China on Thursday issued a video threat to Hong Kong protesters. This reflects my warning last week that Beijing is moving toward crushing the protests with its military.

The newly released video certainly isn’t shy in making that message.

Showing the Peoples Liberation Army’s various branches in training exercises, the video takes pains to focus on counterprotester operations. In an ominous homage to the Tiananmen Square massacre, one protest-focused scene shows armored obstacle-clearance vehicles. A soldier leading riot troops warns protesters, “All consequences are at your own risk!” Later in the video another soldier shouts “annihilated” as munitions destroy their targets.

As I say, the messaging isn’t exactly subtle.

But it does reflect Xi Jinping’s great anger and concern over what is happening in Hong Kong.

As Beijing sees it, the the state’s supremacy is steadily being degraded. Hong Kong, it fears, could be the inspiration to other insurrectionist movements on the mainland. But even if not, Hong Kong portrays China in a way that Xi despises: uncertain and lacking control.

One thing the video omits, however, is Chinese intelligence officers in Hong Kong. While China’s Ministry of State Security operates a bureau on Hong Kong soil, it has significantly boosted its operational presence in support and de facto direction of the Hong Kong police. The MSS’ hand can be seen in the increasing role of violent mafia-associated counter-forces in attacking protesters. This effort will have been complemented with PLA signal intelligence units tasked with helping the police arrest protest ringleaders.

Regardless, this video makes clear that China is growing impatient. It is sadly inevitable that the protests will either cool or Beijing will crush them. You can watch the video below.

Source Article from https://www.washingtonexaminer.com/opinion/chinas-ominous-video-threat-to-hong-kong-protesters

President Trump said he was unsure if he would be able to stop the “send her back” chants directed toward Democratic Rep. Ilhan Omar if they begin during his upcoming rally.

The president spoke to reporters on the West Lawn prior to his departure for his Thursday night rally in Cincinnati, Ohio. Trump eventually denounced the chants of “send her back!” that erupted while he assailed Omar during his last rally in North Carolina.

“Are you prepared to tell your supporters to stop if they begin chanting something problematic?” a reporter asked.

“I do not know what’s going to happen. I can tell you this: I’m going to Cincinnati. The arena’s a very large one. We can sell it out probably 10 times, from what I hear. The applications for seats, as you know, never had an empty seat, the applications are very big. I have no idea. We have a great group of people,” Trump said.

“They love our country,” the president continued. “They love the job we are doing. And when they see the kind of people that want to represent us from the last two nights, that is not what they want. I do not know. I can’t tell you whether or not they’re going to do that chant. If they do the chant, we will have to see what happens. I don’t know that you can stop people, I don’t know that you can. I mean, we will see what we can do. I prefer that they don’t. If they do it, we will have to make a decision then.”

The original chant came only days after Trump attacked Omar and three of her colleagues and argued that they should go back to the countries they come from if they are unhappy in the U.S.

Source Article from https://www.washingtonexaminer.com/news/trump-unsure-if-he-can-stop-future-problematic-chants

CLOSE

Saoirse Kennedy Hill, the granddaughter of Robert F. Kennedy, died at the Kennedy compound in Hyannis Port, Massachusetts Thursday. She was 22. 

The Kennedy family confirmed her death in a statement to the Associated Press, saying, “Our hearts are shattered by the loss of our beloved Saoirse.”

“She lit up our lives with her love, her peals of laughter and her generous spirit,” the statement said, noting that Hill was passionate about human rights, women’s empowerment and volunteer work in indigenous communities. “We will love her and miss her forever.”

Hill was the only child of Courtney Kennedy Hill, the fifth of Robert and Ethel Kennedy’s eleven children. Hill’s father is Paul Michael Hill, one of four falsely convicted in the 1974 Irish Republican Army bombings of two pubs.

Robert’s widow Ethel, 91, said the “world is a little less beautiful today” following her granddaughter’s sudden death. 

The night the light faded: Bobby Kennedy’s assassination changed history

Although the political family’s statement did not list a cause of death, the New York Times and The Hyannis News report that Hill died of an apparent overdose. 

The Cape and Islands District Attorney’s Office told the Times and People that Barnstable police responded to “a reported unattended death” Thursday afternoon.

“The matter remains under investigation by the Barnstable police as well as state police detectives assigned to the Cape and Islands District Attorney’s Office,” Assistant District Attorney Tara Miltimore said. 

The district attorney’s office did not immediately respond to USA TODAY’s request for comment.

Hill was a member of Boston College’s class of 2020, the university confirmed to the Boston Globe. Before that, she attended Deerfield Academy in Deerfield, Massachusetts, where she opened up about her struggles with mental illness. 

“My depression took root in the beginning of my middle school years and will be with me for the rest of my life,” she wrote in a 2016 essay for the school’s student newspaper. “Although I was mostly a happy child, I suffered bouts of deep sadness that felt like a heavy boulder on my chest.”

Hill revealed that she “attempted to take my own life” two weeks before her junior year began and took a “medical leave” from school to receive treatment for depression. She said she returned to Deerfield Academy her senior year. 

“Just because the illness may not be outwardly visible doesn’t mean the person suffering from it isn’t struggling,” she wrote. “Let’s come together to make our community more inclusive and comfortable.”

Saoirse’s death adds to the compendium of tragedies that have befallen the Kennedy family, exemplifying the so-called “Kennedy curse.” Among such tragedies is the assassination of her grandfather, “Bobby” Kennedy, who was killed the same night he won the New York and California presidential primaries in the 1968 election. Bobby’s death was preceded by the assassination of his brother, former president Kennedy, in 1963. 

Other members of the Kennedy family have died from other causes, including plane crashes, World War II combat, alcohol and drug addiction, and various other accidents. Those individuals include a brother and sister of former president John and congressman Bobby, as well as the former president’s son, wife, and sister-in-law. 

Additionally, last month marked the 50th anniversary of the Chappaquiddick incident, in which Edward “Ted” Kennedy, then a senator, drove off a bridge on Chappaquiddick Island in Martha’s Vineyard. Though he survived, his 28-year-old passenger, Mary Jo Kopechne, was killed.

Saoirse’s uncle, David Anthony Kennedy, struggled with alcohol and drug addiction and was found dead in 1984 at a Palm Beach hotel, the Times reported. Thirty years afterward, Saoirse wrote an online message to her uncle, in which she called him a “kind and gentle spirit who went through unimaginable struggles” in his life, according to the Times.

Contributing: Associated Press

Source Article from https://www.usatoday.com/story/entertainment/celebrities/2019/08/01/robert-f-kennedys-granddaughter-saoirse-hill-dies-22/1897137001/


In recent days, President Donald Trump has left some allies feeling uneasy about his connection to voters in America’s heartland. | John Minchillo/AP Photo

2020 elections

At a Cincinnati rally, the president casts the Democratic primary as a referendum on Barack Obama’s legacy.

CINCINNATI — In a state he hopes to capture again next November, President Donald Trump on Thursday accused his “extremist left-wing” opponents of ruining America’s inner cities — escalating his attacks against influential progressive voices and painting the Democratic presidential primary as a referendum on Barack Obama’s legacy.

“I was watching the Democrats’ debate last night … and the Democrats spent more time attacking Barack Obama than they did attacking me,” Trump said at a crowded rally here.

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It was Trump’s first trip to Cincinnati for a campaign event since he warned voters on the eve of the 2018 midterm elections that Democrats would “take a wrecking ball” to the U.S. economy if they won control of the House of Representatives. He painted the same bleak picture for his supporters on Thursday, claiming that a Democratic victory next fall would subject Ohioans to higher taxes, fewer jobs and “socialist” policies that could make the U.S. unrecognizable.

“The rage-filled Democrat Party is trying to tear America apart. The Democrat Party is now being led by four left-wing extremists who reject everything that we believe in,” Trump said, referencing the four first-term congresswomen of color — Reps. Ilhan Omar, Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, Ayanna Pressley and Rashida Tlaib — whom he targeted in a series of tweets last month.

“No one has paid a higher price for the far left’s destructive agenda than Americans living in our inner cities,” he added.

Campaign advisers said the president views this campaign stop as an opportunity to reset the narrative following back-to-back Democratic primary debates this week in Detroit. Nearly every candidate excoriated Trump for stirring up racial animus, in addition to criticizing his trade, health care and immigration policies.

