Tag: Joe Biden

  • World leaders react as Joe Biden pulls out of U.S. presidential election

    World leaders react as Joe Biden pulls out of U.S. presidential election

    World leaders have reacted following Joe Biden’s decision to pull out of the US presidential race.

    Biden announced Sunday that he is dropping out of the 2024 presidential race, ending his bid for reelection against former President Donald Trump.

    Here’s what world leaders are saying:

    British Prime Minister Keir Starmer

    “I respect President Biden’s decision and I look forward to us working together during the remainder of his presidency,” Starmer said in a statement.

    “I know that, as he has done throughout his remarkable career, President Biden will have made his decision based on what he believes is in the best interests of the American people.”

    Irish Taoiseach Simon Harris on X
    “On behalf of the people and government of Ireland. I, as Taoiseach, would like to thank you Mr President for your global leadership and your friendship as you make your announcement that you will not stand in the 2024 US Presidential election.

    “The world has changed since President Biden’s victory in 2020 and we have had to face extraordinary challenges from a global pandemic to the return of war to the continent of Europe with the horrific full- scale invasion of Ukraine by Russia which has deliberately targeted and killed innocent civilians.

    “President Biden has been a voice for reason, effective multilateralism and shared solutions.”

    Polish Prime Minister Donald Tusk on X said,
    “Mr. President @JoeBiden, many times you have made difficult decisions that have made Poland, America, and the world safer, and democracy and freedom stronger. I know that you were guided by the same principles when announcing your latest decision. Perhaps the most difficult one in your life.”

    Czech Prime Minister Petr Fiala on X also said,
    “It is undoubtedly the decision of a statesman who has served his country for decades. It is a responsible and personally difficult step, but it is all the more valuable. I am keeping my fingers crossed for the USA that a good president emerges from the democratic competition of two strong and equal candidates.”

    Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov speaking to SHOT news outlet
    “The elections are still four months away, and that is a long period of time in which a lot can change. We need to be patient and carefully monitor what happens. The priority for us is the special military operation,” Peskov said, referring to the war in Ukraine.

    Norwegian Prime Minister Jonas Gahr Stoere
    “I respect Joe Biden’s decision not to run for re-election. That justification deserves respect,” Stoere told national broadcaster NRK.

    “Biden has been one of America’s most prominent politicians over several decades, and a president who has carried out several important reforms.”

     

     

     

  • Has a woman ever been U.S. president?

    Has a woman ever been U.S. president?

    U.S. President Joe Biden on Sunday pulled out of the race to contest for second term and endorsed his Vice, VP Kamala Harris to be nominated as Democratic Party candidate instead.

    TheNewsGuru.com (TNG) reports Harris is the 49th and current Vice President of the United States since 2021.

    Following the election of Biden as U.S. president in the 2020 election, Harris assumed office as vice president of the United States on January 20, 2021.

    She is the first female Vice President and the highest-ranking female official in U.S. history, as well as the first African-American and first Asian-American Vice President.

    Harris is also the second person of color to hold the post, preceded by Charles Curtis, a Native American and member of the Kaw Nation, who served under Herbert Hoover from 1929 to 1933.

    She is the third person with acknowledged non-European ancestry to reach one of the highest offices in the executive branch, after Curtis and former president Barack Obama.

    Harris,  previously a U.S. Senator from California from 2017 to 2021, was announced running mate to Biden on August 11, 2020. She had been considered a top contender and potential frontrunner for the 2020 Democratic nomination for president.

    She became the first African American, the first Indian American, and the third woman after Geraldine Ferraro and Sarah Palin to be picked as the vice-presidential nominee for a major party ticket.

    Harris also became the first resident of the Western United States to appear on the Democratic Party’s national ticket.

    She resigned her Senate seat on January 18, 2021, two days before her swearing-in as vice president.

