Tag: Joe Biden

  • TB Joshua predicts outcome of US elections

    TB Joshua predicts outcome of US elections

    General Overseer of the Synagogue Church of All Nations (SCOAN) Prophet T.B Joshua yesterday dropped a prediction on the outcome of the ongoing United States presidential elections.

    Joshua held back from directly mentioning, who the winner of the polls would be, but advised that Christians would be disappointed.

    President Donald Trump of the Republican Party is seeking re-election against former Vice President Joe Biden of the Democratic Party.

    Christians, especially of the white demographics, are known to tremendously support Trump.

    About 80 per cent of white evangelical voters still support Trump, according to the latest polling by the Pew Research Centre, about the same as supported him in 2016.

    Joshua urged Christians to take comfort in U.S. Supreme Court Judge, Amy Coney Barrett, a Trump appointee.

    The U.S. Senate confirmed Barret’s appointment on October 27, in what was seen as a victory for President Trump and Conservatives, following the Democrats and Liberals’ opposition to her nomination.

    In a November 1 YouTube audio titled ‘U.S. ELECTION 2020 PROPHECY!!!’ released by the SCOAN, Joshua promised to state more after the “inauguration of the new president”.

    He said: “What is happening in the American election is as a result of the power in the tongue. The word we speak determines the life we enjoy (Proverbs 6:2). The tongue can either work for us or against us – death and life lie in the tongue (Proverbs 18:21).

    “We Christians would have loved it to go the way we wanted. But the Bible says it is never proper to base our faith on our improvement after prayer. We should not worry. The joy is that the new Supreme Court Judge, Amy Coney Barrett, will be an instrument of check.

    “Finally, let us learn how to believe that God hears us when we pray – it is a much greater blessing. There is likely going to be pockets of resistance here and there but nothing will change. Let me reserve what I am seeing until the inauguration of the new president.”

     

  • U.S. ELECTIONS: Trump vows to challenge votes at Supreme Court

    U.S. ELECTIONS: Trump vows to challenge votes at Supreme Court

    President Donald Trump has vowed to challenge the counting of the 2020 U.S. presidential votes at the Supreme Court.

    TheNewsGuru.com (TNG) reports President Trump made this known on Wednesday while results were still being counted.

    He claimed he had won the election after earlier alleging the election was rigged.

    “We did win this election. For the good of this nation, this is a very big moment. This is a major fraud on our nation.

    “We want the law to be used in a proper manner. So, we will be going to the US Supreme Court,” Trump said.

    Trump said this in a speech from the ceremonial East Room of the White House.

    He appeared to mean stopping the counting of mail-in ballots.

    Mail-in can be legally accepted by state election boards after Tuesday’s election, provided they were sent in time.

    The Republican, who according to initial results is in a neck-and-neck race with Democrat Joe Biden, said he would go to court and “we want all voting to stop.”

     

    Details later…

  • BREAKING: Biden surpasses Clinton’s popular vote total

    BREAKING: Biden surpasses Clinton’s popular vote total

    Donald Trump’s opposition in the U.S. 2020 presidential election has surpassed the 2016 popular vote total of Hillary Clinton.

    TheNewsGuru.com (TNG) reports Biden surpassed Clinton’s 2016 popular vote total even with millions of votes yet to be counted.

    In 2016, Clinton’s popular vote total was pegged at 65.8 million but Biden has surpassed that figure.

    Trump, as well, had earlier surpassed his 2016 vote tally.

    He crossed his 2016 vote tally of 62.9 million votes with millions of votes yet to be counted.

    This is the first time since 2004 an incumbent president would win more votes during re-election campaign than first campaign.

    Clinton won more popular votes than Trump in 2016, but Trump went on to win the election.

    The final outcome of the presidential election was decided by the electoral college.

    Right now, Biden has polled 66.4 million (49.8%) popular votes while Trump has polled 64.8 million (49.6%).

  • U.S. ELECTIONS: New York, others remain apprehensive despite Election Day calm

    U.S. ELECTIONS: New York, others remain apprehensive despite Election Day calm

    New York and other cities across the United States on Tuesday remained apprehensive over potential violence in spite of relative calm as voting got underway in the country’s presidential election.