The president has alternated his attacks against Democratic rivals over the past few months, often directing his ire toward whichever candidate is dominating the news cycle that week or gaining ground in primary polls. But on Thursday, Trump specifically went after Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.), who drew praise for her debate performance this week.

“She’s lying and cheating her way through” the presidential primary, Trump said. “She defrauded people with her credentials. She said, ‘I’m Indian,’ and I said, ‘I have more Indian blood than she does and I have none. I’m sorry.’”

He also mocked former Vice President Joe Biden, 76, for his age, suggesting the current Democratic front-runner would be taken advantage of as president because he as “no clue what the hell he is doing.”

“They’d say, ‘Sleepy Joe, Sir, just sign right there,’” Trump said, mimicking White House staffers.

Trump’s team previewed his message in a statement earlier Thursday that sought to underscore his appeal in the industrial Midwest — and mocked Democrats for handing him “another win” with their onstage bickering.

“Plenty of socialist stupidity — eliminating private insurance, decriminalizing border crossings, higher taxes, getting rid of fossil fuels,” campaign spokeswoman Kayleigh McEnany said in a statement.

“Goodbye Pennsylvania. Goodbye auto industry. Goodbye Midwest,” she added.

Melinda Soliz, a Cincinnati native who tuned in to parts of the Democratic debates, said she was less than impressed with the candidates. But, she added, “Biden was OK, I guess.” Soliz said she’s loyal to Trump — for now.

“If the situation changes with the economy, I could change my mind,” Soliz told POLITICO before the rally began.

In recent days, Trump has left some allies feeling uneasy about his connection to voters in America’s heartland. His return to racial politics has done little to boost his approval in the suburbs of Rust Belt cities that many white working-class voters and union members — two demographics that the Trump campaign is targeting — consider home.

One poll released last Thursday, on the heels of the president’s attacks on the four minority congresswomen and before his weekend Twitter rant against Rep. Elijah Cummings (D-Md.), found Democratic front-runner Joe Biden besting the president in Ohio by 8 percentage points — 50 to 42 percent — in a hypothetical general election matchup.

Other polls conducted over the past two weeks have shown the president receiving high marks for the state of the economy, while highlighting voters’ broad disapproval of his racially charged rhetoric. Even among Trump’s supporters, a Fox News survey found a 17-point decline from August 2017 to present of those who believe he respects racial minorities.

But Trump campaign officials say they’re optimistic about capturing voters who disagree with his rhetoric, yet struggle to stomach some of the far-left policies presented by his Democratic opponents. As long as progressive Democrats maintain their current positions on immigration, taxes and health care, aides say, Trump can use them to his advantage.

It’s precisely what Trump sought to do when he took the stage in Cincinnati. Standing before an adoring crowd in the U.S. Bank Arena, he ticked through cultural issues and cast the Democratic Party as far “outside the mainstream.”

“Democrats are now the party of high taxes, high crime, late-term abortion, and they’re the party, frankly, of socialism,” he said.

As he worked through themes that have become a staple of his 2020 campaign, Trump was careful to avoid the same lines that led supporters at a rally last week to chant, “Send her back,” at the mention of Omar (D-Minn.). Prior to arriving here, Trump said he would “prefer” that his fans avoid the chant Thursday night.

“I didn’t care for that. It’s inappropriate,” said Soliz, the Cincinnati native.

Another part of the Trump campaign’s strategy in swing states like Ohio includes forming various coalition groups whose members will serve as pro-Trump surrogates in their communities. The campaign has already announced a women’s coalition and Latino coalition, and has plans to unveil an African American coalition this summer.

“‘Women for Trump’ will not only highlight the president’s clear record of success during his first term, but will share a vision of empowerment and prosperity for every person in every corner of our country,” Lara Trump, the president’s daughter-in-law, said of the coalition she spearheads.

There are some in Trump’s camp who, in addition to congressional Republican leaders, want the president to trade his divisive commentary on race and immigration for safer talking points on jobs and the economy. A reminder of their preference hung behind the president as he took the stage on Thursday: Two enormous red banners hung high above Trump’s head with “JOBS! JOBS! JOBS!” emblazoned across them.

Thursday could have been an ideal opportunity for Trump to tout such progress. Just hours before he arrived here, the Senate passed a two-year budget deal with bipartisan support that erases the threat of a debt default until after the election next year and increases military and domestic spending by $320 billion over the two years. Trump is expected to sign the bill into law.

Trump carried Ohio, a battleground state with 18 electoral votes, by 8 points over Hillary Clinton in 2016. His current approval rating in the state could paint a grim picture, though, as he seeks a second term. Fifty percent of Ohio voters in a June poll by Morning Consult said they disapproved of Trump’s job performance, compared with 46 percent who gave the president high marks.

Source Article from https://www.politico.com/story/2019/08/01/trump-ohio-rally-1444843

President Trump on Thursday escalated his attacks on Baltimore and other diverse, liberal cities, telling a crowd in this key swing state that Democrats “deliver poverty for their constituents and privilege for themselves.”

“For decades, these communities have been run exclusively by Democrat politicians, and it’s been total one-party control of the inner cities,” Trump said. He called federal funding sent to these areas “stolen money and it’s wasted money, and it’s a shame.”

And he invited members of the crowd to criticize Baltimore, asking them to shout out the names of countries with comparable homicide rates. When one supporter yelled out, “Afghanistan,” Trump repeated him, saying, “I believe it’s higher than Afghanistan,” prompting laughter from some in the crowd.

Trump steered clear of mentioning lawmakers by name, in a departure from his recent attacks on Rep. Elijah E. Cummings (D-Md.), whose district includes parts of Baltimore, and four minority Democratic congresswomen, including Rep. Ilhan Omar (Minn.).

On Thursday night, he made only a passing mention to “four left-wing extremists” who he said are now leading the Democratic Party, then told the crowd in the mostly full U.S. Bank Arena: “We can name one after another, but I won’t do that, because I don’t want to be controversial. We want no controversy.”

The president’s remarks were in line with his recent denunciations of liberal enclaves as violent, dirty and outside the mainstream. Trump offered no policy proposals for how he plans to address the problems he says plague numerous cities across the country.

Trump has accused the four Democratic congresswomen — Reps. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (N.Y.), Rashida Tlaib (Mich.), Ayanna Pressley (Mass.) and Omar — of being overly critical of America and said they “can’t get away with it” as long as he is president.

At the same time, Trump himself has been heavily critical of urban parts of the country, both in recent days and at the rally, where he took aim at cities including San Francisco, Los Angeles and Chicago.

As protesters disrupted his remarks in Cincinnati on Thursday night, Trump sought to blame the city’s Democratic leader, declaring, “You must have a Democrat mayor. Come on, law enforcement.”

Trump won Ohio by eight percentage points over former secretary of state Hillary Clinton in 2016, and the state is key to his 2020 reelection bid.

In recent days, Trump has escalated his attacks on Baltimore and Cummings, the House Oversight Committee chairman who has been spearheading investigations into Trump’s administration. Trump began by tweeting Saturday that Cummings represents a “disgusting, rat and rodent infested mess” and that “No human being would want to live there.” The president lashed out anew on Tuesday, calling the city “corrupt” and saying its residents are “living in hell.”

The president kicked off his remarks by mocking the Democratic White House candidates who sparred on the debate stage in Detroit on Wednesday night.

“The Democrats spent more time attacking Barack Obama than they did attacking me, practically, and this morning, that’s all the fake news was talking about,” Trump said, prompting boos from the crowd. “That wasn’t pretty.”

But his remarks later meandered. At one point, he claimed that AIDS and childhood cancer would soon be cured. At another, during a span of 90 seconds, Trump moved from a long riff on how he learned to pronounce Lima, Ohio, to declaring that U.S. astronauts will go to Mars to attacking a teleprompter for being “boring.” The crowd seemed to lose the thread, as they did during a longer riff about the perils and problems of windmills, long a Trump target.

“If a windmill is within two miles of your house, your house is practically worthless,” Trump said.

There were no “Send her back!” chants during Trump’s remarks Thursday night, unlike the crowd’s response during a rally in Greenville, N.C., last month to the president’s attacks on Omar, who was born in Somalia.

