Tag: U.S. President

  • Trump calls new indictment ‘rigged,’ deliberately filed during political campaign

    Trump calls new indictment ‘rigged,’ deliberately filed during political campaign

    Former U.S. President Donald Trump on Tuesday called an indictment approved by a Fulton County grand jury in the U.S. state of Georgia “rigged”.

    Trump added that it was deliberately presented in the midst of his political campaign and that the move was a “witch hunt.”

    On Monday night, the Fulton County grand jury indicted Trump on 13 criminal charges related to an investigation into an alleged attempt to overturn the results of the 2020 presidential election, according to a court document.

    Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis later told reporters that the grand jury had issued arrest warrants for the 19 defendants named in the indictment, but they all have until Aug. 25 to voluntarily surrender.

    “And what about those Indictment Documents put out today, long before the Grand Jury even voted, and then quickly withdrawn? Sounds Rigged to me!

    “Why didn’t they Indict 2.5 years ago? Because they wanted to do it right in the middle of my political campaign. Witch Hunt!” Trump said in a statement on Truth Social.

    He also said the “witch hunt” continued, calling the district attorney “out of control and very corrupt.”

    Several of the charges Trump is facing include violation of the Georgia RICO Act, solicitation of a violation of oath by a public officer, false statements and writings, and forgery, among others.

    Eighteen other associates have been also charged in the indictment, including Trump lawyer Rudy Giuliani and former Trump chief of staff Mark Meadows.

    Trump has repeatedly condemned the criminal proceedings against him as attempts to weaponise the U.S. justice system to prevent him from running in the 2024 U.S. presidential election and has denied any wrongdoing.

  • U.S. to “re-evaluate” relationship with Saudi Arabia over financial support for Russia- Biden

    U.S. to “re-evaluate” relationship with Saudi Arabia over financial support for Russia- Biden

    United States President, Joe Biden, Tuesday, revealed that America needs to “re-evaluate” its relationship with Saudi Arabia, especially in light of the decision by the OPEC+ oil cartel to cut production following the latter’s financial support for Russia after its invasion of Ukraine.

    According to the White House: “I think the president’s been very clear that this is a relationship that we need to continue to re-evaluate, that we need to be willing to revisit,” White House spokesman John Kirby said in an interview with CNN. “And certainly in light of the OPEC decision, I think that’s where he is.”

    Sen. Bob Menendez, the New Jersey Democrat who chairs the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, on Monday called on the U.S. to “immediately freeze all aspects of our cooperation with Saudi Arabia, including any arms sales and security cooperation beyond what is absolutely necessary to defend U.S. personnel and interests.”

    Menendez cited Saudi Arabia’s financial support for Russia after its invasion of Ukraine.

    His get-tough-on-Saudi-Arabia stance seems to be gaining traction with other Senate Democrats as the administration eyes conversations with Congress about the U.S. relationship with Saudi Arabia.

    On Tuesday, during a brief meeting meant to tee-up consideration of the National Defense Authorization Act next month, Senate Armed Services Chairman Jack Reed, a Rhode Island Democrat, told reporters that he is “very supportive of Menendez” and his efforts to end arm sales and security cooperation with Saudi Arabia.

    “I think we should look carefully at everything we’re sending them,” Reed said. “Because their inability to cooperate with the West and their willingness to cooperate with Russia is very disturbing.”

    Last week, Democratic Sen. Dick Durbin of Illinois, who chairs the Senate Judiciary Committee, called on the Senate to pass a bill that would allow the Justice Department to sue oil cartel members for antitrust violations, including, he said, “price fixing by OPEC” and its partners.

    Sen. Angus King, a Vermont independent who caucuses with Democrats, said he agrees with proposals to cease sending arms to Saudi Arabia.

    “Why should we? If they don’t have any ore concern for international security and stability of the world economy, why should we be helping them?” King said.

    Biden would be willing to start conversations with Congress “right away,” Kirby said.

    The move by OPEC+ could send oil prices higher, which in turn, could raise prices at the gas pump in the United States. Higher gas prices could hurt Biden and Democrats politically heading into this fall’s midterm elections.

    Biden traveled to Saudi Arabia in June to, in part, push the kingdom’s leaders to increase production.

    After OPEC+ announced the production cut last week, Biden’s top economic adviser, Brian Deese, told reporters the White House would “be assessing and consulting closely with Congress around a range of issues on the back end of this.”