    As of Tuesday afternoon, many businesses in New York were still fortifying their storefronts with plywood ahead of announcement of results.

    Similar scenes played out in other places like Chicago, Atlanta, Denver, Philadelphia and Washington, D.C.

    “I am not taking chances, my friend”, a jewelry shop owner, who identified himself as Navid, told NAN in Manhattan, New York.

    “I agree with you that there is calm right now, but nobody can tell what happens when the results start coming,” he said.

    Tuesday has been described as the most divisive U.S. presidential polls in decades, and it came after a long and bitter campaign.

    There are reports of clashes between supporters of the two major candidates, President Donald Trump and former Vice President Joe Biden, in New York and elsewhere.

    Trump has repeatedly refused to commit to a peaceful transition of power should he lose the election.

    The president is insisting that the winner must be declared on Tuesday night, before many votes will be counted.

    These have left many Americans worried that he would not concede if he loses.

    Mr Basil Njoku, a Nigerian-American, described the happenings as unbecoming of America, “a country that has been touted to be the bastion of democracy”.

    Njoku said: “I have been in this country for more than 20 years, and I can tell you that what is happening is un-American.

    “The whole world looks up to the U.S. as a perfect example of how to get it right.

    “Election deals with human emotions and often times, America handles it with sportsmanship on Election Day you know the loser will concede and the winner will try to bring everybody together and build the country.

    “But what we are seeing in the media about potential conflicts, and the clash between supporters of the rivals here in Manhattan. It is un-American.”

    Mk Pathak, 75, said he had never witnessed a U.S. presidential election with “extreme divergence in the two major candidates” like this one.

    Pathak, an entrepreneur and philanthropist of Indian descent, said Biden and Trump are fighting over nothing, as the issues remained the same.

    “Before now in America during a Republican government, there was a democratic cabinet member, and vise versa, it was like that.

    “This time it appears these two are poles apart, but whoever wins in the end will be interested in opening the economy while controlling the COVID-19 pandemic,” he said.

  • U.S. ELECTIONS: Nigerian voters cite immigration, healthcare as top issues

    U.S. ELECTIONS: Nigerian voters cite immigration, healthcare as top issues

    A cross-section of Nigerian-Americans and other immigrant voters mentioned immigration, healthcare and stability as top on their minds in Tuesday’s U.S. presidential election.

    They spoke as voting got underway in a presidential race pitting President Donald Trump against former Vice President Joe Biden.

    The Trump administration has cut the inflow of foreigners using visa restrictions through executive orders.

    In February, he added Nigeria to the list of countries on migrant visa restrictions, citing national security concerns.

    If re-elected, he plans to limit asylum grants, outlaw ‘sanctuary cities’, expand travel ban with tougher screening for visa applicants, and impose new limits on work visas.

    Biden, on the other hand, seeks to expand opportunities for legal immigration, including family and work-based visas as well as access to humanitarian visa programmes, among others.

    Mr Olayinka Dan-Salami, Chairman of the Organisation of the Advancement of Nigerians (OAN), said the choice was obvious for him: Biden.

    “A president who doesn’t like immigrants, who just want to send everybody back home is not a president we should be voting for.

    “Trump is waging an immigration war against Nigerians that is borne of out of jealousy of the accomplishments of Nigerians in this country,” Dan-Salami told NAN.

    He also criticised Trump for downplaying the coronavirus pandemic, which has claimed no fewer than 230,000 lives in the U.S.

    A Pakistani immigrant, Mr Nasir Raza, said although he liked Trump’s performance on the economy, he voted for Biden’s liberal stance on immigration.

    Mr Basil Njoku, a leader of the Nigerian community in New York, decried Trump’s “poor handling” of the COVID-19 pandemic, which he said would make the election difficult for him.

    Njoku, who disclosed that he lost seven members of his community to the virus, wondered why the president politicises wearing of masks.

    “Something as simple as wearing a mask is being politicised (by Trump). What is the big deal in wearing a mask?

    “If I wear the mask, I protect you; you protect me. It’s a question of civility; it is something that is honourable to do.