    On November 19, 2021, Harris served as Acting President from 10:10 to 11:35 am EST, while President Biden underwent a colonoscopy. She became the first woman, and the third person overall, to assume the powers and duties of the U.S. presidency under Section 3 of the Twenty-fifth Amendment.

    If nominated and elected, Harris can become the first woman to serve as the substantive President of the United States.

  • BREAKING: Joe Biden endorses Kamala Harris for president

    BREAKING: Joe Biden endorses Kamala Harris for president

    After pulling out of the 2024 U.S. presidential election race, President Joe Biden has endorsed his Vice, VP Kamala Harris for president.

    TheNewsGuru.com (TNG) reports President Biden pulled out of the U.S. presidential election race on Sunday while expressing thanks to “Vice President Kamala Harris for being an extraordinary partner”.

    However, shortly after Biden dropped out of the 2024 U.S. presidential election race, he took to X (formerly Twitter) to throw his weight behind Kamala Harris to vie for the position of president.

    “My fellow Democrats, I have decided not to accept the nomination and to focus all my energies on my duties as President for the remainder of my term.

    “My very first decision as the party nominee in 2020 was to pick Kamala Harris as my Vice President. And it’s been the best decision I’ve made.

    “Today I want to offer my full support and endorsement for Kamala to be the nominee of our party this year. Democrats — it’s time to come together and beat Trump. Let’s do this,” a post by Biden on X reads.

    While democratic nations like the United Kingdom, Australia, and Germany have elected women to the preeminent position in their governments, there has never been a woman president in the United States.

  • BREAKING: Joe Biden pulls out of U.S. presidential election race

    BREAKING: Joe Biden pulls out of U.S. presidential election race

    In an unprecedented move, President of the United States of America (USA), Joe Biden has pulled out of the race to contest for second term.

    TheNewsGuru.com (TNG) reports Biden announced his intention to pull out of the 2024 U.S. presidential election in a statement on Sunday.

    Biden said it was the greatest honour of his life to serve as the President of the United States and that it was his intention to seek reelection, but that he will now focus solely on fulfilling his duties as President for the remainder of his term.

    While expressing thanks to “Vice President Kamala Harris for being an extraordinary partner”, Biden in the statement disclosed that he would be addressing Americans later in the week to provide more detail about his decision.

    The statement reads in full: “My Fellow Americans, over the past three and a half years, we have made great progress as a Nation.

    “Today, America has the strongest economy in the world. We’ve made historic investments in rebuilding our Nation, in lowering prescription drug costs for seniors, and in expanding affordable health care to a record number of Americans.

    “We’ve provided critically needed care to a million veterans exposed to toxic substances. Passed the first gun safety law in 30 years.

    “Appointed the first African American woman to the Supreme Court. And passed the most significant climate legislation in the history of the world. America has never been better positioned to lead than we are today.

    “I know none of this could have been done without you, the American people. Together, we overcame a once in a century pandemic and the worst economic crisis since the Great Depression. We’ve protected and preserved our Democracy. And we’ve revitalized and strengthened our alliances around the world.

    “It has been the greatest honor of my life to serve as your President. And while it has been my intention to seek reelection, I believe it is in the best interest of my party and the country for me to stand down and to focus solely on fulfilling my duties as President for the remainder of my term.

    “I will speak to the Nation later this week in more detail about my decision. For now, let me express my deepest gratitude to all those who have worked so hard to see me reelected.

    “I want to thank Vice President Kamala Harris for being an extraordinary partner in all this work. And let me express my heartfelt appreciation to the American people for the faith and trust you have placed in me.

    “I believe today what I always have: that there is nothing America can’t do – when we do it together. We just have to remember we are the United States of America”.

  • Joe Biden not stepping down from presidential race –  Campaign Chair

    Joe Biden not stepping down from presidential race – Campaign Chair

    Despite pressure mounting that US president, Joe Biden should step down as the presidential candidate of the Democratic party, the campaign chair of the party, Jen O’Malley Dillon has noted that he will  continue and will be at the White house for the next dispensation.

