Donald Trump has used coarse language in remarks about Democrat Beto O’Rourke, telling supporters he was a “poor b***ard” who quit the 2020 presidential race “like a dog”.

Speaking to supporters in Tupelo, Mississippi, Mr Trump launched an attack on the former Texan congressman, just hours after he announced he was ending his bid to become the Democratic challenger for 2020.

“Poor b***ard,” said Mr Trump “Pathetic guy.”

He added: “”He came out of Texas a very hot political property, and he went back as cold as you can be.”

The president then mocked Mr O’Rourke’s arm gestures, adding: “What is he on?

Mr Trump was roundly criticised by Mr O’Rourke this summer in the aftermath of a mass shooting at a Walmart store in El Paso. 

The 47-year-old, who had formerly represented the Texas border city, accused Mr Trump of stirring the kind of racist bigotry that allegedly led to the killing of nearly two-dozen people.

Mr O’Rourke, who also called for the president to act on gun control, rose to national attention in 2018 with his closely-fought challenge to Republican senator Ted Cruz.

However, he was never able to rekindle that kind of passion during his presidential bid, and on Friday he announced he was ending his campaign.

Speaking to supporters in Iowa, Mr O’Rourke said that while his campaign was ending, he planned to stay active in the fight to defeat Mr Trump. “I will be part of this and so will you,” he said.

Mr O’Rourke was urged to run for president by many Democrats, including supporters of former president Barack Obama, who were energised by his narrow Senate loss.

“Though it is difficult to accept, it is clear to me now that this campaign does not have the means to move forward successfully,” he wrote in a Medium post formally announcing the end of his campaign.

“Acknowledging this now is in the best interests of those in the campaign; it is in the best interests of this party as we seek to unify around a nominee; and it is in the best interests of the country.”

Additional reporting by Associated Press

Source Article from https://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/americas/us-election/trump-beto-o-rourke-btard-insult-dog-quit-rally-mississippi-tupelo-a9181936.html

“I’m not a big fan of Medicare-for-all,” Pelosi told Bloomberg TV, adding: “Hopefully, as we emerge into the election year, the mantra will be ‘more health care for all Americans,’ because there is a comfort level that some people have with their current private insurance.”

Source Article from https://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/elizabeth-warren-proposes-new-taxes-to-fund-medicare-for-all-but-says-middle-class-would-be-spared/2019/11/01/13518ae6-fc1a-11e9-ac8c-8eced29ca6ef_story.html

As fires continue to burn across the state, a new blaze in Ventura County exploded to more than 8,000 acres Friday, prompting more evacuations and damaging at least two structures.

The Maria fire broke out atop South Mountain, just south of Santa Paula, about 6:14 p.m. Thursday and was quickly burning toward the small agricultural towns of Somis and Saticoy. Fire officials say 1,800 structures are threatened by the growing blaze.

The Times is offering fire coverage for free today. Please consider a subscription to support our journalism.

Authorities issued mandatory evacuations for 7,500 people, according to the Ventura County Fire Department. The Camarillo Community Center opened as an emergency shelter.

Several school districts announced their schools would close Friday because of the fire.

Elsewhere in the state, firefighters began to make significant progress in containing other blazes. Most evacuation orders were lifted, and containment numbers began to increase after numerous harsh wind events.

In Northern California, Pacific Gas & Electric Co. has restored power to 99% of its customers whose electricity was turned off during public safety power outages. At least 1,000 customers remain without power in Southern California Edison’s jurisdiction.

Here are details on the remaining major fires burning across California:

Kincade fire

The largest California fire burning right now started the evening of Oct. 23 near John Kincade Road and Burned Mountain Road, east of Geyserville and spread quickly toward homes in the town.

Acreage: 77,758
Containment: 68%
Evacuations: Most evacuations have been lifted, including for the cities of Calistoga, Windsor, Healdsburg, Santa Rosa and Napa County.
Damage: At least 352 structures were destroyed and 55 were damaged. Four civilians and firefighters were injured, but no deaths have been reported.
Schools: Sonoma County school districts are closed Friday.

Easy fire

The Easy fire ignited Wednesday near West Easy Street and West Los Angeles Avenue in Simi Valley, threatening the Ronald Reagan Presidential Library and surrounding homes. The library was not damaged in the blaze.

Acreage: 1,860
Containment: 80%
Evacuations: All evacuation orders have been lifted.
Damage: At least two structures were destroyed. Three firefighters have been injured.
Schools: Several schools in Ventura County remained closed Friday because of the Maria fire.

Getty fire

The Getty fire broke out along the 405 Freeway by Getty Center Drive around 1:30 a.m. Monday and blew up under Santa Ana winds. Thousands of people were ordered to evacuate some of the priciest enclaves on Earth, while the people who worked for them — housekeepers and gardners — reported for work despite the flames.

Acreage: 745
Containment: 66%
Evacuations: All evacuation orders have been lifted.
Damage: At least 10 homes have been destroyed and 15 were damaged. More than 7,000 houses remain threatened. Two firefighters were injured in the blaze, and no deaths have been reported.
Schools: The L.A. Unified School District said all schools were in session Friday.

Hill fire

The Hill fire started Wednesday morning near Granite Valley and Pyrite Street in Jurupa Valley. A day later, the 46 fire ignited nearby after a car chase came to a fiery end.

Acreage: 628
Containment: 80%
Evacuations: All evacuation orders have been lifted.
Damage: Two homes were damaged. One civilian was hurt.
Schools: All schools in the Jurupa Unified School District, except Granite Hill and Peralta Elementary schools, were open Friday.

Hillside fire

The Hillside fire in San Bernardino sparked early Thursday near Highway 18 at Waterman Canyon after fierce winds whipped up the destructive blaze and pushed it into neighborhoods.

Acreage: About 200 acres
Containment: 70%
Evacuations: All evacuation orders have been lifted.
Damage: Six homes were destroyed and 18 were damaged.
Schools: All San Bernardino County Unified School District schools were open Friday and Cal State San Bernardino reopened to students at 10 a.m.

46 fire:

The 46 fire broke out just after midnight Thursday near the 5300 block of 46th Avenue in Jurupa Valley, after a police pursuit ended in a crash that authorities say sparked the blaze. The fire threatened an animal shelter and sent ranch hands scrambling to evacuate horses amid a burning backdrop.

