Tag: trump

  • WAR: Trump will give Natanyahu a free ride-Former CIA Director

    WAR: Trump will give Natanyahu a free ride-Former CIA Director

    Ex-CIA director and US defence secretary Leon Panetta, Donald Trump would offer Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu a “blank cheque” in the Middle East once he takes office, potentially paving the door for a full-scale conflict between Israel and Iran.

    He said that Israel would receive his approval for every action taken by the president-elect, who defeated Democratic candidate Kamala Harris to win the presidency this week and will return to office in January

    “With regards to the Middle East, I think he’s basically going to give Netanyahu a blank check,” he said via the Guardian, UK.”

    Whatever you do, whatever you want to do, whoever you want to go after, you have my blessing.’ I mean, he basically said that [before the election].”

    Since Hamas’s October 7 attack on Israel last year, Netanyahu has presided over attacks on Iran and its assets as part of an expanding conflict.

    During the US election campaign, he reportedly spoke with the US president-elect.

  • U.S election: Dollar, Bitcoin soar as Trump emerges president -elect

    U.S election: Dollar, Bitcoin soar as Trump emerges president -elect

    The United States dollar has surged as Republican Donald Trump surged to win back the White House in the presidential race.

    Bitcoin is also at a record high as traders bet on potential tax cuts, tariffs, and rising inflation under Trump.

    The result of the election is expected to have a major impact on the global economy.

    The Republican Party has also taken control of the Senate but there are still votes left to count.

    The dollar has soared by around 1.5% against a host of different currencies, including the pound, euro and the Japanese yen.

    Meanwhile, the value of Bitcoin jumped by $6,000 (£4,645) to a record high of $75,371.69, surpassing the previous high of $73,797.98 in March this year.

    In Japan, the benchmark Nikkei 225 stock index ended the session up by 2.6%, while Australia’s ASX 200 closed 0.8% higher.

    Experts are predicting a turbulent day for the financial markets as a response to global uncertainty and Trump’s potential plans for the economy.

    “Many of his measures will be inflationary and likely to lead to a rise in bond yields, putting pressure on the Federal Reserve in its quest to bring interest rates down,” BBC quoted Lindsay James, investment strategist at Quilter Investors, as saying.

    Trump has pledged to make the U.S. the “bitcoin and cryptocurrency capital of the world”.

    He plans to put billionaire Elon Musk in charge of an audit of governmental waste.

    The major U.S. stock indexes also look likely to open sharply higher. That came after the Dow Jones Industrial Average, S&P 500, and Nasdaq all closed more than 1% higher on Tuesday.

    Tesla’s Frankfurt-listed shares rallied over 14% at the open on Wednesday. Elon Musk, Tesla’s top shareholder, has supported Trump throughout his electoral campaign.

    Trump has said he would dramatically increase trade tariffs, especially on China, if he became the next U.S. president.

    “Trump’s global trade policies are causing particular angst in Asia, given the strong protectionist platform on which more aggressive tariffs on imports into the US have been pledged,” said Katrina Ell, director of economic research at Moody’s Analytics.

    The former president’s more isolationist stance on foreign policy has also raised questions about his willingness to defend Taiwan against potential aggression from China.

    The self-ruling island is a major producer of computer chips, which are crucial to the technology that drives the global economy.

    Meanwhile, Trump’s tax-cutting agenda has also been broadly welcomed by big American companies.

    “If Trump gets elected, we should see pro-business policies and tax cuts, in turn possibly driving up inflation and less rate cuts,” said Jun Bei Liu, portfolio manager at Tribeca Investment Partners.

    However, not all indexes have reacted positively to the potential of a Trump victory.

    In mainland China, the Shanghai Composite Index ended the day down 0.1%, while Hong Kong’s Hang Seng was down by around 2.23%.

    Investors also have other key issues to focus on this week.

    On Thursday, the U.S. Federal Reserve is due to announce its latest decision on interest rates.

    Comments from the head of the central bank, Jerome Powell, will be watched closely around the world.

    On Friday, top Chinese officials are expected to unveil more details about Beijing’s plans to tackle the slowdown of the world’s second-largest economy.

