The murder of a New Jersey federal judge’s son has put the spotlight on an alarming trend that officials say continues to rise: threats against federal judges and their families.

The son of Judge Esther Salas, a freshman at Catholic University in Washington, D.C., was killed in the family’s home in North Brunswick, New Jersey, on Sunday night and her husband was also shot multiple times and is in critical but stable condition, sources told ABC News. Salas was not injured and the suspect was later found dead from a self-inflicted gunshot wound, sources said.

Judge Salas, who is now under 24-hour protection, had received threats in the past and authorities are investigating whether there is any connection between those prior threats and the shooting, sources said.

According to the U.S. Marshals Service, who are tasked with protecting federal judges, there were 4,449 threats and inappropriate communications against protected persons in 2019.

In 2015, that number was 926.

The U.S. Marshals Service says the increase is due to “improved effectiveness in data collection and reporting of potential threats.”

Over that same time period, the number of threats investigated rose from 305 in 2015 to 373 in 2019, peaking at 531 in 2018.

A day after federal Judge James Robart issued a temporary restraining order on President Donald Trump’s first travel ban on Feb. 3, 2017, threats against the judge came flooding in.

According to the American Bar Association, before Robart left the Seattle, Washington, courthouse, his personal information was put out on the internet, along with his wife’s information .

After the president’s tweets about Robart, the U.S. Marshals estimated that there were 1,100 serious threats against the judge, the ABA said.

According to the U.S. Marshals, inappropriate communications or threats to protected court family members have also been on the rise.

There were 4,542 reports of threats or inappropriate communications to family members in 2018.

In 2014, that number was 768.

Source Article from https://abcnews.go.com/US/murder-judge-esther-salas-son-highlights-surge-threats/story?id=71873951

The briefings from the coronavirus task force, once a near-daily occurrence, had been largely scrapped for nearly three months. While the task force is led by Vice President Mike Pence, the briefings were dominated by Trump, who frequently engaged in lengthy and combative exchanges with reporters.

In one of his last appearances in the briefing room, Trump speculated about whether ingesting disinfectants could work as a treatment for Covid-19 — a moment that generated ferocious criticism from public health experts. 

In June, members of the task force held their first public briefing since late April. Trump was not present. 

Trump’s overall approval ratings had gone up in the first months of the crisis, when the task force briefings were regularly taking place, according to FiveThirtyEight’s polling tracker. But by April, the president’s approval had started to slide, the tracker shows.

It has continued to trend downward in subsequent months, as multiple states grapple with record-breaking spikes in cases. With less than four months until the 2020 election, presumptive Democratic nominee Joe Biden holds a sizable and steady lead over Trump, RealClearPolitics’ polling average shows.

As the election draws near, Trump last week announced a campaign shake up, tapping Bill Stepien to replace Brad Parscale as campaign manager. The move came weeks after the Trump campaign’s kickoff rally in Tulsa, Oklahoma, which was mired in controversy and yielded underwhelming turnout. Cases in the city were rising before Trump arrived, and health experts said afterward that a spike in cases there was likely linked to the rally.

The rallies, a defining feature of Trump’s winning 2016 presidential bid, had not been held for months amid the health crisis, depriving the president of one of the key weapons in his campaign arsenal. Absent those large-scale in-person events, Trump has used his platforms in the Rose Garden and elsewhere to launch attacks against Biden and his other political opponents.

Members of the task force — especially Dr. Anthony Fauci, the nation’s top infectious disease expert — have faced criticism from within the White House itself as they continue to speak publicly about the virus.

Trump, in a Fox News interview that aired Sunday, said Fauci is a “a little bit of an alarmist,” while adding, “I have a great relationship with him.”

In that interview Trump also pushed back on remarks from Dr. Robert Redfield, director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and another member of the task force, who said that if “everybody” wore masks, the virus could be under control in a matter of weeks.