Acreage: 300
Containment: 70%
Evacuations: All evacuation orders have been lifted.
Damage: Several structures were damaged. One person was hospitalized with breathing problems from the smoke.
Schools: All schools in the Jurupa Unified School District, except Granite Hill and Peralta Elementary schools, were open Friday.

Times staff writer Hannah Fry contributed to this report.

Source Article from https://www.latimes.com/california/story/2019-11-01/lost-track-of-all-the-california-fires-heres-what-you-need-to-know

A wildfire that started Thursday night near Santa Paula exploded to more than 8,000 acres.

The Maria Fire is burning on South Mountain, between Highway 101 and the Santa Clara River. About 7,500 people were ordered to evacuate overnight, Ventura County fire officials said.

The fire, reported around 9 p.m., is 10 miles west of the Easy Fire, which is now 80 percent contained. That fire started on Wednesday morning and has burned 1,860 acres, including grounds of the Ronald Reagan Presidential Library.

At 7:30 Friday morning, Cal Fire put the Maria Fire at 8,730 acres burned (14 square miles) and 0 percent containment.

An evacuation shelter is open at the Camarillo Community Center, 1605 Burnley Street in Camarillo.

Source Article from http://www.mercurynews.com/map-maria-fire-perimeter-and-evacuation-already-at-8000-acres

President Donald Trump has fired back House Democrats at a raucous campaign rally one day after the vote to formalize impeachment proceedings.

Trump’s remarks came at a rally on Friday night at the BancorpSouth Arena in Tupelo, Mississippi, where he threw his support to the Republican in Tuesday’s election for governor there. 

‘While we’re creating jobs and killing terrorists, the Democrat party has gone completely insane,’ Trump said in opening remarks touting Friday’s blockbuster jobs report and the death last weekend of ISIS leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi. 

‘They’ve been plotting to overthrow the election since I won,’ Trump continued. ‘They actually spied on my campaign.’

‘Now corrupt politicians Nancy Pelosi and ‘Shifty’ Adam Schiff, and the media are continuing with the deranged impeachment witch hunt,’ he said. ‘The word impeachment, to me it’s a dirty word, not a good word.’

‘The American people are fed up with Democrat lies, hoaxes and extremism,’ said Trump. The Democrats, he said, ‘have created an angry majority that will vote many do-nothing Democrats out of office in 2020.’ 

President Donald Trump arrives at a rally at BancorpSouth Arena in Tupelo, Mississippi on Friday

President Donald Trump takes the stage at a rally at BancorpSouth Arena in Tupelo, Mississippi on Friday

‘The word impeachment, to me it’s a dirty word, not a good word,’ Trump said at the raucous campaign rally 

Trump also slammed Beto O’Rourke, who dropped out of the contest for the Democratic presidential nomination just hours earlier.

‘He quit like a dog,’ Trump said. ‘Beto, that poor b*****d – poor, pathetic guy.’ 

‘He said he was born for it, like he was born from heaven and came down,’ Trump said, recalling a quote in the Vanity Fair cover story announcing O’Rorke’s campaign.

O’Rourke told the magazine in March: ‘I want to be in it. Man, I’m just born to be in it.’ 

But his campaign went down hill from there, including struggling with fundraising and dropping to 1% in the polls.

Addressing supporters in Iowa, O’Rourke said Friday that he made the decision to exit the race ‘reluctantly’ and vowed to stay active in the fight to defeat Trump 

‘Anybody who says that he was born for this, they are in trouble,’ Trump said.

Members of the audience listens as President Donald Trump speaks at a rally at BancorpSouth Arena in Tupelo, Mississippi

U.S. President Donald Trump gestures during a campaign rally in Tupelo, Mississippi on Friday

Trump also slammed Beto O’Rourke, who dropped out of the contest for the Democratic presidential nomination hours earlier

Trump went on to defend his July 25 phone call with Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelensky, which is at the heart of the Democrats’ impeachment inquiry. 

‘So I made this call, had this wonderful call and the transcript proves it was perfect,’ Trump said. ‘It was totally appropriate.’

Trump said that Zelensky was a ‘good guy’ and a ‘nice guy and hopefully going to root out corruption because Ukraine has tremendous corruption problems.’

He is accused of abusing his office by withholding military aid to pressure Ukraine into opening a corruption probe against one of his 2020 election rivals, Joe Biden. 

Trump dismissed the notion that he needed Ukraine’s help to beat Biden.

‘Let’s see, I’ve got a guy named Sleepy Joe Biden, how do I beat this guy?’ Trump said sarcastically. ‘Gee, I guess there’s only one way, let’s call up Ukraine for help.’ 

Trump gestures as he speaks during a Keep America Great campaign rally in Tupelo, Mississippi, on Friday

Trump blasted Democrats and defended his July 25 phone call with Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelensky

Children hold up placards as Trump delivers remarks during a Keep America Great campaign rally in Tupelo, Mississippi

Biden, he said, is ‘dropping like a rock.’

Trump returned again and again to the Ukraine scandal swirling around him.

‘Now I’m an honest person anyway, but do you think when I’m making a call to a newly elected president of a country that I would say something improper when I know so many people are listening on the line?’ said Trump.

Trump said Biden’s son Hunter received ‘a payoff’ for his position on a Ukrainian energy company board. And he scoffed that Hunter Biden knows less about energy than a youngster standing near the stage at the rally.

‘Experience with energy, he knew less about it than this young — How old are you? Six? This young beautiful person in front. And this young 6 year old is smarter. So I think I’d basically go with her,’ Trump said.

Trump called on Republicans to rally around him.

‘Make no mistake, they are coming after the Republican Party and me because I´m fighting for you,’ he said.

Trump returned again and again to the Ukraine scandal swirling around him as he addressed the energized crowd

Trump was in Mississippi to endorse Republican Lt. Governor Tate Reeves, who is seen speaking at the rally

Members of the audience listens as President Donald Trump speaks at a rally at BancorpSouth Arena in Tupelo

People packed into the arena, many after waiting hours to get in. The capacity crowd was reported at 15,000.

The rally in Tupelo was Trump’s first since the Democratic-led House of Representatives voted overwhelmingly, but along sharply divided party lines, to put the impeachment probe on a formal track.

That vote Thursday set in motion a likely unstoppable surge toward Trump becoming only the third American president to be impeached.

