep insisting they are still largely marginalized. “
    He emphasized that “Joe Biden’s understading of how to help the Africans is to allow them invade America.Biden believes in the system of exploitation of Africa and indeed Nigeria ,just because some Nigerians live and work in America.”
    Raheem Haak argued further that
    “ IT is only Donald Trump who has campaigned favourably for Africans and Nigerians developing their own countries just like Americans are doing to their own country.
    Continuing,he made the point that “Joe Biden believes that America will carry the responsibilities of Nigeria through aid. Democrats release financial aid to Nigeria and it strengthens America’s right to dictate to Nigeria politically. “
    His opinion is that: “So far, it is only the Republicans who have admitted that aid to Africa has been disastrous.This was the admission of George Bush after Africans complained that aid is always stolen by the officials.The Democrats and Joe Biden don’t even entertain such thoughts let alone act accordingly.
    They believe Africans and Nigerians cannot think for themselves.”

    In Raheem Haak’s conclusion “Donald Trump does not believe in the politics of patron-client relationship which has undermined the development of Nigeria till date.”
    He then advocated that “The way out for Nigerians is to encourage politicians like Donald Trump who hate looters to become president. That is the only way Nigeria can be free from this needless crushing poverty devastating millions in Nigeria.”

    I could not have put it better in an environment where a lot of us are not keen on thinking out of the box,but prefer to internalize and even swear by information that we did not check the motive of the purveyor to see if it had been tainted to suit an ulterior motive which may not be in the best interest of our country.

    Obviously,most of the commentators views are shaped by what they have been seeing and hearing on CNN.

    May l suggest that they should also spare some time to watch Fox News,the preferred television station of Republicans to see the other points of view to form a balanced opinion of Mr Trump?

    I am not unmindful of the fact that the approach that l took for this follow up piece is unorthodox.But just as columnists sometimes adopt drama or satire style of writing when commenting on sensitive issues,the style that l have adopted is akin to democratization of free speech.

    It is a Question and Answer format which l am hoping would help expand the sphere of knowledge of readers in order to enable them have broader,as opposed to pigeon hole perspectives of the important national and international issue of forging stronger relationships with the US which is usually accomplished mainly when they have located a military base in a country of strategic interest to them.

     

    Magnus Onyibe,an entrepreneur,public policy analyst,author,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.
    To continue with this conversation,pls visit www.magnum.ng

  • America, watch your back! – By Azu Ishiekwene

    America, watch your back! – By Azu Ishiekwene

    Former US President Donald Trump didn’t just happen to the United States. He hit the world like the climax of a horror movie. 

    Scene after scene, act after act left the thoughtful in bewilderment, the reserved in shame, and even the incorrigible in doubt. Only the fantasts and ultra-right wing extremists were impressed by Trump’s macabre dance.

    It was a phase like no other when he freely abused the expression, “To make America great again”.

    Apart from his British double and ally, Boris Johnson, only clips from Uganda’s past, without their bloody trail, throw up a shadow of semblance in contemporary history. 

    If Idi Amin, Uganda’s maximum ruler and self-styled conqueror of the British Empire, was alive, Trump would have had a living black effigy, a master of doublespeak. He shifts grounds from subject to subject, changing the narrative before the audience had time to think, and then closing the story with a conclusion neither relevant to the beginning, nor logical in its summation.

    Although Amin declared himself Field Marshal and life president, he only lasted between 1971 and 1979 – roughly the same eight years Trump aspires to rule the US. Amin’s cleverer latter-day successor, Yoweri Museveni, has been, paradoxically, the one to live Amin’s dream of a life presidency. 

    Museveni, who led a guerilla warfare to “liberate Uganda from Amin”, has been in office for 38 years and still counting. Now the whole world is worried about liberating Uganda from him.

    With Trump, facts don’t have to be factual. Any line makes a syllogism so long as it justifies his ends. His presidency reduced the most powerful country in the world to a theatre of absurdities, an endless circus of drama where Trump was the scripter, its director, lead actor, hero, critic and more. 

    It was under Trump that the world really doubted for the first time in many decades the primacy of the US in global affairs – whether it involved the climate debate, migration (legal or otherwise), the pandemic or even the nuclear arms challenge.

