Sen. Mitt Romney brushed off Democrats for complaining about the Senate’s decision to follow trial rules similar to those used during President Bill Clinton’s impeachment.

Romney, 72, the junior senator for Utah and 2012 Republican presidential nominee, has been one of the few Senate Republicans to question President Trump’s behavior in the events that led to impeachment, but he claimed that Democrats have taken their protests too far. While speaking to CNN on Monday, the Utah senator criticized his Democratic colleagues for opposing Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell’s version of the impeachment trial rules that were used during Clinton’s impeachment.

“Well, the changes [in the trial rules] are pretty modest and I don’t think are significant in any dramatic way. So for instance, whether something is going to be taking 12 hours per day or eight hours per day, it’s still going to be covered in the news,” Romney said. “And what’s officially going into evidence doesn’t make a big difference because the senators are, of course, free to look at all the information they have that comes from the House.”

He added, “I think the Democrats make a mistake when they cry outrage time and time again. If everything is an outrage, then nothing is an outrage.”

Romney said he would be supportive of hearing testimony from additional witnesses, saying, “I’m interested in hearing from John Bolton, perhaps, among others.”

It is not clear how many witnesses, if any, will participate in the impeachment trial. Several Republicans have said they would demand that reciprocal witnesses, such as Hunter Biden, testify for every witness the Democrats want to call, such as Bolton. Sen. Ted Cruz, a Republican from Texas, said the impeachment trial could last eight weeks “or even longer” if several additional witnesses are called.

Source Article from https://www.washingtonexaminer.com/news/romney-rips-democrats-for-impeachment-gripes-if-you-call-everything-outrageous-then-nothing-is-outrageous

Alleged Sept. 11 mastermind Khalid Sheikh Mohammed (far left) consults with his defense attorneys in the U.S. military courtroom in Guantánamo Bay, Cuba, as a man who waterboarded him, retired Air Force psychologist James Mitchell, takes the stand.

Janet Hamlin Illustration


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Janet Hamlin Illustration

Alleged Sept. 11 mastermind Khalid Sheikh Mohammed (far left) consults with his defense attorneys in the U.S. military courtroom in Guantánamo Bay, Cuba, as a man who waterboarded him, retired Air Force psychologist James Mitchell, takes the stand.

Janet Hamlin Illustration

One of the architects of the CIA’s torture program for the accused Sept. 11 terrorists testified Wednesday in a Guantánamo Bay courtroom that he eventually came to believe that those torture techniques had gone too far and verged on breaking the law.

Testifying publicly under oath for the first time as part of a pretrial hearing for the criminal case against five accused Sept. 11 terrorists, psychologist and interrogator James Mitchell spoke specifically and graphically about one prisoner, Abu Zubaydah, who was waterboarded more than 80 times at a CIA site overseas. He has been held at Guantánamo for more than 13 years and has never been charged with a crime.

According to Mitchell’s testimony, he thought they’d gotten all the information they could from Zubaydah, who had agreed to cooperate. Mitchell wanted the waterboarding to stop and helped draft a message to CIA headquarters saying that “the intensity of the pressure applied to him thus far approaches the legal limit” and that Zubaydah’s mental state was deteriorating dangerously.

He said the CIA told them to keep going because Zubaydah might still be withholding valuable information about an imminent U.S. attack. In Mitchell’s words, “They were absolutely convinced he had something cooking.” Mitchell says he agreed to waterboard Zubaydah just one more time, but he wanted a senior CIA official to come see in person what it looked like. A senior CIA official did attend that waterboarding, during which — Mitchell testified — Zubaydah was having involuntary body spasms and was crying. Mitchell said he and others in the room became tearful.

“I thought it was unnecessary, and I felt sorry for him,” Mitchell testified.

Mitchell, who personally waterboarded alleged Sept. 11 mastermind Khalid Sheikh Mohammed, began testifying on Tuesday and is expected to continue through the week.

The CIA paid a company owned by Mitchell and his partner, Bruce Jessen, another psychologist, more than $80 million to develop the torture program ultimately used by the CIA on suspected terrorists: waterboarding, stress positions and mock burials, among others. Mitchell and Jessen took a training program meant to teach the U.S. military to resist torture and reverse-engineered it. Once the public learned about the practices, the CIA canceled Mitchell and Jessen’s contract amid international controversy in 2009. Jessen is expected to testify after Mitchell.

Mitchell and Jessen say those methods were meant to be more uncomfortable than painful, but they acknowledge that some interrogations got out of control and say it’s not their fault that other interrogators used the techniques in abusive and unauthorized ways. Mitchell says he got to the point where he didn’t want to be involved anymore but says officials above him told him he’d lost his spine and it would be his fault if more people in the U.S. died in a catastrophic attack.

“The implication was that if we weren’t willing to carry their water, they would send someone else who would do it, and they may be harsher than we were,” Mitchell testified.

Mitchell says he came to Guantánamo Bay for the Sept. 11 victims and their families, emphasizing the climate of fear after the 2001 terrorist attacks. He testified that the CIA had been afraid that another attack was imminent, possibly one with the use of nuclear or biological weapons. He says the government was going to do whatever was necessary to prevent that, saying that the CIA was “going to walk right up to the line of what was legal, put their toes on it and lean forward.”

Mitchell’s revelations suggest that the CIA was willing to lean forward further than Mitchell himself. The CIA declined to comment on the testimony. Still, Mitchell spoke defiantly and unapologetically. He insisted that he was protecting his country and would do so again if given the chance, despite his own testimony indicating that he tried to draw a line in the sand and despite internal debate within the CIA over whether they were venturing into illegal territory.

“I thought my moral obligation to protect American lives outweighed the temporary discomfort of terrorists who had voluntarily taken up war against us,” he testified.

Mitchell has been called as a witness in the Sept. 11 case because defense attorneys want to use him to support their argument that the evidence gathered from the defendants by the FBI should not be presented at trial because it has been tainted by torture. The FBI did not use torture to gather its statements, but those statements were gathered after the CIA’s use of torture. The defense attorneys have argued that once a person has been tortured, you cannot trust anything they tell any interrogator. The statements given by those defendants to the CIA are already inadmissible, because they were not given voluntarily. Mitchell says the CIA was never interested in prosecuting the prisoners.

The pretrial hearings for the Sept. 11 trial, which is scheduled to begin next January, have been going on for years. As NPR previously reported, one major reason for the slow pace has been the use of torture that happened at the CIA’s overseas sites. In a 2008 statement, former CIA Director Mike Hayden said that waterboarding in particular had not been used since 2003.

“The Agency’s decision to employ waterboarding in the wake of 9/11 was not only lawful, it reflected the circumstances of the time,” the statement read. “Those two realities have changed.”