‘The Democrats are crazed, they’re lunatics,’ Trump told reporters before leaving the White House on the Marine One helicopter. ‘You can’t impeach a president who has the greatest economy in the history of our nation.’ 

Trump leaves his plane next to Mississippi Lieutenant Governor Tate Reeves as he arrives for a campaign rally in Mississippi

The president is endorsing Republican Lieutenant Governor Tate Reeves, who faces Democrat Jim Hood for governor

Attendees at a Keep America Great Rally in Tupelo, Mississippi recite the Pledge of Allegiance

Trump is visiting Mississippi to try to shore up Republican support ahead of the state’s toughest governor’s race in nearly a generation, with two established politicians competing for the open seat.

The president is endorsing Republican Lieutenant Governor Tate Reeves, who faces  Democrat Jim Hood, the state attorney general, in Tuesday’s general election.

Trump skipped a pair of Asia summits this weekend in suburban Bangkok in favor of campaigning in Mississippi on Friday night and attending a UFC fight on Saturday in Manhattan.

The president is instead dispatching National Security Adviser Robert O’Brien and Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross to the Association of Southeast Asian Nations summit and the East Asia summit.

Supporters of Donald Trump line up to see the President during a ‘Keep America Great’ campaign rally on Friday

Supporters line up outside the arena ahead of the rally. Trump is campaigning in Mississippi ahead of the state’s gubernatorial election where Republican candidate Tate Reeves is in a close race with Democrat Jim Hood

Source Article from https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-7641289/Donald-Trump-blasts-House-Democrats-says-inquiry-attack-democracy-itself.html

He made little impression during debates. In the final debate in which he would take part, he was dressed down by South Bend, Ind., Mayor Pete Buttigieg, one of his competitors as a fresh Democratic face. A fellow Texan, former San Antonio mayor Julián Castro, likewise belittled him on another debate stage. In both cases, O’Rourke was visibly stunned.

Source Article from https://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/beto-orourke-quits-presidential-race-amid-financial-strains-and-lagging-popularity/2019/11/01/e25c380c-fcee-11e9-8190-6be4deb56e01_story.html

President TrumpDonald John TrumpTrump says he would be willing to do ‘fireside chat’ reading the Zelensky transcript Krystal Ball: ‘The weird obsession and freakout over Tulsi Gabbard has massively helped her’ Trump says poor treatment and high taxes prompted permanent residence change MORE denied any wrongdoing in his dealings with Ukraine, maintaining that a phone call with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky was “a good call.” The July 25 conversation between the two leaders is at the heart of an impeachment inquiry launched by House Democrats last month. 

To prove claims that the substance of the call was not cause for alarm, the president remarked on Thursday that he would be willing to do a “fireside chat,” broadcasted on television, to read the correspondence transcript. 

“This is over a phone call that is a good call,” Trump said in an interview with the Washington Examiner. “At some point, I’m going to sit down, perhaps as a fireside chat on live television, and I will read the transcript of the call, because people have to hear it. When you read it, it’s a straight call.”

Trump signaled he has no intention of cooperating with House Democrats in their impeachment inquiry, saying, “You are setting a terrible precedent for other presidents.”

The comments come as Trump faces a deluge of accusations from Democrats that he sought to tie $400 million in military aid to Ukraine in exchange for a Ukrainian investigation into his political rivals. 

The allegations against him have been bolstered after William Taylor, who serves as the top U.S. diplomat to Ukraine, testified Tuesday that he believed Trump withheld the money until he secured a commitment from Ukraine that they would launch probes into former Vice President Biden and the 2016 presidential election.

Lt. Col. Alexander Vindman, a top Ukraine expert on the White House National Security Council, also testified that he expressed alarm Tuesday about the July conversation with Zelensky, saying he twice raised objections to his superiors about Trump’s interactions with Ukraine.

“I did not think it was proper to demand that a foreign government investigate a U.S. citizen, and I was worried about the implications for the U.S. government’s support of Ukraine,” Vindman said in his testimony. “I realized that if Ukraine pursued an investigation into the Bidens and Burisma it would likely be interpreted as a partisan play which would undoubtedly result in Ukraine losing the bipartisan support it has thus far maintained.” 

However, Trump maintained he did nothing wrong, comparing the impeachment investigation to efforts to oust former Presidents Clinton and Nixon.

“Everybody knows I did nothing wrong,” he said. “Bill ClintonWilliam (Bill) Jefferson ClintonTrump says he would be willing to do ‘fireside chat’ reading the Zelensky transcript Krystal Ball: ‘The weird obsession and freakout over Tulsi Gabbard has massively helped her’ GOP ex-lawmaker who served during Watergate: Trump sounds like a dictator MORE did things wrong; Richard Nixon did things wrong. I won’t go back to [Andrew] Johnson because that was a little before my time,” he said. “But they did things wrong. I did nothing wrong.” 

The transcript of the July conversation is at the heart of the House’s impeachment investigation. The White House released a memorandum of the conversation that showed Trump repeatedly requested Zelensky investigate Biden.

Source Article from https://thehill.com/homenews/administration/468468-trump-says-he-would-be-willing-to-do-fireside-chat-reading-the

Sen. Elizabeth Warren speaks to reporters in Des Moines, Iowa, on Friday, after releasing her plan to pay for single-payer health care.

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Sen. Elizabeth Warren speaks to reporters in Des Moines, Iowa, on Friday, after releasing her plan to pay for single-payer health care.

Scott Olson/Getty Images

Sen. Elizabeth Warren says paying for “Medicare for All” would require $20.5 trillion in new federal spending over a decade. That spending includes higher taxes on the wealthy but no new taxes on the middle class.

The Democratic presidential candidate released her plan to pay for Medicare for All on Friday after being dogged for months by questions of how she would finance such a sweeping overhaul of the health care system. That pressure has been intensified by the fact that Warren has made detailed proposals a central part of her brand as a candidate.

Medicare for All is a single-payer health care proposal introduced by Sen. Bernie Sanders and cosponsored by multiple candidates in the presidential race, including Warren. It would virtually eliminate private insurance, including employer-sponsored coverage.

It also represents a political risk, as multiple polls show that introducing a public option for health insurance coverage is more popular than a Medicare for All plan that almost entirely does away with private insurance.

Here’s a look at what Warren has laid out to provide single-payer health care, including proposals to cut costs, where new revenue would come from, where funds would not be taken from and what comes next.

