Tag: trump

  • US Poll: Trump’s campaign runs out of funds

    US Poll: Trump’s campaign runs out of funds

    U.S. President Donald Trump campaign machine is in the throes of a cash crunch, forcing it to pull back television advertising in some crucial states.

    A flustered Trump will now embark on a heavier fundraising schedule in coming weeks, seeking money from small and big donors, a strategy that his Democratic rival Joe Biden has been using.

    Trump’s campaign started the year with more than 10 times as much money as Democratic rival Joe Biden.

    But to the alarm of some Republican donors, the former vice president closed the gap as Democratic donors consolidated behind him and the Trump campaign burned through its cash more quickly.

    Biden, who leads Trump in most national and battleground state polling ahead of the Nov. 3 election, had about $99 million in the bank to Trump’s $121 million by the end of July, according to disclosures by each side’s campaign.

    But in August, Biden outraised Trump nearly $365 million to $210 million in August.

    “I am flabbergasted that the money lead we had in February has completely evaporated,” said Dan Eberhart, a Republican fundraiser and executive in the oil and gas industry who cut a $100,000 check to the Trump Victory Fund in June.

    Trump this week said his campaign had to spend millions on advertisements earlier this year to fight the impression that he mishandled the coronavirus pandemic, which has killed more than 194,000 Americans and devastated the U.S. economy.

    A couple of donors questioned whether the campaign’s purchase of a multi-million dollar ad during the Super Bowl in February so far ahead of the election, as well as ads in the heavily Democratic Washington, D.C. market in June, were more about Trump’s vanity than strategy.

    Eberhart said some of the campaign’s recent actions, including buying ads in few-day increments as opposed to weekly and going dark in some states for a stretch, suggested the campaign now faces a cash pinch.

    Bill Stepien, who became Trump’s campaign manager in July, told reporters this week that the campaign was “very comfortable and confident in how we’re spending and where we’re spending.”

    Biden is poised to outspend Trump on ads in the final weeks of the race.

    The Democrat’s campaign has booked about $181 million in television and radio ad spending between September and November, compared to $156 million by the Trump campaign, according to ad tracking firm Advertising Analytics.

    The current bookings show Biden will spend more than Trump in battleground states North Carolina, Pennsylvania, Michigan, Arizona and Wisconsin. Trump is slated to outspend Biden in Florida and Ohio.

    Stepien said in a statement that the incumbent’s campaign has invested heavily in a field operation and ground game aimed at turning out voters “while the Biden campaign is waging almost exclusively an air war.”

    “We like our strategy better,” Stepien said.

    In the final stretch of the race, the Trump campaign will increase its outreach to donors of all means, advisers said.

    Trump’s weekend agenda includes meeting with deep-pocketed donors on Saturday in Washington and on Sunday in Las Vegas, where an event is expected to raise $4 million.

  • Trump claims Biden is taking drugs to give speeches

    Trump claims Biden is taking drugs to give speeches

    U.S. President Donald Trump claimed, without offering any proof, that Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden is taking performance-enhancing drugs for his public speeches.

    Trump said this in an interview with Fox News which is due to be appeared in full on Saturday.

    “I think there are probably, possibly drugs involved, that’s what I hear,” he said.

    Two short clips were made available in advance,

    Trump, 74, has long tried to paint Biden, 77, as senile, as part of his campaign tactics.

    Trump also said that he was not worried about violence on election day.

    “We’ll put them down very quickly if they do that,” he said.

  • MURIC attacks Trump for questioning Buhari over ‘killing of Christians’

    MURIC attacks Trump for questioning Buhari over ‘killing of Christians’

    An Islamic human rights organization, the Muslim Rights Concern (MURIC), has attacked President Donald Trump of the United States for questioning President Muhammadu Buhari over the alleged killing of Christians in Nigeria.

    The group in a statement signed by its Director, Prof Ishaq Akintola also accused the Christian Association of Nigeria, CAN, of selling the country to the US.

    MURIC further warned Trump against bullying the Nigerian President for whatever reasons.

    President Buhari had on Tuesday, during the Ministers’ retreat, said that Trump asked him during his visit to the US in 2018 why he was killing Christians.

    MURIC said it take serious objection to President Donald Trump’s diction.

    According to MURIC, Trump’s question was based on false and misleading reports which CAN has allegedly been sending to the outside world.