Source Article from https://www.npr.org/2020/01/22/798561799/architect-of-cias-torture-program-says-it-went-too-far

Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, Senator Murphy and Senate Democrats to hold press conference on Senate impeachment trial.

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Source Article from https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=A-c3lA2GgGU

Schiff, who led the House in its efforts to pass two articles of impeachment against Trump in December, spoke on the Senate floor for more than two hours.

He made lofty arguments about historical precedent, warning that if Trump is not removed, future presidents will feel free to seek foreign help with elections.

Trump was impeached over his efforts to pressure Ukraine President Volodymyr Zelenskiy to launch investigations into his political rival, former Vice President Joe Biden, and his son Hunter, along with a debunked conspiracy theory alleging Ukrainian interference in the 2016 presidential election.

While Trump sought those investigations, his administration was withholding hundreds of millions of dollars in military aid to Ukraine without providing a clear explanation. Democrats also impeached Trump for blocking the House’s investigation into the matter, by refusing to hand over any documents and directing key witnesses not to comply with Congress.

Schiff began his remarks by tying the founding fathers’ “prescient” views about impeachment to Trump through a quote from Alexander Hamilton:

“When a man unprincipled in private life desperate in his fortune, bold in his temper, possessed of considerable talents, having the advantage of military habits — despotic in his ordinary demeanour — known to have scoffed in private at the principles of liberty — when such a man is seen to mount the hobby horse of popularity — to join in the cry of danger to liberty — to take every opportunity of embarrassing the General Government & bringing it under suspicion — to flatter and fall in with all the non sense of the zealots of the day — It may justly be suspected that his object is to throw things into confusion that he may ‘ride the storm and direct the whirlwind.'”

Schiff quickly moved to establish that Trump’s dealings with Ukraine constituted abuses of the presidency – a preemptive strike against Trump’s attorneys, who maintain that the president has done nothing wrong.

Trump, Schiff said, “does not, under our laws and under our constitution, have a right to use the powers of his office to corruptly solicit foreign aid, prohibited foreign aid, in his re-election.”

“He does not have the right to withhold official presidential acts to secure that assistance, and he certainly does not have the right to undermine our elections and place our security at risk for his own personal benefit,” Schiff said. “No president, Republican or Democrat, can be permitted to do that.”

Schiff also employed the words of acting White House chief of staff Mick Mulvaney, who in October admitted – then tried to walk back – that the Ukraine aid was tied to investigations.

If this was allowed to stand, Schiff argued, there was no limit to the presidential malfeasance Americans would be told to just “get over it” in the future.

“Are we to accept, ‘Well, the president says there was no quid pro quo, I guess that closes the case!'” Schiff asked rhetorically.

Source Article from https://www.cnbc.com/2020/01/22/trump-impeachment-trial-schumer-says-dems-wont-trade-bolton-for-biden.html

Here’s what you need to know to understand the impeachment trial of President Trump.

What’s happening now: Opening arguments have begun in the Senate impeachment trial.

What happens next: Under ground rules adopted early this morning, each side is given 24 hours to present their case over a three-day period. Here’s more on what happens next.

How we got here: A whistleblower complaint led House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) to announce the beginning of an official impeachment inquiry on Sept. 24. Closed-door hearings and subpoenaed documents related to the president’s July 25 phone call with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky followed. After two weeks of public hearings in November, the House Intelligence Committee wrote a report that was sent to the House Judiciary Committee, which held its own hearings. Pelosi and House Democrats announced the articles of impeachment against Trump on Dec. 10. The Judiciary Committee approved two articles of impeachment against Trump: abuse of power and obstruction of Congress. When the full House of Representatives adopted both articles of impeachment against him on Dec. 18, Trump became the third U.S. president to be impeached.

Stay informed: Read the latest reporting and analysis on impeachment here.

Listen: Follow The Washington Post’s coverage with daily updates from across our podcasts.

Want to understand impeachment better? Sign up for the 5-Minute Fix to get a guide in your inbox every weekday. Have questions? Submit them here, and they may be answered in the newsletter.

Source Article from https://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/senators-urge-house-impeachment-managers-to-tone-it-down-after-testy-debate/2020/01/22/e515807a-3d36-11ea-b90d-5652806c3b3a_story.html

General Motors, Ford and other U.S. companies have started restricting employee travel to Wuhan, China, as an outbreak of a flu-like coronavirus that has killed at least 17 people spreads throughout Asia.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and Homeland Security started screening passengers flying to major U.S. airports from China for the disease over the weekend. The World Health Organization convened an emergency meeting in Geneva on Wednesday to assess the severity of the illness and issue recommendations to control the outbreak.

Fears that the coronavirus could disrupt travel and commerce and slow economic growth sent a chill through global risk markets, hitting Asian stocks hard, depressing copper and oil prices, and sending investors into safe havens, such as U.S. Treasurys and German bunds.

Business leaders at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, privately expressed concerns this week about the virus, according to people with direct knowledge of the matter. Some even raised the issue directly with President Donald Trump at a private breakfast Wednesday morning, according to an executive who attended the meeting.

  • The Association of Flight Attendants, which represents about 50,000 cabin crew members at 20 airlines including United, said Tuesday it was contacting airlines to put in place precautions for crew members, while the Air Line Pilots Association distributed information from U.S. and international health officials on the virus.
  • General Motors has placed a temporary restriction on travel to the Chinese city where the outbreak emerged over the holidays, “out of an abundance of caution,” the company said in a statement. “Employees are also reminded to take necessary protection measures suggested by medical authorities.”
  • Ford Motor “has suspended all business travel to Wuhan, specifically, and is monitoring the situation very closely,” a company spokesman said, adding that the Detroit automaker hasn’t suspended travel to other parts of China.
  • Fiat Chrysler hasn’t imposed any travel restrictions “at this time,” but it’s advising employees to travel to China only for “essential business.” It’s also implemented a travel advisory for all people who need to get around in the region, a company spokesman said.
  • Norwegian Cruise Line is beginning to screen passengers departing from Chinese ports, according to a company spokesperson. The Miami-based cruise line won’t let anyone who’s traveling from Wuhan, China, or who has been in the city over the last 30 days to board. It’s also denying boarding for guests with a body temperature of 100.4 degrees Fahrenheit or more.

This story is developing. Please check back for updates.

— CNBC’s Leslie Josephs, Brian Schwartz and Michael Wayland and Reuters contributed to this article.

