Mr. Trump’s initiative was widely praised, at first. After a quarter-century of fruitless negotiations at lower levels, a president-to-president summit seemed refreshing. But while the meeting had fabulous theatrics, the specifics were missing and the agreement was ridden with ambiguity and loopholes.

So when Secretary of State Mike Pompeo sought to obtain a list of the North’s nuclear facilities as a first step toward turning over weapons, Mr. Kim accused Mr. Pompeo of seeking a “target list” for American missile attacks. “I don’t need a target list,” Mr. Pompeo responded, making clear he already had one. He wanted to make sure, he said, that the North was coming clean.

The list never arrived. Subsequent talks quickly stalled over how to enforce a vaguely worded agreement.

In his New Year’s speech in January 2019, Mr. Kim threatened to find a “new way” if Washington persisted with sanctions. When Mr. Kim and Mr. Trump met in Hanoi the next month, their talks collapsed over differences over when to ease sanctions, and the North’s insistence that in return it would dismantle only its aging nuclear site at Yongbyon. That would have left him with other major nuclear sites, and all his missile launching capability.

Since then, North Korea has shifted gears, expressing anger and frustration with Washington and Seoul. President Moon Jae-in of South Korea made his own visit to the North. He encouraged Mr. Kim and Mr. Trump, telling them that they were a once-in-a-lifetime pair to negotiate a history-making deal.

“Kim Jong-un’s expectations for his meetings with Trump were big,” said Lee Byong-chul, a North Korea expert at Kyungnam University’s Institute for Far Eastern Studies in Seoul. “So was his frustration when the talks collapsed.”

In May 2019, North Korea broke an 18-month hiatus in weapons tests, launching a series of mostly short-range ballistic missiles and rockets. Negotiators from both countries met in Stockholm in October but parted ways only confirming their differences. Later, North Korea said it was no longer interested in “sickening negotiations” with the United States. In December, it conducted two ground tests at its missile-engine test site to bolster what it called its “nuclear deterrent.”

Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/2020/06/12/world/asia/korea-nuclear-trump-kim.html

Tucker Carlson spoke out Friday against Sen. Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass., and her push to remove the names of Confederate leaders from all U.S. military bases and other assets, saying “healthy societies do not destroy their own history.”

“Those bases include many of the most famous in the country: Fort Benning, Georgia. Fort Hood in Texas, Fort Bragg in North Carolina. You may have trained on one of those bases. The men who fought and won World War II did,” the “Tucker Carlson Tonight” host said. “But Warren’s amendment goes farther than just renaming bases. Warren would also require the desecration of war graves.”

TRUMP SAYS HE WILL ‘NOT EVEN CONSIDER’ RENAMING MILITARY BASES NAMED AFTER CONFEDERATE SOLDIERS

Carlson explained that many national cemeteries across America “hold Civil War soldiers from both sides and contain monuments to their sacrifice. Those soldiers, blue and gray, Confederate and Union, are buried alongside one another, and they are for a reason.

“One side in that conflict was right, the Union side and the other was wrong, the Confederate side,” Carlson emphasized. “But when it was over, they were all Americans again, and allowing them to lie in the same cemeteries next to each other allowed this country to heal its deepest fissure, but healing is the opposite of what Elizabeth Warren wants to do.”

Carlson noted Warren’s amendment would call for the Army to tear down a monument to Confederate soldiers in Virginia’s Arlington National Cemetery.

“This is vandalism, obviously,” the host stated, “but it’s worse and deeper than that.

“Healthy societies do not destroy their own history. A country is the sum total of what has happened within it, good and bad,” Carlson said.  “Without history you have no country. You just have a collection of banks and check cashing outlets and retail stores. All of us may have iPhones, but that’s not a country.”

Carlson slammed Republicans on the Senate Armed Services Committee for not opposing the legislation, saying that they believe “the mob will be sated” if they support the Warren amendment.

CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

“But they’re mistaken in this,” he warned. “Because it’s never enough. Extremists are never placated. Every success makes them stronger and makes them more radical. We’re watching it now.”

“The Confederacy declared war on the United States,” Carlson concluded. “We’re grateful they lost and that their cause was discredited forever by losing. And it was discredited. But that’s the whole point.

“The Civil War was the turning point in American history. It shaped who we are now. Eliminating the past leaves us unable to say who we are. And that’s the point of eliminating it.”

Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/media/tucker-decries-push-remove-confederate-memorials-cemeteries

Donald Trump has postponed his planned election rally in Tulsa, Oklahoma – the scene of one of the worst race massacres in US history – amid outcry over its clash with the Juneteenth holiday marking the end of US slavery.

The gathering – which had also caused alarm among health officials tackling the coronavirus pandemic – was to be held on 19 June, the anniversary of the day in 1865 when a general read out Abraham Lincoln’s emancipation proclamation in Texas, freeing slaves in the last un-emancipated state.

On Friday night, the US president reversed his decision to hold a rally then as a “celebration” of that day, pushing it back one day to “honour requests” from the African American community.

He tweeted: “Many of my African American friends and supporters have reached out to suggest that we consider changing the date out of respect for this holiday, and in observance of this important occasion and all that it represents.

“I have therefore decided to move our rally to Saturday, June 20th, in order to honor their requests.”

The change came as Trump further stoked controversy over race issues and policing by saying that chokeholds sounded “so innocent and so perfect”, and once again claimed he has been the best president for black Americans – only partially conceding that Abraham Lincoln may have surpassed him.