The chant echoed the racist remarks Trump aimed at Omar, Pressley, Tlaib and Ocasio-Cortez days earlier. Trump has accused the four lawmakers of making hateful comments about the country, setting off a controversy that led the House to vote to formally rebuke him.

Trump had earlier tweeted that the four Democrats should “go back” to “the crime infested places from which they came.” All four congresswomen are U.S. citizens, and only Omar was not born in the United States.

Trump later distanced himself from the chant and falsely claimed that he had tried to stop it, even though he paused for 13 seconds in Greenville to allow the chant to continue.

Ahead of Thursday’s rally, Trump had voiced skepticism about his ability to stop his supporters from chanting, telling reporters outside the White House that he wasn’t sure whether it was possible.

“I don’t know that you can stop people,” Trump said when asked whether he would stop his supporters if they began the “Send her back!” chant. “I don’t know that you can. I mean, we’ll see what we can do. I’d prefer that they don’t. But if they do it, we’ll have to make a decision then.”

Asked whether he had a message for his supporters, Trump said, “I do have a message . . . You know what my message is? I love them. And I think they love me. I actually think they love me.”

Trump supporters outside the arena Thursday afternoon had mixed reactions when asked whether they planned to join in if the crowd broke out into chants of “Send her back!”

Some, like Shawn Meinhardt, a 50-year-old from Ohio, embraced the chant.

“I would have to say I agree with the chant because I’m ex-military,” he said. “Some of the things she says are so anti-
Semitic it’s ridiculous. I have to be honest and say I’d probably join in if it was chanted tonight.”

Several rallygoers said they would steer clear of saying “Send her back,” even though they empathized with those who chanted it in Greenville.

Omar has “been very vocal about America and putting it down, so I think that people have reached a point where they’ve had enough,” said Andrea Shannon, 53. “I don’t think I would join in, as I don’t agree with the ‘send her back’ sentiment, but I understand people’s frustration.”

Others commented on the religion of Omar, who is one of two Muslim women who were elected to the House last year.

“I wouldn’t join in with that chant,” said Tom Smith, a 65-year-old from Ohio. “She’s a naturalized citizen. But she doesn’t assimilate, and that’s the whole thing. I don’t think Omar has, and I don’t think she wants to. Islam is not a religion that conforms to anything. Islam wants you to conform to it.”

Omar, meanwhile, tweeted photos of herself Thursday with House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) as part of a congressional delegation to Ghana. Omar is one of more than a dozen Congressional Black Caucus members who are on the trip.

Coinciding with the 400th anniversary of the arrival of the first enslaved Africans in America, the trip included meetings with Ghanaian lawmakers and a visit to the “Door of No Return,” through which millions of Africans passed before being shipped off and sold into slavery.

“They said ‘send her back’ but Speaker @SpeakerPelosi didn’t just make arrangements to send me back, she went back with me,” Omar tweeted. “So grateful for the honor to return to Mother Africa with the @TheBlackCaucus and commemorate The Year of Return!”

Sonmez reported from Washington.

Source Article from https://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/trump-escalates-attacks-on-baltimore-and-other-cities–says-federal-funds-have-been-stolen-wasted/2019/08/01/cc5b438e-b475-11e9-8949-5f36ff92706e_story.html

China can hold out longer than the US in the trade war,…

While U.S. President Donald Trump’s “No. 1 priority” is to get reelected next year, China is trying to wait out the American election cycle, said Eric Robertsen, head of…

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Source Article from https://www.cnbc.com/2019/08/02/us-china-trade-war-trump-is-misreading-beijings-pressure-points.html

President Trump’s recent tweets about Baltimore, rats, and the city’s political leadership have roiled Washington and prompted another round of cries of “racism” from the usual race hustlers, who are seeking out every camera they can find. But rather than focus on whether or not Trump is a racist, how about we focus on the man’s words? Are they true?

Yes, they are.

First elected to the U.S. House of Representatives in 1995, Elijah Cummings has represented Maryland’s 7th Congressional District (which includes Baltimore City) for the past 23 years. Prior to that, Cummings was an elected member of Maryland’s House of Delegates, representing District 39 (also Baltimore City) beginning in 1983. In all, Cummings has represented Baltimore for 36 years.

What has Baltimore to show for Cummings’ years of representation? Here are a few examples. In 2017, 13 high schools in the city of Baltimore were found to have zero students — not a single one — who were proficient in math. And out of the 3,804 students in all who took the state math proficiency test, only 14 were proficient.

Baltimore’s schools perform this poorly despite the fact that residents of Baltimore pay 3.2% city income tax, the maximum local income tax rate allowed by state law in an already high-tax state. Take that as further proof that throwing money at problems doesn’t necessarily solve them.

Crime in Baltimore is, simply put, out of control. With over 2,000 violent crimes per 100,000 people, in the year 2017 Baltimore was well within the most dangerous than 1% of U.S. cities.

And then, there’s the rats, the mention of which generated much of the ire directed at Trump. He claimed that Baltimore is “rat infested,” causing some left-wing pundits to claim he was using code to refer to “black and brown people.” Yet, once again, the issue is whether he was right. And he was. The city has a very real rat infestation problem.

Baltimore’s rats have long been the subject of commentary in the news and in social media. From both sides of the political aisle, everyone from Barack Obama and Bernie Sanders to Ben Carson and Baltimore’s former Mayor Catherine Pugh (who resigned in May amid federal and state corruption investigations) have been outed on the web for having publicly commented on the city’s filth and squalor in years past. A 2018 video has surfaced of Pugh touring her miserable city and nearly gagging on her own words as she exclaimed, “You can smell the rats … Oh my God, you can smell the dead animals.”

So, yes, there are rats. A lot of rats. So many rats that one citizen created a full feature-length documentary film about Baltimore’s rats. The city and county themselves launched the “Rat Attack Program” to battle the epidemic, sadly without much success.

On Monday, Baltimore’s local Fox broadcasting affiliate WBFF was reporting on Trump’s tweetstorm when, as if sensing its opportunity for two seconds of fame, a rat ran through the frame effectively photobombing the Fox45 reporter’s live shot!

As a black American pundit, I am often asked whether I think Trump is a racist. I do not, but the answer I always give is that I don’t care. What I care about is the truth.

The point is that the overarching focus on race accomplishes nothing. And if the focus is simply on truth, then in this case, Trump is unquestionably right.

That Baltimore’s political leadership has failed its constituents is inarguable. That’s why those same political figures, along with the race hustlers of the day, repeatedly pull out the same card they’ve been playing for decades. They get away with it by accusing their own accusers of racism. They choose to focus on accusations of intent rather than substance of the issue.

Baltimore is steeped in squalor, and the black community there bears the brunt of its inept, corrupt political leadership. Trump hasn’t had time to cause that in his less than three years in office. But in less than three seconds, his tweet has shone a glaring spotlight onto it, and that bright light is causing the rats to scurry.

Derrick Wilburn is a Centennial Institute fellow, founder of BlackandConservative.com, and executive director of Rocky Mountain Black Conservatives.

Source Article from https://www.washingtonexaminer.com/opinion/op-eds/the-trouble-with-trumps-tweets-about-baltimore-is-that-they-are-true

The Pentagon is preparing to withdraw thousands of troops from Afghanistan as part of a proposed peace deal with the Taliban, U.S. officials told Fox News Thursday.

One official warned the withdrawal would be subject to the completion of any agreement. So far, no such deal has been finalized.

“While RS [Resolute Support] or DOD [The Department of Defense] can speak with more authority on this issue, we have not adjusted our troop levels in Afghanistan to reflect our discussions with either the Afghan government or the Taliban,” a State Department official told Fox News. “The presence of U.S. forces has long been conditions-based.  Adjustments over the years have been conditions-based.  And any future reductions or withdrawal of forces will also be conditions-based.”

The Trump administration has undertaken eight rounds of negotiations with the Taliban, which controlled Afghanistan between 1996 and 2001, led by envoy Zalmay Khalilzad, the Afghan-born former U.S. ambassador to Kabul. Khalilzad has hinted that a peace agreement could be reached in the next round of talks, scheduled to be held in Qatar later this week.

“In Doha, if the Taliban do their part, we will do ours, and conclude the agreement we have been working on,” he tweeted Wednesday, adding that he was, “Wrapping up my most productive visit to #Afghanistan since I took this job as Special Rep.”