    MURIC said it expected the US leader to know better because the killings are not being done by the Nigerian security agencies.

    “Again, it is not Christians alone that are being killed. Muslims are also victims. This is the same false information that was spread about Boko Haram,” MURIC said.

    The Islamic rights group said CAN was able to tell people that the terrorists were only killing Christians and bombing churches.

    MURIC noted that Boko Haram as a terrorist group, is killing emirs, Imams, Islamic scholars and ordinary Muslims too and also destroying Islamic worship centres.

    “The crisis is mainly between herders and farmers, not between the government of Buhari and Nigerian Christians. So how can anyone accuse President Buhari of killing Christians?” MURIC said.

    MURIC also noted that the herders-farmers clashes predate were there before the administration of President Buhari came into being in 2015 and has been occurring for a very long time.

    “It was there in ex-President Jonathan’s period and even in ex-President Olusegun Obasanjo’s days. Jonathan and Obasanjo are Christians but the killings also occurred during their regimes,” the group said.

    It wondered why the Christian Association is making the situation look as if Buhari, a Muslim president is killing Nigerian Christians, adding that CAN is selling the country too cheaply to the US.

    MURIC said it has no doubt that the narrative will change if President Buhari is succeeded by a Christian President in 2023.

  • BREAKING: Trump nominated for Nobel Peace Prize

    BREAKING: Trump nominated for Nobel Peace Prize

    The President of the United States of America Donald Trump has been nominated for the 2021 Nobel Peace Prize.

    This came after Trump helped broker a peace deal between Israel and the United Arab Emirates in August.

    Christian Tybring-Gjedde, a member of the Norwegian Parliament, who submitted Trump’s nomination said he has done more to create a peace than most other Peace Prize nominees.

    “For his merit, I think he has done more trying to create peace between nations than most other Peace Prize nominees,” Tybring-Gjedde, a four-term member of parliament who also serves as chairman of the Norwegian delegation to the NATO Parliamentary Assembly, told Fox News.

    This is the second time Tybring-Gjedde submitted a nomination for Trump.

    The first was in 2018, following the US president’s summit with North Korean leader Kim Jong Un.

    Trump, however, lost the award to Ethiopian Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed.

  • What I told Trump when he asked me: ‘Why are you killing Christians?’ – Buhari

    What I told Trump when he asked me: ‘Why are you killing Christians?’ – Buhari

    President Muhammadu Buhari has revealed his answer when the President of the United States of America, Donald Trump, asked him during a visit to the White House: “Why are you killing Christians?”

    Buhari, who digressed from his prepared speech, said this on Tuesday in his closing remark at the end of a two-day Ministerial Performance Review Retreat at the Presidential Villa, Abuja.

    Buhari met Trump on April 30, 2018.

    President Buhari said: “I believe I was about the only African among the less developed countries, the President of United States invited, and when I was in his office only myself and himself, only God is my witness, he looked at me in the face, he said: ‘Why are you killing Christians?’

    “I wonder if you were the person how you will react.

    “I hope what I was feeling inside did not betray my emotion.

    “So, I told him that the problem between the cattle rearers and stagnant farmers I know is older than me not to talk of him (Trump).

    “I think I am a couple of years older than him.

    “With climate change and population growth and the culture of the cattle rearers, if you have 50 cows and they eat grass, any root to your water point, they will follow it, it doesn’t matter whose farm it was.

    “The First Republic set of leadership was the most responsible leadership we ever had.

    “I asked the Minister of Agriculture to get a gazette of the early 60s, which delineated the cattle routes where they used meagre resources then to put earth dams, wind mills even sanitary department.

    “So, any cattle rearer that allowed his cattle to go to somebody’s farm is arrested, taken before the court, the farmer is called to submit his bill and if he can’t pay, the cattle are sold, but subsequent leaders, VVIPs (very very important persons), they encroached on the cattle routes, they took over the cattle rearing areas.

    “So, I tried and explained to him, this has got nothing to do with ethnicity or religion.

    “It is a cultural thing in which the respective leadership was failing the nation.”

  • Trump says all African nations ‘complete toilets’ in new book by Cohen

    Trump says all African nations ‘complete toilets’ in new book by Cohen

    In a new book out this week, U.S. President Donald Trump’s former personal lawyer, Michael Cohen, alleges that Trump regarded all African countries and nations run by black people as “complete toilets”.