    “But when it is politicised, and the people see it as a human rights issue, but they forget that other people’s rights start where theirs begin,” Nkoju said.

    Mr Ugo Nwaokoro, former Deputy Mayor of Newark, New Jersey, said he voted for the candidate that would properly handle the pandemic and foster good relationship between U.S. and Africa.

    “I cannot tell you whom I voted for, but I can categorically tell you I did not vote for Trump”, Nwaokoro, a Democrat, said.

    Mr George Onuorah, a community development advocate and philanthropist, said political and economic stability and immigration were the key issues for him.

    ”Being an immigrant from Africa, I am also looking to see that those of us here who have relatives that are willing to come to this country legally are not denied the opportunity to do so,” he said.

    Onuorah said he was also looking forward to a stronger diplomatic and economic ties between Nigeria and the United States under whoever wins the election.

    A Trump supporter, Maria Estavez, 60, defended the president’s immigration policy and his handling of the pandemic.

    “No sane President would allow illegal aliens into his country to perpetrate crime, that is what Trump stands for,” Estevez said.

    She also argued that Trump did what any other president would do to control the virus.

    Another supporter, a Nigerian, who asked not to be named for fear of political victimisation, endorsed Trump’s tough stance on law and order.

  • U.S. elections kick off with first polls opening in Vermont

    U.S. elections kick off with first polls opening in Vermont

    First polling stations opened in the U.S. state of Vermont, kicking off the in-person voting in U.S. elections where incumbent President Donald Trump is in a tight race with his Democratic challenger Joe Biden.

    In addition, all 435 seats of the House of Representative are up for grabs and 35 of the 100 seats in the Senate.

    The U.S. Elections Project estimates that nearly 98 million Americans have voted early, a number that represents more than 71 per cent of all votes cast in 2016.

    More than 63 million Americans are estimated to have cast their ballot by mail.

    On Monday, many of the final polls rolled in and showed the close race between Trump and Biden has further tightened nationally and in battleground states such as Florida, North Carolina, Pennsylvania, Michigan, Georgia and Wisconsin.

  • #EndSARS: Biden urges U.S. to stand with Nigeria

    #EndSARS: Biden urges U.S. to stand with Nigeria

    Former U.S. Vice President and 2020 Democratic presidential candidate, Joe Biden, says the U.S. must stand with Nigerians “who are peacefully demonstrating for police reform and seeking an end to corruption in their democracy.”

    “My heart goes out to all those who have lost a loved one in the violence,” Biden said in a statement made available on his official campaign website.

    The statement came shortly after security agents allegedly opened fire on protesters on Tuesday night, in Lagos.

    Biden encouraged the Nigerian government to engage in a good-faith dialogue with civil society.

    This, according to him, is to address the “long-standing grievances and work together for a more just and inclusive Nigeria.”

    “I urge President Buhari and the Nigerian military to cease the violent crackdown on protesters in Nigeria, which has already resulted in several deaths,” Biden said.

    In spite of the disbandment of the Special Anti-Robbery Squad (SARS), protests against their brutality have continued in cities across the country.

    The actual number of casualties and deaths from the incident on Tuesday night, in Lagos, is still unknown.

  • Trump’s challenger, Joe Biden, wife announce COVID-19 test results

    Trump’s challenger, Joe Biden, wife announce COVID-19 test results

    Democratic presidential candidate Joe Biden and his wife Jill have tested negative for coronavirus, their doctor said in a statement on Friday.

    “Vice President Joe Biden and Dr. Jill Biden underwent PCR testing for COVID-19 today and COVID-19 was not detected,” Dr. Kevin O’Connor said in a statement.

    TheNewsGuru.com, TNG reports that Incumbent president and Republican presidential flag bearer, Donald Trump and his wife, Melanie tested positive for the virus earlier in the day.

  • Trump says ‘Revolution’ will occur in U.S. if Biden becomes president

    Trump says ‘Revolution’ will occur in U.S. if Biden becomes president

    U.S. Democratic Presidential nominee Joe Biden is a puppet figure, who, if elected in November, will ignite a “revolution” in the U.S., President Donald Trump said.