US SOLDIERS KILLED IN APPARENT AFGHANISTAN ‘INSIDER’ ATTACK IDENTIFIED

The agreement would require the Taliban to broker a peace deal directly with the Afghan government, and give assurances the country won’t be used as a launching pad for international terror attacks. However, some officials have concerns about how to hold the group accountable. The Washington Post reported that if finalized, the agreement would cut the number of troops in the country from 14,000 to between 8,000 and 9,000.

Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., tweeted his skepticism about the potential deal saying he was “[v]ery interested to see what kind of deal is made with the Taliban in Afghanistan. One thing I know for certain— al-Qaeda [sic] and ISIS will never be at the negotiating table.”

“Mr. President, keep your foot on their throat!” Graham continued. “A meaningful counter-terrorism force is an insurance policy against another 9/11. Fight them there so they don’t ever come here again!”

Graham added that “any agreement will be a good deal for America that protects our homeland, our allies, and our interests. It is one thing to end the war with honor and security. It is another to simply hope it goes away.”

In an interview with Fox News’ Tucker Carlson last month, Trump said the U.S. had already cut the number of forces down to 9,000 from the current 14,000. By comparison, there were 100,000 U.S. troops in Afghanistan.

“I have pulled a lot out,” Trump said. “We were at 16,000. We’re down to about 9,000, which a lot of people don’t know … “

In the same interview, the president also expressed frustration with the cost of rebuilding Afghanistan since the 2001 NATO invasion following the 9/11 attacks.

“With Afghanistan, it’s 19 years and we should not have been there 19 years and if we were, you know, it would be nice to fight to win,” he said. “But it’s just 19 years. They’re building hotels — we are. I mean, we had a Holiday Inn that cost numbers that would be 10 times what it should have cost.”

The Taliban have refused to recognize the Kabul government, viewing it as an American puppet. The insurgents effectively control around half the country and continue to carry out daily attacks on Afghan security forces.

AFGHAN WOMEN FEAR RENEWED CHAPTER OF SHARIA LAW, REGRESSION OF RIGHTS UNDER TALIBAN’S THUMB

As a result, the Afghan National Security and Defense Forces are losing troops at the fastest rate in years, according to Washington’s watchdog on the billions of dollars the U.S. spends in Afghanistan. For the fourth quarter in a row, Afghan troop levels were at their lowest levels since 2015, when the U.S. and NATO Resolute Support mission began, according to the quarterly report from the Special Inspector General for Afghan Reconstruction.

The U.S. has lost more than 2,400 soldiers in its longest war and has spent more than $900 billion on everything from military operations to the construction of roads, bridges and power plants.

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Khalilzad has held a series of meetings with Pakistani and Afghan officials over the past several months to brief them about the outcome of his meetings with the Taliban, who are talking to prominent Afghans in Kabul.

The most recent such talks among Afghans were held in July in Doha. The Taliban have said that once they reach an agreement with the U.S., they would be open to intra-Afghan talks, but any government representatives would have to participate in a personal capacity.

Fox News’ Lucas Tomlinson and The Associated Press contributed to this report.

Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/world/us-afghanistan-taliban-troop-withdrawal-tentative-peace-deal

The 22-year-old granddaughter of Robert F. Kennedy died Thursday at the fabled political family’s compound in Hyannisport, Mass., the family said in a statement.

Saoirse Kennedy Hill was the daughter of Courtney Kennedy Hill, the fifth of 11 children born to the late New York senator and wife Ethel, The New York Times reported. She attended Boston College, where she was a member of the class of 2020, the university confirmed to The Boston Globe.

JOHN F. KENNEDY JR. DIDN’T UNDERSTAND WHY PEOPLE WERE FASCINATED BY HIS FATHER’S DEATH, SAYS PAL

Robert F. Kennedy’s granddaughter Saoirse Kennedy Hill places a white rose at the Eternal Flame, President John F. Kennedy’s gravesite, at Arlington National Cemetery in Arlington, Va., June 6, 2000. Hill died Thursday at age 22.<br>
​​​​​​(Associated Press)

“Our hearts are shattered by the loss of our beloved Saoirse,” the family statement said. “Her life was filled with hope, promise and love. She cared deeply about friends and family, especially her mother Courtney, her father Paul, her stepmother Stephanie, and her grandmother Ethel.”

The statement quoted Ethel Kennedy as saying: “The world is a little less beautiful today” before continuing: “She lit up our lives with her love, her peals of laughter and her generous spirit. Saoirse was passionately moved by the causes of human rights and women’s empowerment and found great joy in volunteer work, working alongside indigenous communities to build schools in Mexico. We will love her and miss her forever.”

The statement was issued by Brian Wright O’Connor, a spokesman for Saoirse Hill’s uncle, former Massachusetts congressman Joseph P. Kennedy II.

Hill’s father, Paul Michael Hill, was one of four men falsely convicted in the 1974 Irish Republican Army bombings of two pubs in Guildford, England.

Hyannis Fire Capt. Greg Dardia told Fox News Police that paramedics responded to a medical call at 28 Marchant Avenue at around 2:30 p.m. Hill was taken to Cape Cod Hospital in an unknown condition. It is not clear whether she was pronounced dead at the hospital or at the property.

Boston 25 News, citing a law enforcement source, reported that Hill died from a suspected drug overdose.

“Earlier this afternoon Barnstable Police responded to a residence on Marchant Ave in Hyannisport for a reported unattended death,” Cape and Islands Assistant District Attorney Tara Miltimore said in a statement. “The matter remains under investigation by Barnstable Police and State Police detectives assigned to the District Attorney’s Office.”

FAMILY MEMBERS SLAM RFK JR. FOR SPREADING ‘DANGEROUS MISINFORMATION’ ABOUT VACCINES

An aerial view of the Kennedy Compound on July 25, 2008 in Hyannis Port, Massachusetts. (Photo by Tim Gray/Getty Images)

In a 2016 opinion piece for the Deerfield Scroll, the student newspaper for the Deerfield Academy boarding school, Hill wrote about her bouts with depression.

“My depression took root in the beginning of my middle school years and will be with me for the rest of my life,” she wrote. “Although I was mostly a happy child, I suffered bouts of deep sadness that felt like a heavy boulder on my chest. These bouts would come and go, but they did not outwardly affect me until I was a new sophomore at Deerfield.”

She added that “someone I knew and loved broke serious sexual boundaries with me,” leading her to pretend the incident hadn’t happened and attempting suicide.

She urged students and faculty to talk openly about mental illness in order to get rid of the stigma associated with depression.

“People talk about cancer freely; why is it so difficult to discuss the effects of depression, bipolar [sic], anxiety, or schizophrenic disorders?” Hill wrote. “Just because the illness may not be outwardly visible doesn’t mean the person suffering from it isn’t struggling.”

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The compound has around six homes on Nantucket Sound in Hyannisport. The Hyannis News first reported that the home where police were called owned by Ethel Kennedy.

Multiple generations of the Kennedy family have lived at the compound, which famously served as President John F. Kennedy’s summer White House.

Click for more from Boston25News.com.

Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/us/saoirse-kennedy-hill-dead-kennedy-compound-hyannis-port-robert-f-kennedy

Watch live coverage as President Trump holds a campaign rally in Cincinnati, Ohio, one night after the Democratic presidential debates.
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Source Article from https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Kr8NlvKUfz4

President Trump tore into his Democratic rivals for the presidency at a campaign rally in Cincinnati Thursday night, but dialed back his criticisms of the so-called “Squad” of freshman Democratic lawmakers in the first rally since his supporters drew bipartisan condemnation last month by engaging in an impromptu “Send her back!” chant directed at Somali-born Rep. Ilhan Omar, D-Minn.

Almost immediately, Trump charged that the “Democrat party is now being led by four left-wing extremists who reject everything that we hold dear” — an apparent reference to the “Squad.” The comment drew jeers, but no chanting, from attendees.

The president pointedly did not name and criticize each member of the “Squad,” as he did at the previous rally in Greenville, N.C.

Trump did, however, condemn what he called the “wasted money” that has led to “blight” in inner cities run by Democrats. But he initially declined to specify which cities he was referring to, because as he put it, “we want no controversy.”