How Warren wants to reduce spending

Warren bases her plan off of a recent analysis from the Urban Institute, which estimated that under current law, Americans would spend $52 trillion over the next decade on health care — that includes many types of spending, from employers, individuals and all levels of government.

In that analysis, the Urban Institute calculated that under a single-payer plan that looks a lot like Medicare for All, costs would total $59 trillion over a decade, which would require $34 trillion in new federal spending.

Warren’s plan estimates that total health costs could be held to $52 trillion and that $20.5 trillion in new federal spending would be necessary.

Like Urban, Warren’s plan assumes that Medicare for All would pay doctors what Medicare pays them right now. It would also pay hospitals 110 percent of what Medicare pays right now — slightly less than Urban’s 115 percent assumption.

This question — what to pay hospitals and doctors — is a big part of what determines how much Medicare for All would cost. That’s because Medicare pays doctors and hospitals much less than private insurance.

“This plan aggressively constrains the price of health care, paying doctors, hospitals and drug companies much less,” said Larry Levitt, executive vice president for health policy at the Kaiser Family Foundation. “There would be a lot of adjustment required from from hospitals and doctors as their incomes go down.”

Just how seismic such a shift would be would depend in part on how fast the transition is, he added.

“I think how quickly she proposes to transition to this new system will be really important because it would be very disruptive to the health care system,” Levitt said. “You know, a quick transition would be hard and potentially result in shortages or increased wait times for health care.”

Sanders calls for a four-year transition to Medicare for All — a pace that Levitt characterized as “quite quick.” In a Friday blog post spelling out her proposal, Warren said she plans to unveil her transition plan “in the weeks ahead.”

A letter from economists supporting the plan, provided by Warren’s team, argued that these payment rates would work in part because doctors and hospitals would save substantially on administrative costs. Warren’s team also says there would be ways to ensure that vulnerable hospitals, like those in rural areas, would get paid more, so they could stay in business.

Her proposal also establishes savings by projecting that Medicare for All could substantially slow medical cost growth. Warren also stipulates that state and local governments would redirect the more than $6 trillion they currently spend on Medicaid and the Children’s Health Insurance Program (CHIP) to the federal government.

Where money would not come from

One thing that’s notable about this plan is where the revenue doesn’t come from. Warren had promised at a recent debate that she would not sign a bill that raises health care costs for the middle class.

This plan goes further: Middle-class Americans would no longer pay health premiums or copays and would also not pay new taxes to replace those costs. They would, however, pay taxes on whatever additional take-home pay they would receive from this plan. That would add $1.4 trillion in revenue, her team estimates.

This is a departure from Bernie Sanders’ ideas about how to fund Medicare for All. One of his options is a 4% tax on families earning more than $29,000. At the Democrats’ October debate, he explained that taxes would go up for many Americans under his plan.

“At the end of the day, the overwhelming majority of people will save money on their health care bills. But I do think it is appropriate to acknowledge that taxes will go up,” he said. “They’re going to go up significantly for the wealthy. And for virtually everybody, the tax increase they pay will be substantially less — substantially less than what they were paying for premiums and out-of-pocket expenses.”

Where the $20.5 trillion comes from

Employers are one of the main sources of revenue in this proposal. Warren says she would raise nearly $9 trillion here, a figure that comes from the roughly $9 trillion private employers are projected to spend over the next decade on health insurance. The idea here is that instead of contributing to employees’ health insurance, employers would pay virtually all of that money to the government.

In addition, she will boost her proposed 3% wealth tax on people with over a billion dollars to 6% and also boost taxes on large corporations. Altogether, she believes, taxes on the rich and on corporations would raise an estimated $6 trillion. An additional $2.3 trillion would come from improving tax enforcement.

But there are lingering questions about how much revenue some of these taxes would bring in or how easy it would be to impose a wealth tax in particular.

“Something like half of the wealth of the wealthiest people in America are held in privately held corporations, privately held businesses,” said Howard Gleckman, senior fellow at the Urban-Brookings Tax Policy Center. “And it’s really hard to value those assets for tax purposes.”

Warren also includes comprehensive immigration reform as part of her plan. Giving more people a path to citizenship would mean more taxpayers, which would mean more tax revenue.

Political ramifications

While Medicare for All is Sanders’ plan, his bill does not include set methods to pay for the plan. Rather, Sanders has included “options” to pay for his health care plan. In a recent interview with CNBC, he said “we’ll have that debate” over how exactly to finance the plan.

As the candidate with “a plan for that,” as one of her slogans goes, Warren has been asked repeatedly whether her health care overhaul plan would raise taxes on the middle class. Warren repeatedly said in response that she would not raise costs for the middle class.

This proposal gives Warren an answer for the next time she is asked how she would pay for Medicare for All, and it means she can say that she wouldn’t impose new taxes on middle-class Americans.

But it also gives her opponents potential new fodder for attacks. Former Vice President Joe Biden has already come out swinging, accusing Warren of fuzzy math. In addition, his team argues that that nearly $9 trillion that employers would pay the government would ultimately hurt workers.

“To accomplish this sleight of hand, her proposal dramatically understates its cost, overstates its savings, inflates the revenue, and pretends that an employer payroll tax increase is something else,” said Biden deputy campaign manager Kate Bedingfield in a statement released Friday.

Source Article from https://www.npr.org/2019/11/01/775339519/heres-how-warren-finds-20-5-trillion-to-pay-for-medicare-for-all

China said Friday that it has reached a consensus with the U.S. in principle after a phone call among high-level trade negotiators this week.

The Chinese Ministry of Commerce said Vice Premier Liu He had a phone call with U.S. Trade Representative Robert Lighthizer and Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin on Friday. It said the two sides conducted “serious and constructive” discussions on “core” trade points and talked about arrangements for the next round of talks.

The White House said in a statement Friday that the trade representatives “made progress in a variety of areas and are in the process of resolving outstanding issues. Discussions will continue at the deputy level.”

Last month, the U.S. and China reached a truce and started working to finalize a “phase one” trade agreement that includes a pause in tariff escalation and China buying U.S. agriculture products. President Donald Trump said Thursday that a new location for signing the limited deal will be announced soon after the initial gathering in Chile was canceled due to protests in that country over public transport fares.

Trump also said the phase one trade deal represents 60% of a long-term agreement. However, a report Thursday showed China is doubtful about reaching a comprehensive trade deal with the U.S. due to Trump’s “impulsive nature.”