    The book also said Trump made disparaging remarks about Black world leaders including former South African President Nelson Mandela after he died.

    In the book, Cohen alleges that Trump described Mandela as a poor leader and disparaged U.S. minorities in general, the Washington Post has reported.

    According to the newspaper, which has a copy of the book, Cohen wrote that following Mandela’s death in 2013, Trump said: “Mandela f—-ed the whole country up. Now it’s a s—-hole. F—- Mandela. He was no leader.”

    Cohen also alleges that Trump said: “Tell me one country run by a black person that isn’t a s—-hole. They are all complete f—-ing toilets.”

    Trump was previously linked with making denigrating comments about African countries.

    In January 2018, during a discussion with lawmakers at the White House regarding immigrants, Trump reportedly exhibited frustration over protecting immigrants from Haiti, El Salvador, and African countries.

    At the time, he allegedly said, “Why are we having all these people from shithole countries come here?” This alleged comment generated outrage across the US and wider world.

  • Obasanjo, Trump would have responded more harshly, Fani-Kayode defends rascally attack on journalist

    Obasanjo, Trump would have responded more harshly, Fani-Kayode defends rascally attack on journalist

    Former minister of aviation, Femi Fani-Kayode has defended his outrageous verbal assault on Daily Trust’s correspondent, Eyo Charles at a press conference over a question in Calabar, Cross River State.

    TheNewsGuru.com, TNG reports that the PDP chieftain had in a press conference held in Cross River State in a viral video leaked on Tuesday seen attacking the journalist and calling him stupid for asking the ex-minister if his tour was being sponsored by any politician or political group.

    The former minister said the reporter was “very stupid” and that he did not need anyone to bankroll his tour.

    Defending his outburst against the backlash of attacks on social media, Fani-Kayode in a series of tweet said he does not regret his action and that the reporter in question had apologised.

     

     

  • US presidential poll: Republicans officially nominate Trump, Pence for second term

    US presidential poll: Republicans officially nominate Trump, Pence for second term

    U.S. President Donald Trump and Vice President Mike Pence were on Monday officially nominated for a second term at the Republican National Convention, during a scaled down roll call vote in Charlotte, North Carolina.

    States were limited to six delegates at the Charlotte Convention Center, 336 total for the live roll call, unlike the Democratic National Convention where the roll call was done virtually.

    Vice President Mike Pence made brief comments at the convention.

    The roll call is usually held on Tuesday but was moved up by the party’s updated schedule.

    The event, scheduled to run through Thursday, will be largely virtual. Some small, official business will still take place in Charlotte, N.C.

    After some last-minute wrangling to attempt to move the convention to Jacksonville, Fla., the GOP settled on keeping Charlotte as its base, but severely limiting the number of in-person events that take place there.

    North Carolina Gov. Roy Cooper warned in June it was likely that safety measures to limit the spread of COVID-19 wouldn’t be lifted in time for Republicans to hold their full program of events with thousands of supporters, delegates and elected officials in attendance.

    Originally scheduled to be held at the Spectrum Center, the in-person events, including Monday’s roll call of delegates, took place at the Charlotte Convention Center. Most other events will be virtual, including Trump’s acceptance speech from the South Lawn of the White House on Thursday.–UPI

  • TikTok sues Trump administration

    TikTok sues Trump administration

    TikTok, with over 100 million subscribers in the United States, on Monday filed a lawsuit to counter President Donald Trump’s executive order.

    The order slates TikTok app for banning in 45 days and TikTok itself from conducting business in the country.

    In a statement on its website, TikTok said the administration’s ban had the potential to “strip the rights” of the employees and creators on the TikTok platform “without any evidence to justify such an extreme action.”

    Trump on 6 August issued an executive order giving the Chinese owned company 45 days to sell off or wind down.

    Trump cited security concerns for his action, accusing the parent company ByteDance of likely to turn users data to the Chinese government.

    TikTok and Bytedance denied the allegation.

    Here is the statement issued today:

    Today we are filing a complaint in federal court challenging the Administration’s efforts to ban TikTok in the US. As a company we have always focused on transparency, so we want to explain why we are taking this step.