“I don’t agree with the statement that if everybody wears a mask everything disappears,” Trump told Fox.

Trump said Monday that the U.S. is now in a much better place regarding vaccines and therapeutics than it was at the time the briefings halted, when “we were nowhere.”

“I think it’s a great way to get information out to the public as to where with the vaccines, with the therapeutics, and generally speaking where we are,” he said.

Trump added that regular White House press briefings, led by the press secretary, would continue.

Source Article from https://www.cnbc.com/2020/07/20/coronavirus-trump-says-he-will-resume-holding-white-house-briefings.html

Fox News’s Chris WallaceChristopher (Chris) WallaceTrump on whether he’ll accept election results in November: ‘I have to see’ Trump mocks push to rename Fort Bragg: ‘We’re going to name it after the Rev. Al Sharpton?’ Some Republicans dig in against mask mandate as bipartisan consensus in favor grows MORE said presumptive Democratic presidential nominee Joe BidenJoe BidenTrump on whether he’ll accept election results in November: ‘I have to see’ Ryan warned Trump was losing key voters in Wisconsin, other states: NYT TikTok may be a political-culture war victim, when the larger issue is data use MORE should sit down for an interview and take tough questions, one day after the “Fox News Sunday” host’s interview with President TrumpDonald John TrumpKanye West says Harriet Tubman ‘never actually freed the slaves’ at rally Trump-Afghan deal passes key deadline, but peace elusive GOP governors in hardest hit states split over COVID-19 response MORE was aired.

“The fact is, the president is out there. He’s out there in this broiling heat with me for an hour, took all the questions,” Wallace told anchor Bret Baier on Monday. “You can like his answers or dislike them, but he had answers, and Joe Biden hasn’t faced that kind of scrutiny, hasn’t faced that kind of exposure.”

“You’ve got to feel at some point he’s going to come out from the basement,” Wallace continued. “He’s going to have to be more exposed and take questions just as tough as the ones I asked this president.

“He’s going to have to do it with a bunch of people and, of course, he’s going to have those three debates with the president and you know that the president can handle himself in these debates. I think there is an open question there, can Joe Biden do the same?”

Baier said he’s asked Biden for an interview on his own show.

Biden currently leads Trump in the RealClearPolitics index of polls by 8.6 points, which is down from his highest lead of 9.8 points one month ago.

Source Article from https://thehill.com/homenews/media/508125-chris-wallace-says-biden-should-do-tough-interview-like-trump


Dining chairs and tables are stacked at Little Tong Noodle Shop in New York. | AP Photo/John Minchillo

NEW YORK — New York City entered the fourth and final scheduled phase of its coronavirus reopening on Monday, but Mayor Bill de Blasio said there’s no timeline for when still-shuttered indoor facilities like restaurants, museums, theaters and malls will be able to open.

Until they do, the city’s economy remains largely at a standstill. A report from the Partnership for New York City, first reported Monday by POLITICO, painted a bleak picture of the city’s economic future. As many as one-third of the 230,000 or so small businesses across the city may close permanently. A report from the Brooklyn Chamber of Commerce found more than half of that borough’s small businesses were struggling to stay open through the summer.

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The phase four reopening does include some outdoor cultural sites like zoos and botanic gardens. The Bronx Zoo, Central Park Zoo, New York Botanical Garden, Empire State Building observation deck and outdoor sections of Liberty Island are among the iconic spots opening this week, with capacity limits in place and some with the first days open only to members.

“The heroic efforts of New Yorkers fighting back this disease have made this possible,” de Blasio said during his daily briefing Monday. “So many things are moving forward.”

TV, movie and music production have the green light to start up on Monday, and professional sports are returning with no fans.

Since it began to emerge from a monthslong lockdown in early June, the city has every two weeks entered a new phase of the reopening plan. Now that it has reached phase four, there are no more planned milestones on the calendar.