Larry Kudlow, Trump’s top economic advisor, told Fox Business Network on Friday that the two countries haven’t completed negotiations on intellectual property theft and forced technology transfer, adding financial services and currency chapters of the trade deal are “virtually wrapped up.”

Many on Wall Street have expressed skepticism about the phase one deal, believing it represents a much smaller portion of the resolution than Trump had originally set out to pursue.

Source Article from https://www.cnbc.com/2019/11/01/china-says-its-reached-a-consensus-in-principle-with-the-us-during-this-weeks-trade-talks.html

WASHINGTON (Reuters) – “READ THE TRANSCRIPT!” U.S. President Donald Trump exhorts regularly on Twitter, referring to a telephone call with Ukraine’s president that led to an impeachment inquiry. Now he is threatening to do just that – on live television.

Trump told the Washington Examiner he would not cooperate with congressional impeachment proceedings and might read out loud a transcript of a July 25 call in which Trump asks President Volodymyr Zelenskiy to investigate a domestic political rival.

“This is over a phone call that is a good call,” Trump told the Examiner in an interview. “At some point, I’m going to sit down, perhaps as a fireside chat on live television, and I will read the transcript of the call, because people have to hear it. When you read it, it’s a straight call.”

Trump’s reference to the fireside chat recalled the informal evening radio addresses President Franklin D. Roosevelt used to reassure Americans facing hardships during the Great Depression – a far cry from a U.S. president defending himself against impeachment.

The Trump administration in September released a detailed summary of the 30-minute call – not a precise transcript – based on notes taken by aides, as Democrats in the House of Representatives began looking into Trump’s call following a whistleblower complaint.

The House, which is controlled by Democrats, approved rules on Thursday for the next, more public, stage in the inquiry into the Republican president’s attempt to have Ukraine investigate a domestic political rival.

The inquiry centers on whether Trump solicited foreign interference and aid in a U.S. election, which federal law prohibits. Democrats are also investigating whether Trump withheld $391 million in American aid to vulnerable Ukraine, who faced a military threat from Russian-backed separatists, as leverage to get Zelenskiy to announce an investigation into former Vice President Joe Biden and his son Hunter. [

Biden is a leading contender for the Democratic nomination to face Trump in the November 2020 presidential election. Hunter Biden sat on the board of a Ukrainian energy company. There has been no evidence of wrongdoing on their part.

Current and former Trump administration officials have testified behind closed doors that the White House went outside normal diplomatic channels to pressure Zelenskiy to investigate the Bidens.

Trump has insisted he did nothing wrong. He said his administration would continue to not honor document requests and subpoenas.

He told the Examiner he would fight back with a defense of the Ukraine call and use his well-honed art of the slogan, offering T-shirts emblazoned with “Read the transcript.”

Reporting by Doina Chiacu; Editing by Frances Kerry

Source Article from https://www.reuters.com/article/us-usa-trump-impeachment-chat/trump-may-read-summary-of-ukraine-call-in-fireside-chat-interview-idUSKBN1XB43M

ORINDA, Calif. – Four people were killed and at least four injured at a Halloween party shooting at a Northern California home rented by a woman who falsely claimed she wanted the Airbnb so her asthmatic family members could escape wildfire smoke, officials and a person with knowledge of the transaction said Friday.

Gunshots were reported at about 10:45 p.m. PDT Thursday at the large home in the wealthy San Francisco suburb of Orinda where more than 100 people had gathered, police said. The home had been rented on Airbnb by a woman who told the owner her dozen family members needed a place with fresh air, the person with knowledge of the transaction told The Associated Press.

A one-night rental on Halloween was suspicious enough that before agreeing to rent the home, the owner reminded the renter that no parties were allowed, said the person, who was not authorized to publicly disclose the information and spoke only on condition of anonymity.

The renter, whose name and hometown have not been disclosed, told the homeowner that her family members had asthma and needed a place with fresh air. A giant wildfire burning in Sonoma County about 60 miles north of Orinda earlier in the week forced tens of thousands to evacuate and fouled the air over a wide area.

Source Article from https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/nation/2019/11/01/california-shooting-party-halloween-san-francisco-shot-four-dead/4128444002/

Chat with us in Facebook Messenger. Find out what’s happening in the world as it unfolds.

Source Article from https://www.cnn.com/2019/11/01/politics/beto-orourke-drops-out/index.html

The identical twin brother of Lt. Col. Alexander Vindman, the top Ukraine expert on the National Security Council who testified this week before House lawmakers in the Trump impeachment probe, may also be called to testify, according to a report.

Yevgeny Vindman, also an Army lieutenant colonel, works in the White House in an office next to his brother as an NSC lawyer handling ethics issues.

Alexander Vindman allegedly told investigators that his sibling had witnessed the decision to move the transcript of President Trump’s July 25 phone call with his Ukrainian counterpart, Volodymyr Zelensky, to a top secret server, according to the Wall Street Journal.

House committees have contacted Yevgeny’s lawyer, although no decision has been made, a person briefed on the outreach told the news outlet.

Unlike Alexander, Yevgeny didn’t listen in on the conversation between the two leaders, during which Trump asked Zelensky to investigate former Vice President Joe Biden and his son Hunter while almost $400 million in aid was being withheld from Ukraine, a source told the Journal.

But Yevgeny was allegedly present when Alexander, at the direction of his superiors, reported the phone call to the NSC’s general counsel, John Eisenberg, a person familiar with the colonel’s testimony told the paper.

Army Lt. Col. Alexander Vindman arrives for a closed session before the House Intelligence, Foreign Affairs and Oversight committees at the US Capitol on Oct. 29.EPA

Gordon Lang, Yevgeny’s attorney, declined to comment to the Journal.

White House deputy press secretary Hogan Gidley told the outlet that the White House “will not discuss the internal deliberations of the White House Counsel’s Office.”

Source Article from https://nypost.com/2019/11/01/vindmans-identical-twin-may-be-called-to-testify-in-impeachment-probe/

White House aides said Friday that they are prepared for President TrumpDonald John TrumpTrump says he would be willing to do ‘fireside chat’ reading the Zelensky transcript Krystal Ball: ‘The weird obsession and freakout over Tulsi Gabbard has massively helped her’ Trump says poor treatment and high taxes prompted permanent residence change MORE to be impeached by the House.