  • Trump withdraws from televised election interview

    Trump withdraws from televised election interview

    The Republican US presidential candidate Donald Trump has cancelled a television interview on the US channel CBS, the programme “60 Minutes” announced on platform X on Wednesday.

    Trump’s campaign spokesman Steven Cheung denied that the former president had agreed to participate in the interview, writing on X that “there were initial discussions, but nothing was ever scheduled or locked in.”

    The programme said the Democratic candidate Kamala Harris would appear as planned in Monday’s broadcast and that the original invitation to Trump stands.

    The programme “60 Minutes” said it has been having interviews with presidential candidates for over 50 years.

    However, Cheung said that CBS had insisted on live fact-checking for this year’s programme, which is “unprecedented.”

    Harris and Trump are running against each other in the US presidential election on November 5.

    Following a televised debate hosted by the US channel ABC on September 10, Harris called for a second debate, while Trump said he did not intend to participate in further debates.

  • Trump vows to deal legally for publishing bad stories about him if…

    Trump vows to deal legally for publishing bad stories about him if…

    Donald Trump on Friday accused Google of showing only “bad stories” about him and promised to have the tech giant prosecuted if he gets back in the White House.

    Trump provided no backing for his accusation in a post on his Truth Social platform, in which he added that the search engine displays only positive articles about his Democratic rival Vice President Kamala Harris.

    This is an ILLEGAL ACTIVITY, and hopefully the Justice Department will criminally prosecute them for this blatant Interference of Elections,” he said in the post.

    “If not, and subject to the Laws of our Country, I will request their prosecution, at the maximum levels, when I win the election.”

    The Trump post came after a conservative group reported on what it said it found when doing a search on “Donald Trump presidential race 2024.”

    “Both campaign websites consistently appear at the top of Search for relevant and common search queries,” Google said in response to an AFP inquiry.

    “This report looked at a single rare search term on a single day a few weeks ago, and even for that search, both candidates’ websites ranked in the top results on Google.”

    Google has been adamant that it does not manipulate search results to favour any political candidate.

    The company does not disclose the inner workings of the software that powers its ubiquitous search engine.

    However, factors known to influence search results for news stories include the timeliness and popularity of topics.

    Trump is at the centre of numerous criminal and civil cases in which he faces accusations including sexual abuse, paying hush money to a porn star, interfering with the 2020 election and trying to thwart the peaceful transition of power after President Joe Biden defeated him.

  • Trump, Harris to clash at debate that could reshape 2024 race

    Trump, Harris to clash at debate that could reshape 2024 race

    Republican U.S. presidential candidate Donald Trump and Democratic Vice President Kamala Harris will on Tuesday meet to debate, a phenomenon that could prove pivotal in their pitched battle for the White House.

    The ABC News-hosted debate at 9 p.m. ET (0100 GMT on Wednesday) takes place just eight weeks before the Nov. 5 election, with both candidates locked in a tight race that could still easily swing in either direction. Early voting will start in some states just days after the debate.

    The encounter is particularly important for Harris, with opinion polls showing that more than a quarter of likely voters feel they do not yet know enough about her, in contrast to the well-known Trump.

    The nationally televised debate also offers Harris, a former prosecutor, a chance to make her case against Trump, whose felony convictions, outspoken backing for supporters convicted of the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the U.S. Capitol and frequent falsehoods all offer plenty of fertile ground.

    It will be the first time the two candidates have met and follows weeks of personal attacks on Harris by Trump and his allies that have included racist and sexist insults.

    A similar outburst on stage could turn off undecided voters, according to John Geer, a professor at Vanderbilt University and an expert on presidential politics.

    Trump’s advisers and fellow Republicans have urged him to focus on Tuesday on illegal immigration and high prices, issues that play well with voters, and portraying Harris as too liberal for the country.

    “There’s no floor for him in terms of how low he will go, and we should be prepared for that,” Harris said in a radio interview that aired on Monday.

    Presidential debates do not always move the needle, but they can transform the dynamics of a race. President Joe Biden’s faltering performance against Trump in June was so damaging that it eventually led him to abandon his campaign.