Source Article from https://www.cnbc.com/2020/01/22/some-us-companies-have-started-restricting-china-travel-as-coronavirus-outbreak-spreads.html

WASHINGTON (Reuters) – Democratic presidential contender Tulsi Gabbard sued Hillary Clinton for defamation on Wednesday, seeking at least $50 million in damages for harming her reputation by suggesting last year that one of the party’s White House contenders was a “Russian asset.”

The lawsuit said Clinton’s comments had damaged the presidential candidacy of Gabbard, a U.S. representative from Hawaii, and were motivated by anger over Gabbard’s endorsement in 2016 of Clinton’s Democratic nominating contest rival, Bernie Sanders.

“Clinton got exactly what she wanted by lying about Tulsi – she harmed her political and personal rival’s reputation and ongoing presidential campaign, and started a damaging whisper campaign based on baseless, but vicious, untruths,” said the lawsuit, filed in federal court in New York.

“That’s ridiculous,” Clinton spokesman Nick Merrill said of the lawsuit.

Clinton, the Democratic presidential nominee in 2016, had said on a podcast in October that Russians were grooming one of the Democratic presidential candidates for a third-party bid, but did not name the candidate.

“She’s the favorite of the Russians, they have a bunch of sites and bots and other ways of supporting her so far, and that’s assuming Jill Stein will give it up, which she might not, because she’s also a Russian asset,” Clinton said.

Stein was the Green Party candidate in the 2016 presidential election.

After the podcast comments, Merrill confirmed to Politico that Clinton was referring to Gabbard.

The Gabbard lawsuit said Clinton had refused to apologize or retract the comments, which it described as “devastating to a United States politician’s reputation,” and made them knowing they were false.

“Rep. Gabbard must defend her good name and hold Mrs. Clinton responsible. This lawsuit intends to do just that,” Gabbard’s lawyer, Brian Dunne, said in a statement.

As a public figure, Gabbard must show that the defendant acted with actual malice to recover damages. In addition, U.S. courts have said “rhetorical hyperbole” associated with politics is constitutionally protected speech.

Gabbard has routinely polled in the law single digits in the Democratic race to pick a challenger to Republican President Donald Trump in November’s election, but she has said she will not run as a third-party candidate.

After Clinton’s comments in October, Gabbard said the former first lady, U.S. senator and secretary of state was the “embodiment of corruption and personification of the rot that has sickened the Democratic Party for so long.”

Reporting by John Whitesides; Editing by Jonathan Oatis and Peter Cooney

Source Article from https://www.reuters.com/article/us-usa-election-gabbard-idUSKBN1ZL2UR

The Senate impeachment trial of US President Donald Trump has begun. Republican Senate Majority leader, Mitch McConnell, wants to block subpoenaing key witnesses or documents. While the Democrats say this will be no less than a cover-up.

Mr Trump is charged with abusing his presidential power with leverage over Ukraine, and of obstructing Congress as it looked into his conduct. He denies all the charges.

Part of the BBC News at Ten’s coverage, presented by Huw Edwards with reporting from our North America Editor Jon Sopel.

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Source Article from https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LTThOmwR3h8

The Trump International Hotel in Washington, D.C., sits at the center of what top Democrats and some ethics advisers see as a unique web of conflicts of interest.

John Minchillo/AP


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John Minchillo/AP

The Trump International Hotel in Washington, D.C., sits at the center of what top Democrats and some ethics advisers see as a unique web of conflicts of interest.

John Minchillo/AP

The District of Columbia is suing President Trump’s inaugural committee, the Trump Organization and the Trump International Hotel in Washington, accusing them of “grossly overpaying” for event space at the hotel to enrich the president’s family during the 2017 inauguration.

The funds to rent the hotel space came from the inaugural committee. As a nonprofit, the committee was not legally allowed to use “any portion of its funds to be spent in a way that are designed to benefit private persons or companies,” according to the lawsuit. The committee spent more than a million dollars to rent the hotel space, a cost that D.C. Attorney General Karl Racine says is far above market rate.

“We are seeking to recover the nonprofit funds that were improperly funneled directly to the Trump family business,” Racine said in a statement about the lawsuit filed Wednesday. He wants those funds, if they are recovered, to be funneled to a nonprofit promoting U.S. civic engagement.

A Trump Hotels spokesperson denied there was anything inappropriate about the contract and said the timing of the complaint “reeks of politics.”

“The AG’s claims are false, intentionally misleading and riddled with inaccuracies,” the spokesperson said in an emailed statement to NPR. “The rates charged by the hotel were completely in line with what anyone else would have been charged for an unprecedented event of this enormous magnitude and were reflective of the fact that [the] hotel had just recently opened, possessed superior facilities and was centrally located on Pennsylvania Avenue.”

But the Democratic attorney general says the inaugural committee paid many times over market value. The complaint filed in D.C. Superior Court states that another nonprofit, the Prayer Breakfast, paid just $5,000 to rent the ballroom on the morning of Trump’s inauguration. That afternoon, the inaugural committee reportedly paid $175,000 to rent the same room.

Nonprofit money was also used to “pay for a private after-hours party for the Trump family and roughly 1,200 guests at the Hotel,” Racine says, despite concerns raised by inaugural committee staff that the use of funds was inappropriate.

The inaugural committee was also involved in booking the majority of the rooms at the hotel, according to the complaint. The lawsuit states that it would be standard practice for the hotel to provide free or reduced-priced event space to a group that booked a large block of rooms.

The amount that Racine says the nonprofit paid the hotel, $1.03 million, is actually far less than the hotel initially asked for. According to the complaint, the Trump hotel gave the inaugural committee an initial quote of $3.6 million for the use of all event space for eight days.

Members of the Trump family were involved in coordinating the costly rental, Racine adds.

Trump’s inaugural committee raised a record $107 million for official events, as The Wall Street Journal reported in 2018, and spent almost all of that money. That’s about double what President Barack Obama raised and spent on his 2009 inauguration, according to the newspaper.

The Trump International Hotel has been at the center of many questions about whether the president is improperly profiting from his position. Critics of the president say it is inappropriate for him to profit from state and foreign guests staying at the hotel.

Last year, an internal federal government watchdog said officials who leased the Old Post Office Building for the Trump International Hotel “improperly ignored the Constitution’s anti-corruption clauses when they continued to lease the government property to President Trump even after he won the White House,” as NPR reported.

Source Article from https://www.npr.org/2020/01/22/798500880/district-of-columbia-sues-inaugural-committee-for-grossly-overpaying-at-trump-ho

During an unplanned news conference in Davos, Switzerland, where he was attending the World Economic Forum, President Trump took a break from talking about the economy and lashed out at Democrats back home for impeaching him. He hurled insults at two of the prominent House managers, calling Representative Jerrold Nadler of New York, the Judiciary Committee chairman, a “sleaze bag” and branding Representative Adam B. Schiff of California, who is leading the prosecution, a “con job” and a “corrupt politician.”