His comments came after decades-old video emerged of House Oversight Committee Chairman Elijah Cummings, D-Md., referring  to his community of Baltimore as a “drug-infested” area, using a term that Trump included in a tweet widely panned as a racist attack on the city.

Robert Morris, of Jasper, Tenn., wears a giant hat as he waits in line to enter a rally by President Donald Trump Thursday, Aug. 1, 2019, in Cincinnati. (AP Photo/Gary Landers)

“You see our inner cities,” Trump said. “We spend billions and billions and billions, for years and years and years, and it’s stolen money and it’s wasted money — and it’s a shame.”

Trump then began naming Democrat-run cities.

CLINTON-APPOINTED JUDGE FORCEFULLY DISMISSES DNC LAWSUIT AGAINST TRUMP TEAM, WIKILEAKS ON HACKING

“The homicide rate in Baltimore is significantly higher than El Salvador, Honduras, Guatemala,” Trump said, before joking: “I believe it’s higher than Afghanistan.”

“The conditions in [House Speaker] Nancy Pelosi’s once-great city of San Francisco are deplorable,” he said later. “Do you remember the word ‘deplorable’? Do you remember when Hillary [Clinton] used the word ‘deplorable’? She used two words: deplorable and irredeemable.”

After the crowd broke out into a “Lock her up!”  chant, Trump continued, “Look at Los Angeles, with the tents, and the horrible, horrible disgusting conditions,” Trump added. “Look at San Francisco. And then you have a governor who invites the whole world to come into California, we’ll pay for your healthcare. .. Who wouldn’t come up? How crazy is this?”

At one point, a protester with a pro-immigrant disrupted the rally for several minutes.

“I grew up in Ohio and know a bunch of random facts about the state. The irony of supporters in Ohio being anti-immigrant is that Ohio was literally co-founded by an immigrant,” tweeted California Democratic Rep. Ted Lieu as the rally progressed.

Trump also drew cheers by claiming that Wednesday’s Democratic presidential  “so-called debate” involved, at times, more attacks on his predecessor than his own administration.

“The Democrats spent more time attacking Barack Obama than they did attacking me,” Trump said.

He added that former Vice President Joe Biden has “no clue what the hell he is doing.”

MCCONNELL, IN UNUSUALLY ANGRY FLOOR SPEECH, CONDEMNS ‘MODERN-DAY MCCARTHYISM’

Trump captured Ohio by nearly nine percentage points in 2016 — “we won by a lot,” Trump told attendees Thursday — and he fared somewhat better among midterm voters in Ohio than among voters in Rust Belt neighbors Michigan and Wisconsin.

“I don’t know that you can stop people.”

— President Trump

“Right now Ohio is the most successful it has ever been in the history of our country. Congratulations, Ohio,” Trump said.

China also insisted again that China, not U.S. taxpayers, would bear the brunt of the new tariffs he announced earlier Thursday.

Trump also worked in a sarcastic jab at former Special Counsel Robert Mueller: “He was sharp as a tack.”

Several small protests occurred around the rally site, including one at the nearby National Underground Railroad Freedom Center. It focused on the slavery era and current struggles against injustice around the world.

But all eyes were watching the U.S. Bank Arena crowd, and how Trump would react if another disruptive chant broke out.

Trump said earlier Thursday that he would “prefer” that his supporters at the rally don’t engage in a similar chant.

TRUMP ANNOUNCES MAJOR NEW TARIFFS ON $300B IN CHINESE GOODS

“I don’t know that you can stop people,” Trump said. “We’ll see what we can do. I’d prefer that they don’t. But if they do it, we’ll have to make a decision then.”

Even his closest advisers had seemed uncertain as to what might transpire.

“If it happened again, he might make an effort to speak out about it,” Vice President Mike Pence said recently.

Republican Rep. Steve Chabot, who represents a Cincinnati-area district, said Wednesday he hopes the crowd will avoid such chants this time, and he thinks Trump will react more quickly if it does happen.

“I would discourage the crowd from doing anything inappropriate and I think saying something like that would be inappropriate,” Chabot said. “I would hope that the president would silence the crowd, tell them: ‘Hey, don’t do that, there’s no place for that. It’s not helpful, it’s not right.'”

CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

Ohio Gov. Mike DeWine said Wednesday that he found Trump’s comments about the Democratic freshman “squad” to be “inappropriate,” but added that he would not raise the matter with the president.

Fox News’ Sarah Tobianski and The Associated Press contributed to this report.

Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/politics/trump-ohio-campaign-rally-wasted-money-inner-cities

Investors can afford to sell a few stocks and protect some of the gains they made on the market here, but they shouldn’t quit just yet, CNBC’s Jim Cramer said Thursday.

The major U.S. averages all tanked about 1% in the session as Wall Street reacted to a fresh new round of tariffs that will be imposed on Chinese imports next month.

Still, the market has to take into account how the People’s Republic of China may respond to President Donald Trump’s decision to tack 10% duties onto another batch of $300 billion in goods, the “Mad Money” host said. It’s worth waiting until the smoke is clear to start buying high-quality names at a discount, he added.

“Once you take profits, there’s no reason to start buying immediately,” Cramer said.

“We are barely down, though. We haven’t even seen the Chinese response yet, and I have to believe it will be swift and when they do the stocks are going to go lower and you’ll be glad you sold a little,” he continued. “There’s no reason to be a hero here — you’ve got to wait and see what happens.”

The latest round of tariffs is “game changing” for the ongoing trade war between the world’s largest economies and prove that there is no breaking point for Trump, Cramer said. In a tweet announcing the move, the president vented his frustration, among other sticking points, that China failed to follow through on a promise to buy a large amount of crops from American farmers.

It is unclear how soon a trade deal could as talks between the two nations this week did not yield a conclusion to the trade dispute.

Cramer suggested that investors search for stocks of dividend paying or growing companies that will feel little to no impact from the tariffs. Those are the equities that money managers will pour money into, as they did in reaction to the first two rounds of tariffs, he said.

“I think it’s too soon to buy anything but the domestic stocks that have zero exposure to China, either as a supplier or as an end market,” Cramer said. “After the smoke clears, companies that cater to small- and medium-sized businesses could be worth buying, too.”

Utility stocks are safe to buy with the 10-year treasury yield falling below 2%, he added. Consolidated Edison, American Electric Power, Dominion Energy are worth a play. The former two stocks increased 1.1% and the latter gained 2.2% during the trading day.

A company like Procter & Gamble, whose stock dipped 1.11%, that has a lot of business in China is too hot to touch here, even after its positive quarter report, he said.

“We’re now back in a world where international companies will be forced to cut their forecasts,” Cramer said.

Apple, whose shares climbed above $218 earlier in the day before losing those gains closing down more than 2%, was punished because its iPhones and computers are assembled in China. The new taxes are expected to raise their prices, and Cramer says that will benefit Samsung phones.

Trump, Cramer said, still has more ammo in the chamber as he has room to later increase the looming tariffs to 25%.

“One thing’s certainly clear: Jay Powell, our clever Fed Chief, had great intuition about these tariffs,” the host said. “Can you imagine how bad today would’ve been if Powell hadn’t cut us that quarter point break? Plus, he’s now got a lot more ammo” to keep easing.

Source Article from https://www.cnbc.com/2019/08/01/cramer-new-tariffs-forecast-cuts-are-coming-heres-how-to-play-it.html

President Trump heads to Cincinnati to rally crowds for his 2020 re-election campaign as the crowded Democratic field wraps its second round of primary debates. #FoxNewsLive #FoxNews

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Source Article from https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vcO_WLUu_-0

(CNN)He’s the most popular figure in the Democratic Party by far, revered by liberals, moderates and even some Republicans.

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    “Look, he is our statesman, and anybody who was an executive — I, too, was an executive, two terms of a city — he ain’t perfect,” Booker, a current senator who was a former mayor of Newark, New Jersey, said on CNN’s “New Day” Thursday. “And I’m sure (if) Barack Obama was sitting here … he will tell you, ‘I made some mistakes.'”

    Source Article from https://www.cnn.com/2019/08/01/politics/obama-legacy-democratic-primary/index.html

    CLOSE

    Stocks dropped sharply Thursday and bond prices spiked after President Donald Trump announced the U.S. will slap a new 10% tariff on some $300 billion worth of goods from China beginning next month.

