Tag: trump

  • Trump makes first public appearance since assassination attempt

    Trump makes first public appearance since assassination attempt

    Former U.S. President Donald Trump has made his first public appearance since an assassination attempt, appearing at the Republican National Convention with a bandage over his right ear.

    Trump, who was confirmed as the Republican presidential candidate earlier on Monday, entered the convention to a standing ovation.

    He then posed on stage with his vice presidential running-mate JD Vance.

    It was Trump’s first public appearance since a campaign event in Pennsylvania on Saturday, where a shooter was able to climb to an elevated position with an assault rifle.

    The shooter fired a number of shots at Trump, causing panic to break out in the audience.

    Trump, wounded in the ear and left bleeding, struck a defiant tone as he pumped his fist while being whisked off the stage.

  • By luck or by God, I’m still here – Trump

    By luck or by God, I’m still here – Trump

    Former U.S. president Donald Trump said in a joint interview that it was either “by luck or by God’’ that he survived the Saturdays assassination attempt.

    Trump survived an assassination attempt on his life on Saturday, saying “I’m supposed to be dead.”

    “By luck or by God, many people are saying it’s by God, I’m still here.

    “I’m not supposed to be here. I’m supposed to be dead,’’ Trump said, according to the tabloid New York Post.

    Trump was quoted in the Washington Examiner as saying the fact that he turned to point at a poster about immigration likely saved his life.

    “That reality is just setting in,” he said in the joint interview with the newspapers.

    “I rarely look away from the crowd. Had I not done that in that moment, well, we will not be talking today, would we?”

    “The doctor at the hospital said he never saw anything like this, he called it a miracle,” Trump said, according to the Post.

  • Trump safe after shots fired at Pennsylvania rally, Secret Service reports

    Trump safe after shots fired at Pennsylvania rally, Secret Service reports

    Donald Trump was declared safe by the U.S. Secret Service on Saturday after multiple gunshots were heard at a rally in Pennsylvania. The incident occurred shortly after Trump began his speech, causing visible concern as he grimaced and raised his right hand.

     

    “The Secret Service has implemented protective measures and the former president is safe,” a spokesperson announced on X, referring to the situation as an “incident.” An active investigation is ongoing, with further details to be released as available.

     

    The shots rang out at the outdoor rally in Butler, Pennsylvania, leading bodyguards to surround Trump and duck him below the podium. Armed officers took positions at the front of the stage. Trump, raising his fist to the crowd, was escorted to a vehicle by the Secret Service. Despite a CNN report indicating Trump was injured, details on his condition were scarce. Footage showed blood on his right ear and the right side of his face.

     

    A campaign spokesperson assured the public that Trump was fine and being checked at a local medical facility. The rally site was subsequently cleared, with chairs overturned and yellow police tape marking the area. Helicopters and armed officers surveyed the scene from above and nearby rooftops.

     

    President Joe Biden received an initial briefing on the incident, the White House confirmed.

     

    As Trump and Biden continue their tight election rematch, this event adds to the heightened tensions. Recent polls, including Reuters/Ipsos, show a close contest between the two. Biden, facing internal party challenges following a recent debate performance, continues to navigate the complexities of his campaign.

     

    Trump, who held office from 2017-2021, has maintained strong support within the Republican Party despite the January 6 Capitol attack. His early success in the nomination race has solidified his position as the party’s frontrunner.

  • US Election: Biden may defeat Trump – Moghalu

    US Election: Biden may defeat Trump – Moghalu

    Former Deputy Governor of the Central Bank of Nigeria, CBN, Kingsley Moghalu has given reasons President Joe Biden can’t be written off in the forthcoming US presidential election.

    Moghalu said that no one knows who will win between former President Donald Trump and Biden.

    He explained that anyone writing off Biden because he is old and fumbled on the first debate is jumping on a bandwagon, saying it says nothing about the real outcome of the election.

    In a post on his X handle on Thursday, Moghalu noted that Trump has been convicted on 34 felony counts but it doesn’t rule out his chances of beating Biden.

    He said: “The brouhaha over whether @JoeBiden should step down is much ado about not much. The US presidential election campaigns have not begun seriously.