Mr. Trump said he would love to attend his own trial — something his lawyers have advised against — so he could “sit right in the front row and stare into their corrupt faces.”

While his legal team spent Tuesday arguing that Democrats’ calls for witnesses were inappropriate and a sign of a weak case, and Mr. Trump himself spent months blocking his advisers from participating in the House impeachment inquiry, the president said on Wednesday that he actually would like them to be able to testify.

“I would rather interview Bolton,” he said, referring to John R. Bolton, his former national security adviser. “I would rather interview a lot of people.”

Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/2020/01/22/us/politics/trump-impeachment.html

President Donald Trump returned to the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, touting sustained growth in the American economy as well as his his recent trade agreements with Mexico and Canada, and China.

On Wednesday, the president, who is undergoing an impeachment trial in the Senate, sat down with CNBC’s Joe Kernen to discuss trade, the U.S. economy and much more, including the president’s persistent complaints about the Federal Reserve’s rate policy.

Read the transcript:

JOE KERNEN: Good morning, Mr. President.

PRESIDENT TRUMP: Morning.

JOE KERNEN: It’s great to see you. Thank you for joining us, again, in Davos. We’ve done this before.

PRESIDENT TRUMP: That’s right.

JOE KERNEN: It was a couple of years ago. Before we get started– with- we’re going talk about the economy and a lot of other things–the CDC– has identified a case of coronavirus– in Washington state. The Wuhan strain of this. If you remember SARS, that affected GDP. Travel-related effects. Do you– have you been briefed by the CDC? And–

PRESIDENT TRUMP: I have, and–

JOE KERNEN: –are there worries about a pandemic at this point?

PRESIDENT TRUMP: No. Not at all. And– we’re– we have it totally under control. It’s one person coming in from China, and we have it under control. It’s—going to be just fine.

JOE KERNEN: Okay. And President Xi– there’s just some– talk in China that maybe the transparency isn’t everything that it’s going to be. Do you trust that we’re going to know everything we need to know from China?

PRESIDENT TRUMP: I do. I do. I have a great relationship with President Xi. We just signed probably the biggest deal ever made. It certainly has the potential to be the biggest deal ever made. And– it was a very interesting period of time time.

JOE KERNEN: Yeah. Let’s get into that–

PRESIDENT TRUMP: But we got it done, and– no, I do. I think– the relationship is very, very good.

JOE KERNEN: Let’s talk about Davos, cause– you were here two years ago. Even The New York Times at this point, your favorite, acknowledges that the Davos elite are accepting that your policies are working and the U.S. economy is the envy of the world. In fact, the press coverage here is very favorable. You know what’s going on back in– back at home. It’s all impeachment all the time. Did you watch any of it? Were you–

PRESIDENT TRUMP: I did. I did. I watched some of it last night

JOE KERNEN: What did you make of it

PRESIDENT TRUMP: I got– I had a busy day yesterday, as you know. You were there. And we had the speech and we had lots of meetings with different leaders, including Pakistan and others. Other countries. In addition to businessmen all over the place. But I did get to see some of it. It’s a hoax. It’s a total hoax. It’s a perfect conversation

JOE KERNEN: How do you think—-your team performed?

PRESIDENT TRUMP: I think the team was really good. And– the facts are all on our side. The Republican party has never been this unified. You saw that. 195 to nothing. I guess twice. In fact we got three Democrats voting for us. That was with the House. I think–

JOE KERNEN: You think there’ll be witnesses, Mr. President, or do–you have–?

PRESIDENT TRUMP: –I really don’t know. I think that– if everybody tells the truth, it’s perfect. All you have to do is read the transcript. Read– if you take a look at the transcript– and it’s really two transcripts. It’s– you know, I had a first call which was perfect, and I had a second call which was perfect. You notice they don’t mention the calls, though. They never mention the calls. They talk about everything but the calls. All they have to do is read the transcripts. I put it out all the time. The other thing is speak to the president of Ukraine. He’s been great, I have to tell you. And his foreign minister’s been great.

JOE KERNEN: Right.

PRESIDENT TRUMP: They constantly–say there was no pressure. They don’t even know what we’re doing. They think it’s crazy. So they got the money. In fact they got it very early. President Obama gave them nothing. He gave them pillows and sheets and things like that, and I gave them tank busters. You know, it’s a disgraceful hoax.

JOE KERNEN: Well, what–

PRESIDENT TRUMP: But we do it.

JOE KERNEN: We had a four hour show–four hour show yesterday. Didn’t– I don’t even think the I-word came up at all. What the CEOs are talking about

PRESIDENT TRUMP: But no, you asked me- the question.

JOE KERNEN: No, I know I did. I know—I did

PRESIDENT TRUMP: And I have to answer it—you are my friend–for too long.

JOE KERNEN: –and I needed to ask it. And I needed to–ask it. That’s why I did. But I really want to talk about– what we’re seeing over here. We came–to Davos expecting to hear about this ESG, Environmental, Social and Governmental issues. We expected to hear about stakeholders versus shareholders.

PRESIDENT TRUMP: Right.

JOE KERNEN: We expected to hear about climate change. In four hours yesterday, with the CEO of Bank of America, and Schwartzman with Blackstone, all we talked about, and all they wanted to talk about, was the strength of the U.S. economy. It’s the envy of the world. And I think if you have a strong economy, all these ancillary issues become easier to deal with. And I think even the Europeans, even the plutocrats of Davos, are now acknowledging that.

PRESIDENT TRUMP: Well, I appreciate that very much. We do. We have an incredible economy. The consumer has never been so rich. They– you know, they’re– between the tax cuts and the regulation cuts– people forget about regulation. I think it might have been more important than the tax cuts. But we have– a consumer in the United States that has never done so well. And I think we’re really poised to have I think we have tremendous potential. You know, we’re at a point where we’ve done so well, I think we’re going do much better. We have tremendous potential.

JOE KERNEN: So the market’s up 50%, and we’ve talked about this before. November 9th is the date–

PRESIDENT TRUMP: Right, right thank you–

JOE KERNEN: –that you need to do it. Not–

PRESIDENT TRUMP: Thank you.

JOE KERNEN: –not the inauguration. I just want to ask you, because we’re starting to see this– the– bandied about that–the re-expansion of the Fed’s balance sheet. Somehow correlates with the movement in the stock market. Do you think there’s anything to that? That– that the– they’ve primed the pump and some of the gains are– not warranted by the underlying economy–?