Trump said he would like to see a ban on chokeholds in most instances, but suggested their use would be understandable in some situations, such as the current protests. “I don’t like chokeholds … [but] sometimes, if you’re alone and you’re fighting someone, it’s tough,” he said in an interview with Fox News on Friday.

“You saw some very good people protesting, but you saw some bad people also,” Trump said. “And you get somebody in a chokehold. What are you going to do now? Let go and say, ‘Oh, let’s start all over again’?”

As Black Lives Matter protests reverberate around the US and the world, the choice of date had been criticised as incendiary given the historic symbolism of the Tulsa race massacre in which up to 300 black Americans were killed by white mobs.

“This isn’t just a wink to white supremacists – he’s throwing them a welcome home party,” tweeted Democrat senator Kamala Harris at the time.

Sherry Gamble Smith, the president of Tulsa’s Black Wall Street Chamber of Commerce, an organisation named after the prosperous black community that white Oklahomans burned down in the 1921 attack, said: “To choose the date, to come to Tulsa, is totally disrespectful and a slap in the face to even happen.”

The massacre took place over two days from 31 May to 1 June in the highly segregated city, with mobs attacking the Greenwood neighbourhood of the city, known as Black Wall Street for its prosperity.

Following a familiar pattern to the racist lynchings of the era, the attacks started with accusations that a 19-year-old black man, Dick Rowland, had assaulted Sarah Page, a 17-year-old white girl.

The Trump campaign was aware that the date for the president’s return to rallies was Juneteenth, according to two campaign officials, who were not authorised to speak publicly about internal discussions and spoke on condition of anonymity.

The rally has also caused health concerns, with those attending asked to sign a waiver to say the Trump campaign is not liable if they contracted coronavirus at the event.

Source Article from https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2020/jun/13/donald-trump-oklahoma-election-rally-juneteenth-slavery-date

Sean Hannity opened Friday night’s edition of “Hannity” by noting that the actions taken by denizens of Seattle‘s “Capitol Hill Autonomous Zone” directly contradict the principles and positions liberals consistently champion in public.

“In this little slice of socialist heaven, all police have been kicked out and the local police precinct was totally abandoned by city officials and subsequently taken over by the so-called peaceful demonstrators,” Hannity said, “which is putting everyone inside the autonomous zone at risk.”

TRUMP MOCKS SEATTLE MAYOR’S ‘SUMMER OF LOVE’ COMMENT: ‘THESE LIBERAL DEMS DON’T HAVE A CLUE’

“[A]rmed vigilantes, checkpoints and vandalism, the host continued. “And, of course, a community garden. The police are not invited. What do they call that? I thought that was discrimination.

“They even built a border wall,” Hannity pointed out. “[They have] tough on immigration policies. That sounds like discrimination against law enforcement to me. I thought liberals were against these things and believed in inclusiveness and diversity and open borders.”

Hannity then bashed Seattle Mayor Jenny Durkan, describing her as “either too stupid or too incompetent to care” about the situation.

“She’s actually letting the anarchists take over and control and even destroy her city,” he said, adding that Durkan showed a lack of understanding of the law when she claimed President Trump doesn’t have the constitutional authority to intervene in the matter.

CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

“My unsolicited humble advice is this: OK, if she doesn’t want help, [she] and her Democratic governor, the ever incompetent Inslee, both of them will be fully responsible for the demise of this city and this state,” said Hannity.

“I hope and pray it doesn’t’ become that bad,” he added, “because then the president will have to get involved.”

Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/media/hannity-seattle-chaz-anarchists-built-border-wall

President Donald Trump is stuck between a rock and a hard place as he struggles to find a response to the crises facing America.

“With less than five months before voters head to the polls, President Trump finds himself in an uncertain position: caught between advisers urging him to calm a country in the grips of a pandemic, economic uncertainty and civil unrest, and those who want him to lean into aggressive tactics that almost certainly would further inflame a nation on edge,” according to a new report from NBC News.

Trump has repeatedly dismissed protesters by telling aides “these aren’t my voters.”

“The president’s approach to what’s widely seen as a seminal moment for the country reflects his ambivalence about being anything other than a self-styled ‘president of law and order’ and his stubborn adherence to tactics he believes have served him well politically, advisers inside and outside the White House say,” NBC News reported. “Some of those who spoke to NBC News about their confidential discussions with the president say they think Trump should be leading on changes in policing and race that even members of his own party are embracing, rather than undermining them. Others say the president is not fighting back hard enough, and is instead allowing protesters to drive his agenda.”

NBC News gave anonymity to one political advisor.

“It looks like he’s bewildered right now,” the political adviser. “We’re losing the culture war because we won’t engage directly, because we’re so scared to be called racist.”

“This adviser said the president and his allies should be taking on the Black Lives Matter movement by calling it a ‘front organization for a lot of crazy leftist ideas that are unpopular.’ But another political ally said the opposite — that the president appears to be ‘spinning wheels’ because he’s not setting the agenda on policing and race in the U.S. when he ‘should be leading on these issues’ by taking steps like banning tactics like chokehold,” NBC News reported.

Read the full report.

Source Article from https://www.salon.com/2020/06/12/were-losing-the-culture-war-trump-adviser-worries-the-president-looks-like-hes-bewildered_partner/

Fox News contributor Ted Williams, a former Washigton D.C. police detective, told “Bill Hemmer Reports” Friday that President Trump should “butt out” of the debate about how to handle the so-called “Capitol Hill Autonomus Zone” in Seattle.