    According to  O’Malley Dillon, there had been some “slippage” in support since the 81-year-old’s disastrous debate performance against Donald Trump, but insisted he would still win in November.

    “Absolutely the president’s in this race,” Jen O’Malley Dillon told MSNBC’s Morning Joe program. “Joe Biden is more committed than ever to beat Donald Trump.”

    She added: “You have heard from the president directly time and again, he is in this race to win, and he is our nominee, and he’s going to be our president for a second term.”

    Biden is currently holed up at his beach house in Delaware self-isolating with Covid.

    Recall that Senior Democrats including former president Barack Obama, former House speaker Nancy Pelosi and the party’s current leaders in the Senate and House have all reportedly expressed concerns that he will lose the election.

    Furthermore, twenty Democrats in the US House and two senators have meanwhile called on him to step aside from the race.

    O’Malley Dillon, Biden’s former deputy chief of staff, admitted that the campaign had faced a difficult time since he appeared tired and confused in the June 27 debate.

    “I’m not here to say that this hasn’t been a tough several weeks for the campaign,” she said.

    “There’s no doubt that it has been, and we’ve definitely seen some slippage in support, but it has been a small movement.”

    A series of recent polls have shown Biden behind Trump in the 2024 race, including in all key battleground states.

  • In this difficult marriage, Democrats must love Biden – By Azu Ishiekwene

    In this difficult marriage, Democrats must love Biden – By Azu Ishiekwene

    The assassination attempt on former President Donald Trump on July 13 at a campaign rally in Pennsylvania has sucked the oxygen from the debate on President Joe Biden’s fitness for a second term. The discussion will resurface, but Democrats should forget it. The party is stuck with Biden.

    The odds are daunting. It must feel like a difficult marriage heading for a shipwreck. However, with only four months to the election, facing the odds is the only way to overcome them. Expectedly, Biden doubled down on his decision to run after the presidential debate with Trump left the president looking like the victim of a car crash.

    He has tried to redeem himself several times and has snagged on his speeches every time. Yet, despite his frail health, stumbling speeches, and the mocking caricatures in the media, Biden insists he would stay in the race.

    “I know I’m not a young man,” Biden said after the debate with Trump. “I don’t walk as easy as I used to. I don’t speak as smoothly as I used to. I don’t debate as well as I used to, but I know what I do know — I know how to tell the truth!”

    Stuck on him

    As doubts about his fitness persist, one truth that he weighs is whether it’s in his party’s best interest to run. With a heavy heart, it’s fair to say that the answer is yes. Democrats are stuck with Biden. However worrying the prospects of a defeat – particularly a defeat to Trump – might seem, Biden’s candidacy still gives the party the best chance to win or rebuild.

    Some think Biden should let Vice President Kamala Harris run. She has received support from members of Congress, especially from her state of California, women organisations, progressive activists, and sections of the Asian American community.

    Her supporters have given reasons, from her relatively younger age to the likelihood that, given her background as a prosecutor and Attorney General, she would pay more attention to issues like criminal justice reform, immigration and healthcare. Others have added that her ethnic nationality would bring diversity to the ticket and energise Latinos, Asians and Blacks, who are increasingly important demographics among voters.

    Others, like Illinois, Pennsylvania, and Michigan governors, have also been mentioned as possible Biden replacements, but none would appear as viable as Harris. Yet, for all the promises she offers, there are many reasons Biden, instead of Harris, remains the Democrats’ best card.

    Remember Hilary?

    Hilary Clinton, former First Lady and Secretary of State, apart from being a senator, a white woman and one of the best-kept secrets of the deep state, could not defeat Trump in 2016 because America was not ready. It was unprepared to discard the bogey of an “evil” Clinton dynasty. It was – and still is – unprepared for a female president.

    Sure, more women are serving in the US Congress today, and voters’ attitudes toward having a female president have slightly improved. But not so fast when a woman of colour is on the ballot.