    “Elites do not speak for ordinary Americans. We don’t know who will win between Donald Trump and Biden, but anyone writing off Biden because he is old (with many concrete governance achievements, but also supportive of some deeply controversial social policies) and fumbled on the first debate is jumping on a bandwagon that says nothing about the real outcome of the election.

    “At the same time, that Trump has been convicted on 34 felony counts doesn’t rule out his chances of beating Biden.

    “Odd though it may seem, today’s America is one where right-wing populism has gone mainstream. There are some valid reasons for this. Let’s just watch this race.”

  • Top Democrats rule out replacing Biden amid calls for him to quit

    Top Democrats rule out replacing Biden amid calls for him to quit

    Top Democrats on Sunday ruled out the possibility of replacing President Joe Biden as the Democratic nominee after a feeble debate performance and called on party members to focus instead on the consequences of a second Donald Trump presidency.

    After days of hand-wringing about Biden’s poor night on stage debating Trump, Democratic leaders firmly rejected calls for their party to choose a younger presidential candidate for the Nov. 5 election.

    Biden, 81, meanwhile, was huddling with family members at the Camp David presidential retreat on Sunday.

    The New York Times quoted people close to the situation as saying that Biden’s family was urging him to stay in the race and keep fighting.

    The paper said some members of his clan privately expressed exasperation at how his staff prepared him for Thursday night’s event.

    A drumbeat of calls for Biden to step aside has continued since Thursday and a post-debate CBS poll showed a 10-point jump in the number of Democrats who believe Biden should not be running for president, to 46 per cent from 36 per cent in February.

    “The unfortunate truth is that Biden should withdraw from the race, for the good of the nation he has served so admirably for half a century,” the Atlanta Journal-Constitution said in an editorial on Sunday.

    “The shade of retirement is now necessary for President Biden.”

    “Democratic leaders rejected this.

    “Absolutely not,” responded Georgia Democratic Senator Raphael Warnock, one of several Democrats seen as a possible replacement for Biden.

    “Bad debates happen,” he told NBC’s Meet the Press program.

    “The question is, ‘Who has Donald Trump ever shown up for other than himself and people like himself?’ I’m with Joe Biden, and it’s our assignment to ensure he gets over the finish line come November.”

    House of Representatives Democratic leader Hakeem Jeffries, who could become speaker next year if his party can take control of the House in November, acknowledged that Biden had suffered a setback, but this was “nothing more than a setup for a comeback.”

    “So the moment that we’re in is a comeback moment,” he told MSNBC.

    Senator Chris Coons of Delaware, a leading Biden surrogate, told ABC’s This Week program Biden needed to stay in the race to ensure Trump’s defeat.

    “I think he’s the only Democrat who can beat Donald Trump,” Coons said.

    With Democratic leaders rallying around him, it will be up to Biden to decide whether he wants to end his re-election bid.

    But other Democrats held open the possibility of choosing a different presidential candidate.

    Representative Jamie Raskin, a prominent Democrat in Congress, told MSNBC that “frank and serious and rigorous conversations” were taking place within the party.

    “Whether he’s the candidate or someone else is the candidate, he’s going to be the keynote speaker at our convention. He will be the figure that we rally around to move forward,” Raskin said.

    During the debate, a hoarse-sounding Biden delivered a shaky, halting performance in which he stumbled over his words on several occasions. Some Democrats later said privately that the showing could prove to be a disqualifying factor.

    For his part in the debate, Trump made a series of well-worn falsehoods, including claims that migrants have carried out a crime wave, that Democrats support infanticide, and that he actually won the 2020 election.

    Trump’s daughter-in-law Lara, co-chair of the Republican National Committee, told Fox News that Trump was feeling “great” after “probably the best debate of his political career.”

    Biden headed to Camp David after a frenzied run of seven campaign events across four states following the debate.

    While the Camp David trip had been planned for months, the timing and circumstances of Biden being surrounded by family members who have weighed heavily in his past decisions to run for the presidency have added to the scrutiny around the visit.

    Two people familiar with the scheduling said the gathering would include a family photo shoot.

    The attendees include his wife Jill, and the Biden children and grandchildren.