“This is a state and local matter that should be taken care of,” said Williams, putting the onus on Seattle Mayor Jenny Durkan and Washington Gov. Jay Inslee.

Trump told Fox News’ Harris Faulkner in an exclusive interview Thursday that “we’re not going to let Seattle be occupied by anarchists” and promised that if Durkan and Inslee “don’t straighten that situation out, we’re going to straighten it out.”

FOX EXCLUSIVE: TRUMP RESPONDS TO BIDEN’S CLAIM HE WILL TRY TO STEAL ELECTION

For her part, Durkan told CNN Thursday night that she did not know how long the protesters would continued to occupy the six-block area of the city’s Capitol Hill neighborhood before volunteering, “We could have a summer of love.”

CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

“We have right now, in Seattle, anarchy,” Williams acknowledged. “We have armed demonstrators holding up an eight-block area in Seattle there and they are demanding free education, they are demanding the disbandment of the police department, these kinds of things are things that cannot take place or it is unrealistic.”

“I’ve got to disagree [with the idea] we should just let this peter out,” he continued. “It’s not going to peter out.”

Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/media/ted-williams-trump-butt-out-seattle-chaz

New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo will sign a 10-bill package of criminal justice and police reform bills into law Friday, following a week of expedited votes by Albany lawmakers in the wake of the death of George Floyd in Minneapolis police custody and the wave of nationwide protests and unrest that followed.

The bills were long held up in Albany by several factors: political gridlock born of Democratic and Republican power-sharing that ended in 2018, longstanding opposition by powerful police unions and lack of real influence from New York City.

Among the measures expected to be signed is one banning police chokeholds, named after Eric Garner, the Staten Island man who died in police custody in 2014.

A video showing Garner shouting “I can’t breathe” turned into a national symbol of the Black Lives Matter movement.

A second will result in the repeal of New York’s civil rights law 50-a, relating to the release of law enforcement officers’ disciplinary records and any complaints filed against them.

Originally designed to help protect the lives and families of police, firefighters and corrections officers during criminal investigations, broad interpretation of the law has resulted in stymied or denied requests by individuals and reporters for information concerning officers.

The new law — effective immediately once signed — will allow all records to be subject to Freedom of Information laws, except for personal information like home addresses, phone numbers and email addresses.

The other proposals include:

  • A “stats” bill requiring courts to compile and publish racial and other demographic data on all low-level offenses, and police departments to submit arrest-related deaths to the state
  • A measure requiring officers to report within six hours if they’ve discharged a weapon and a civilian could have been shot
  • A requirement that state police wear body cameras
  • A bill making false or hate-based 911 calls subject to civil penalties
  • Legislation barring police from interfering with citizens recording videos
  • A law that would allow the state attorney general to investigate cases when an individual dies in police custody or at the hands of an officer
  • A measure creating an independent investigative office in the state Law Department with powers to review, study and audit practices of law enforcement agencies
  • A bill requiring emergency medical attention be provided to suspects in custody

Cuomo is also expected to be joined by state Senate Majority Leader Andrea Stewart-Cousins (D-Westchester) and Assembly Speaker Carl Heastie (D-Bronx) in Manhattan.

Source Article from https://nypost.com/2020/06/12/cuomo-to-sign-10-bill-package-of-police-reform-bills-today/

Wayne Reyes Jr., whose father was shot and killed by Minneapolis police officers in 2006, said he was hopeful that lawmakers would make meaningful changes this time, but said he was angry it had taken more killings for them to do so. Derek Chauvin, the former officer who has been charged with killing Mr. Floyd, was one of the officers who opened fire at Mr. Reyes’s father, Wayne Reyes Sr., a Native American man who the police said aimed a shotgun at them.

“It seems like people have been asking for these changes for a long time,” Mr. Reyes, 35, said in an interview, “and it wasn’t until just the last couple of weeks that people are starting to look and listen a little bit.”

On Friday, Minneapolis’s efforts to alter policing in the city appeared mostly to be a slow, governmental grind. To achieve its aims of dismantling the Police Department as it currently exists, the City Council plans to ask voters to approve rewriting a section of the City Charter to eliminate a provision that dictates a minimum number of police officers. That change would give council members much more flexibility to divert funds to mental health and other agencies that could respond to calls traditionally handled by the police.

The ballot initiative would also include removing the Minneapolis Police Department from the charter — although not necessarily abolishing it altogether — and adding a new department “focused on cultivating public safety.”

The City Council also voted unanimously, at its virtual meeting, on a resolution to commit to a yearlong effort to research other models of public safety and to listen to what residents say they would like to see.

Andrea Jenkins, the vice president of the City Council, said the world was looking to Minneapolis to see how it would respond after the killing of Mr. Floyd last month.

“People have marched all over the world, all over the city of Minneapolis, and what they’re saying to us is they want change,” Ms. Jenkins said. “Not ‘fix it,’ not reform, but change. So we must take these voices seriously.”

Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/2020/06/12/us/minneapolis-police-defunding.html

WASHINGTON — With less than five months before voters head to the polls, President Donald Trump finds himself in an uncertain position: caught between advisers urging him to calm a country in the grips of a pandemic, economic uncertainty and civil unrest and those who want him to lean into aggressive tactics that almost certainly would further inflame a nation on edge.

Trump’s reluctance so far to come down on one side — or to strike a clear balance between the opposing sets of advice — has frustrated his allies and shaded, if not slowed, his response to nationwide protests arising since the death of George Floyd.