Indoor restaurants and bars have been ordered to stay shut in the city, and indoor museums were nixed from the fourth phase. Gyms, movie theaters and malls are among the other businesses still under indefinite shutdown orders.

“There’s so much concern about certain types of indoor activities, and right now we are all about keeping New York City safe, being smart, being cautious about it,” de Blasio said.

“We do not have a deadline, quote unquote, by which we’re looking to make a decision on indoor dining or malls,” he said. “We want to keep watching the overall situation in the country, the overall situation in the city, and how all these other things interact — including, most obviously, when people start to come back more in September to school and work.”

Jay Varma, a top public health adviser to the mayor, said the city was shaping its approach based on the experience of other places where reopening has sparked a surge in virus cases.

“We understand completely this presents an incredible challenge for the businesses throughout the city. But we’ve seen what has happened in many other places around the world — particularly places that have done an exceptional job at controlling this epidemic — have had to repeatedly open and close indoor bars, restaurants, other shopping facilities because of resurgence,” he said.

“We need to be very cautious because of the experiences throughout the world.”

The city has been reporting a few hundred new coronavirus cases each day, and there has been an increase in the infection rate among young adults.

In the latest data reported Monday, 74 people entered hospitals for Covid-19 symptoms, public hospital ICUs were treating 311 patients and 2 percent of coronavirus tests came back positive.

De Blasio also vowed enforcement against establishments that flout social distancing rules — saying an Astoria lounge, Brik, which was a focal point for maskless crowds partying on Steinway Street over the weekend, has been shut down.

“No one wants to shut down bars and restaurants, but if they do not cooperate in our efforts to contain the coronavirus, they will be shut down,” de Blasio said. “If we have to, we’ll give out summonses. So there will be heavier enforcement by the sheriff’s office, and when needed by the NYPD as well, around bars and restaurants.”

Source Article from https://www.politico.com/states/new-york/albany/story/2020/07/20/new-york-citys-latest-reopening-phase-leaves-much-of-the-economy-still-frozen-1302326