    We never know what might have happened if Hilary challenged Trump again in 2020. But she declined not only because the previous contest had left her with deep emotional scars but because the Democratic party had also come to the inevitable conclusion that in what was supposed to be a post-modern society, gender – and the elephant in the room, race – remained a big issue.

    It’s unlikely that Harris would succeed where Clinton failed, a hint that may also be responsible for Michelle Obama staying out of the race despite her popularity in the opinion polls.

    Harris’ bonafide

    Harris’ slim chance against Trump has little to do with her credentials. She was a former Attorney General and senator from California who formed a bipartisan coalition to enact a $1 trillion investment in infrastructure to remove every lead pipe in the US. She has also been on the frontline to reform the healthcare system, especially among the vulnerable, and reduce gun violence, among other things.

    On a typical day, Harris is an asset to the Democratic party and might still be for some time. But this November election is an unusual one. America is deeply divided, and trust in politics is so severely broken that a Wall Street Journal poll indicated that even though this is the first presidential rematch in five decades, nearly 10 per cent of voters are still undecided.

    That shouldn’t be because voters have records to judge the contestants: Trump, the demagogue, cut taxes for the middle class and massively removed regulations, among other things; Biden, on the other hand, has recorded two crucial years of job growth in a long time and managed to keep the economy steady, despite the supply chain disruptions of COVID-19. Inflation has taken a significant toll on families but could have been worse.

    The jury is out on voters’ feelings, especially where it matters most: their pockets. Although the demographics of the undecided population – less educated, less wealthy, less politically aware and engaged, less interested in politics, but definitely more diverse – should favour Harris, the “silent voters” or “hidden Trump voters” who blindsided pollsters and torpedoed Clinton eight years ago are still alive and well.

    Teflon Trump thrives in scandals. Today’s Feeble Joe is not the same Biden who faced Trump four years ago and got away by the skin of his teeth. While he is weaker, frailer and poorer even at sharing his accomplishments in the last four years, his opponent, Trump, has been emboldened by his worst excesses. The race for the US presidency is a match-up between horror and uncertainty.

    Strength in weakness

    Yet, Biden’s weaknesses, especially his common touch – not Harris’ strengths – are the Democrats’ most potent weapon against a candidate who would lie, cheat, inflate, incite and routinely invent stories to get by. It’s a hard thing to say, but Biden, with all his frailties, is the medicine for Trump’s demagoguery.

    Biden stepping down at this time will further weaken and divide the Democrats, giving them very little time to rally before the election. And if the worst, a Trump victory happens – which I think is improbable – then the party would have the chance to rebuild from its potentially less fragmented ruins.

    What’s in it for Africa? Heads or tails, not a lot. Trump made clear that it was America first and last and the rest of the world, especially Africa, was shithole. Some still romanticise the Biden Senate years, when he spoke against apartheid, railed against injustice in the Middle East and pursued global peace through multilateralism.

    A new Biden

    That was then. The Biden of the last four years has massively funded Ukraine’s senseless war with Russia, a meat grinder if ever there was one, and paid scant attention to Africa. He has also proved utterly ineffective in getting Benjamin Netanyahu to stop the killings in Gaza.

    The election in November is not about Africa. It’s about whether an exceptional country that lost its way in 2016 – with horrific consequences for the rest of the world – is determined to lose it yet again.

    Ishiekwene is the Editor-In-Chief of LEADERSHIP

  • BREAKING: President Biden down with COVID-19, at higher risk of severe illness

    BREAKING: President Biden down with COVID-19, at higher risk of severe illness

    U.S. President Joe Biden has tested positive for COVID-19, the White House said in a statement on Thursday.

    Biden is “vaccinated and boosted and he is experiencing mild symptoms,” White House Press Secretary Karine Jean-Pierre said in a statement.

    According to the statement, the positive test came following an event Biden attended in Nevada.