“These aren’t my voters,” the president has said repeatedly, dismissing protesters in discussions with aides about how to respond over nearly three weeks of unrest, according to three people familiar with the comments.

The president’s approach to what’s widely seen as a seminal moment for the country reflects his ambivalence about being anything other than a self-styled “president of law and order” and his stubborn adherence to tactics he believes have served him well politically, advisers inside and outside the White House say.

Some of those who spoke to NBC News about their confidential discussions with the president say they think Trump should be leading on changes in policing and race that even members of his own party are embracing, rather than undermining them. Others say the president is not fighting back hard enough and is instead allowing protesters to drive his agenda.

“It looks like he’s bewildered right now,” one political adviser said of the president. “We’re losing the culture war because we won’t engage directly, because we’re so scared to be called racist.”

This adviser said the president and his allies should be taking on the Black Lives Matter movement by calling it a “front organization for a lot of crazy leftist ideas that are unpopular.” But another political ally said the opposite — that the president appears to be “spinning wheels” because he’s not setting the agenda on policing and race in the U.S. when he “should be leading on these issues” by taking steps like banning tactics like chokeholds.

Trump has suggested he might support a limit on chokeholds, saying “I don’t like chokeholds” in an interview with Fox News that aired Friday.

Among advisers who said they want the president to more fully embrace reforms, there is growing concern that Trump is further hurting his re-election chances by taking positions that seem so out of step with where the country is headed.

Those concerns have been bolstered by Trump viewing the protests through a political lens, they said, with anyone calling for change seen as inherently opposing his re-election effort.

In one tense meeting about how to respond to the unrest on the day of his now-infamous photo-op in front of St. John’s Episcopal Church in Washington, D.C., which had been damaged the night before, Trump lamented that none of the protesters had voted for him, according to one person present for the meeting.

After another meeting where the president remarked that “these aren’t my voters,” some of his aides expressed concern about how “out of touch” he seemed to be on race relations, according to a person familiar with the comments.

But some of Trump’s allies agree with his view, conveying to him that “there is no one protesting right now who is voting for him,” one of them said.

A White House official said the president “doesn’t see the protests as directly about him — which is accurate — it’s a result of decades of racism in our country. So he’s been inclined to only weigh in to the extent he feels he needs to. He doesn’t want to make this ‘Trump versus the protestors,’ more he’s the outsider factor that can bring about law and order.”

The competing advice from the president’s allies doesn’t split neatly between White House and campaign officials, but rather represents a hodgepodge of advisers on either side. It has created dueling public White House narratives.

In one, the president is seriously considering policing reforms he could unveil any day now. In the other, he’s advancing a conspiracy theory about an injured protester, rejecting efforts by his military advisers and Senate Republicans to rename bases that memorialize Confederate generals and announcing a return to the campaign trail on Juneteenth at the site of one of America’s worst instances of racial violence against African Americans.

The latter stems from a president who believes that approach helped get him elected in 2016, despite a slew of polling that said such a win was all but impossible.

So far, amid the civil unrest following Floyd’s death at the hands of police, it hasn’t mattered to the president that even Americans he considers his political base are part of the growing chorus of voices pushing for change.

NASCAR — whose then-CEO endorsed Trump in the 2016 election — announced Wednesday, for instance, that it was banning Confederate flags at its events because the banner’s presence “runs contrary to our commitment to providing a welcome and inclusive environment for all of our fans.” Trump, who appeared at a NASCAR event at the Daytona International Speedway in February, has not commented on that decision.

But he has continued to dig in on his opposition to renaming military bases, even using a racial slur on Thursday to criticize Sen. Elizabeth Warren’s proposal to do so.

“Seriously failed presidential candidate, Senator Elizabeth ‘Pocahontas’ Warren, just introduced an Amendment on the renaming of many of our legendary Military Bases from which we trained to WIN two World Wars. Hopefully our great Republican Senators won’t fall for this!” Yet the Republican-led Senate Armed Services Committee advanced Warren’s amendment.

Both civilian and uniformed military leaders at the Pentagon privately expressed disappointment with Trump’s decision to shut down any discussion about renaming the bases, according to four defense officials.

White House officials had given Pentagon brass a heads-up that Trump was not in favor of changing the names, after Defense Secretary Mark Esper and Army Secretary Ryan McCarthy both expressed support for the move earlier this week.

Before Trump expressed his firm opposition to the idea on Wednesday, McCarthy had planned to create a task force to review streets and buildings on military installations that are named after Confederate soldiers. As part of the review, the Army planned to reach out to the rank-and-file soldiers to get their opinions on the matter. Now the task force is on hold, according to two defense officials, with no plans to revisit the issue.

That, in the view of some of the president’s allies, is a missed opportunity.

“Soon, he’s going to find out he doesn’t have any room to write off sets of potential voters,” said one Republican close to the White House.

While the president is “obsessed” with his re-election, in the words of this ally, he doesn’t appear to understand that his recent inaction on the issue could damage his prospects.

“There’s a disconnect there,” the Republican said, adding it’s in part because the president doesn’t believe polls — public or conducted by his own campaign — showing him trailing presumptive Democratic nominee Joe Biden.

The president told his political advisers in an Oval Office meeting just last week that he didn’t believe the polls they presented him with, including surveys suggesting he could lose Georgia and Arizona, and asked them to conduct new ones.

Trump’s advisers also have warned him for weeks that if he continues to lose ground with key voting demographics such as senior citizens, moderates and suburban women, a second term won’t happen. Trump, so far, hasn’t appeared to take any concrete steps to address that concern.