“We are prepared for an impeachment to happen,” White House press secretary Stephanie GrishamStephanie Grisham2020 Democrats applaud House vote on impeachment procedures Ivanka Trump quotes Jefferson on ‘enemies’ in Washington after impeachment vote Trump slams ‘witch hunt’ after House impeachment vote MORE said in an interview on Fox News. “[Speaker] Nancy PelosiNancy PelosiOn The Money: Senate passes first spending package as shutdown looms | Treasury moves to roll back Obama rules on offshore tax deals | Trade deal talks manage to weather Trump impeachment storm Former coal exec Don Blankenship files for third-party presidential bid Democrats, GOP dig in for public phase of impeachment battle MORE [D-Calif.] has made it very, very clear that the House Democrats are going to vote.”

Grisham said she hoped Democrats would “come to their senses” but described them as intent on impeaching Trump despite him doing “nothing wrong.”

“As we’re preparing in the White House, this is what has been shown,” Grisham said. “They have made their intentions very clear.”

Grisham’s remarks seemed to suggest that the White House views impeachment to be likely if not inevitable. However, when pressed, she pushed back on the notion that she believes impeachment to be a foregone conclusion but said the White House is “expecting” it.

Grisham also reiterated that Trump believes the impeachment inquiry to be a “sham,” pointing to criticisms he has voiced on his Twitter feed.

“I wouldn’t say it is a foregone conclusion, I would say it’s what we’re expecting it, yes,” Grisham said.

White House counselor Kellyanne ConwayKellyanne Elizabeth ConwayWhite House launches website to help people find addiction treatment Menendez seeks probe into if Pompeo violated Hatch Act Conway calls it ‘silly’ to say she threatened Washington Examiner reporter MORE later told reporters that impeachment “certainly is possible” and that she is “prepared” for the result, while noting it could go the other way depending on what evidence was presented by Democrats.

“[Democrats] know the votes are not there in the Senate. So, if you’re going to impeach the president are you going to remove him? Unlikely. But I’m prepared for the president to be impeached and I’m prepared for the votes to not go that way depending on what the evidence says,” Conway told reporters at the White House.

“I would hope that we are going to have a process that we haven’t had so far,” she added, saying the White House would like to see open hearings and be able to cross-examine witnesses.

Their remarks came one day after the House voted along party lines to approve procedures for the impeachment inquiry, paving the way for the second phase in which Democrats expect to take hearings public and draft articles of impeachment that will later be voted on.

The inquiry is focused on Trump’s July 25 call with Ukraine’s president during which he asked Kiev to “look into” former Vice President Joe BidenJoe BidenTrump says he would be willing to do ‘fireside chat’ reading the Zelensky transcript Judge questions whether Don McGahn is immune from testifying in front of House: report California Governor Newsom and family dress as 2020 Democrats for Halloween MORE and his son Hunter Biden’s business dealings. Democrats are investigating in part whether Trump held up military aid to pressure Ukraine to open a politically motivated investigation.

Trump has insisted that he did nothing wrong on the call and that there was no quid pro quo involved in his dealings with Ukraine, a message Grisham reiterated Friday. She described the investigation as a “stupid impeachment sham from the Democrats.”

Grisham also said Trump was serious when he raised the prospect of performing a televised “fireside chat” reading of his call with Ukraine President Volodymyr Zelensky during an interview with the Washington Examiner.

“Anything he says is always a consideration,” Grisham said, though she declined to say when it could happen.

“He has got nothing to hide. I think that’s the point that is not getting across,” she continued. “That phone call was a normal phone call with a foreign leader.”

The White House has accused Democrats of an unfair process in the five weeks since Pelosi announced the inquiry, criticizing party leaders for holding closed-door depositions and not voting to formalize the inquiry.

Grisham would not say Friday whether the vote would change the White House’s unwillingness to cooperate. Thus far, the White House has refused to furnish documents pursuant to subpoenas and sought to block witnesses from testifying.

“If things are actually open and transparent as purported, I would believe that we would participate,” Grisham said on Fox.

—Updated at 3:48 p.m.

Source Article from https://thehill.com/homenews/administration/468537-white-house-prepared-for-trump-to-be-impeached

Sen. Elizabeth Warren speaks to reporters in Des Moines, Iowa, on Friday, after releasing her plan to pay for single-payer health care.

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Sen. Elizabeth Warren speaks to reporters in Des Moines, Iowa, on Friday, after releasing her plan to pay for single-payer health care.

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Sen. Elizabeth Warren says paying for “Medicare for All” would require $20.5 trillion in new federal spending over a decade. That spending includes higher taxes on the wealthy but no new taxes on the middle class.

The Democratic presidential candidate released her plan to pay for Medicare for All on Friday after being dogged for months by questions of how she would finance such a sweeping overhaul of the health care system. That pressure has been intensified by the fact that Warren has made detailed proposals a central part of her brand as a candidate.

Medicare for All is a single-payer health care proposal introduced by Sen. Bernie Sanders and cosponsored by multiple candidates in the presidential race, including Warren. It would virtually eliminate private insurance, including employer-sponsored coverage.

It also represents a political risk, as multiple polls show that introducing a public option for health insurance coverage is more popular than a Medicare for All plan that almost entirely does away with private insurance.

Here’s a look at what Warren has laid out to provide single-payer health care, including proposals to cut costs, where new revenue would come from, where funds would not be taken from and what comes next.

How Warren wants to reduce spending

Warren bases her plan off of a recent analysis from the Urban Institute, which estimated that under current law, Americans would spend $52 trillion over the next decade on health care — that includes many types of spending, from employers, individuals and all levels of government.

In that analysis, the Urban Institute calculated that under a single-payer plan that looks a lot like Medicare for All, costs would total $59 trillion over a decade, which would require $34 trillion in new federal spending.

Warren’s plan estimates that total health costs could be held to $52 trillion and that $20.5 trillion in new federal spending would be necessary.

Like Urban, Warren’s plan assumes that Medicare for All would pay doctors what Medicare pays them right now. It would also pay hospitals 110 percent of what Medicare pays right now — slightly less than Urban’s 115 percent assumption.

This question — what to pay hospitals and doctors — is a big part of what determines how much Medicare for All would cost. That’s because Medicare pays doctors and hospitals much less than private insurance.