    The New York Times said one of the strongest voices imploring Biden to resist pressure to drop out was his son Hunter, who on June 11 became the first child of a sitting president to be convicted of a felony after a jury found him guilty of lying about illegal drug use when he purchased a handgun in 2018.

    DNC Chairman Jaime Harrison and Biden campaign manager Julie Chavez Rodriguez held a Saturday afternoon call with dozens of committee members across the country, a group of some of the most influential members of the party.

    The call was part pep talk, part planning meeting for the upcoming national convention, according to two people who were on the call who requested anonymity to discuss private discussions.

  • Biden acknowledges age, bad debate performance, but vows Trump’s defeat

    Biden acknowledges age, bad debate performance, but vows Trump’s defeat

    President Joe Biden said on Friday he intended to defeat Republican rival Donald Trump in the November presidential election, giving no sign he would consider dropping out of the race.

    Biden was speaking after a feeble debate performance that dismayed his fellow Democrats.

    “I know I’m not a young man, to state the obvious,” an ebullient Biden said at a rally one day after the head-to-head showdown with his Republican rival – a showdown widely viewed as a defeat for the 81-year-old president.

    “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,” he said, as the crowd chanted “four more years.”

    “I would not be running again if I didn’t believe with all my heart and soul that I could do this job. The stakes are too high,” Biden said.

    Biden’s verbal mumbles and occasionally meandering responses in the debate heightened voter concerns that he might not be fit to serve another four-year term.

    This prompted some of his fellow Democrats to wonder whether they could replace him as their candidate for the Nov. 5 U.S. election.

    Campaign spokesperson Michael Tyler said no conversations were taking place about that possibility.

    “We’d rather have one bad night than a candidate with a bad vision for where he wants to take the country,” he told reporters aboard Air Force One.

    The campaign handlers held an “all-hands-on-deck” meeting on Friday afternoon to reassure staffers that Biden was not dropping out of the race, according to two people familiar with the meeting.

    Though Trump, 78, put forward a series of falsehoods throughout the debate, the focus afterward was squarely on Biden, especially among Democrats.

    Hakeem Jeffries, the Democratic Party leader in the U.S. House of Representatives, avoided answering directly when asked whether he still had faith in Biden’s candidacy.

    “I support the ticket. I support the Senate Democratic majority. We’re going to do everything possible to take back the House in November. Thank you, everyone,” he told reporters.

    Some other Democrats likewise demurred when asked if Biden should stay in the race.

    “That’s the president’s decision,” Democratic Senator Jack Reed told a local TV station in Rhode Island.

    But several of the party’s most senior figures, including former presidents Bill Clinton and Barack Obama, said they were sticking with Biden.

    “Bad debate nights happen. Trust me, I know. But this election is still a choice between someone who has fought for ordinary folks his entire life and somebody who only cares about himself,” former Democratic president, Obama wrote on X.

    The New York Times editorial board that endorsed Biden in 2020, called on him to drop out of the race to give the Democratic Party a better chance of beating Trump by picking another candidate.

    “The greatest public service Mr Biden can now perform is to announce that he will not continue to run for re-election,” the editorial said.

    The Biden campaign said it raised 14 million dollars on Thursday and Friday and posted its single best hour of fundraising immediately after the Thursday night debate.

    The Trump campaign said it raised 8 million dollars on the night of the debate.

    One possible bright spot for Biden: preliminary viewership data indicated that only 48 million Americans watched the debate, far short of the 73 million who watched the candidates’ last face-off in 2020.

    Biden, already the oldest American president in history, faced only token opposition during the party’s months-long nominating contest, and he has secured enough support to guarantee his spot as the Democratic nominee.

    Trump likewise overcame his intra-party challengers early in the year, setting the stage for a long and bitter general election fight.

    If Biden were to step aside, the party would have less than two months to pick another nominee at its national convention, which starts on Aug. 19 – a potentially messy process that could pit Kamala Harris, the nation’s first Black female vice president, against governors and other officeholders whose names have been floated as possible replacements.

    At an afternoon rally in Chesapeake, Virginia, Trump told supporters that he had a “big victory against a man looking to destroy our country.”