The doom and gloom has prompted some White House and campaign staffers to start thinking about life after the election if the president loses, according to people familiar with the discussions.

“If the election were today, we’d get destroyed,” one of the president’s outside advisers said.

Source Article from https://www.nbcnews.com/politics/white-house/white-house-divide-floyd-response-some-push-trump-tougher-tactics-n1230941

Washington (CNN)Dr. Anthony Fauci cautioned states on Friday to rethink their reopening strategies if they see increases in the number of people hospitalized with Covid-19, adding that although he hasn’t spoken to President Donald Trump about next week’s campaign rally in Oklahoma, he is urging everyone who attends to wear a mask.

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Source Article from https://www.cnn.com/2020/06/12/politics/anthony-fauci-reopening-hospitalizations-trump-rally-cnntv/index.html

Despite massive problems at the voting booth, Democratic turnout in Georgia’s primaries skyrocketed — with three times as many votes cast in the Senate primary as in 2016.

With 91 percent of the vote in as of Friday, nearly 960,000 voters had cast ballots in the Democratic Senate primary race won by Jon Ossoff, compared to 310,000 who voted in the Senate primary in 2016.

The Democratic turnout was also higher than it was in the gubernatorial primary in 2018, which saw 550,000 ballots cast.

“This was extraordinarily high turnout for a primary — way beyond what we’ve seen in previous primary elections,” Alan Abramowitz, a political science professor at Atlanta’s Emory University, told NBC News.

“The bottom line is that, despite all of the problems at the polls on Tuesday, it appears that there was a big increase in turnout over 2018, especially on the Democratic side,” Abramowitz said. “And over 900,000 votes cast in the Democratic Senate primary blows the 310,000 votes cast in the 2016 Democratic Senate primary out of the water.”

Voting rights groups have called Tuesday’s primary a disaster, with voters across the state, particularly in counties where the majority of residents are not white, faced issues including long lines, problems with voting machines and a lack of available ballots.

Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger, a Republican, said he was launching an investigation into the “unacceptable” problems, which he blamed on local election officials in mostly minority counties.

Those officials blamed Raffensperger, saying the responsibility to train, prepare and equip election staff to deal with new election machinery used on Tuesday was his.

“Each one’s trying to blame the other, but I think they’re both really responsible for a lot of the problems,” Abramowitz said, noting that Raffensperger selected the cumbersome new voting machines, but local officials had a duty to make sure their poll workers knew how to use it — an effort the secretary of state’s office is supposed to oversee. He added that some of the difficulties were likely unavoidable because fewer polling places had been opened and a number of poll workers had quit because of the coronavirus pandemic.

Abramowitz credited the rise in the overall vote to Raffensperger, saying his decision to mail every registered active voter an application for an absentee ballot and encourage Georgians to vote by mail because of the pandemic resulted in the surge in turnout, especially among Democrats. The state also had early voting.

Exact breakdowns for how voters cast their ballot aren’t yet available, but Abramowitz said “a large majority of votes were cast by absentee ballot. “

President Donald Trump has complained about a similar effort to send voters absentee ballot applications in Michigan, where both the governor and secretary of state are Democrats.

Turnout for Republicans was not as strong in the primary, but there were no statewide contested races. Incumbent Sen. David Perdue, who ran unopposed, received about 457,000 votes. In the presidential primary, which the state typically holds on a different date than the state races but was held on the same date this year because of the pandemic, President Donald Trump ran unopposed and netted about 866,000 votes.

More than 1.2 million Republicans voted in the state’s contested presidential primary in 2016, which Trump won with just over 500,000 votes.

On the Democratic side, over 870,000 voted in 2020, compared to more than 761,000 in 2016. Former Vice President Joe Biden won the state with more than 741,000 votes, while Hillary Clinton won the state with about 543,000 votes in 2016.

Source Article from https://www.nbcnews.com/politics/2020-election/voter-turnout-soared-georgia-despite-massive-primary-day-problems-n1230806

Donald Trump further stoked controversy over race issues and policing by remarking on Friday that chokeholds sounded “so innocent and so perfect”, and once again claimed he has been the best president for black Americans – only partially conceding that Abraham Lincoln may have surpassed him.

The US president also called his choice to resume rallies on 19 June, the Juneteenth day marking the end of slavery, “a celebration”, despite having picked a city known for a historic massacre of black Americans by white Americans and used divisive language over the anti-racism protests spurred by the police killing of George Floyd.

As more American cities and states move to ban chokehold-type restraints by police, Trump said he would like to see a ban on such tactics in most instances, but suggested their use would be understandable in some situations.

“I don’t like chokeholds … [but] sometimes, if you’re alone and you’re fighting someone, it’s tough,” he said in an interview with Fox News on Friday.

He gave an example of a “really bad person” confronting a police officer and said that situation had played out amid the protests, which were sparked after a white Minneapolis police officer knelt on Floyd’s neck for almost nine minutes during an arrest attempt in May.

The autopsy report concluded homicide and the now former officer, Derek Chauvin, was charged with murder. A video by a witness went viral and spurred protests over police bias and brutality and wider issues of societal racism.

“You saw some very good people protesting, but you saw some bad people also,” Trump said. “And you get somebody in a chokehold. What are you going to do now? Let go and say, ‘Oh, let’s start all over again’?”

Trump later said be believed chokeholds to be theoretically acceptable, but he acknowledged they are often used inappropriately by police.