    Deese, the director of the White House National Economic Council, declined to say whether the Biden administration thought the U.S. should continue to provide weapons and other military assistance to Saudi Arabia if the Gulf nation was not willing to keep the price of gas in the U.S. lower.

  • al-Qaeda leader, Ayman al-Zawahiri killed in a drone strike in Kabul

    al-Qaeda leader, Ayman al-Zawahiri killed in a drone strike in Kabul

    U.S President, Joe Biden has announced that the al-Qaeda leader, Ayman al-Zawahiri, has been killed in a drone strike in Kabul, Afghanistan, over the weekend.

    Biden hailed the operation of the U.S military as a significant win in the fight against terror groups overseas — including, as the White House was quick to point out almost a year after the messy exit from Afghanistan, in countries where the U.S. no longer maintains a military presence.

    U.S

    Al-Zawahiri was named the leader of al-Qaeda after Osama bin Laden was killed by U.S. forces in 2011

    In his words: “Justice has been delivered, and this terrorist leader is no more. People around the world no longer need to fear the vicious and determined killer,” Biden said, speaking from the White House where he is isolating with COVID-19.

    “The United States continues to demonstrate our resolve and our capacity to defend the American people against those who seek to do us harm,” he said. “We make it clear again tonight that no matter how long it takes, no matter where you hide, if you are a threat to our people, the United States will find you and take you out.”

     

    Briefing reporters on Monday ahead of Biden’s remarks, a senior administration official said that “we showed that without American forces on the ground in Afghanistan and in harm’s way, we remain able to identify and locate even the world’s most wanted terrorists and then take action to remove him from the battlefield.”

     

    The president said in his speech that al-Zawahiri had returned to the Afghan capital to be with family and was killed on Sunday morning local time. Al-Zawahiri was named the leader of al-Qaeda after Osama bin Laden was killed by U.S. forces in 2011 and officials believe he was a key part of the group’s international activities for decades.

    “He was deeply involved in the planning of 9/11, one of the most responsible for the attacks that killed 2,977 people on American soil. For decades, he was the mastermind behind attacks against Americans,” Biden said. “He carved a trail of murder and violence against American citizens, American service members, American diplomats and American interests.”

    al-Qaeda leader Ayman al-Zawahiri

    The U.S President said he hoped al-Zawahiri’s killing could offer a moment of relief for those who had family members killed in the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks.

    Biden was first briefed on al-Zawahiri’s whereabouts in April and was ultimately briefed on a proposed operation on July 1

     

    The U.S President spoke from the Blue Room Balcony as he announced that a U.S. airstrike killed al-Qaida leader Ayman al-Zawahri in Afghanistan, in Washington, Aug. 1, 2022.

    “We continue to mourn every innocent life that was stolen on 9/11 and honor their memories,” he said. “To the families who lost fathers and mothers, husbands, wives, sons and daughters, brothers and sisters, friends and coworkers on that searing September day, it is my hope that this decisive action will bring one more measure of closure.”

    The U.S. drone strike comes after collaboration from various parts of the counterterrorism community, the senior administration official told reporters earlier Monday.

     

    However, TheNewsGuru.com gathered from a separate source that the operation was carried out by the CIA.

    al-Qaeda leader Ayman al-Zawahiri

     

    Biden’s briefing on al-Zawahiri’s whereabouts in April
    The U.S President was first briefed on al-Zawahiri’s whereabouts in April and was ultimately briefed on a proposed operation on July 1, the administration official told reporters. Key Cabinet members and advisers were convened on July 25 to receive a final updated briefing on the intelligence assessment, which the official said continued to strengthen on a daily basis.

    “The president received an updated operational report and pressed at a granular level. He asked again about any other options that would reduce collateral or civilian casualties. He wanted to understand more about the layout of rooms [of al-Zawahiri’s safe house in Kabul] behind the door and windows on the third floor of the building,” the official said.

    “At the conclusion of the meeting, the president authorized a precise tailored airstrike on the condition that a strike minimize to the greatest extent possible the risk of civilian casualties. This authorization meant that the U.S. government could conduct an airstrike once an opportunity was available,” the official said.

    The U.S. is confident through intelligence sources and “multiple streams of intelligence that he was killed “and no other individual,” the official said.