“This plan aggressively constrains the price of health care, paying doctors, hospitals and drug companies much less,” said Larry Levitt, executive vice president for health policy at the Kaiser Family Foundation. “There would be a lot of adjustment required from from hospitals and doctors as their incomes go down.”

Just how seismic such a shift would be would depend in part on how fast the transition is, he added.

“I think how quickly she proposes to transition to this new system will be really important because it would be very disruptive to the health care system,” Levitt said. “You know, a quick transition would be hard and potentially result in shortages or increased wait times for health care.”

Sanders calls for a four-year transition to Medicare for All — a pace that Levitt characterized as “quite quick.” In a Friday blog post spelling out her proposal, Warren said she plans to unveil her transition plan “in the weeks ahead.”

A letter from economists supporting the plan, provided by Warren’s team, argued that these payment rates would work in part because doctors and hospitals would save substantially on administrative costs. Warren’s team also says there would be ways to ensure that vulnerable hospitals, like those in rural areas, would get paid more, so they could stay in business.

Her proposal also establishes savings by projecting that Medicare for All could substantially slow medical cost growth. Warren also stipulates that state and local governments would redirect the more than $6 trillion they currently spend on Medicaid and the Children’s Health Insurance Program (CHIP) to the federal government.

Where money would not come from

One thing that’s notable about this plan is where the revenue doesn’t come from. Warren had promised at a recent debate that she would not sign a bill that raises health care costs for the middle class.

This plan goes further: Middle-class Americans would no longer pay health premiums or copays and would also not pay new taxes to replace those costs. They would, however, pay taxes on whatever additional take-home pay they would receive from this plan. That would add $1.4 trillion in revenue, her team estimates.

This is a departure from Bernie Sanders’ ideas about how to fund Medicare for All. One of his options is a 4% tax on families earning more than $29,000. At the Democrats’ October debate, he explained that taxes would go up for many Americans under his plan.

“At the end of the day, the overwhelming majority of people will save money on their health care bills. But I do think it is appropriate to acknowledge that taxes will go up,” he said. “They’re going to go up significantly for the wealthy. And for virtually everybody, the tax increase they pay will be substantially less — substantially less than what they were paying for premiums and out-of-pocket expenses.”

Where the $20.5 trillion comes from

Employers are one of the main sources of revenue in this proposal. Warren says she would raise nearly $9 trillion here, a figure that comes from the roughly $9 trillion private employers are projected to spend over the next decade on health insurance. The idea here is that instead of contributing to employees’ health insurance, employers would pay virtually all of that money to the government.

In addition, she will boost her proposed 3% wealth tax on people with over a billion dollars to 6% and also boost taxes on large corporations. Altogether, she believes, taxes on the rich and on corporations would raise an estimated $6 trillion. An additional $2.3 trillion would come from improving tax enforcement.

But there are lingering questions about how much revenue some of these taxes would bring in or how easy it would be to impose a wealth tax in particular.

“Something like half of the wealth of the wealthiest people in America are held in privately held corporations, privately held businesses,” said Howard Gleckman, senior fellow at the Urban-Brookings Tax Policy Center. “And it’s really hard to value those assets for tax purposes.”

Warren also includes comprehensive immigration reform as part of her plan. Giving more people a path to citizenship would mean more taxpayers, which would mean more tax revenue.

Political ramifications

While Medicare for All is Sanders’ plan, his bill does not include set methods to pay for the plan. Rather, Sanders has included “options” to pay for his health care plan. In a recent interview with CNBC, he said “we’ll have that debate” over how exactly to finance the plan.

As the candidate with “a plan for that,” as one of her slogans goes, Warren has been asked repeatedly whether her health care overhaul plan would raise taxes on the middle class. Warren repeatedly said in response that she would not raise costs for the middle class.

This proposal gives Warren an answer for the next time she is asked how she would pay for Medicare for All, and it means she can say that she wouldn’t impose new taxes on middle-class Americans.

But it also gives her opponents potential new fodder for attacks. Former Vice President Joe Biden has already come out swinging, accusing Warren of fuzzy math. In addition, his team argues that that nearly $9 trillion that employers would pay the government would ultimately hurt workers.

“To accomplish this sleight of hand, her proposal dramatically understates its cost, overstates its savings, inflates the revenue, and pretends that an employer payroll tax increase is something else,” said Biden deputy campaign manager Kate Bedingfield in a statement released Friday.

Source Article from https://www.npr.org/2019/11/01/775339519/heres-how-warren-finds-20-5-trillion-to-pay-for-medicare-for-all

From Castro Peak in the Santa Monica Mountains, the sun is beginning to set when a small bright light emerges far in the distance. The tiny speck, barely noticeable, marks the beginning of another massive California wildfire.

Within seconds — fanned by strong Santa Ana winds — the fire explodes, sending up massive flames and a plume of dark smoke that quickly blanketed small the agricultural towns just south of Santa Paula.

Thursday’s ignition of the Maria fire in Ventura County was captured by a camera from the ALERT Wildfire program, an effort by three universities — UC San Diego, the University of Nevada and the University of Oregon — to help firefighters investigate the origins of fires and their behavior. The program is funded by utility companies throughout California, including Southern California Edison.

The camera, mounted atop the peak of the Santa Monica Mountains, recorded the fire’s first moments after it broke out on South Mountain about 6:16 p.m. Thursday and quickly began burning toward Somis and Saticoy, forcing more than 1,000 residents to flee.

The Times is offering fire coverage for free today. Please consider a subscription to support our journalism.

Studying the footage helps firefighters develop a strategy as they battle wildfires and help residents evacuate, Neal Driscoll, a professor of geology and geoscience at UC San Diego, told The Times last week.

“Our whole goal is to save lives, minimize burning of wildland and [save] habitats,” he said. “First responders and Cal Fire have password-encrypted rights to get on the cameras” through their cellphones.

By 7 a.m. Friday, the Maria fire had grown to 8,730 acres and had already burned two structures, including a home. At the tail end of a strong Santa Ana wind event, firefighters have struggled to gain control of the blaze, which remained 0% contained nearly 18 hours after it ignited.

Though strong winds have complicated the fight, the blaze broke out high on the ridge so it gave authorities time to conduct evacuations before the flames moved down the mountain and into residential areas, said Ventura Assistant Fire Chief John McNeil.

McNeil said the location of the Maria fire means it probably will run out of fuel to burn once it reaches more manicured landscapes at the bottom of the hill.