“I think the concept of chokeholds sounds so innocent and so perfect,” Trump said, adding that “you have to be careful. With that being said, it would be, I think, a very good thing that, generally speaking, it should be ended.”

The remarks followed action by a number of US cities and states towards banning police chokeholds. In the latest such move, the New York governor, Andrew Cuomo signed legislation on Friday morning to ban chokeholds in the state.

Aaron Rupar
(@atrupar)

Trump on police chokeholds: “I think the concept of chokeholds sounds so innocent and so perfect.” pic.twitter.com/3NbyFwX26R


June 12, 2020

In the interview with Fox News’s Harris Faulkner, Trump had been emphasizing the outbreaks of rioting and looting seen during early nights of unrest after Floyd’s killing, on the fringe of larger, peaceful protests.

When Faulkner asked the president what he would say to the many peaceful demonstrators, he said: “I think you had protesters for different reasons, and then you had protesting also because, you know, they just didn’t know … they’re following the crowd.”

The comments contrasted with millions on the streets chanting “I can’t breathe”, after the dying words uttered by Floyd and Eric Garner, who was killed during a police chokehold arrest attempt in New York in 2014, as well as other victims of police killings.

The president’s remarks also flew in the face of the fresh surge of the Black Lives Matter movement, with the slogan emblazoned on clothing, banners and entire city streets.

Trump offered several equivocal answers on sensitive issues in a time of exceptional national tumult, with the coronavirus pandemic, the resulting economic nosedive and the blight of police brutality all falling disproportionately on black Americans.


What the George Floyd protests say about America – video explainer

The president has also come under heavy fire for announcing on Thursday, two days after George Floyd’s funeral and a day after his brother testified tearfully to Congress about racism in policing, that he will resume election rallying with an event on 19 June in Tulsa, Oklahoma, the scene of one of the worst race massacres in US history, in 1921.

In the Fox interview, Trump said the choice of Juneteenth for a partisan rally was not specific, but “the fact that I’m having a rally on that day, you can really think about that very positively as a celebration because a rally, to me, is celebration.”

A fresh wave of protests is expected that day in many cities and critics have accused him of “racially motivated trolling” and timing akin to “blasphemy”.

Senator Kamala Harris of California remarked on Twitter on the implications, calling the move a “welcome home party” for white supremacists.

Kamala Harris
(@KamalaHarris)

This isn’t just a wink to white supremacists—he’s throwing them a welcome home party. https://t.co/lUXpnUoFQU


June 11, 2020

This week the president has refused outright to consider removing the names of US military bases honoring Confederate leaders from the civil war. And he has spoken up before in defense of Confederate monuments, including after defending white supremacists who rallied to protect one amid violence in Charlottesville, Virginia.

In Friday’s Fox interview, Trump also said: “I think I’ve done more for the black community than any other president, and let’s take a pass on Abraham Lincoln because he did good, although it’s always questionable, you know, in other words, the end result.”

It was not clear if “end result” was referring to Lincoln’s assassination. Faulkner, who is black, interjected to say of Lincoln: “Well, we are free, Mr President, so he did pretty well.”

Trump has previously claimed that nobody has ever done for the black community what President Trump has done”, which factcheckers rate as patently false.

Source Article from https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2020/jun/12/donald-trump-chokeholds-juneteenth-rally

FAULKNER: Say no to chokeholds?

TRUMP: Yeah. I don’t like chokeholds. I will say this, as somebody that, you know, you grow up and you wrestle and you fight and you were you see what happens sometimes if you’re alone and you’re fighting somebody who’s tough and you get somebody in a chokehold. What are you going to do, say, oh, and it’s a real bad person and you know that. And they do exist. I mean, we have some real bad people. You saw that during the last couple of weeks. You saw some very good people protesting. You saw some bad people also. And you get somebody in a chokehold. And what you going to do now? Let go and say, oh, let’s start all over again. I’m not allowed to have you in a chokehold. It’s a tough situation. Now, if you have two people in case we’re talking about — four people and two of them, I guess, just pretty much started. So it’s a very, very, very tricky situation. So the chokehold thing is good because to talk about, because off the cuff, it would sound like absolutely. But if you’re thinking about it, then you realize maybe there is a bad fight and the officer gets somebody in a position that’s a very tough position.

FAULKNER: So you’re saying it’s a sliding scale depending on what the circumstances are?

TRUMP: I think you have to probably say —

FAULKNER: Do you want to be in that conversation? Are you in that conversation?

TRUMP: I really am. And I think the concept of chokehold sounds so innocent, so perfect. And then you realize if it’s a one-on-one. Now if it’s two-on-one, that’s a little bit of a different story, depending on the toughness and strength. You know, we’re talking about toughness and strength. We are talking there’s a physical thing here also. But if a police officer is in a bad scuffle and he’s got somebody …

FAULKNER: Well, if it’s a one-on-one fight for the life. That’s what you’re saying.

TRUMP: And that does happen. And that does happen. So you have to be careful, with that being said, it would be, I think, a very good thing that, generally speaking, it should be ended.

FAULKNER: Do you want that to be a top down federal or should it be at the local level?

TRUMP: Well, it could be at the local level.

Seattle’s mayor mingles in city’s “autonomous zone.”

Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/2020/06/12/us/protests-george-floyd-black-lives-matter.html

Many of the 1,100 graduating cadets slept in barracks named for Lee, who also served as superintendent of West Point before breaking with the Union. And Fort Lee in Virginia is one of the 10 Army bases that Trump this week said he would “not even consider” renaming after Pentagon leaders said they were open to the possibility.