    “Joe Biden’s problem is not his age. It’s his competence,” Trump said.

    Trump advisers said they thought the debate would bolster their chances in Democratic-leaning states like Virginia, which has not backed a Republican presidential candidate since 2004.

    Beforehand, some Trump supporters said they were struck by Biden’s poor performance. “I’m scared they are going to replace him and put up somebody more competitive,” said Mike Boatman, who added that he had attended more than 90 Trump rallies.

    Trump fundraisers said they were fielding enthusiastic calls from donors.

    “Anyone who raises money knows there’s a time to go to donors, and this is one of those watershed moments,” said Ed McMullen, who served as ambassador to Switzerland during Trump’s presidency.

    Questions about Trump’s fitness for office have also arisen over his conviction last month in New York for covering up a hush money payment to a porn star, his efforts to overturn the 2020 election, and his chaotic term in office.

    He is scheduled to be sentenced on July 11, just days before his party convenes to nominate him formally.

    He still faces three other criminal indictments, though none appears likely to reach trial before November.

    Biden’s shaky performance in the debate drew stunned global reactions on Friday, prompting public calls for him to step aside thus giving some of America’s closest allies a hefty encouragement to steel up for Trump’s return.

  • Trump promises US green card for foreign graduates

    Trump promises US green card for foreign graduates

    Donald Trump said he wants to grant green cards to foreign graduates from US colleges, in an apparent softening of his typically hard-line view on immigration, a key election issue.

    The Republican candidate made the remarks in a podcast published Thursday, days after President Joe Biden announced a citizenship pathway for immigrants married to US nationals, counterbalancing his recent crackdown on illegal border crossings.

    “What I want to do and what I will do is, you graduate from a college, I think you should get automatically as part of your diploma a green card to be able to stay in this country,” Trump told the All-In podcast.

    A green card is the commonly used name for a permanent resident card in the United States and a step toward citizenship.

    Trump said this should include “anybody who graduates from a college,” including those who complete two-year programs, known as junior colleges, and doctoral graduates.

    Asked initially on the podcast if he would promise to help import the “best and the brightest around the world to America,” Trump replied: “I do promise.”

    He added: “I know of stories where people graduated from a top college, or from a college, and they desperately want to stay here… and they can’t.

    “They go back to India, they go back to China. They do the same basic company in those places and they become multi billionaires employing thousands and thousands of people,” Trump said.

    He also said that US companies need “smart people,” adding “they can’t even make a deal with a company because they don’t think they’re going to be able to stay in the country.”

    “That is going to end on day one,” Trump added.

    During Trump’s 2017-2021 presidency, he ordered construction of a wall on the US-Mexico border and implemented a travel ban on people from mostly Muslim countries.

    His comments came after Democrat opponent Biden on Tuesday relaxed visa rules for around half a million spouses of US nationals, making it easier for them to obtain citizenship.

    The president also simplified the process for migrants who came to the United States illegally as children — known as “Dreamers” — to get work visas if they’ve graduated college and have a “high-skilled job offer.”

     

  • Biden accuses Trump of using ‘Hitler’s language

    Biden accuses Trump of using ‘Hitler’s language

    U.S. President Joe Biden has accused his predecessor and likely election opponent Donald Trump of using Nazi rhetoric following the publication of a video referencing a “unified Reich.’’

    Trump is using “Hitler’s language’’.

    That’s not America’s, Biden said in a campaign video released.

    In the short clip, the Democrat held a phone in his hand and said, referencing the video, is this on his official account? Wow.

    Earlier, on Monday, Trump had shared a video which was later deleted on his social media site Truth Social, showing mocks of newspaper articles that would be written if Trump won the presidential election in November.

    Among the bits of text featured was a subheading referring to the creation of a unified Reich.

    The term, empire in German, is often associated with the Third Reich under Adolf Hitler’s Nazi regime from 1933 to 1945.

    The word Reich in the video presumably refers to the founding of the German Reich in 1871, with the text being taken from a Wikipedia entry on World War I, according to U.S. media.

    The video was created using a ready-made newspaper article mask.

    According to the reports, it has also been used in other clips circulating online,.