    U.S
    al-Qaeda leader Ayman al-Zawahiri

    The successful remote strike against al-Zawahiri comes nearly a year after Biden presided over the turbulent U.S. military withdrawal from Afghanistan following two decades of war. He and his administration insisted then that the cost of involvement wasn’t worth the chaos and that the U.S. would still have the capability to track and eliminate terror threats without forces on the ground.

    “We showed that without American forces on the ground in Afghanistan and in harm’s way we remain able to identify and locate even the world’s most wanted terrorists and then take action to remove him from the battlefield,” the senior administration official said Monday.

     

    The exit from Afghanistan, which had been negotiated during the Trump administration, took place against the backdrop of an unexpectedly rapid takeover of the country by the Taliban, the armed group the U.S. had fought after invading in 2001.

     

    Biden was castigated by Republicans and others over his handling of the withdrawal.

    Evacuation efforts were also marred by an Islamic State attack at an airport checkpoint in Kabul as the U.S. military and others worked to ferry out civilians. Thirteen U.S. troops and dozens of Afghans were killed.

    On Monday, the senior administration official told reporters that al-Zawahiri had been staying in one of Kabul’s most affluent and prominent neighborhoods, near various diplomatic centers and international companies. The official confirmed that the ruling Taliban were aware of his presence in the area, knowledge that could further strain already tenuous relations with Washington.

    The official said that the Taliban sought to cover up al-Zawahiri’s presence at his safe house after the strike.

     

    “This is a very important point for us to make clear to the Taliban: that we expect them to abide by the terms of the Doha agreement, and the presence of al-Zawahiri in downtown Kabul is a clear violation of that,” the senior official said, referring to the agreement the Taliban negotiated with President Donald Trump in Doha, Qatar.

    “My administration will continue to vigilantly monitor and address threats from al-Qaeda, no matter where they emanate from,” Biden said in his speech from the White House.

     

    “The United States did not seek this war against terror, it came to us, and we answered with the same principles and resolve that have shaped us for generation upon generation: to protect [the] innocent, defend liberty, and we keep the light of freedom burning — a beacon for the rest of the entire world.”

  • Ex-wife of Donald Trump, Ivana Trump is dead

    Ex-wife of Donald Trump, Ivana Trump is dead

    Ivana Trump, Donald Trump’s first wife and the mother of his three oldest children, has died, the former president said Thursday.

    “I am very saddened to inform all of those that loved her, of which there are many, that Ivana Trump has passed away at her home in New York City,” the former president said in a post on his social media platform, Truth Social. “She was a wonderful, beautiful, and amazing woman, who led a great and inspirational life. Her pride and joy were her three children, Donald Jr., Ivanka, and Eric. She was so proud of them, as we were all so proud of her. Rest In Peace, Ivana!”

    According to CNBC, Ivana Trump was 73. Her cause of death is unknown.

    A former model who was born in Czechoslovakia, the former Ivana Zelnickova married then-businessman Donald Trump in 1977, and held key positions in his businesses, including the Trump Organization, during their 15-year marriage. The couple had three children — Donald Trump Jr., 44, Ivanka Trump, 40, and Eric Trump, 38.

    In a statement, the Trump children remembered their mother as “an incredible woman — a force in business, a world-class athlete, a radiant beauty, and caring mother and friend.”

    “Ivana Trump was a survivor. She fled from communism and embraced this country. She taught her children about grit and toughness, compassion, and determination. She will be dearly missed by her mother, her three children, and ten grandchildren,” they wrote.

     

  • President Biden new sanctions target Russian elites

    President Biden new sanctions target Russian elites

    U.S. President, Joe Biden, has announced a range of new sanctions against Russia, targeting the majority of the Duma and Russian elites.

    President Biden, while answering questions at a news conference at NATO headquarters in Brussels, Thursday, said the U.S. will welcome up to 100,000 refugees from Ukraine and provide $1 billion in new humanitarian aid.

    According to President Biden, he is facing pressure from Ukraine President, Volodymyr Zelenskky, to provide more deliverables to Ukraine.

    “Putin is getting exactly the opposite of what he intended to have as a consequence of going into Ukraine. He was banking on NATO being split,” he posited.

    The president made the foreign trip to attend an extraordinary summit of all 30 NATO leaders to reaffirm the U.S. commitment to NATO allies, participate in a pre-scheduled meeting of the European Council, the political body of the European Union, and meet with leaders of the Group of Seven, or G-7, major industrial nations.