    Over the past few years, people of all backgrounds have embraced the TikTok community. Today, 100 million Americans turn to TikTok for entertainment, inspiration, and connection; countless creators rely on our platform to express their creativity, reach broad audiences, and generate income; our more than 1,500 employees across the US pour their hearts into building this platform every day, with 10,000 more jobs planned in California, Texas, New York, Tennessee, Florida, Michigan, Illinois, and Washington State; and many of the country’s leading brands are on TikTok to connect with consumers more authentically and directly than they can elsewhere.

    Put simply, we have a thriving community and we are grateful – and responsible – to them.

    The Executive Order issued by the Administration on August 6, 2020 has the potential to strip the rights of that community without any evidence to justify such an extreme action, and without any due process. We strongly disagree with the Administration’s position that TikTok is a national security threat and we have articulated these objections previously.

    Now is the time for us to act. We do not take suing the government lightly, however we feel we have no choice but to take action to protect our rights, and the rights of our community and employees.

    In our complaint we make clear that we believe the Administration ignored our extensive efforts to address its concerns, which we conducted fully and in good faith even as we disagreed with the concerns themselves:

    “The executive order seeks to ban TikTok purportedly because of the speculative possibility that the application could be manipulated by the Chinese government. But, as the U.S. government is well aware, Plaintiffs have taken extraordinary measures to protect the privacy and security of TikTok’s U.S. user data, including by having TikTok store such data outside of China (in the United States and Singapore) and by erecting software barriers that help ensure that TikTok stores its U.S. user data separately from the user data of other ByteDance products. These actions were made known to the U.S. government during a recent U.S. national security review of ByteDance’s 2017 acquisition of a China-based company, Musical.ly. As part of that review, Plaintiffs provided voluminous documentation to the U.S. government documenting TikTok’s security practices and made commitments that were more than sufficient to address any conceivable U.S. government privacy or national security concerns…”

    The Administration ignored the great lengths that TikTok has gone to in order to demonstrate our commitment to serving the US market:

    “The key personnel responsible for TikTok, including its CEO, Global Chief Security Officer, and General Counsel, are all Americans based in the United States—and therefore are not subject to Chinese law. U.S. content moderation is likewise led by a U.S.-based team and operates independently from China, and, as noted above, the TikTok application stores U.S. user data on servers located in the United States and Singapore.”

    Further, as we note in our complaint, not only does the Executive Order ignore due process, it also authorizes the prohibition of activities that have not been found to be “an unusual and extraordinary threat,” as required by the International Emergency Economic Powers Act (IEEPA), under which the Administration is purportedly acting:

    “By banning TikTok with no notice or opportunity to be heard (whether before or after the fact), the executive order violates the due process protections of the Fifth Amendment.

    “The order is ultra vires because it is not based on a bona fide national emergency and authorizes the prohibition of activities that have not been found to pose ‘an unusual and extraordinary threat.’”

    In the complaint we also point to the fact that the August 6 Executive Order is a misuse of IEEPA:

    “…the actions directed in the August 6 executive order are not supported by the emergency declared a year earlier in Executive Order 13873.

    “That previous executive order was designed to address asserted U.S. national security concerns about certain telecommunications companies’ ability to abuse access to ‘information and communications technology and services’ that ‘store and communicate vast amounts of sensitive information, facilitate the digital economy, and support critical infrastructure and vital emergency services, in order to commit malicious cyber-enabled actions, including economic and industrial espionage against the United States and its people.’

    “TikTok Inc. is not a telecommunications provider and it does not provide the types of technology and services contemplated by the 2019 executive order. Specifically, TikTok Inc. does not provide the hardware backbone to ‘facilitate the digital economy,’ and TikTok Inc. has no role in providing ‘critical infrastructure and vital emergency services.’”

    In the complaint we also go into significant detail about the nearly year-long effort we made in good faith to provide the Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States (“CFIUS”) the voluminous information requested – was disregarded – and the numerous steps we offered to take in our commitment to transparency and cooperation:

    “In 2019, CFIUS contacted ByteDance to consider whether to review its acquisition of Musical.ly, a China-based video-sharing platform—even though Musical.ly was based in China and had very limited assets in the United States. This review was highly unusual in that ByteDance had acquired Musical.ly two years earlier in 2017, Musical.ly was previously Chinese-owned and based in China, and ByteDance had predominantly abandoned Musical.ly’s limited U.S. assets by the time of CFIUS’s outreach in 2019.