    Other newspaper headlines in the video published on Trump’s platform also make reference to World War I.

    Trump’s team later confirmed that the clip had been removed from his account.

    A spokeswoman for his campaign team said that “it was not a campaign video, it was created by a random account online and reposted by a staffer who clearly did not see the word.’’

    Biden also attacked the Republican, who is hoping to return to the White House, at a campaign event in Boston on Tuesday.

    The 81-year-old said that “the threat that Trump poses is greater in the second term than it was in the first,’’ according to reporters travelling with him.

    He called Trump a little unhinged and accused him of seeking revenge after losing the 2020 presidential election.

    Biden and Trump were all but guaranteed to face off on Nov. 5 in a rematch of the 2020 vote.

    They both achieved the required number of delegates to be nominated as candidates of the Democratic and Republican parties respectively.

    Trump has been using radical rhetoric in his election campaign, including hateful and dehumanising language, as well as making racist statements and inciting hatred against minorities.

    The 77-year-old also compared Biden’s government to the Gestapo, the official secret police of Nazi Germany.

  • Trump’s historic New York hush money trial begins with jury selection

    Trump’s historic New York hush money trial begins with jury selection

    Donald Trump would become the first former president in U.S. history to stand trial on criminal charges when jury selection begins on Monday in New York.

    The trial of the case that stemmed from payments made to an adult film actress ahead of the 2016 election.

    Trump, who was the 45th president of the U.S. and is set for an election rematch with incumbent President Joe Biden coming this November.

    Trump is charged with 34 counts of falsifying business records as part of a scheme involving his former lawyer Michael Cohen to conceal the 130,000 dollars pay-off made to Stormy Daniels.

    Daniels said the money was given to keep her quiet about an affair she had with Trump in 2006.

    He has admitted to paying her on the eve of the 2016 election to stop her “false and extortionist accusations’’ but denied any sexual encounter.

    Trump’s lawyers made several unsuccessful attempts to have the hush money trial delayed; a tactic they have also used in the former president’s three other ongoing criminal cases.

    The process of selecting a jury in New York, a heavily Democratic city, could take several days, with potentially hundreds of people ultimately whittled down to just 12 jurors and six alternates.

    The whole trial, in which Cohen and Daniels are expected to testify for the prosecution, could last up to eight weeks.

    Trump, who has pleaded not guilty to all of the charges, faces a maximum of four years behind bars if convicted.

    At a news conference at his Mar-a-Lago resort in Florida on Friday, he told reporters he was ready to take the stand to defend himself.

    “I’m testifying. I tell the truth’’, Trump said, although it was far from certain the Republican real estate tycoon would actually undertake such a high-risk legal strategy.

    In any case, Trump’s campaign for the presidency would collide with his courtroom obligations.

    He was required to be present every day of the historic trial, which is sure to generate a frenzy of media coverage.

    Trump’s legal entanglements were extensive.

    The most serious are his four criminal indictments in four different cities.

    Besides the New York case, two involve his alleged efforts to keep himself in power after Biden defeated him in 2020 and other concerns the retention of classified documents after leaving office.

    The three other trials don’t have firm start dates.

    Trump has been dealt with major blows in two New York civil lawsuits.

    One is accusing him and his organisation of committing fraud and another for defaming magazine columnist E Jean Carroll when he denied her claims of sexual assault.

    Trump owed more than half a billion dollars in legal penalties in the combined cases.

    Trump claimed, without evidence, he was a victim of political persecution orchestrated by Democrats to keep him from the White House.

    Even if he was convicted, the Constitution did not prevent a felon from running for the presidency.

    Trump and Biden remain locked in a neck-and-neck race.

    According to an opinion poll from the New York Times and Siena College released at the weekend, with Trump holding a 46 per cent to 45 per cent edge over Biden.

  • Trump arrested in election case, mug shot released

    Trump arrested in election case, mug shot released

    Former president of United States of America, Donald Trump was photographed for a police mug shot after his arrest on August 24 at the Fulton County Jail in Georgia, multiple US media outlets reported citing local officials.

    Trump was arrested at a Georgia jail Thursday on racketeering and conspiracy charges and released on a $200,000 bond after having a historic mug shot taken.