    Biden also answered a definitive “yes,” when asked he believes that Russia should be removed from the G20, but noted that it “would depend on the G20” to make that decision.

    He said that point was raised today by G20 leaders and that he raised the possibility that if removing Russia can’t be done because of “Indonesia and others” not in agreement, Ukraine should be able to attend future G20 meetings.

  • PUBLIC DISPLAY: U.S President announces supply of drones to Ukraine

    PUBLIC DISPLAY: U.S President announces supply of drones to Ukraine

    Despite an emotional address to congress by Ukrainian President, Volodymyr Zelenskyy, where he pleaded for a no-fly zone, U.S President, Joe Biden, has announced that the U.S. is increasing its supply of missiles, firearms, and now drones to Ukraine in a public display.

    The White House has now detailed exactly what weaponry the U.S. is providing, when just weeks ago U.S. officials refused to say.

    The message is meant to not only reassure Ukraine of strong U.S. support but also send a message to Moscow that it will pay a bloody price for its invasion of its neighbor.

    “The American people are answering President Zelenskyy’s call for more help, more weapons for Ukraine to defend itself, more tools to fight Russian aggression, and that’s what we’re doing,” Biden said in an address Wednesday.

    That increase comes after intense pressure from Kyiv, as well as Washington, where lawmakers of both parties have urged Biden to escalate U.S. military support.

    U.S President has repeatedly cautioned against crossing certain lines, saying they would lead to “World War III.”

    Among them, the administration has ruled out implementing a no-fly zone, sending U.S. troops into Ukrainian territory, or having the U.S. directly provide Soviet-era warplanes from NATO allies like Poland.

    Instead, Biden said that an initial tranche of $800 million, from the nearly $14 billion Congress approved in humanitarian and military aid for Ukraine, would include 800 Stinger anti-aircraft missiles, 100 Switchblade drones, and 9,000 anti-armor missiles, including 2,000 Javelin anti-tank missiles.

    The Switchblade drone is the newest form of lethal assistance — a small kamikaze-style drone launched from a tube that can track and attack armored targets.

    Ukrainian armed forces have made powerful use of drones in their fight against invading Russian forces already, although some military analysts say the Switchblade is not powerful enough and the U.S. isn’t sending enough of them.

    “The Switchblade is a capable system, but has its drawbacks compared to some more modern versions of ‘loitering munitions’ that you can return to base and re-use,” said retired Gen. Robert Abrams, former chief of U.S. Forces Korea.

    To date, Ukraine has received thousands of Javelin missiles from the U.S. and other NATO allies, including approximately 2,600 from the U.S., the White House announced Wednesday.

    Javelins were once seen as too escalatory by the Obama administration to provide Ukraine after Russia first invaded its smaller, democratic neighbor in 2014, seizing the Crimean Peninsula and sparking a separatist war in the eastern provinces Donetsk and Luhansk.

    Now, the White House is confirming not just the delivery of thousands of them, but of hundreds of Stinger missiles.

    Still, there are many who say more must be done, from U.S. lawmakers to Ukrainian officials to leaders of NATO countries in the alliance’s eastern flank.

    After meeting Zelenskyy in Kyiv, for example, Jaroslaw Kaczynski, the powerful leader of Poland’s ruling party who serves as deputy prime minister, told reporters an international peacekeeping mission should be sent to Ukraine, with the means to defend itself.

    U.S. officials have ruled that out, starting with Biden and stretching to include Republican lawmakers.

    “[A] NATO no-fly zone seems to be a bridge too far for me and the administration,” said Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C.

    But he added that “there is bipartisan support for sending a package that includes fighter jets and air defense systems to Ukraine immediately so that we can have a Ukrainian no-fly zone manned by Ukrainian pilots and manned by missile systems in the hands of the Ukrainian military.”

    The administration is consulting with U.S. allies that have more advanced missile systems than the shoulder-fired Stingers and Javelins that have been provided so far, according to State Department and Pentagon officials.

     

    In particular, there are talks to resupply Soviet-era or Russian-made missile systems, they said — such as the S-300 missile battery.

    “Those are the systems on which they’re already using, the systems on which they’re already trained and have actually demonstrated great effect already,” State Department spokesperson Ned Price told reporters Wednesday.
    Only three NATO allies have the S-300 (Greece, Bulgaria, and Slovakia).