    The news erased a broad rally on Wall Street, sending the Dow Jones Industrial Average from a gain of more than 250 points and fell as much as 278. The S&P 500 had been on pace for its best day in nearly two months.

    The escalation in the long-running and costly trade dispute comes only a couple of days after both sides resumed negotiations. In a series of tweets, Trump noted that while the slow-moving trade talks have been “constructive,” China has not followed through on some prior agreements, including the purchase of large quantities of U.S. agricultural products.

    Retail apocalypse: Flagship stores shutting down

    The new tariff would take effect Sept. 1. The U.S. has already applied tariffs of 25% on $250 billion worth of goods from China. Beijing has retaliated with tariffs on $110 billion in American goods, including agricultural products, in a direct shot at Trump supporters in the U.S. farm belt.

    Companies that rely heavily on doing business with China took the brunt of the selling. Apple quickly went from a gain of 1.4% to a loss of 2.3%. Electronics retailer Best Buy went from a slight gain to a drop of 9.3% in heavy trading.

    Banks, industrials and energy companies also fell. Utilities and real estate stocks rose as traders shifted money into more stable, high-yield stocks. Bond prices spiked as traders sought safety. The yield on the 10-year Treasury dropped to the lowest it’s been since the 2016 election. The price of U.S. crude oil skidded 8%.

    The afternoon sell-off puts the market on track to extend its losses for the week. The S&P 500 had its worst day in two months Wednesday after the Federal Reserve’s latest interest rate policy signals disappointed investors.

    Not getting that through security: Rocket launcher found in Baltimore airport checked luggage for second time

    Keeping score

    The S&P 500 index was down 0.9% as of 2:36 p.m. Eastern time. The Dow dropped 251 points, or 0.9%, to 26,612. The Nasdaq composite lost 1%. The Russell 2000 index of small companies slid 1.6%.

    Bonds

    Prices for U.S. government bond rose sharply, sending yields even lower. The yield on the benchmark 10-year Treasury fell to 1.90%, the first time it’s been below 2% since July 3. That yield, a benchmark used to set interest rates on mortgages and other loans, has been declining steadily since November, when it traded as high as 3.23%.

    Meanwhile, the yield on the 2-year Treasury note slid to 1.73% from 1.87% late Wednesday, a very large move.

    Source Article from https://www.usatoday.com/story/money/investing/2019/08/01/trumps-china-tariff-hits-stock-market-dow-apple-sink/1891664001/

    High-profile Obama administration alumni pointedly warned the Democratic presidential candidates to “be wary of attacking” the popular two-term president’s record, in the wake of Wednesday’s debate where top-tier contenders bashed his legacy in a bid to score points against former Vice President Joe Biden.

    While all 10 White House hopefuls on stage during the second night of back-to-back Democratic nomination debates fired away at Republican President Trump, Barack Obama’s name was invoked 23 times during the showdown.

    Some of those mentions were made by front-runner Biden, who touted administration achievements during the two terms he served as Obama’s vice president. But many came from rivals who took shots at Biden by tying him to polices that have fallen out of favor with progressives as the Democratic Party’s base drifts further left.

    BIDEN TAKES JABS FROM ALL SIDES DURING DEBATE

    Specifically coming under attack were ObamaCare – the president’s signature domestic policy achievement that dramatically transformed health care in America – and the Obama administration’s policy of stepped-up deportations of illegal immigrants.

    Former Chicago Mayor Rahm Emanuel – who served as Obama’s first White House chief of staff – on Thursday morning called the jabs by fellow Democrats “nuts.”

    Emanuel told Fox Business Network’s “WSJ At Large,” in an interview airing Friday at 9:30 p.m., that his former boss “is at 90-odd percent among Democrats. He’s the most successful progressive president … since the Great Society.”

    And Eric Holder – who served as attorney general for much of Obama’s presidency – issued a warning on Twitter.

    “To my fellow Democrats. Be wary of attacking the Obama record. Build on it. Expand it. But there is little to be gained – for you or the party – by attacking a very successful and still popular Democratic President,” Holder wrote.

    Biden himself weighed in on Thursday, saying “I must tell ya’ I was a little surprised at how much incoming about Barack … I’m proud of the job he did. I don’t think there’s anything he has to apologize for and … it kind of surprised me the degree of the criticism.”

    He said the notion that Obama’s immigration policies are somehow comparable to Trump’s is “bizarre” and added, “There’s nothing moderate about what Barack did with ObamaCare.”

    While the nation’s first African-American president occasionally takes aim at Trump, he’s largely stayed silent as a record-setting two-dozen candidates battle for the Democratic nomination.

    Biden often invokes Obama on the campaign trail. As he repeatedly took incoming fire from most of the other contenders on stage in Detroit, the former vice president noted “everybody is talking about how terrible I am on these issues.” He then touted that “Barack Obama knew exactly who I was. He had 10 lawyers do a background check on everything about me on civil rights and civil liberties, and he chose me, and he said it was the best decision he made. I’ll take his judgment.”

    Democratic White House hopeful Julian Castro, the former San Antonio, Texas mayor who later served in the Obama Cabinet as Housing and Urban Development secretary, also praised his former boss.

    “We’ve now had about 105 straight months of positive job growth, the longest streak in American history,” Castro noted. “Over 80 months of that was due to President Barack Obama. Thank you, Barack Obama.”

    But Castro – who’s making the divisive issue of illegal immigration central to his White House bid – jabbed at Biden for failing to speak out at the time over the Obama-era deportations of illegal immigrants. Biden praised Obama’s overall policies on the issue of illegal immigration and pushed back, saying he never heard any dissent against the deportations by Castro.

    “One of us on that stage did criticize things the Obama administration was doing and one did not. I did in 2014 and he did not,” Castro told Fox News after the debate. “It’s very clear as between Vice President Biden and me when it comes to immigration, I learned the lessons of the past and Vice President Biden did not. He is still stuck in the past.”

    Castro wasn’t the only one on the stage shining a spotlight on the deportations. New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio repeatedly questioned Biden whether he used his clout as vice president to fight the deportations.

    “When I was asking the vice president a bunch of tough questions, I don’t know what the heck he was saying. I didn’t get answers,” he said after the debate.

    Taking a shot at Obama, de Blasio told Fox News that “a lot of people feel in communities all over this country that there were too many deportations and that they weren’t fair. And that a lot of people who hadn’t done anything wrong were deported.”

    Sen. Cory Booker of New Jersey – who lately has become a very vocal Biden critic – also called out the former vice president for not detailing his discussions with Obama regarding deportations.

    “You can’t have it both ways. You invoke President Obama more than anybody in this campaign. You can’t do it when it’s convenient and dodge it when it’s not,” Booker said point-blank to Biden.

    It wasn’t just the candidates. As Biden began to explain his role in the deportations, multiple protesters in the audience briefly shouted “3 million deportations.”

    Biden – the only top-tier contender who doesn’t support a government-run “Medicare-for-all” plan – during the debate played the role of chief defender of the Affordable Care Act. Biden wants to enhance ObamaCare by adding a public option but still keep the system in place.

    The law – which has been weakened since Trump took over in the White House – has increasingly been criticized by Sens. Bernie Sanders of Vermont and Elizabeth Warren of Massachusetts, who are pushing Medicare-for-all plans that would replace private insurance with a single-payer system.

    Sen. Kamala Harris of California – who proposes a hybrid Medicare-for-all plan – took a punch at ObamaCare as she stood next to Biden on Wednesday night.

    “Senator Biden, your plan will keep and allow insurance companies to remain with status quo, doing business as usual, and that’s going to be about jacking up co-pays, jacking up deductibles,” Harris said.

    The targeting of Obama and his achievements isn’t sitting well with many who served under the former president.

    Center for American Progress President Neera Tanden – who served as a senior official on Obama’s 2008 presidential campaign and senior adviser in his administration – noted on Twitter that “the GOP didn’t attack Reagan, they built him up for decades.”

    And she highlighted that “Dem Candidates who attack Obama are wrong and terrible. Obama wasn’t perfect, but come on people, next to Trump, he kind of is. This is my outrage of the day.”

    Lynda Tran, who ran communications for the Obama-tied Organizing for America and served as a senior official in his administration, said “comparing President Obama to Donald Trump on either [immigration or health care] is deeply disingenuous.”