    Biden will be returning to his private residence in Delaware “where he will self-isolate and will continue to carry out all of his duties fully during that time,” Jean-Pierre said.

    Biden’s doctor said the president had shown “upper respiratory symptoms” in the afternoon, including a runny nose and a cough.

    His physician said the results of a PCR confirmation test are still pending but Biden has received the first dose of the COVID drug Paxlovid,.

    Biden, 81, last tested positive for COVID-19 two years ago. At the time, he only suffered from mild symptoms, according to the White House.

    Due to his advanced age, the U.S. president is considered to be at higher risk of becoming severely ill from COVID-19.

    The latest positive result comes as Biden’s mental acuity and physical condition are increasingly being scrutinised amid growing concern that he may not be fit enough to run for a second term in November’s presidential elections.

  • Assassination attempt: Biden condemns attack on Trump

    Assassination attempt: Biden condemns attack on Trump

    U.S. President Joe Biden has condemned the assassination attempt on former President Donald Trump in Butler, Pennsylvania.

    TheNewsGuru.com (TNG) reports Trump was shot at during a campaign rally in Butler, where one person died as a result of the shooting and two others injured.

    Reacting over the development, Biden said he believes Trump is doing well.

    “There is no place in America for this kind of violence. It is sick. It is sick.

    “That is one of the reasons why we have to unite this country. You cannot allow for this to be happening. We cannot be like this. We cannot condone this,” Biden said.

    The president said Trump’s rally should have been able to take place peacefully, “without any problem.”

    “But the idea, the idea that there’s political violence or violence in America like this is just unheard of,” he said.

    When asked if this was an assassination attempt, Biden said: “I don’t know enough to. I have an opinion, but I don’t have any facts.

    “So I want to make sure we have all the facts before I make any more comments”.

    Meanwhile, the White House and an adviser to Trump have confirmed that Mr. Biden has spoken with the former president.

    TNG reports the Secret Service has confirmed that Trump is safe after the shooting.

    “I have been briefed on the shooting at Donald Trump’s rally in Pennsylvania.  I’m grateful to hear that he’s safe and doing well. I’m praying for him and his family and for all those who were at the rally, as we await further information.

    “Jill and I are grateful to the Secret Service for getting him to safety. There’s no place for this kind of violence in America. We must unite as one nation to condemn it,” Biden wrote via X.

  • Give us Biden – By Chidi Amuta

    Give us Biden – By Chidi Amuta

    All it has taken to expose the porous underbelly of American democracy is one bad debate night by an 81 year old incumbent president. President Joe Biden fared poorly in his first CNN debate for this election season. A combination of  cold, jet lag and old age troubles made him a bit nervous and uncollected. He was lost in the middle of sentences and seemed to forget his lines on familiar subjects even those where he has excelled as president.

    More destabilizing perhaps was the fact that he  was sharing a debate podium with a known serial liar, habitual bully  and unashamed demagogue. That combination in an electoral opponent is enough to unhinge any honest contestant. But even at that, Trump’s negatives are what should have prepared Biden to come fighting. But he did not. He frequently landed  weak blows and a miserable thud each time he tried to put up a fight. The strategy of treating Trump with kid gloves as, at best, a spoilt child did not work and never works in politics.

    Biden was restrained, meek and a bit uncollected. Trump was his usual blustery, hectoring and serially lying self. He won the debate not by repenting from Trumpism but by repeatedly punching a weakened Biden. In the end, supporters and opponents of the sitting president agreed that he was hardly at his best that Thursday night.

    Concern about Biden’s bad showing at that debate has refused to go away.  Concern among suppporters has grown into anxiety and even division among Democrats. The Democratic Party is riled and divided. Some would like Biden to quit the stage and yield place to a younger candidate with a better chance of defeating Donald Trump in the November elections. A solid core of Democrats led by majority of governors still believe Biden is their best bet in the circumstance.