More than 500 firefighters battling the blaze took advantage of lighter winds overnight and early Friday, using a helicopter with night-flying capabilities and ground crews in an effort to protect nearby homes and avocado and citrus orchards, Ventura County Fire Capt. Brian McGrath said.

“The winds have died down and the cold temperatures have reduced the fire’s ability to aggressively run downhill,” McGrath said. “Today we’re going to see what the sun looks like on it and see what the normal onshore breeze is going to do for us.”

Times staff writer Alejandra Reyes-Velarde contributed to this report.

Source Article from https://www.latimes.com/california/story/2019-11-01/watch-the-moment-the-maria-fire-in-ventura-county-ignited

Donald Trump has insisted he has “done nothing wrong” and does not deserve to be impeached, and made the extraordinary suggestion that he appear on live TV to read the full transcript of his controversial phone call with the Ukrainian president in a “fireside chat”.

On the evening of the historic day that the House of Representatives voted to formalize impeachment proceedings against him, Trump proclaimed his innocence in an Oval Office interview with the Washington Examiner.

Meanwhile, the speaker of the House, Nancy Pelosi, who announced the launch of the impeachment inquiry in September, appeared on Stephen Colbert’s late-night TV show and said: “I pray for the United States of America.”

Pelosi said: “It’s very sad. We don’t want to impeach a president. We don’t want the reality that a president has done something that is in violation of the constitution.”

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Article 1 of the United States constitution gives the House of Representatives the sole power to initiate impeachment and the Senate the sole power to try impeachments of the president. A president can be impeached if they are judged to have committed “treason, bribery, or other high crimes and misdemeanors” – although the constitution does not specify what “high crimes and misdemeanors” are.

The process starts with the House of Representatives passing articles of impeachment. A simple majority of members need to vote in favour of impeachment for it to pass to the next stage. Democrats currently control the house, with 235 representatives.

The chief justice of the US supreme court then presides over the proceedings in the Senate, where the president is tried, with senators acting as the jury. For the president to be found guilty two-thirds of senators must vote to convict. Republicans currently control the Senate, with 53 of the 100 senators.

Two presidents have previously been impeached, Bill Clinton in 1998, and Andrew Johnson in 1868, though neither was removed from office as a result. Richard Nixon resigned in 1974 before there was a formal vote to impeach him.

Martin Belam

But a defiant Trump defended himself from the allegation at the heart of the inquiry – that he pressured the Ukrainian president, Volodymyr Zelenskiy, to investigate Joe Biden and delayed vital military aid to Ukraine as a quid pro quo.

Trump has previously described the central phone call in which he asked Zelenskiy for “a favor” as a “perfect” call. In his latest interview, he modified that by saying it was “a good call”.

He said: “At some point, I’m going to sit down, perhaps as a fireside chat on live television, and I will read the transcript of the call, because people have to hear it. When you read it, it’s a straight call.”

Trump also floated the idea of making T-shirts with the message “Read the transcript” as part of the White House strategy to defend him in the impeachment inquiry – which is likely to proceed in the next few months to a congressional trial in the Senate. He reiterated that the White House will not cooperate with the investigation, in terms of acceding to demands for documents and witnesses from the Democratic-dominated House or obeying subpoenas.

After a whistleblower from the US intelligence community made a formal complaint about the substance of the phone call, the White House issued a memo that revealed much of the phone dialogue – echoing the whistleblower’s details – but was not a full transcript.

Trump also sharply contrasted his situation with that of the Democratic president Bill Clinton in his second term, over an affair with a White House intern, and the fate of the Republican president Richard Nixon, who resigned in 1974 as he was facing the impeachment process and likely removal from office.


Could Donald Trump actually be impeached? – video

“Everybody knows I did nothing wrong,” he said. “Bill Clinton did things wrong; Richard Nixon did things wrong. I won’t go back to [Andrew] Johnson because that was a little before my time,” he said. “But they did things wrong. I did nothing wrong.”

Nixon was at the head of a conspiracy and cover-up that centered on the break-in of the Democratic National Committee office in the Watergate building in Washington in 1972 to steal dirt on his political opponents.

Johnson was impeached in 1868 on congressional charges relating to political corruption.

On Thursday, for only the third time in the history of the modern presidency, the US House of Representatives voted to formalize the impeachment proceedings.

In a largely party-line vote of 232-196, the House embarked on a path that seemed likely to lead to Donald Trump’s impeachment – if not necessarily his removal from office. Pelosi presided over the vote and marked it with a bang of her gavel.

Republicans held ranks to vote uniformly against the process, while two Democrats crossed party lines to join them. The House’s sole independent, former Republican Justin Amash of Michigan, voted to advance the resolution.

The vote set rules for the public phase of the inquiry, laying out a plan for impeachment that could produce dramatic televised public hearings within two weeks and a vote on impeachment itself by the end of the year.

For weeks, congressional investigators have been interviewing witnesses – 15 and counting – behind closed doors about alleged misconduct by Trump, who stands accused of using the power of his office to solicit foreign interference in the 2020 US election.

Witnesses have been called to appear behind closed doors next week, before a shift to open hearings and the drawing up of official articles of impeachment. A simple majority vote in favor in the House would then move the process to the Senate for a likely trial of the president.

Source Article from https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2019/nov/01/trump-impeachment-inquiry-ukraine-call-transcript

WASHINGTON – After Twitter CEO Jack Dorsey declared on Wednesday that his company would no longer run political ads, President Donald Trump’s reelection campaign denounced the move, while several 2020 Democratic presidential candidates lauded the decision. 

“We believe political message reach should be earned, not bought,” Dorsey said when he announced the move.

“Twitter just walked away from hundreds of millions of dollars of potential revenue, a very dumb decision for their stockholders,” Trump campaign manager Brad Parscale responded.  

Parscale expressed doubt that Twitter would apply the policy fairly across political ideologies and called it “another attempt to silence conservatives, since Twitter knows President Trump has the most sophisticated online program ever known.” 

In contrast, former Vice President Joe Biden’s campaign manager, Bill Russo, lamented that Twitter felt it had to take such drastic action, but applauded the decision as an example of a private enterprise putting principle ahead of profit. 

Source Article from https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/politics/elections/2019/10/31/twitter-political-ad-ban-bashed-trump-campaign-lauded-2020-dems/4109354002/