    Trump, who is accused of colluding with 18 other defendants to overturn the 2020 election result in the southern state, spent less than 30 minutes inside Atlanta’s Fulton County Jail before leaving in a motorcade for the airport.

    Like the other defendants in the case who have surrendered so far, the 77-year-old Trump had his mug shot taken during the booking process — a first for any serving or former US president.

    In the photograph released by the sheriff’s office, he scowled at the camera while dressed in a dark blue suit, white shirt and red tie.

    Speaking to reporters after his arrest, Trump, the frontrunner for the 2024 Republican presidential nomination, said it was a “very sad day for America.”

    “What has taken place here is a travesty of justice,” he said. “I did nothing wrong.”

    Trump posted the mug shot on his own Truth Social platform with the caption “Election Interference” and a link to his campaign website.

    A short while later, he also posted it on X — formerly Twitter, which was Trump’s favourite bullhorn until he was banned from it after the January 6, 2021, insurrection at the US Capitol by a mob of his supporters.

    New owner Elon Musk reinstated Trump on X in November of last year, but Trump stayed away and posted instead on Truth Social. This was Trump’s first post since 2021 on what had been Twitter.

    Trump was given the inmate number “PO1135809” by the Fulton County Jail, which listed his height as six foot three inches (1.9 meters), his weight as 215 pounds (97 kilograms) and his hair colour as “Blond or Strawberry.”

    The billionaire has been criminally indicted four times since April, setting the stage for a year of unprecedented drama as he tries to juggle multiple court appearances and another White House campaign.

    Trump was able to dodge having a mugshot taken during his previous arrests this year: in New York on charges of paying hush money to a porn star, in Florida for mishandling top secret government documents, and in Washington on charges of conspiring to upend his 2020 election loss to Democrat Joe Biden.

    His arrest came one day after Trump spurned a televised debate in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, featuring eight of his rivals for the 2024 Republican presidential nomination, all of whom lag well behind him in the polls.

    He still stole the spotlight, though, with all but two of the candidates saying they would support him as the party’s nominee even if he were a convicted felon.

    – Court dates in election race –
    A tight security perimeter was set up for Trump’s booking at the Fulton County Jail, which is under investigation for a slew of inmate deaths and deplorable conditions.

    Fani Willis, the Fulton County district attorney who filed the sweeping racketeering case, had set a deadline of noon on Friday for Trump and the other 18 defendants to surrender.

    Trump and 11 others have turned themselves in so far.

    Former White House chief of staff Mark Meadows surrendered on Thursday and was released on $100,000 bond.

    Former New York mayor Rudy Giuliani, who served as Trump’s personal lawyer when he was in the White House and vigorously pushed the false claims that Trump had won the 2020 election, was booked and released on Wednesday.

    John Eastman, a conservative lawyer who is accused of drawing up a scheme to submit a false slate of Trump electors to Congress from Georgia instead of the legitimate Biden ones, has also been booked and released.

    A few dozen supporters of the former Republican president gathered outside the jail, including Sharon Anderson, who spent the night in her car.

    “I think this is political persecution, and now that’s turned into a political prosecution,” Anderson told AFP.

    Trump is the first US president in history to face criminal charges.

    Racketeering Case
    His various trials, if they take place next year, may coincide with the Republican presidential primary season, which begins in January, and the campaign for the November 2024 White House election.

    Special counsel Jack Smith has proposed a January 2024 start date for Trump’s trial on charges of conspiring to overturn the last election with a lie-fueled campaign that culminated in the January 6, 2021 attack on the US Capitol by his supporters.

    Trump’s attorneys have countered with a suggested start date well after the election — April 2026.

    Willis, the Georgia district attorney, initially proposed that the racketeering case begin in March next year, the same month Trump is scheduled to go on trial in New York on charges of paying hush money to porn star Stormy Daniels.

    On Thursday, after one of the defendants asked for a speedy trial, she proposed that it begin for all 19 in October of this year, a move met with an immediate objection from Trump’s lawyers.

    The Florida case, in which Trump is accused of taking secret government documents as he left the White House and refusing to return them, is scheduled to begin in May.AFP