    “During this period, and through the course of the CFIUS review, ByteDance provided voluminous documentation and information in response to CFIUS’s questions. Among other evidence, ByteDance submitted detailed documentation to CFIUS demonstrating TikTok’s security measures to help ensure U.S. user data is safeguarded in storage and in transit and cannot be accessed by unauthorized persons—including any government—outside the United States.

    “CFIUS never articulated any reason why TikTok’s security measures were inadequate to address any national security concerns, and effectively terminated formal communications with Plaintiffs well before the conclusion of the initial statutory review period. Notwithstanding the U.S. government’s failure to identify any security risk, in an effort to address any conceivable concerns that the U.S. government may have and to assure continuity for the U.S. users who had come to value and cherish the platform that TikTok provides, Plaintiffs took the extraordinary step of offering to restructure their U.S. business…

    “Despite these repeated efforts and concrete proposals to alleviate any national security concerns, the agency record reflects that CFIUS repeatedly refused to engage with ByteDance and its counsel about CFIUS’s concerns.”

    Finally, despite all of these efforts, without the standard communication appropriate in a CFIUS case, and with little regard to the mitigation proposals that TikTok had made, CFIUS rushed out its decision within five minutes of its deadline:

    “At 11:55 p.m. on July 30, 2020—the final day of the statutory CFIUS review period—the Committee issued a letter stating that ‘CFIUS has identified national security risks arising from the Transaction and that it has not identified mitigation measures that would address those risks.’

    “The CFIUS letter was principally based on outdated news articles, failed to address the voluminous documentation that Plaintiffs had provided demonstrating the security of TikTok user data, and was flawed in numerous other respects.”

    Likewise, in the August 6 Executive Order issued under IEEPA, the Administration failed to follow due process and act in good faith, neither providing evidence that TikTok was an actual threat, nor justification for its punitive actions. We believe the Administration’s decisions were heavily politicized, and industry experts have said the same. As the complaint explains:

    “The executive order is not rooted in bona fide national security concerns. Independent national security and information security experts have criticized the political nature of this executive order, and expressed doubt as to whether its stated national security objective is genuine…

    “The President’s demands for payments have no relationship to any conceivable national security concern and serve only to underscore that Defendants failed to provide Plaintiffs with the due process required by law.”

    To be clear, we far prefer constructive dialogue over litigation. But with the Executive Order threatening to bring a ban on our US operations – eliminating the creation of 10,000 American jobs and irreparably harming the millions of Americans who turn to this app for entertainment, connection, and legitimate livelihoods that are vital especially during the pandemic – we simply have no choice.

    We will continue the work we have long been undertaking to earn the trust of our full US community. For example, our Transparency and Accountability Center is central among those ongoing efforts as an industry-leading step to build trust and understanding of our moderation policies, source code, and data practices. Our legal challenge is a protection to ensure that these efforts can take place without the threat of an unwarranted ban hovering like a dark cloud over the joy and creativity of our community.

  • Trump pressures authorities to develop COVID-19 vaccine before presidential poll

    Trump pressures authorities to develop COVID-19 vaccine before presidential poll

    U.S. President Donald Trump put pressure on the authorities to develop and approve a vaccine for the novel coronavirus in a tweet on Saturday.

    “The deep state, or whoever, over at the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) is making it very difficult for drug companies to get people in order to test the vaccines and therapeutics.

    “Obviously, they are hoping to delay the answer until after Nov. 3. Must focus on speed, and saving lives!” Trump tweeted.

    The tweet was directed at Stephen Hahn, the commissioner of the FDA.

    Trump has said in the past that he hopes that a vaccine is developed around the time of the election.

    Experts, however, have warned that any political interference in the vaccine testing and approval process could cast doubt and undermine its safety and legitimacy.

    Any concerns about the vaccine could lead to a lower level of uptake, making it harder to battle the pandemic.

    Hahn has repeatedly emphasized that the regulator will stick to its usual stringent scientific processes and has said that it has not faced any pressure to alter its criteria.

    Larger clinical studies are under way for several vaccine candidates, involving up to 30,000 subjects.

    If these are completed by autumn, the regulator could start the approval process, which is normally costly and lengthy.

    U.S. government experts, including the government’s infectious disease specialist Anthony Fauci, have said they are confident a vaccine could be available in early 2021.