    “Biden won’t calm things down,” Trump said. They will take over. They will have won. If Biden gets in, they will have won. He’s a weak person.

    “He’s controlled like a puppet. So it’s not going to be calm … They will have taken over your cities. It’s a revolution. You understand that. It’s a revolution and the people of this country will not stand for that.”

    According to Trump, funding for the “revolution” is coming from “very stupid rich people that have no idea that if their thing ever succeeded, which it won’t, they would be thrown to the wolves like never before.”

    On Monday, Biden accused Trump of further dividing the protest-ridden nation rather than unifying it and his words and messages were sowing chaos rather than law and order.

    Biden’s remarks came after Trump and numerous Republicans repeatedly criticised him and the Democrats for not denouncing the three-month-long campaign of violence by the Antifa and Black Lives Matter movements in Democrat-run states and cities.

    Republicans have said Democrats in those jurisdictions are trying to score political points in an election year by allowing the violent protests and riots and by refusing federal assistance that Trump has offered to quell the unrest.

    Protests against police brutality and racism started in numerous cities in the U.S. after the death of African American George Floyd in police custody in Minneapolis on May 25.

    In August, a new wave of protests started in Wisconsin and elsewhere in the U.S. after police shot 29-year-old Jacob Blake, an African American man, in the back seven times .

    The incident, which occurred on Aug. 23, left Blake paralysed.

    Protests turned into riots complete with violence against police and civilians as well as acts of arson and destruction.

  • Biden’s agenda made in China — Trump

    Biden’s agenda made in China — Trump

    U.S. President Donald Trump on Thursday night drew the curtains on the Republican National Convention with blistering attacks on his Democratic challenger in the Nov. 3 presidential election, Mr Joe Biden.

    In a speech that lasted a little over an hour, Trump dismissed Biden as a puppet of China, repeating his claim that China would own America under his leadership.

    The president began by formally accepting his nomination to seek re-election in November.

    Thereafter, he went for Biden, saying the former Vice President’s victory would spell doom for the American Dream and the people’s common destiny.

    Speaking in front of no fewer than 1,000 people at the White House South Lawn , the president said the election was the most important in the country’s history.

    He said: “At no time before have voters faced a clearer choice between two parties, two visions, two philosophies or two agendas.

    “This election will decide whether we save the American Dream or whether we allow a socialist agenda to demolish our cherished destiny.

    “It will decide whether we rapidly create millions of high-paying jobs or whether we crush our industries and send million of these jobs overseas as has been done for many decades.

    “This election will decide whether we protect law-abiding Americans, or whether we give free rein to violent anarchists, agitators and criminals who threaten our citizens.”

    The president said during last week’s Democratic National Convention, Biden and his fellow party members portrayed the U.S. as a land of racial, economic and social injustice.

    “Tonight, I ask you a simple question: how can the Democratic Party ask to lead our country when it spent so much time tearing down on our country?”

    Trump described Biden’s public service record in the last 47 years as “a shameful roll call of the most catastrophic betrayals and blunders in our lifetime”.

    He said Biden spent his entire career on the wrong side of history; supporting China’s entry into the World Trade Organisation with devastating economic consequences for the U.S.

    According to him, the former Vice President repeatedly supported mass amnesty for illegal immigrants, voted for the Iraq war and opposed the mission to kill Osama Bin Laden.

    Trump alleged that Biden oversaw the rise of ISIS, and hailed the rise of China as a positive development for the U.S. and the world.

    “That is why China supports Joe Biden and desperately wants him to win, I can tell you that upon very good information.

    “China would own our country if Joe Biden got elected”, he said, adding that he would continue to hold China accountable for the suffering it had caused over the world.

    The president went further to state that Biden’s agenda was made in China”, while his was made in the USA, drawing applause from his audience.

    While the president spoke, Biden responded in a series of tweets, including one that suggests the country is suffering its worst security crisis under the Trump administration.

    “When President Trump took office, he inherited a growing economy from the Obama-Biden administration.

    “And just like everything else he’s inherited in his life, he squandered it,” Biden said in another tweet that included unemployment data from the Department of Labour between 2004 and 2020.