    In a contest that could again come down to thousands of votes in a handful of states, even a small shift in public opinion could alter the outcome.

    The two candidates are effectively tied in the seven battleground states likely to decide the election, according to polling averages compiled by the New York Times.

    “There is more for Kamala Harris to gain and more for her to lose,” said Mitchell McKinney, a former adviser to the U.S. Commission on Presidential Debates, since she remains somewhat of an unknown for many voters.

    Viewers will be looking for where she stands on various issues. But just as important, they will be looking to see how she handles herself against Trump.

    Trump, by contrast, is already well-defined. “You’re either for him or against him” at this point, McKinney said.

    The 90-minute debate will take place at the National Constitution Centre in Philadelphia. As agreed by the campaigns, there will be no live audience and microphones will be muted when it is not a candidate’s turn to speak.

  • US election: Trump announces press briefing as VP Harris soars higher

    US election: Trump announces press briefing as VP Harris soars higher

    Donald Trump scheduled a short-notice media event Thursday at his Florida resort as rumblings of discontent hit his presidential campaign and poll numbers surged for his election rival Kamala Harris.

    Trump announced the “general news conference” in a one-sentence post on his Truth Social platform after Harris and new running mate Tim Walz have drawn large, jubilant crowds for her freshly energized Democratic bid to beat Trump in November.

    Since President Joe Biden dropped out of the race last month, Harris has turned the race for the White House upside down, raking in donations and erasing Trump’s lead in the polls.

    Trump is described in US media reports as angry at how his campaign is now performing against Harris and how it dominates news coverage.

    He is also reportedly unhappy with his young Republican running mate J.D. Vance, who has been described as a lackluster public speaker and making a poor impression with voters.

  • Biden addresses US, as Trump, Harris trade barbs in reset presidential race

    Biden addresses US, as Trump, Harris trade barbs in reset presidential race

    U.S. President Joe Biden addressed the nation on Wednesday for the first time since dropping his reelection bid, saying he decided to forgo personal ambition to save democracy in a sedate Oval Office speech that contrasted with the rough-and-tumble campaign.

    Shortly before the speech, Republican Donald Trump laid into Democratic rival Kamala Harris in his first rally since she replaced Biden atop the ticket, signaling a bare-knuckled campaign ahead of the Nov. 5 election.

    Trump branded Harris a “radical left lunatic” after she had dominated the campaign the two previous days with withering attacks on him that pointedly raised his felony convictions, his liability for sexual abuse, and fraud judgments against his business, charitable foundation, and private university.

    Momentum grew for the Harris campaign as NBC News said on Thursday that former President Barack Obama planned to endorse Harris as the Democratic presidential candidate soon.

    “Aides to Obama and Harris also have discussed arranging for the two of them to appear together on the campaign trail, though no date has been set,” it said.

    Biden said he believed he deserved to be reelected based on his first-term record, but his love of country led him to step aside.

    “I decided the best way forward is to pass the torch to a new generation.

    “That is the best way to unite our nation,” Biden added, after having resisted calls from within the party to quit the race after his poor showing in a June 27 debate with Trump.

    Biden, at 81 the oldest president in U.S. history, was greeted with cheers, applause, and music in the Rose Garden after the address, as his staff had converged on the White House for a viewing party.

    Trump was less kind, saying in a post on his Truth Social platform that Biden’s speech was “barely understandable and so bad!”

    After spending much of the campaign attacking Biden as old and feeble, Trump, 78, now faces a younger candidate in Harris, 59, the first Black woman and Asian American to serve as vice president.

    Energising many Democrats as potentially the first woman to take the White House, Harris quickly consolidated the party behind her, as her campaign said it had raised 126 million dollars since Sunday, with 64 per cent of donors making their first contribution of the 2024 campaign.

    With no challengers for the nomination, she won the backing of party delegates on Monday, a day after Biden’s announcement.

    The next highly anticipated development will be Harris’ choice of a vice-presidential candidate to counter Trump’s selection of Ohio Senator J.D. Vance.

    Among those being mentioned are Kentucky Governor Andy Beshear and Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg.