    Tran, a founding partner of the communications firm 270 Strategies, predicted that attacks on Obama will diminish as the Democratic 2020 field gets smaller.

    “As the field looks to winnow sharply ahead of the September debates, it’s clear several candidates were hoping to force some daylight between Joe Biden and Barack Obama given the former president’s continued and soaring popularity,” she said. “They were generally unsuccessful and I suspect those who remain in the race this fall will take a different approach moving forward.”

    Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/politics/obama-allies-dem-candidates-blast-legacy-to-score-points-on-biden

    Sen. Cory Booker (D-NJ) was looking to have a moment reminiscent of the first Democratic debate’s viral exchange between Sen. Kamala Harris’s (D-CA) and Joe Biden at the second Democratic debate Wednesday night on an issue he’s been dedicated to his entire career: criminal justice reform.

    Ahead of the debate, Booker signaled he planned to attack the former vice president over his role in the 1994 crime bill, which Biden helped write and, as Vox’s German Lopez has reported, experts now see as one of the major contributors to mass incarceration in the 1990s. Booker did indeed attack Biden on the issue, working to — as many of Biden’s other Democratic competitors have — paint the former vice president as out of touch with the Democratic Party due to his past positions.

    “Since the 1970s, every crime bill, major and minor, has had his name on it,” Booker said. “And those are your words, not mine. And this is one of those instances where the house was set on fire and you claimed responsibility for those laws. And you can’t just now come out with a plan to put out that fire.”

    Biden attempted to inoculate himself from this criticism by highlighting what he thinks about the issue now, arguing he now has a strong criminal justice reform plan and suggesting Booker didn’t do enough to reform Newark, New Jersey’s system when he was mayor of that city.

    “There’s a saying in my community that you’re dipping into the Kool-Aid and you don’t even know the flavor,” Booker responded, in probably his most biting line of the whole debate.

    “You are trying to shift the view from what you created,” Booker said. “There are people right now in prison for life, for drug offenses because you stood up and used that tough-on-crime phony rhetoric that got a lot of people elected but destroyed communities like mine. This isn’t about the past. This is about the present right now.”

    Booker has opposed Biden’s historical position on this issue for some time; he’s introduced legislation to make it easier for people, particularly those older than 50, to get an early release from federal prison and was a lead sponsor of the First Step Act, the criminal justice reform bill passed under Donald Trump that took modest steps to ease mass incarceration.

    As Vox’s Matt Yglesias wrote, we shouldn’t put too much stock in the electoral effectiveness of Booker’s exchange with Biden, however. “[Biden’s] support comes from older, working-class Democrats who are generally moderate on social and cultural issues and likely won’t be impressed by the revelation that there’s yet another topic on which progressive activists don’t like Biden,” Yglesias writes.

    But Biden, who has been consistently leading the polls ever since he jumped into the race, was pushed into a defensive stance yet again. And this time Booker, who has failed to find a footing in the packed field, walked away as the candidate with the meanest punches.

    How the Booker-Biden moment on criminal justice went down

    Booker, whose presidential campaign has centered around a robust and aggressive criminal justice platform, has been focusing on Biden’s record on the campaign trail for weeks.

    It all goes back to the 1994 crime bill.

    Biden defended the law as recently as 2016, saying it “restored American cities” during a period of high crime. But we know that it also led to aggressive policing and harsher prison sentences that disproportionately hurt black and brown communities.

    Biden’s strategy to ward off the attacks during the debate were threefold: 1) he tried to position himself with Booker on the issue, 2) he attempted to turn the tables on the New Jersey senator for his time as Newark mayor, questioning why the police force continued to use “stop and frisk” practices, and 3) he used Barack Obama as a shield.

    “I think we should work together,” Biden said. “We should change the way we look at prisons. … I know what my plan does, and I think it’s not dissimilar to what the senator said: We should be working together to get things done.”

    When Obama cabinet secretary Julián Castro and Harris jumped into the fray to hammer Booker’s point home, Biden retreated behind his closeness with the first black president.

    “I find it fascinating, everybody is talking about how terrible I am on these issues,” Biden said. “Barack Obama knew exactly who I was. He had 10 lawyers do a background check and everything about me on civil rights, and he chose me and said it was the best decision he ever made.”

    But the other candidates in the race aren’t having it, and Biden’s record on issues that pertain to race has played a significant role in both debates. In June, Harris’s defining moment came when she went after Biden for opposing federally mandated busing to racially integrate schools in the 1970s. Going into Wednesday’s debate, Booker’s campaign said they were looking for a similar moment on Biden’s criminal justice record.

    They got it, and a slip of the tongue Booker quickly seized upon.

    “The bills that the president — excuse me, the future president, that the senator is talking about, are bills that were passed years ago and passed overwhelming,” Biden said, tripping up over Booker’s title.

    And with that Booker’s night was made.

    “I’m glad he endorsed my presidency already,” he said.

    Source Article from https://www.vox.com/2019/8/1/20749908/cory-booker-biden-crime-bill-democratic-debate-2020

    Rep. Elijah Cummings’ Baltimore home was broken into over the weekend, police and a report said Thursday.

    The burglary took place Saturday around 3:40 a.m. at the house in the 200 block of Madison Avenue, a Baltimore Police Department spokeswoman said.

    According to local outlet WJZ, that is where the Democratic congressman lives. It’s still unclear if anything was stolen, cops said.

    The break-in occurred several hours before President Trump accused the House Oversight Committee chair on Twitter of being a “brutal bully” and called Cummings’ district a “disgusting, rat and rodent infested mess” and a “very dangerous place.”

    Congressional Democrats have called Trump a racist over his attacks on Cummings and Maryland’s largest city.

    Source Article from https://nypost.com/2019/08/01/elijah-cummings-baltimore-home-broken-into-cops/


    Asked whether it “made sense” for Democrats to be attacking Obama’s tenure instead of President Donald Trump, Sen. Cory Booker insisted that intra-party criticism should not be out of bounds. | Carlos Osorio/AP Photo

    2020 elections

    08/01/2019 09:14 AM EDT

    Updated 08/01/2019 02:32 PM EDT


    Sens. Cory Booker and Kamala Harris on Thursday defended their criticisms of former Vice President Joe Biden at Wednesday night’s Democratic primary debate, arguing that the presidency of Barack Obama, who remains wildly popular among Democrats, is not above criticism.

    The former president was somewhat of an off-stage target at the debate, as 2020 hopefuls touted their own plans to build on or overhaul his signature health care law and criticized the rate of deportations in his administration. While there was virtually no criticism of Obama by name, attacks on his record were directed regularly at Biden, who served under Obama and is the front-runner for the 2020 nomination.

    Story Continued Below

    Booker (D-N.J.) argued that no politician, no matter how well-liked, should be above reproach. Asked in an interview on MSNBC’s “Morning Joe” whether it “made sense” for Democrats to be carping about Obama’s tenure instead of President Donald Trump, Booker insisted that the intraparty criticism should not be out of bounds.

    “Well, look, at the end of the day, you’re right, President Obama has been the statesman of our party and has the highest approval ratings, but I don’t think any administration, as you and I both know have been in public life, nothing is without criticism,” he said, adding that there were “really substantive issues to discuss,” especially when it came to immigration.

    As the Democratic Party has drifted further left in years since Obama left office, the former president has increasingly come under fire from liberals who decry his policies as incrementalist or more moderate than they would have liked. Despite these criticisms, Obam still enjoys immense popularity among Democrats — a CNN poll from 2018 found he had a 97 percent favorability rating within his own party.

    At Wednesday’s debate, the New Jersey senator sparred once again not only with Biden over the former vice president’s criminal justice record, but also over Biden’s role as second-in-command to a president referred to by some critics as the “deporter in chief.”

    Biden, who has tied his campaign to his former boss by invoking the work of the “Obama-Biden administration” and touting his friendship with the former commander in chief, bore the brunt of these attacks on Wednesday.

    Despite attempts by the Obama administration to pursue immigration reform and executive action to protect so-called Dreamers, his administration’s three million deportations were the subject of protests within the debate hall Wednesday, with hecklers interrupting the debate as Biden tried to outline what he would have done differently.