    Biden’s national security adviser Jake Sullivan spoke on Wednesday to his Greek counterpart, Dr. Thanos Dokos, including about “international efforts, to ensure Ukraine has the ability to defend itself,” the White House said.

    But the Pentagon has rejected an idea from Poland to have Polish Soviet-era warplanes known as MiG-29s transferred to U.S. custody and then passed onto Ukraine, saying a U.S. intelligence assessment warned the move would be seen as too escalatory by the Kremlin.

    “The equipment that we provided is defensive, as you know, not offensive, and we see that as being a difference,” White House press secretary Jen Psaki said Wednesday.

    To some, any lethal U.S. aid may be seen as crossing Putin’s red line after the strongman leader warned the world that countries interfering in his so-called “special military operation” would face “consequences you have never seen.”

    U.S. officials have said they’re still encouraging other countries to provide warplanes directly, but lawmakers continue to press the White House to get involved, especially after Zelenskyy’s address.

    “Never in the history of warfare have 28 planes meant so much to so many,” said Graham Wednesday.

    Ukraine already has a fleet of MiG-29s that the Pentagon has said they are not using often in part because Russia has not dominated the country’s airspace.

    In addition, fewer than half of Poland’s planes may be flyable, according to retired Gen. Joseph Ralston, the former commander of U.S. European Command and Supreme Allied Commander Europe.

    The Soviet-era planes require spare parts from Russia, out of the question in the current conflict, and constant maintenance, although providing their spare parts to the Ukrainians now be helpful, he said.

    “The MiG-29 issue has taken on more of a symbolic issue than it is a real-world issue,” Ralston said during an event at the Center for Strategic and International Studies.

    While the White House has publicly touted this aid in the midst of pressure to do more, it’s been very tight-lipped about how it is getting into Ukrainian hands. Russia has made clear that the delivery of military aid is a potential “target.”

    Russian Deputy Foreign Minister, Sergei Ryabkov, said “pumping Ukraine with weapons from a number of countries orchestrated by them is not just a dangerous move, but these are actions that turn the corresponding convoys into legitimate targets.”

  • U.S. President mulls over call for an end to normal trade relations with Russia

    U.S. President mulls over call for an end to normal trade relations with Russia

    U.S. President, Joe Biden, has reviewed to call for an end to normal trade relations with Russia on Friday, following their invasion of Ukraine.

     

    This was as the Senate approved a $1.5 trillion government funding bill with supplemental aid to Ukraine.

    According to a source familiar with the matter, the decision would give the White House clearance to increase tariffs on the Kremlin.

    The source stated: “Tomorrow President Biden will announce that the U.S., along with the G-7, European Union, will be calling to revoke Most Favored Nation status for Russia, or called permanent normal trade relations, ‘PNTR,’ in the U.S.

    “Each country will implement based on its own national processes. President Biden and the administration appreciate the bipartisan leadership of Congress and its calls for the revocation of the PNTR.

    “Following the announcement tomorrow, the Admin looks forward to working with Congress on legislation to revoke PNTR.”

    A bipartisan group of lawmakers has already publicly voiced support for this move.

    However, the government funding bill, which was passed late Thursday, includes $13.6 billion in supplemental aid to Ukraine by a vote of 68-31.

    President Joe Biden is expected to receive the legislation for his signature on the bill.

    In a statement, White House press secretary, Jen Psaki, thanked leaders for “getting this bill done” and said Biden “looks forward to signing it into law.”

    The statement in part read: “With these resources, we will be able to deliver historic support for the Ukrainian people as they defend their country and democracy.”

    The supplemental Ukrainian aid is split between defense and non-defense funding.

    It was gathered that the $1.5 trillion also includes funding for many of the administration’s priorities as well as sizable amounts for defense spending.

  • Iran’s new hardline president rules out meeting U.S. President

    Iran’s new hardline president rules out meeting U.S. President

    Iran’s newly elected President Ebrahim Raisi has declined the opprtunity t0 meet U.S. President Joe Biden.

    During the first news conference after his election win, he said he could not imagine meeting Biden, as he ignored the 2015 nuclear deal by supporting “inhuman sanctions” against the Iranian population.

    “Biden has to lift the sanctions first to make the United States look credible again in Iran.’’