PRESIDENT TRUMP: Well, I think it’s the opposite, actually. The Fed raised too fast interest. They brought up the rate too fast, and they didn’t drop it fast enough. And that was very– you know, that was a lot of increases, and it was a lot of increase. And I think it’s really the opposite of what you’re saying. Now they’ve dropped it, but it was very late. And you look at other countries where they actually have negative interest rates, negative in a positive way. I mean they’re actually getting paid– they make a loan and they end up–

JOE KERNEN: Well, let’s– talk–

PRESIDENT TRUMP: –getting paid.

JOE KERNEN: –about that. You don’t– are you hoping that it comes to that in the United States? That we get negative rates? ‘Cause it– a lotta people don’t think it’s a great thing, and it hasn’t worked well in other places. You–

PRESIDENT TRUMP: Well, they don’t know yet. It’s so new. I want to know who are the people that buy. Okay? Who are the people that buy and they invest in Germany and end up getting, you know, less money at the period of time -so I– have to find these people. But– no, if Germany– and– we’re the most prime in the world. We’re the leader in the world. We have the dollar, and the dollar’s very strong. A lotta– a lotta things are happening. But, you know, we’re paying higher interest than other countries because of the Fed. If we were paying less, I would do it, and I’d pay off a lot of debt.

JOE KERNEN: Right.

PRESIDENT TRUMP: I’d do a lot of things.

JOE KERNEN: Is Chairman Powell out of the doghouse? Is he– are rates where they should be? Are you satisfied with the situation–?

PRESIDENT TRUMP: Well, I don’t want talk doghouse. I wish he didn’t raise the rates. That was not what I thought would happen

JOE KERNEN: Are we at a good–level now, do you feel?

PRESIDENT TRUMP: I think the rate should go down.

JOE KERNEN: Should go down further.

PRESIDENT TRUMP: No, because I think the dollar’s very, very strong. And I think the rate should go down. We have a very strong dollar, and that sounds good, and it is good in many ways, but it’s very bad in terms of manufacturing. I’ve created almost 700,000 manufacturing jobs. The past administration said manufacturing is dead, which I said, “Tell me about that. How do you– you can’t do that.” And we have had a tremendous success, but it’s harder with a strong dollar. And– I want this dollar to be strong. I want it to be so powerful. I want it to be great. But if you lower the interest rates, so many good things would happen.

JOE KERNEN: Right.

PRESIDENT TRUMP: And one of the things I do want to do is pay off debt, and we’re poised for tremendous growth. It’ll really kick in toward the end of this year. But–

JOE KERNEN: Okay.

PRESIDENT TRUMP: we’re poised for tremendous growth.

JOE KERNEN: Let me ask you about that. We– came close to 3% last year. This year lower, but we’ve had obviously the– China trade war, which has been–

PRESIDENT TRUMP: We had many things.

JOE KERNEN: We did. Do you– do you attribute the–GDP at 2% to– the Fed being– tight for too long? Do acknowledge that maybe some of the tariffs or some of the— uncertainty engendered by the China trade war affected GDP?

PRESIDENT TRUMP: Well, it’ll be higher than 2%. A lotta people are very thrilled with that. Me, I’m not, but we had a lot of bad things happen. Number one, the Fed was not good.

JOE KERNEN: Okay.

PRESIDENT TRUMP: As far as I’m concerned. And that was a big blip that should not have taken place. It should not have happened. But it’s one of those things. But we had Boeing. We had the big strike with General Motors. We had things happen that are very unusual to happen.

JOE KERNEN: Could–

PRESIDENT TRUMP: Including some unbelievably powerful storms. You know, we were hit with storms. Now, with all of that, had we not done the big raise on interest, I think we would have been close to 4%, and I– could see 5,000 to 10,000 points more on the Dow. But that was a killer when they raised the rate. It was just a big mistake. And they admit to it. They admit to it. I was right. I don’t wanna be right, but I was right.

JOE KERNEN: There– are some that say that the uncertainty for CEOs in dealing with China and making plans for the future may have hurt capital spending. Do you expect it to come back now the we’ve had a phase one– agreement? And– let’s talk about phase two, if we get a chance, and–

PRESIDENT TRUMP: Okay, I think the biggest thing about getting the deal with China– number one, it’s a great deal for us. It’s an important deal for China, because they were– you know, their supply chains were breaking. It was– you know, it’s been tough for them. The best thing that happened is we have two countries that like each other again, because it was getting pretty nasty. And, you know, they have taken advantage of our country for 30 years and we– I was not going let it happen. And– we’ve taken in billions and billions of dollars. The tariffs are still on, so I still have that negotiating chip. I have 25% tariffs on, and that’s a great negotiating chip. And yes, we’re starting phase two very soon. But the relationship that we have now with China is probably better than it’s ever been. The relationship I have with President Xi, president for life. Okay? It’s not bad. But the relationship I have with President Xi is, you know, I think extraordinary, considering he’s for China, I’m for us.

JOE KERNEN: Right.

PRESIDENT TRUMP: But– the deal is a phenomenal deal. We will take in $250 billion– they’re going to be buying $250 billion, and it could go a lot higher than that.

JOE KERNEN: And– real IP– progress made with the IP theft

PRESIDENT TRUMP: Oh yeah. Oh yeah.

JOE KERNEN: –and enforcement and–watching–

PRESIDENT TRUMP: Absolutely.

JOE KERNEN: –and–the tariffs stay on.

PRESIDENT TRUMP: You– I know I was watching you and you were really surprised that so many of these other things, the intellectual property, so many of these other things were–

JOE KERNEN: I read the same newspapers—

PRESIDENT TRUMP: –were part of the deal.

JOE KERNEN: –as– I– heard this was just going to be–

PRESIDENT TRUMP: Farms

JOE KERNEN: –ag guys

PRESIDENT TRUMP: Yeah.

JOE KERNEN: Yeah, and– it was a lot more.

PRESIDENT TRUMP: And this is—-manufacturing. This is– technology. This– phase one is a massive deal. And in the end, it’s probably $250 billion, but it could go much higher than that. And just that alone, not even talking about the USMCA, which now we just got passed. In fact, when I go back I’ll be signing it. It’s all passed. And we had I believe 89 votes in the Senate, which is tremendous.

JOE KERNEN: The UK next with Boris Johnson?

PRESIDENT TRUMP: Yeah. Boris and I are friends and he wants to make a deal, and that’s okay with me.

JOE KERNEN: So that could start–

PRESIDENT TRUMP: I think they want it, they need it.

JOE KERNEN: That could start soon?