    Others including of course Biden’s immediate family and his core supporters insist that notwithstanding the bad debate night, Biden is their best bet. He is a tested hand. He has experience, track record and can be trusted by allies and  respected , if not exactly feared, by adversaries. After all , he had out- debated and defeated Trump in 2020. He is best suited to do it again than would a totally new hand so late in the day.

    The Republicans, especially Trump and his diehard devotees , are triumphant. They see Mr. Biden as a man weakened by age, unstated infirmity and incremental incapacity especially in unscripted situations. They are silent on the fact of Trump being nearly of the same age bracket as Biden.

    On the whole, it is bad enough that America is now faced with a presidential choice weighed down by geriatric concerns. It is a binary choice between two ageing men whose competitiveness has been reduced to a comparison between two geriatric health records. It is even worse that both parties have become so limited in their leadership options that they seem stuck with a choice between a convicted blustering old crook and a tired good old man.

    Biden’s debate performance means so much because of the peculiarities of American democracy and society.  America is a nation built on an ideal, on a creed of equality of the people and the rejection of monarchical absolutism. A creedalnation that covers syuch a wide area of terriroty can best be forged through effective communication. At first, it was radio that forged that communication link. But radio was constrained by voice and sound. The advent of television completed the link by additing images to voice, giving nirth to the television nation. People as far flung as from Boston to Alaska , from Washington DC to North Dakota could now hear and see common images of their political leaders and other key influencers.

    America’s is an image and television driven democracy. The political contest in America thrives on big marketing, advertisement and image engineering. Over time, television and the media have come to overwhelm American politics with their influence to the extent that the political persona has become something of a pseudo celebrity. The culture of stardom and celebrity created by Hollywood and the musince industry hasve come to rub off on politics, luring the politician into the limelight of celebrity culture.

    The ability to appear on most major channels and networks, to out- talk your opponent and reduce the urgent needs of the nation to a marketing selling point have become the deciding factors in whom the electorate votes for. The political star that must sell should wear the correct tie colour, be made up by make-up artists, rehash the catch phrases of the moment and appear to be on the side of Joe the plumber and Jane the housewife. In all of it, the ability to convince, to play the salesman at short notice has become a major indicator of preparedness to lead America.

    A candidate who has all the ideas on how to sustain America’s greatness but fares poorly on the television screen  may end up being just “the best president America may never get”. On the contrary, the smooth talker, the guy who has an uncanny ability to combine some substance with celebrity appeal stands a better chance of moving into the White House to lord it over America and, by implication, the entire world for a good four years in the first instance.

    Therefore, Biden’s recent bad debate night meant a  tragedy for America’s television image driven politics. This is why the options have narrowed to whether Biden should stay in the race or take a dignified exit. Either option is no easy route. If he were to quit, the Democratic party will be jolted into finding a substitute bafrely five months to the election. The possibility that the substitute will find his  or her feet so readily and quickly and be in a strong psotion to defeat Donald Trump is slim. That option effectively means that the Democrats would be ready to lose the election just to make the point that they opted for a younger, more vibrant candidate.

    In the alternative, keep Biden in the race and try to fix his lapses and the degradations of old age on his electability.  This requires a closer management of the optics of his campaign events,  better preparations and more indepth homework on Trump’s weakenesseses especially his compulsive lying and liberty with facts. The chances of a Biden win can are better if he stays in the race. But of course, those opposed to his staying on are more concerened about the energy and style of governance that he will lead if he secures a second term. In that regard, his experience and mature knowledge of people should equiop him with good men and women to pull off a credible administration.

    Those who wish Biden well are either genuine supporters or people who live with a mortal fear of the catastrophe of a second Trump presidency. People are genuinely concerned about the fiture of democracy in the hands of a lover of dictators and a self declared autocrat. Worse still, Trump’s looming threat to the international order is likely to tilt the balance in favour of the forces of authoritarianism. A man who openly admires Vladimir Putin, Xi Jiping, Kim Jung Un etc cannot be placed in the White House without overturning the world order.