The West Point speech comes as a growing number of military figures slam the president for politicizing the armed forces as he seeks reelection — in the clash over Confederate symbols, his recent threat to use federal troops to put down protests, and for staging a photo op with Defense Secretary Mark Esper and Joint Chiefs Chairman Gen. Mark Milley after peaceful demonstrators were forcibly removed.

Esper said publicly he opposed the deployment of active troops and Milley on Thursday said his role in the June 1 episode in Lafayette Park outside the White House was a “mistake” that tarnished the military’s hard-earned reputation as being divorced from politics.

While some express hope the president will use Saturday’s storied backdrop overlooking New York’s Hudson River to try to heal the rifts, others fear that for political gain he will stoke more division and further exacerbate a crisis in civil-military relations.

“I’d love to hear the president change his mind about a lot of things,” said retired Army Col. Joseph Collins, a former instructor at West Point who until last year taught at the National Defense University, where senior officers and Pentagon civilians are groomed. “This business of threatening protesters with military forces, there was a lot of emotion with that.”

But he fears the president will strike back: “He was opposed by the secretary and the chairman. He doesn’t take those things lightly.”

Retired Gen. Wesley Clark, a West Point graduate who sought the Democratic presidential nomination in 2004, also worries the president could use the speech to try to score political points.

For example, he could go after some of his critics such as former Defense Secretary Jim Mattis or retired Adm. Michael Mullen, a former Joint Chiefs Chairman.

“He is not going to apologize for Lafayette Square and he is probably going to talk about the importance of loyalty and accuse Mattis and Mullen, at least implicitly, of being those people who stand on the wayside and criticize,” Clark said. “He could try to make fun of them, to try to hurt them and damage their reputations.”

Even worse, Clark fears, Trump could declare that he is standing up “for the heroes of West Point who served for the Confederacy and fought valiantly for a lost cause.” He could say “they were wrong but their generalship was outstanding and they learned their attributes at West Point.”

“He wraps himself in the credibility of the armed forces,” Clark added. “That’s been his objective from the beginning and it’s even more important now that people like Mattis have spoken out. “

On Friday, Trump appeared to lower the temperature in his standoff with the Pentagon, telling Fox News that he was “fine” with Milley’s statement of regret on Thursday, while defending his own actions. But he has also stoked the Confederate controversy, by tweeting that “THOSE THAT DENY THEIR HISTORY ARE DOOMED TO REPEAT IT!”

In that same interview, Trump said he has “done more for the black community than any other president,” adding that Abraham Lincoln “did good, although it’s always questionable, you know, in other words, the end result.” To which anchor Harris Faulkner responded: “Well, we are free, Mr. President. He did pretty well.”

The commencement address was controversial from the start. When Trump announced in April he would be delivering his first graduation speech at West Point, it was at the height of the coronavirus outbreak and cadets had been released early.

They have been forced to return to campus, including some with the coronavirus. The festivities will be smaller than previous ceremonies, which usually take place in front of a capacity crowd in West Point’s Mitchie Stadium. Even so, the gathering will violate New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo’s order to limit graduation crowds to 150. (As a federal facility, the academy is exempt from the state guidelines.)

The president is also being greeted at West Point by a backlash from hundreds of former cadets who issued an unusual public rebuke on Thursday of their fellow graduates who are serving the president, including Esper and Secretary of State Mike Pompeo. The two are among a number of members of the class of 1986 in high levels of the administration.

“When leaders betray public faith through deceitful rhetoric, quibbling, or the appearance of unethical behavior, it erodes public trust,” the Concerned Members of the Long Gray Line wrote in a post on Medium. “When fellow graduates acquiesce to bullying, and fail to defend honorable subordinates, it harms the nation and the Long Gray Line.”

They also urged their fellow West Point graduates to resist the president’s impulse to use the military as a political prop. “Politicization of the Armed Forces puts at risk the bond of trust between the American military and American society. Should this trust be ruptured, the damage to the nation would be incalculable,” they wrote.

Some see the West Point visit as a perfect opportunity to change the tone of the conversation, starting with the military.

“It does seem the relationship between the White House and the Pentagon — the leadership in the Pentagon — is worsening,” said Chris Jenks, a retired Army officer who worked for the Defense Department’s general counsel under Trump and now teaches law at Southern Methodist University. “It’s now even public.”

Others said the setting offers a unique backdrop for easing tensions in a nation buffeted by historic challenges, ranging from economic hardship to disease and lingering racial inequality that has led to the recent nationwide protests.

The West Point Class of 2020 is one of the most diverse in the academy’s history. Of the 1,105 graduates, 12 are international cadets, 229 are women, 132 are African American, 103 are Asian/Pacific Islander, 101 are Hispanic and 10 are Native American, the academy says.

“Ideally, a president speaking at a West Point graduation would offer positive, non-partisan messages about leadership and service,” said Benjamin Haas, a former Army intelligence officer and West Point graduate who is now a human rights lawyer. “But Trump has no respect for civil-military norms, and he is notorious for politicizing the military. It would be wholly inappropriate for Trump to push domestic political messages or boast of his perception that the military supports him politically.

“And it would be indefensible,” he added, “for Trump to further pit the military against protesters seeking racial justice or to advance his wrongheaded feelings about Confederate-named Army bases.”

For the newly commissioned Army second lieutenants in the audience, what the president has to say has immediate implications.

The largest share of graduating cadets — more than 20 percent — will be heading to their first assignments at Fort Bragg in North Carolina, named after Gen. Braxton Bragg, and Fort Hood in Texas, which honors Gen. John Bell Hood, two other Confederate generals.