PRESIDENT TRUMP: Oh yeah. We’re starting. We’ve already started negotiating. And frankly, we’re starting with Europe too. Europe is– to be honest with you, Europe has been very, very tough to deal with. They’ve taken advantage of our country, the European Union, for many, many years. And I told them, we can’t do it anymore. I met with them yesterday. I wanted to wait till I finished China, to be honest with you. I’m– always like to be very transparent. I wanted to wait till I finished China. I didn’t want to go with China and Europe at the same time. Now China’s done, and I met with the new head of the European Commission, who’s terrific. And had a great talk. But I said, look, if we don’t get something, I’m going to have to take action, and the action will be a very high tariffs on their cars and other things that come into our country. Now, saying that, I don’t want your audience to get nervous. They’re going to make a deal, because they have to. They have to. They have no choice. But we’ve had a tremendous deficit for many, many years. Over $150 billion with Europe. And they are– frankly, Jean-Claude was a friend of mine, but he was impossible to deal with. And I think it’s going to be a lot better for Boris now too. You couldn’t make a deal. It was very hard to make a deal. Now, I never played my cards, because I didn’t want to do that again while I was doing China. I wanted to do China first. I wanted to do Mexico and Canada first. But now that we’re all done– and now what we do is we are going to do Europe. And I had a very good conversation. And I would be very surprised if I had to implement the tariffs.

JOE KERNEN: We had– one of your guys, the NEC– director– Lawrence Kudlow, on yesterday. We asked him about deficits, and we asked him– I mean I– we acknowledged that you wanted to rebuild the defense industry, and you had to agreed to—certain things with– the Demos– in the second term, will you look at–

PRESIDENT TRUMP: Big focus.

JOE KERNEN: –will you look at–will– do you need to raise taxes or do you need to cut spending?

PRESIDENT TRUMP: We’re going to actually probably lower taxes, if you want to know the truth. You know, if you take a look at what we’ve done, we’ve cut taxes in half. And we’ve taken in more revenue substantially than we did when the taxes were high. Nobody can even believe it. But we take in more revenue with the big tax cuts– I mean you were paying really 41% and we brought it down to 21%, and it’s sort of lower than that–

JOE KERNEN: So the– that will—-be a priority?

PRESIDENT TRUMP: Oh, absolutely. And–

JOE KERNEN: For– cutting taxes.

PRESIDENT TRUMP: And one of the reasons I’d like to see the interest rates lowered, frankly, is because I’d like to refinance the debt and pay off the debt.

PRESIDENT TRUMP: We’re going have tremendous growth. Joe, when you have all of these trade deals the I’ve made– don’t forget, I made a $40 billion deal with Japan. I made a massive deal with South Korea. Nobody even knows what the number is, but, you know, it was a horrible deal, now it’s a great deal. And then you add Mexico, you add China, you add Canada. You add all of these other countries. And we have about ten countries that we’re dealing with. These deals were horrible. In many cases we didn’t even have a deal. They just came in here and took advantage of our country. So– we have massive potential, massive growth, and you’ll see that toward the middle to the end of next year–

JOE KERNEN: Right. I’m going to go through, like, 10 things, cause–

PRESIDENT TRUMP: Go ahead, Joe. They–

JOE KERNEN: All right, let’s talk about what– if there is a second term– do you have– a preference for an opponent– I came up with the three Bs. Biden, Bernie and Bloomberg.

PRESIDENT TRUMP: All very different. You have Mini Mike is spending a lot of money. He’s got no chance. But he’s got a tremendous– you know, he used to be a friend of mine until I ran for politics, and then– he went a little off. You should see some of the nice things he said about me before I ran. They’re like the nicest. But he had a deal with Hillary Clinton that he was going to become secretary of State. It was very simple. People know that. And he– wasn’t going to happen. It was going to go to Terry McAuliffe. I mean so they were playing with Michael. And– it’s too bad, but he’s spending a fortune. He’s making a lot of broadcasters wealthy. And he’s getting nowhere. His ratings are terrible. His– you look at his numbers. I don’t know if Joe’s going to limp across the line, but you– I watch him. I s– watch him speaking. He can’t put together a sentence, but it could be him. And it could be Crazy Bernie. I don’t know who it’s going to be. Whoever it is, I’m ready.

JOE KERNEN: I just want to ask you some rapid-fire questions. Just– to get your clear comments.

PRESIDENT TRUMP: Go ahead.

JOE KERNEN: So– Boeing. Yesterday in the news– and it hit the Dow–

PRESIDENT TRUMP: Yeah, I know

JOE KERNEN: –yesterday. And the news is-this summer, perhaps, before–

PRESIDENT TRUMP: Yeah.

JOE KERNEN: –we see—the 737

PRESIDENT TRUMP: Very disappointing company. This is one of the great companies of the world, let’s say as of a year ago, and then all of a sudden things happen. I am so disappointed in Boeing– had a tremendous impact. You know, when you talk about growth, it’s so big that some people say it’s more than a half a point of GDP. So Boeing– big, big disappointment to me. Big disappointment.

JOE KERNEN: Right. Apple. What do you think? You’re– friends—with Tim

PRESIDENT TRUMP: I am–

JOE KERNEN: –I– think you

PRESIDENT TRUMP: I like them a lot. I think we should do some encryption. I think we should– we should start finding some of the bad people out there that we can do with Apple. I think it’s very important. Frankly, I’ve helped them a lot. I’ve given them waivers, because I want them– it’s a great company, but it made a big difference. Now, you know, they compete against Samsung. Mostly Samsung. I guess that would be their number one competitor. That’s from South Korea. It’s not fair, because we have a trade deal with South Korea, so Samsung would get the no waiver. And they would– they would have to pay– tariffs. So I did waivers, but I want them to help us a little bit. They– you know, Apple has to help us. And I’m very strong on it. They have the keys to so many criminals and criminal minds, and we can do things. When they had the problem with the– recently in Florida. I won’t go into it, because it’s so horrible.

JOE KERNEN: Right.

PRESIDENT TRUMP: But they could have given us that information. It would have been very helpful.

JOE KERNEN: Well, we don’t need a back door– way in getting into the wrong hands either. You– do you–

PRESIDENT TRUMP: No, no. I understand–

JOE KERNEN: –you–

PRESIDENT TRUMP: –you know what, I understand both sides of the argument.

JOE KERNEN: And this won’t–

PRESIDENT TRUMP: But if you’re dealing with drug lords–

JOE KERNEN: –this won’t hurt your relationship– with Tim?

PRESIDENT TRUMP: You’re dealing with drug lords and you’re dealing with terrorists, and if you’re dealing with murderers, I don’t care. We have to get–

JOE KERNEN: Okay.

PRESIDENT TRUMP: –we have to find out what’s going on.