    Elsewhere in other political cultures, a mere one night of television debate would not mean so much. Take Nigeria for instance. We run a US-type presidential system with a cloned constitution along the same lines. But we hardly subject our presidential candidates to any verbal or intellectual rigour. Our presidential candidates do not have to debate with each other. They do not have to have any mastery of the most urgent national issues. They do not have to reel out statistics of the national economy of other vital statistics. They only need to be the choice of some party, loosely defined.

    In 1999 when the military was handing over to a civil democracy, the two front runners for the presidency were Olusegun Obasanjo for the Peoples Democratic Party(PDP) and Olu Falaye for the Alliance for Democracy (AD). At the height of the campaigns, the idea was floated that there should be a television debate between the two. Somehow, neither party was enthusiastic about the debate. Time was allowed to elapse and the debate never took place.

    In Buhari’s two terms as civilian president, there was no debate between him and any of his opponents. Both Atiku Abubakar and Goodliuck Jonathan may have been willing to debate with Mr. Buari but the latter was not  there for any debate. He lacked the capacity to string sentences together. He lacked any demonstrable knowledge or conviction on whatever were the raging national issues of his time. No one knows what he knew or did not know about anything and everything.

    A reclusive and aloof man of few words and scanty ideas, Mr. Buhari was not the type to talk his way to power. He knew only how to cobble together an alliance of strange bed fellows to forge a winning alliance. Power was his means and end as well. In power, he feasted on the combined ability of his devotees and staffers to do most of the talking in no coordinated manner. What was important was that he was in power and at the helm.

    As late as the 2023 presidential election campaign season, the matter of debates among the candidates was toyed with but dropped like hot potato. While Mr. Peter Obi and Abubakar Atiku were inclined to engage in open debates and media sessions, not so with Bola Tinubu. In fact, the campaign season witnessed Mr. Tinubu at his most controversial and incomprehensible. At campaign events, he was quoted as uttering gibberish, a point that fuelled speculations about his exact health condition. People who heard him uttering “Bulaba; Baba blu… Bulaba…” could not make out what language he was speaking. The obvious conclusion in street corners and bars was that the man was suffering from some mental health conditions that had affected both his comprehension and elocution.

    When he showed up to present his agenda at the Chatham House in London, he could hardly answer any question. Instead, he lined up party faithful and supporting cronies on his entourage as the ones who would answer questions on his behalf  since he preferred ‘team work’.

    Eventually, there was no debate between Mr. Tinubu and any of the other major candidates. There was not even a face –to- face interview between Tinubu and anyone or medium of note. But when the election results were announced, Tinubu, the man who said practically nothing to any one, was declared the winner over and above the other two who spent mental energy dissecting the nation’s problems and urgent challenges.

    Therefore, the favourite Nigerian presidential candidate cannot be a television  hero or media celebrity. Yet Nigerians have shown more than passing interest in the America’s presidential elections than other nationals. It may be a subliminal celebration of what we long for but do not yet have.

  • US president Biden, promises to support new UK PM

    US president Biden, promises to support new UK PM

    President Joe Biden has expressed his eagerness to collaborate with the new Prime Minister of the United Kingdom, Keir Starmer, aiming to bolster the relationship between the US and the UK during Starmer’s tenure.

     

    On his X page, President Biden congratulated Starmer on his new role: “Congratulations to Prime Minister Keir Starmer on becoming Prime Minister of the United Kingdom. I look forward to our shared work in support of freedom and democracy around the world, and to further strengthening the special relationship between our two countries.”

     

    Starmer, the Labour Party candidate, was elected into office yesterday after securing the necessary 326 parliamentary seats. Addressing an enthusiastic crowd in Central London following his victory, Starmer said: “We did it; change begins now. It feels good; I have to be honest.”

     

    The outgoing Prime Minister, Rishi Sunak, acknowledged his responsibility for the Conservative Party’s defeat.