Source Article from https://www.politico.com/news/2020/06/12/trumps-battle-with-the-military-heads-to-west-point-315833

President Donald Trump downplayed the danger of police chokeholds on Friday even as he suggested he could support banning the practice during a nationwide outcry against brutality. 

In a Fox News interview, the president said that “the concept of chokeholds sounds so innocent and so perfect” in “one-on-one” struggles. He added that it becomes “a bit of a different story” if “it’s two-on-one.” 

“With that being said, it would be I think a very good thing that, generally speaking, it should be ended,” Trump said. Asked at what level of government a ban should take place, he said that “in some cases” the law could come from local officials, but the U.S. government could make “very strong recommendations” about the practice. 

The killing of George Floyd, a 46-year-old unarmed Black man who died after police knelt on his neck for nearly nine minutes in Minneapolis last month, has sparked more than two weeks of demonstrations calling for officials to address police violence and systemic racism. Floyd’s pleas of “I can’t breathe” echoed the words of Eric Garner, a Black man killed in New York City when police held him in a banned chokehold in 2014. 

Source Article from https://www.cnbc.com/2020/06/12/trump-discusses-police-chokehold-ban-after-george-floyd-protests.html

President Trump on Friday pushed back against presumptive Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden for claiming the commander in chief would try to steal the election.

“Look, Joe’s not all there. Everybody knows. And it’s sad when you look at it and you see it, you see it for yourself. He’s created his own sanctuary city in the basement or wherever he is and he doesn’t come out,” Trump told Harris Faulkner on “Outnumbered Overtime.”

The commander in chief went on to say, “And certainly if I don’t win, I don’t win.”

TRUMP SIGNS SOCIAL MEDIA EXECUTIVE ORDER THAT CALLS FOR REMOVAL OF LIABILITY PROTECTIONS OVER ‘CENSORING’

Trump reacted to former Vice President Biden telling Comedy Central’s “The Daily Show” Wednesday night that “my single greatest concern [is that] this president is going to try to steal this election. This is a guy who said that all mail-in ballots are fraudulent … while he sits behind the desk in the Oval Office and writes his mail-in ballot to vote in a primary.”

If Trump refuses to concede, Biden told host Trevor Noah, “I am absolutely convinced they [the military] will escort him from the White House with great dispatch.”

CLICK HERE FOR THE FOX NEWS APP

Trump said that losing the election would be a “very sad thing for our country” because Democrats’ policies entail “getting rid of police departments” or “doing nothing” to address the rioting.

Furthermore, Trump said that Americans are “getting a glimpse of liberal policies” in the wake of the protests against George Floyd’s police-involved death.

“It was all very liberal mayors, radical left mayors, all of these places,” Trump said.

“It was not that they were not in Republican cities. They were all in cities that frankly, I think I have a chance to win many of those cities. But these were all cities run by radical lefts Democrats. And I think it’s a very sad thing that would happen.”

Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/media/trump-responds-biden-try-steal-election-joes-not-all-there

A second round of stimulus payments designed to jump start the U.S. economy amid the coronavirus pandemic is a possibility, according to Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin.

“It’s something that we’re very seriously considering,” Mnuchin said, according to a report in The Hill.

Another stimulus package proposal is currently in the House. The $3.5 trillion measure includes another round of stimulus checks, boosting the $500 per-child payments to up to $1,200 each for up to three children.

The current stimulus provides $1,200 for individuals earning up to $75,000 and $2,400 for married couples filing jointly who earn up to $150,000. Single filers who earn more than $99,000 and joint filers who earn more than $198,000 are not eligible.

150 million payments processed

The IRS said it has processed 159 million stimulus payments, totaling $267 billion.

Of those, 120 million were sent by direct deposit, 35 million by check and 4 million paid in the form of a pre-paid debit card. That includes payments sent to those who usually do not have to file a tax return but receive retirement, survivor or disability benefits under various programs.

Source Article from https://www.al.com/news/2020/06/second-round-of-stimulus-checks-a-possibility-treasury-sec-says.html

ALBANY, N.Y. – New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo on Thursday pledged support for allowing a statue of Christopher Columbus to remain at the center of Manhattan’s Columbus Circle, calling it a symbol of the “Italian American legacy.”

The Democratic governor reiterated his support for the statue Thursday after similar Columbus monuments have been vandalized or toppled in cities across the country amid protests following the police killing of George Floyd.

Protesters, who have also targeted Confederate monuments across the country, say Columbus’ exploration shouldn’t be idolized because it led to the massacre and forced migration of Native Americans.

But Cuomo, who speaks frequently of his Italian-American heritage and upbringing, said he supports the iconic Manhattan monument because it has come to represent the assimilation of Italian-American people.

Confederates toppled, Columbus beheaded:Protesters rip down controversial statues

Columbus was born in what is now modern day Italy.

“I understand the feelings about Christopher Columbus and some of his acts, which nobody would support,” Cuomo said at his daily coronavirus briefing.

“But the statue has come to represent and signify appreciation for the Italian-American contribution to New York, so for that reason I support it.”

Cuomo’s comments drew an immediate rebuke from Betty Lyons, president of the American Indian Law Alliance, who said those who ignore Columbus’ role in promoting racism and dehumanizing indigenous people “must be called to task.”

Source Article from https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/politics/2020/06/11/andrew-cuomo-supports-christopher-columbus-statue-manhattan/5344917002/