JOE KERNEN: Can– Facebook. Zuckerberg–

PRESIDENT TRUMP: Well, I met him– and he told me that I’m number one in the world in Facebook. He sat down. He said, “Congratulations. You’re number one.” Now, I wouldn’t be able to say that unless it was–

JOE KERNEN: Should he stick to his guns with the political ads? He’s getting a lot of flack

PRESIDENT TRUMP: I’d rather him just do whatever he’s going to do. You know, he’s done– he’s done a hell of a job, when you think of it. And– he’s going to do what he has to do. I heard he was going to run for president. That wouldn’t be too frightening, I don’t think. But he does have that monster behind him. He said, “You’re number one,” and I said, “That’s really nice.” It’s always nice to be number one. You know who number two is?

JOE KERNEN: No?

PRESIDENT TRUMP: Modi of India. But he has 1.5 billion people. I have 350. So– Modi. And we’re going there very soon, too–

JOE KERNEN: All right. Last but not least, you–

PRESIDENT TRUMP: And by the way, our relationship with India, and again with China and with Japan and with so many countries, is better than it’s ever been. Literally better than it’s ever been.

JOE KERNEN: Tesla’s now worth more than GM and Ford. Do you have comments on Elon Musk?

PRESIDENT TRUMP: Well– you have to give him credit. I spoke to him very recently, and he’s also doing the rockets. He likes rockets. And– he does good at rockets too, by the way. I never saw where the engines come down with no wings, no anything, and they’re landing. I said I’ve never seen that before. And I was worried about him, because he’s one of our great geniuses, and we have to protect our genius. You know, we have to protect Thomas Edison and we have to protect all of these people that– came up with originally the light bulb and– the wheel and all of these things. And he’s one of our very smart people and we want to– we want to cherish those people. That’s very important. But he’s done a very good job. Shocking how well– you know, how it’s come so fast. I mean you go back a year and they were talking about the end of the company. And now all of a sudden they’re talking about these great things. He’s going to be building a very big plant in the United States. He has to, because we help him, so he has to help us.

JOE KERNEN: Do I dare– one last question.

PRESIDENT TRUMP: Go ahead.

JOE KERNEN: Entitlements ever be on your plate?

PRESIDENT TRUMP: At some point they will be. We have tremendous growth. We’re going to have tremendous growth. This next year I– it’ll be toward the end of the year. The growth is going to be incredible. And at the right time, we will take a look at that. You know, that’s actually the easiest of all things, if you look, cause it’s such a–

JOE KERNEN: If you’re willing–

PRESIDENT TRUMP: –big percentage.

JOE KERNEN: –to do some of the things that you said you wouldn’t do in the past, though, in terms of Medicare–

PRESIDENT TRUMP: Well, we’re going– we’re going look. We also have– assets that we’ve never had. I mean we’ve never had growth like this. We never had a consumer that was taking in, through– different means, over $10,000 a family. We never had the kind of– the kind of things that we have. Look, our country is the hottest in the world. We have the hottest economy in the world. We have the best unemployment numbers we’ve ever had. African American, Asian American. Hispanics are doing so incredibly. Best they’ve ever done. Black. Best they’ve ever done. African American. The numbers are incredible. The poverty numbers. The unemployment and the employment. There’s– there is a difference, actually. But the unemployment and employment numbers for African Americans are the best we’ve ever had. You know, we just– came up with a chart, and it was a very important to number to me. African American youth has the highest, by far, unemployment. The best unemployment numbers that they’ve ever had. And the best employment numbers. Right now we have almost 160 million people working in the United States, and we’ve never even been close to that, Joe.

JOE KERNEN: All right. Safe travels–

PRESIDENT TRUMP: Thank you.

JOE KERNEN: –on your way back. Thank you once again for– –meeting with us–

PRESIDENT TRUMP: Thank you very much.

JOE KERNEN: –Mr. President. Thank you.

PRESIDENT TRUMP: Appreciate it.

JOE KERNEN: Appreciate it.

PRESIDENT TRUMP: Great Joe.

Source Article from https://www.cnbc.com/2020/01/22/davos-2020-cnbcs-full-interview-with-president-trump.html

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

Source Article from https://www.cnn.com/2020/01/22/asia/wuhan-ground-zero-intl-hnk/index.html

President Trump discusses the planned travel ban extension Wednesday during a news conference at the 50th World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland.

Jonathan Ernst/Reuters


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Jonathan Ernst/Reuters

President Trump discusses the planned travel ban extension Wednesday during a news conference at the 50th World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland.

Jonathan Ernst/Reuters

Updated at 12:04 p.m. ET

President Trump says he’ll widen a controversial travel ban that prohibits nearly all people from seven countries from traveling or immigrating to the U.S., calling it “a very powerful ban” that’s necessary to ensure national security.

“We’re adding a couple of countries” to the ban, Trump said when asked about his policy shift at a news conference at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland. He added, “We have to be safe. Our country has to be safe. You see what’s going on in the world. Our country has to be safe.”

According to The Wall Street Journal, which first reported on the White House plan to expand the ban, the Trump administration wants to double the scope of the ban by blacklisting seven more countries: Belarus, Eritrea, Kyrgyzstan, Myanmar, Nigeria, Sudan and Tanzania.

Trump did not share any more details about the ban’s expansion, saying, “It’s going to be announced very shortly.”

However, Trump did criticize how the legal battles over past travel bans have been portrayed, emphasizing that after some losses in lower courts, the Supreme Court sided with him in 2018.

Despite Trump’s assertion that a wider travel ban was imminent, White House principal deputy press secretary Hogan Gidley said Wednesday that “there are no new announcements at this time.”

Calling the president’s travel ban a success, Gidley added, “If a country wants to fully participate in U.S. immigration programs, they should also comply with all security and counterterrorism measures” the U.S. requires.

The ban was put in place by Presidential Proclamation 9645, which is titled “Enhancing Vetting Capabilities and Processes for Detecting Attempted Entry into the United States by Terrorists or other Public-Safety Threats.”

The travel ban includes several criteria for the U.S. to evaluate foreign countries’ security practices, including whether they issue secure “ePassports” (with biometric data on a computer chip) and how much information they share with the U.S.

Countries that are found to be “inadequate” are at risk of being hit by restrictions.

Trump signed the original version of the travel ban in his first week in office three years ago, triggering confusion and chaos in airports and legal challenges in federal courts.

The Supreme Court upheld the Trump administration’s third version of the ban, which bars nearly all travelers or immigrants from five majority-Muslim countries — Iran, Syria, Yemen, Libya and Somalia — as well as North Korea and Venezuela. The ban also originally included both Iraq and Sudan, but those countries were eventually removed from the restrictions.

The intense legal battles over the ban were resolved in 2018, when the Supreme Court backed Trump’s assertion of presidential power under the Immigration and Nationality Act – the 1965 law that originally abolished the U.S. quota system that limited immigrants based on their national origin.