    At one point, Booker interjected, telling Biden: “You can’t have it both ways. You invoke President Obama more than anybody in this campaign. You can’t do it when it’s convenient and dodge it when it’s not.“

    While Biden wouldn’t say whether he’d protested the mass deportations carried out under Obama, Booker on Thursday called the current immigration system “savagely broken” and said that “so many things are happening that just aren’t common sense,” though he didn’t specifically lay the blame on Obama.

    “Having a substantive conversation about that isn’t distracting from a great administration before,” the senator said Thursday morning, adding that criticisms of Obama should not distract Democrats from being forward-looking through the 2020 primary.

    “It’s really trying to give a picture of what we want in the future. I tried to go back time and time again last night on multiple occasions, for us to keep our eyes on the prize, which is unifying as a party and being able to keep Donald Trump, and then do it in a way that doesn’t further divide this country.”

    Harris (D-Calif.), whose criticisms of Obama were rooted more in her desire to replace the Affordable Care Act with a transition to a Medicare for All-style health care plan, pointed out that Obama himself had endorsed the general idea and said in an interview on “Morning Joe” that his contributions should not be overlooked.

    “What he did and what he accomplished in getting the Affordable Care Act to actually come into being was extraordinary,” she said. “But in his own words, he has said it was a starter house. He has said Medicare for All is a good idea. So when I talk about my Medicare for All plan, it is about building on the success of what President Obama achieved.”

    The California senator added that Obama had been an “extraordinary president and probably the best president or one of the best presidents in our lifetimes.” Still, she said, the state of Obamacare under two years of Trump “is not working.”

    The friendly fire aimed at Obama on Wednesday split former members of his administration. Julián Castro, the former secretary of Housing and Urban Development who has made waves with his call to decriminalize illegal border crossings, at one point zinged Biden by telling the former vice president that his opposition to the idea showed “one of us has learned the lessons of the past and one of us hasn’t.”

    The barrage of criticism prompted Obama’s first attorney general, Eric Holder, to issue a firm warning to his fellow Democrats. “Be wary of attacking the Obama record,” he wrote on Twitter following the debate. “Build on it. Expand it. But there is little to be gained — for you or the party — by attacking a very successful and still popular Democratic President.”

    But in an interview on CNN’s “New Day,” Booker framed his critiques as mere tough love, and had even more praise for the former president, saying that if Obama could have run for a third term as president, “I wouldn’t be running.”

    Still, the former Newark, N.J., mayor said Obama “ain’t perfect,” adding that “nobody’s ever pulled that off,” something he argued he had the authority to say as a former executive. Booker portrayed Democrats’ willingness to criticize the former leader of their party as a strength rather than a weakness, pointing to Republicans’ practice of staying silent in the face of an avalanche of Trump controversies.

    “I’m sure if Barack Obama was sitting here — and I hope he’s sleeping this morning — he would tell you I made some mistakes. And to not point them out, to me is, you know, Donald Trump is the guy that my Republican colleagues can’t even criticize when he’s preaching racism,” he said. So “we are having an honest conversation about an administration that was incredible. I would take him back.”

    Biden on Thursday expressed surprise at the pile-on the night before but mounted a full-throated defense of his former boss.

    “I’m proud of having served with him, I’m proud of the job he did. I don’t think there’s anything he has to apologize for,” he told reporters in Detroit. “And I think, you know, it kind of surprised me, the degree of the criticism.”

    He indicated that he would continue to have Obama’s back, but echoed Booker in calling for more forward-looking debates, and argued that changes in policy were necessary because “the world has changed since Obama.”

    “The next debate, I hope we can talk about how we fix our answers, to fix things that trump has broken,” Biden said. “Not how Barack Obama made all these mistakes. He didn’t. He didn’t.”

    While declining to criticize Democratic candidates who teed off on Obama’s record, Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.) defended Obama’s record on Thursday when asked about the debates.

    “President Obama is a very popular figure in America to this day because he did a very good job. Did he accomplish everything? No,” Schumer said. But “you compare the Obama Administration to this administration it’s night and day and Americans are realizing that.”

    Burgess Everett contributed to this report.

    Source Article from https://www.politico.com/story/2019/08/01/cory-booker-obama-presidency-criticism-1444314

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    Source Article from https://www.cnn.com/2019/08/01/asia/north-korea-missile-launch-aug-1-intl/index.html

    Following the second night of debates for the second round of 2020 Democratic hopefuls, Hollywood stars once again took to social media to voice both their positive and negative feelings about the candidates’ performance.

    The 10 candidates taking the stage to battle it out this time were Joe Biden, Cory Booker, Kamala Harris, Andrew Yang, Tulsi Gabbard, Jay Inslee, Bill de Blasio, Julian Castro, Kirsten Gillibrand and Michael Bennet. However, after the first night of debates left show business’ most outspoken political voices feeling let down by the messy drama, they seemed to zero in on the former vice president and Harris going into night 2.

    While Biden was jabbed far and wide for being out of touch and invoking former President Obama too often, Harris was taken to task for her record.

    CNN’S DEMOCRATIC DEBATE MOCKED BY SOME LIBERAL STARS, WHILE OTHERS PICK THEIR WINNERS

    “Avengers: Endgame” star Don Cheadle got the ball rolling when he responded to a tweet criticizing Biden for refusing to apologize for his past words.

    “he sees it as weakness. almost all politicians do. it’s extremely unfortunate …” Cheadle wrote.

    “Ol’ Man Biden just said “malarkey” on the talking radio!” wrote comedian Michael Ian Black.

    Comedian Sarah Silverman noted that Obama may not endorse his former VP in the election.

    “DYING to know who Obama will endorse. Could be AWKWAAARD #DemDebate2,” she wrote.

    “Biden turns & faces you like a battle rapper waiting his turn. #DemDebates,” wrote actor Roy Wood Jr. over a video of Booker tearing into Biden.

    Michael Rapaport shared a similar video of Harris’ record being torn down by Gabbard, writing: “And they haven’t even mentioned Willie Brown yet. #KamalaHarrisDestroyed.”

    DEMS GEAR UP FOR DEBATE NIGHT TWO

    The line is a reference to a past relationship Harris allegedly had with the former San Francisco mayor.

    Actress Jackee Harry posted a Harris gif to mock her treatment of Biden at the debate.

    “Dana: Senator Harris, would you like to respond to Senator Gillibrand?
    Kamala: Nah, let me get back to this Biden fella. #DemDebate,” she wrote.

    “Strong close by @KamalaHarris,” wrote actor Bradley Whitford.

    Meanwhile, others just discussed the debate in more general terms. Many were quick to deride the candidates for the general tone that the debate struck.

    “For a party who’s biggest star, savior and hero is Obama they sure were quick to dump Obamacare,” wrote comedian Bill Maher.

    “Watching this debate without Marianne Williamson is like watching #GameOfThrones without Melisandre. #DemDebate2,” wrote Jimmy Kimmel.

    “I think after a moderator has said for the third time “your time is up” the Oscar music they play when a speech has gone on too far should be played,” wrote actor Josh Charles.

    “Who is ready to hear Warren and Sanders on the same stage as Biden and Harris? With e.g. Booker, Castro and Buttigieg there to keep us focused on our better natures? Let’s watch that,” a bored George Takei noted.

    “If you support Trump

    -using taxpayer $ to build a wall he promised Mexico would pay for

    -bailing out farmers hurt by tariffs w/28 bil of taxpayer $

    -$885 mill in family biz tax breaks

    -millions of taxpayer $ for 7/4 parade

    …don’t call anyone at  #DemDebate2 ‘Socialist,'” John Fugelsang tweeted.

    “#demdebate so inspirational to have leaders who care about us, care about the environment, care about the rule of law, care about human rights, care about lgbtq, care about people of color and women’s equal pay, care about health care and taxing the rich!!” John Leguizamo noted.

    “I don’t think the old guard politicians are capable of the work that is going to be necessary if 
    YOU WANT YOUR CHILDREN TO LIVE …” David Crosby wrote.

    CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

    “These debates really are Twitter: Too many voices, limited space to communicate, and moderators who’ve been thrust into a regulatory position they’re ill-equipped to manage,” said “Family Guy” creator Seth MacFarlane.

    Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/entertainment/celebrities-react-cnn-democratic-debates-joe-biden-kamala-harris