    With skin tougher than a reptile’s, Trump drove through scandals, not batting an eyelid. He rigged the Supreme Court with conservative justices, trampled over Congress and bullied the press. Trump was not just a master of the alternative universe, he also sustained it with hysteria that left normal folks doubting their own sanity.

    A darling of the Christian right, he may as well have borrowed his moral compass from the Crusaders, an earlier generation of Christians, who lacked the grace to accommodate what they could not change, but did not lack the courage to undermine or destroy them. 

    Trump was never wrong as long as he called the shots. He must have thought Nixon was foolish to have resigned at the mere triviality that was Watergate.

    Coming on the heels of the remarkable era of Barack Obama, Trump had the very effect of that bull inside a China shop. Frequently seeking judicial reinterpretation of his indiscretions, America lost its sense of outrage under him! With brazen incorrigibility, he simply blew out one scandal with another. 

    When, after four difficult years Americans had the chance to choose again, the confused, frightened world prayed that American voters would find the courage to escort DJT out of the White House and back to his Towers. That’s where his alternative facts and self-serving narratives move mountains and form the operational blueprint. 

    But he didn’t only resist by stirring an insurrection on the Capitol, he would go on to ask the courts and whoever cared not to accept or confirm Joe Biden’s electoral victory. Sounds like a tale from a thriller, but we lived through it.

    To be fair to American voters, the majority of them didn’t elect Trump. He was the product of the Electoral College – a warped and archaic electoral system which sometimes allows the majority to have their say, but the minority to have their way.  

    If that system was meant to provide some balance and comfort in America’s complex federation – and possibly stop the emergence of demagogues, as some argue – well, it failed to deliver in 2016. 

    The Electoral College, that 230-year-old political contraption, became the very vehicle that took Trump to the presidency. Hilary Clinton had trounced him with a margin of 2.8 million popular votes, but the counter-democratic wisdom of the electoral college overrode the popular will of Americans.

    In the words of one of the founding leaders of the US, James Madison, the Electoral College was meant to ensure that the president is elected “by men most capable of analysing the qualities adapted to the station, and acting under circumstances favourable to deliberation, and to a judicious combination of all the reasons and inducements which were proper to govern their choice.” Trump possessed anything but these qualities.

    His Democratic opponent warned and admonished most prophetically, about the man lacking the temperament and wisdom befitting of the job. The electorate heard, and adhered, but the “College” did the reverse. The world felt the impact of that mistake, and America bore this burden for four long years. 

    And he stunned the world even more. He wouldn’t leave the White House without a fight and attempted a coup. He wouldn’t concede defeat or congratulate the man who beat him at the polls. He sulked, balked and bluffed. But in the end, he had to slink away like a bully humiliated by an underdog.

    The mid-term elections in November in the US provided Trump with another opportunity to show-up in the ring again, hoping for a Red wave, which thankfully, did not happen. He still wants to make America great, to “save” America. 

    His fanatical crowds are unrelenting, cheering him at the podium like nothing happened before. And just like before, too, the world risks the mistake of under-estimating Trump, thinking he is going nowhere.  

    Whether Trump will succeed or not depends on the Republican Party, a party so beholden to Trump that it answers twice, even when he calls once. If he overcomes the loop, his brand of entrepreneurial politics and personality cult could generate a bandwagon effect that may be hard to stop.

    As America approaches the 2024 elections, chances of a Trump on the ballot are a possibility not to be dismissed, considering how he pushed through the Republican primaries to the presidency in 2016. He feels even more surefooted now, despite the outcome of the midterm elections. 

    He claims he wants to save America. But America desperately needs to save itself from him. He’s never been short of this messianic complex. And he knows when and how to deploy it to devastating effect.

    Trump 2.0 is a possibility and the man is seriously looking forward to it. He has the capacity of a brigand; he fights – fair or foul – he just fights, anyway. The end justifies the means. With Trump, the world should never say never until he has been retired by consent or by force. 

    Trump is not done, yet. And anyone who thinks otherwise should remember what his cousin, Mary, told The Guardian about him in January 2021: “He’s never had a legitimate win in his life. All that matters is getting the win, no matter if there’s an asterisk next to it.” 

    Why? Because asterisks are to a demagogue what the red flag is to the bull. America, watch your back!

     

    Ishiekwene is the Editor-In-Chief of LEADERSHIP