Before the high court upheld Trump’s travel ban, federal courts had put two early iterations of the ban on hold after lawsuits accused them of discriminating against majority-Muslim nations. In court filings, challengers to the prohibition pointed to Trump’s numerous negative comments about Islam as proof of bias.

The Trump administration then added North Korea and Venezuela to the travel ban list. The restrictions on Venezuela apply mainly to members of government agencies and their families.

With additional reporting by NPR’s Ayesha Rascoe

Source Article from https://www.npr.org/2020/01/22/798457326/trump-says-hell-add-a-few-countries-to-controversial-u-s-travel-ban

DANIA BEACH, Fla. – It’s so cold, iguanas are falling from trees.

Local 10 News reporter Parker Branton stumbled upon an iguana frozen stiff Wednesday morning in Dania Beach.

He found several others clinging to branches before making the plunge to the ground.

The National Weather Service in Miami issued a rare forecast warning Tuesday on Twitter.

“This isn’t something we usually forecast, but don’t be surprised if you see iguanas falling from the trees tonight,” the tweet said ahead of the region’s coldest temperatures in two years.

It’s well documented that South Florida’s iguana population goes into shock when temperatures dip below 50 degrees, sending many of these invasive lizards plummeting to the ground.

The cold-stunned creatures appear to be dead, but they’re not.

Source Article from https://www.local10.com/news/local/2020/01/22/frozen-iguanas-falling-from-trees-in-south-florida/

DAVOS, Switzerland—President Trump said Tuesday that he is serious about imposing tariffs on European automobiles if he can’t strike a trade agreement with the European Union.

“They know that I’m going to put tariffs on them if they don’t make a deal that’s a fair deal,” Mr. Trump said in an interview with The Wall Street Journal on the sidelines of the World Economic Forum.

Mr….

Source Article from https://www.wsj.com/articles/trump-doubles-down-on-threats-to-impose-tariffs-on-european-cars-11579623694

Supporters of Democratic candidate Bernie Sanders took to Twitter to post their love and support for the independent senator from Vermont after former presidential opponent Hillary Clinton trashed him in a new documentary.

“Nobody likes him,” Clinton said in the film, according to The Hollywood Reporter.

“He was in Congress for years. He had one senator support him…. Nobody wants to work with him, he got nothing done,” Clinton argued. “He was a career politician. It’s all just baloney, and I feel so bad that people got sucked into it.”

Asked by the Reporter whether she would back Sanders if he gets the Democratic Party’s nomination in 2020, Clinton declined to answer. “I’m not going to go there yet,” she said, while also criticizing Sanders’ surrogates and supporters.

Less than impressed by Clinton’s criticism, many of Sanders’ supporters quickly made the hashtag #ILikeBernie trend on Twitter.

“@HillaryClinton thanks for the motivation. Every time you trash him, I will give more #iLikeBernie #RespondWithSolidarity,” Los Angeles Chargers running back Justin Jackson tweeted, sharing a screenshot showing that he had just contributed to Sanders’ campaign.

“#Bernie2020 Fam, stay fierce & stay focused. The moment to respond to resentful smears will come, but our mission is too important to stray from the work. ‘Perfectly timed’ attacks are meant to bait us away from expanding our coalition,” Nina Turner, a former Ohio state senator who co-chairs Sanders’ national campaign, tweeted. “We have the MOMENTUM #iLikeBernie.”

“#IlikeBernie because he fights for all of us,” Linda Sarsour, a Palestinian-American organizer and surrogate for Sanders, posted. In a follow-up tweet, she encouraged supporters of the Vermont senator to contribute to his campaign.

“How many know what it’s like when bullies say ‘nobody likes’ them? I do,” Abdul El-Sayed, an author and former Michigan gubernatorial candidate, wrote. “It’s a marginalizing tool of elites—on the schoolyard or in politics. Well, I like @BernieSanders. He’s my friend + millions of others,” he continued. “Why? Rather than say nobody likes us, he’s fighting for us.”

Despite Clinton’s criticism, Sanders is a clear front-runner for the Democratic nomination, with the latest data from Morning Consult showing that he has the highest favorability of all candidates in the primary race. Sanders is viewed positively by 76 percent of voters, while former Vice President Joe Biden is viewed favorably by 71 percent. Senator Elizabeth Warren comes in third at 65 percent.

Meanwhile, only 17 percent of respondents said they had an unfavorable opinion of Sanders, while 22 percent had an unfavorable view of Biden. Warren was viewed unfavorably by 18 percent.

Additionally, Morning Consult survey data from the fourth quarter of 2019 showed that Sanders was the most popular lawmaker in the Senate. Sixty-five percent of respondents approved of the progressive senator, with only three other senators having approval ratings above 60 percent.

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Source Article from https://www.newsweek.com/ilikebernie-trends-after-hillary-clinton-says-nobody-likes-bernie-sanders-1483273

Police in Phoenix said Tuesday a 22-year-old woman has been arrested after confessing to killing her three children — an infant and two toddlers.

“Right now, we can tell you she admitted to doing this to the children, and that’s where we’re going and that’s where the investigation is at this point,” Phoenix police Sgt. Mercedes Fortune told Fox 10 Phoenix.

The children were a 7-month-old girl, a 2-year-old girl and a 3-year-old boy, police said. Their mother, Rachel Henry, was booked on three counts of first-degree murder Tuesday afternoon.

Rachel Henry was booked on multiple murder counts.
(Maricopa County Sheriff’s Office)

Phoenix firefighters reported the children died from drowning, but then disavowed that report, Fox 10 Phoenix reported.

ARIZONA POLICE SAY 3 CHILDREN FOUND DEAD AT HOME

Police vehicle at home where a mother was charged with killing her three young children–a 7-month-old girl, a 2-year-old girl and a 3-year-old boy–after the children were found unresponsive by police Monday night.
(Phoenix Police Department)

Police received a report Monday night from a relative of the mother and the father, Fortune told Fox 10. Officers found the infant and her siblings unresponsive in the living room, the station reported.

CALIFORNIA 4-YEAR-OLD BOY’S PARENTS CHARGED IN HIS DEATH AFTER THEY CLAIMED HE DROWNED

“These are the case we don’t want to respond to,” the sergeant told the station.

At the scene police questioned the relative, the father and the mother. Fortune said the mother told detectives that the children had been sick earlier in the day.

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Police tweeted that the mother recently moved to Arizona from Oklahoma.

Fox News’ Mike Arroyo contributed to this report.

Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/us/woman-22-confesses-in-phoenix-to-killing-infant-2-toddlers-police