    The Democratic National Committee’s rules committee agreed on a plan on Wednesday to formally nominate Harris as soon as Aug. 1 – before the party’s Aug. 19-22 convention in Chicago – with Harris picking a running mate by Aug. 7.

    Biden praised Harris as a strong leader who would make an effective president.

    “She’s experienced, she’s tough, she’s capable,” he said. “She’s been an incredible partner to me and a leader for our country. Now the choice is up to you, the American people.”

    Trump tried to quash some of her momentum in an aggressive speech at a campaign rally.

    “I’m not gonna be nice!” he told cheering supporters in Charlotte, North Carolina, a battleground state where voting preferences can swing to either side.

    On Tuesday Harris showed her willingness to throw a punch, contrasting her background as a prosecutor to his record as a convicted felon.

    “Do we want to live in a country of freedom, compassion and rule of law, or a country of chaos, fear and hate?” she asked during a speech in Milwaukee.

    AReuters/Ipsos poll completed on Tuesday showed Harris with a lead of two percentage points over Trump, 44 per cent to 42 per cent.

    A CNN poll by SSRS showed Trump leading Harris, 49 per cent to 46 per cent.

    Both findings were within the polls’ margins of error.

  • Trump campaign switches gears to confront a Harris challenge

    Trump campaign switches gears to confront a Harris challenge

    Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump will try to show swing voters that his likely new rival, Vice President Kamala Harris, has her fingerprints all over two issues he is counting on for victory in November – immigration and the cost of living.

    Sources within the Trump campaign said it will cast Harris, the likely Democratic candidate after President Joe Biden quit the race on Sunday, as the “co-pilot” of administration polices it says are behind both sources of voter discontent.

    Biden’s sudden exit and endorsement of Harris has upended the race, just eight days after Trump survived an assassination attempt at a campaign rally.

    Sources told Reuters that Trump’s campaign had for weeks been preparing for Harris should Biden drop out and she wins her party’s nomination.

    “Harris will be easier to beat than Joe Biden would have been,” Trump told CNN shortly after Biden’s announcement on Sunday.

    Trump’s campaign has signaled it will tie her as tightly as possible to Biden’s immigration policy, which Republicans say is to blame for a sharp increase in the numbers of people crossing the southern border with Mexico illegally.

    The second line of attack will revolve around the economy, they say.

    Public opinion polls consistently show Americans are unhappy with high food and fuel costs as well as interest rates that have made buying a home less affordable.

    “She’s the co-pilot of the Biden vision,” said one Trump adviser, speaking on condition of anonymity during last week’s Republican National Convention, where a unified party anointed Trump as its nominee in the White House race.

    “If they want to switch to Biden 2.0 and have ‘Cackling’ Kamala at the top of the ticket, we’re good either way,” the adviser said, repeating an insult the campaign has been trying out for weeks focused on how the vice president laughs.

    Make America Great Again Inc, a super PAC backing Trump, said on Sunday it was pulling anti-Biden television ads that had been set to run in the battleground states of Arizona, Georgia, Nevada, and Pennsylvania and replacing them with an ad attacking Harris.

    The 30-second ad accuses Harris of hiding Biden’s infirmity from the public, and it seeks to pin the administration’s record solely on her.

    “Kamala knew Joe couldn’t do the job, so she did it. Look what she got done: a border invasion, runaway inflation, the American Dream dead,” the narrator says.

    Trump, known for using insulting and sometimes offensive language to attack his opponents, gave supporters at a rally in Michigan on Saturday a taste of the insults he is likely to fling at Harris in the coming days.

    “I call her laughing Kamala. You ever watch a laugh? She’s crazy. You can tell a lot by a laugh. She’s crazy. She’s nuts,” he said.

    The Democratic Party has yet to determine how to move forward, and there is as yet no guarantee that Harris will emerge as the party’s nominee even with Biden’s endorsement.

    Harris as the Democratic nominee would alter the race in perhaps unforeseen ways, political strategists said.

    A 59-year-old woman who is Black and Asian-American would fashion an entirely new dynamic with Trump, 78, offering a vivid generational and cultural split-screen.

    The United States has yet to elect a woman president in its 248-year history.