    The 60-year-old won Friday’s presidential elections with 60 per cent of the vote as the top candidate of the hardliners camp.

    After most competitive candidates were weeded out by the electoral body, Raisi stood practically unopposed for election.

    Participation was at a record low at below 50 per cent, which observers said was a move to boycott the election.

    Raisi, an arch-conservative cleric who is close to Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei and is accused of human rights abuses, is set to be inaugurated in August.

    Negotiations have been going on for weeks on reviving the 2015 nuclear deal which has been in tatters since former U.S. President Donald Trump pulled the country out of the accord in 2018.

    However, it has not shown signs of breakthrough after six rounds of talks in Vienna and it remains unclear how Raisi’s win would affect them.

  • How my involvement in politics, decision to run for U.S. President ruined my marriage – Kanye West

    How my involvement in politics, decision to run for U.S. President ruined my marriage – Kanye West

    Kanye West has an idea as to why his marriage is ending: his involvement in politics and decision to run for the presidency.

    On Friday, news broke that West’s wife, reality star Kim Kardashian, had filed for divorce after nearly seven years of marriage.

    While previous reports indicated that there were a handful of factors that led to their split — property, lifestyle and more — politics was also mentioned.

    West, 43, famously threw his name in the ring during the 2020 presidential election, only securing his name on the ballot in 12 states.

    He conceded the longshot election before the race between Donald Trump and Joe Biden was called.

    Following the news of the divorce filing, West has been “texting people” and “talking things through,” an insider told People magazine.

    “He’s in that place of ‘if only,’” the source said. “‘If only I had done this, if only I hadn’t done that.’ He’s processing things.”

    Additionally, the source claimed that the hip-hop star “thinks that the Presidential run was the straw that broke the camel’s back.”

    “Before that, there was hope. After that, none,” the insider further claimed. “It cost him his marriage.”

    In fact, a source previously told Page Six that the campaign was the “final straw” for Kardashian while another source said that she had opposed the idea from the beginning.

    People magazine also learned from a source that while West “isn’t happy” with the divorce, he’s “resigned to reality.”

    “He knew it was coming, but that doesn’t make it any easier,” said the insider. “This is a somber day for him.”

    The divorce is as “amicable as possible,” said the source, noting that “amicable doesn’t mean joyful or ideal.”

    West and Kardashian, 40, are “being adults” about the split. The source also revealed that the rapper is “seeing counselors and advisors to help him through this spot.”

    The information comes not long after a report surfaced that West was “not doing well” ahead of the divorce filing.

    “He is anxious and very sad,” another insider told People. “He knows that the marriage is over, and there’s nothing that can be done right now.”

    They added: “He also knows what he is losing in Kim.”

    The source also said that the “Keeping Up with the Kardashians” star has “defended [West] privately to her family” and “stood beside him at a time where a few wives would have done that.”

    “He is very aware that she has been a good wife. He still loves her very much. But he understands,” said the source, who explained that Kardashian feels “she can’t be married to him anymore.”

    Reps for Kardashian and West did not immediately respond to Fox News’ request for comment.

    Reported by Fox News

  • Ex-U.S. President, Donald Trump returns to social media

    Ex-U.S. President, Donald Trump returns to social media

    Immediate past United States President, Donald Trump has returned to the social media space after a hard hit by the Silicon valley tech giant regulators.

    In his first post to the site since 8 January, Trump uploaded his lawyer’s response to demands he testifies at his second impeachment hearing next week.

    Trump had resorted to releasing statements from the Office of the Former President after he and his campaign presence was scrubbed from the internet by Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, Reddit, Snapchat, Twitch, Shopify, Stripe, and YouTube, among others.

    While his return to social media was just a repost his lawyers’ letter, the phrasing carried the ex-president’s characteristic defiance, according to the Independent.

    “We are in receipt of your latest public relations stunt,” attorneys David Schoen and Bruce Castor Jr wrote.

    “Your letter only confirms what is known to everyone: you cannot prove your allegations against the 45th President of the United States, who is now a private citizen. The use of our Constitution to bring a purported impeachment proceeding is much too serious to try to play these games.”

    Trump’s attorneys were responding to requests from Congressman Jamie Raskin that the ex-president appear before or during the trial, subject to cross-examination, pointing to the testimonies of former presidents Gerald Ford and Bill Clinton while in office.