    Rodell Mollineau, a Democratic strategist and longtime congressional aide, said Harris would be able to mount “a more energetic campaign with excitement from younger voters and people of color” after Biden struggled to energise these important Democratic Party voting blocs.

    A former prosecutor and California attorney general as well as a former U.S. senator, Harris would be able to use “her years of litigation experience to effectively prosecute Trump in the court of public opinion,” Mollineau said.

    Chip Felkel, a Republican strategist, cautioned that it would be a mistake for the Trump campaign to assume Harris could serve as a simple stand-in for Biden, because of her potential appeal to different parts of the electorate.

    Recent polls have shown Harris to be competitive with Trump.

    In a hypothetical head-to-head matchup, Harris and Trump were tied with 44 per cent support each in a July 15-16 Reuters/Ipsos poll.

    Before Sunday, the Trump campaign had already begun discussions about how they would redeploy campaign resources should Biden drop out of the race, according to a source with direct knowledge of the matter.

    Jeanette Hoffman, a Republican political consultant, said even with the contrasts Harris would bring to the ticket, her close ties to Biden would be a drag on her candidacy.

    Harris “doesn’t represent the change America is looking for,” Hoffman said.

    MAGA Inc CEO Taylor Budowich said his group had commissioned opposition research on several possible Democratic candidates.

    “MAGA Inc is prepared for all outcomes of a Democrat Party who has only brought chaos and failure,” he said.

  • US Election: Elon Musk to support  Trump with $45 million monthly

    US Election: Elon Musk to support Trump with $45 million monthly

     Billionaire businessman and X CEO, Elon Musk plans to contribute approximately $45 million each month to a new fund supporting Donald Trump for the US presidency, the Wall Street Journal reported on Monday.

     

    Musk, the world’s wealthiest individual with an estimated net worth of $250 billion, has become increasingly close with Trump during the 2024 US election cycle.

     

    In March, the two met in person at a donor breakfast hosted by billionaire Nelson Peltz at his Florida residence.

     

    While individual campaign donations in the United States are limited to $3,300 per person, loopholes in the campaign finance system allow major donors to contribute to political action committees (PACs), which can support candidates more broadly.

     

    Trump, who previously criticized mail-in and absentee voting, has softened his stance after recognizing that Democrats had an advantage among mail voters.

  • 1st interview after Trump attack, Biden slams rival’s rhetoric

    1st interview after Trump attack, Biden slams rival’s rhetoric

    In spite of his recent appeals for unity and restraint following the assassination attempt on Donald Trump, U.S. President Joe Biden didn’t hold back in an interview on Monday.

    He went back to accusing his Republican rival of inflammatory rhetoric.

    Trump talked about there’d be a bloodbath if he loses; Biden told NBC News anchor Lester Holt, two days after Trump was injured by a shooter at a campaign rally in Pennsylvania.

    Biden, who in the wake of the attack stressed the need “to lower the temperature in our politics.’’

    He said it was Trump’s own rhetoric not his that had heated up the campaign ahead of November’s presidential elections.

    Biden said, “Look, I’m not the guy that said I want to be a dictator on day one,.

    “I’m not the guy that refused to accept the outcome of the election’’ Biden said, referring to previous remarks made by Trump.

    “I’m not the guy who said that wouldn’t accept the outcome of this election automatically.

    “I have not engaged in that rhetoric. My opponent has engaged in that rhetoric.’’

    Following the attack on Trump on Saturday, Biden called for unity and condemned the attack several times.

    “In America, we resolve our difference at the ballot box, not with bullets.

    “The path forward through competing visions of the campaign should always be resolved peacefully, not through acts of violence,’’ Biden said in a formal Oval Office address on Sunday evening.

    Asked by NBC’s Holt what he could do himself to cool down the political debate, Biden said.

    “Continue to talk about the things that matter to the American public.’’

    “It matters whether or not you, for example, talk about how you’re gonna deal with the border instead of talking about people as being vermin, those things matter.

    `That’s the kind of language that is inflammatory.’’

    Some of Trump’s fiercest supporters have accused Biden of being partially responsible for the attack due to his rhetoric.

    Biden has repeatedly described his rival as an existential threat to democracy.