If you are one of the millions of people around the world wearing a face mask because of the coronavirus pandemic, this footage may concern you. It shows a group of Uighurs arriving at a textile company that started producing masks in response to the pandemic. The Uighurs are a long-persecuted, largely Muslim ethnic minority. This slickly produced video from Chinese state TV appears to show grateful workers getting ready for their new jobs. But behind this propaganda is a hidden story about a longstanding and highly controversial government labor program that experts say often puts people to work against their will. We reviewed hundreds of videos, photos, government documents and shipping data to reveal how the surging demand for face masks is linked to this problematic program. We identified several Chinese companies that use Uighur labor to produce P.P.E. And we tracked some of their shipments to consumers in the U.S. and around the world. “The rural poor that are being put into factory work are not going by choice. There are these coercive quotas that cause people to be put into factory work when they don’t want to be. And that could be considered forced labor under international law.” This is all driven by supply and demand. Chinese companies have been rushing to produce masks as the pandemic spread across China and the rest of the world. In Xinjiang, where a majority of Uighurs live, only four companies produced medical-grade protective equipment before the pandemic. Now, that number is 51. We found that at least 17 of those participate in the labor transfer program. “Any company that is procuring masks or other personal protective equipment that wants to avoid forced labor content in those products should not be sourcing them from Xinjiang.” Let’s take a closer look at one factory in Xinjiang: the company we showed you earlier, where Uighurs were arriving for their first day. It’s called Tianshan Textile. China proudly promotes the transfer program as a way to reduce poverty. So we are able to follow the workers to their new living quarters at the factory, thanks to reports on state media. It all started here. In mid-March, the government moved almost 2,000 Uighurs from Hotan, in the south of Xinjiang. Their destination is Urumqi, Xinjiang’s capital city in the north. Fifty were sent to Tianshan Textile for a very specific task. Tianshan didn’t respond to our request for comment. But it’s a clear example of how Uighur workers are fulfilling the increasing need for P.P.E. Now, let’s look at companies that use the labor program to make products that are shipped to the United States and around the world. We are first going to look at a company called Hubei Haixin. It uses Uighur workers from the labor transfer program. Its factory is located here, almost 2,000 miles away from Hotan, where the Uighur workers were transferred from. We tracked one of Hubei Haixin’s face mask shipments from its port of departure in Shanghai to the United States. It arrived at the port of Los Angeles in late May. Then, the shipment was received by MedWay US, a medical supply company in Suwanee, Ga. Although MedWay US wouldn’t respond to questions from The Times about the origins of their products, we can see they do sell face masks online. Protective gear made by Hubei Haixin is also readily available to U.S. consumers on popular online shopping websites. Images of the Uighurs’ living conditions at the Hubei Haixin factory, proudly broadcast on state media, help explain why the labor transfer program is so controversial. They are required to attend a weekly national flag-raising ceremony to pledge loyalty to China. They also must learn to speak Mandarin. This form of political indoctrination is common, and we see it in even greater detail at another exporting company we identified. This is Medwell Medical Products. According to state media, Uighurs make up over 25 percent of the company’s labor force. Although an employee who answered the phone at Medwell told The Times that they have no workers from Xinjiang, we know there are Uighurs at Medwell’s factory. In satellite imagery, we can clearly see their segregated living quarters. They have an assigned area on the factory grounds. They’re surrounded by government indoctrination and take mandatory Mandarin language classes three times a week. In the government’s view, fluency in Mandarin and skills in factory work are key to assimilating to Chinese society. It’s unclear how many masks Medwell sends abroad. But a Medwell representative openly promoted its robust export business in an interview on state TV. And we found that it’s also shipping to current virus hot spots in Latin America. A Brazilian company called MedTrace received a shipment of face masks from Medwell but told us they were unaware that it uses Uighur workers. The labor transfer program is part of a larger system of repression and mass incarceration. Over one million Uighurs and mostly Muslim minorities have been detained in recent years, some simply for their religious practice. The Chinese Communist Party says its tight control over Xinjiang is necessary to fight what it says is religious extremism. It’s virtually impossible to know who in the transfer program was forced to participate. Speaking out is incredibly risky. And the government is shaping the narrative. “In Xinjiang, it is not a practical possibility at this moment to do effective worker interviews because no worker can be expected, whether onsite or offsite, to feel comfortable speaking candidly and openly with an interviewer, particularly if the matter under discussion is the issue of forced labor, which is the burning issue in Xinjiang from a labor rights standpoint.” But we do know that the transfers are widespread and often coercive. Authorities provide regions with subsidies for each worker that they take in. They also impose quotas on the number of workers that must be transferred. “That puts enormous pressure on those government officials to find those workers. And that increases the risks that those workers are not working willingly.” Those who refuse to work in the program can be penalized. A local government directive from 2018 describes a system that grades workers on their level of cooperation. Those with low scores are subject to more indoctrination, and their movements are restricted. Since 2017, almost three million people per year have been put in the program. The spokesman for China’s embassy in the U.S. told The Times that the rights of Uighur workers are protected and that the measures, quote, “help local residents rise above poverty through employment and lead fulfilling lives.” Earlier this year, an Australian think tank identified 83 major international brands whose supply chains were connected to the Uighur labor transfers, including Nike and Apple. The situation has become so troubling that the U.S. government in July 2020 warned U.S. companies of the risk of forced labor from Xinjiang. And U.S. lawmakers introduced a bipartisan bill to restrict imports from the region. “It’s injected forced labor into American and global supply chains.” “We know that many U.S., international and Chinese companies are complicit in the exploitation of forced labor.” But despite the concern, we found that protective gear from problematic supply chains is continuing to make its way into the U.S. and around the world. “Hey, it’s Haley here, one of the reporters on this video. Our team spent months investigating companies in China that use Uighur labor to produce P.P.E., but we only realized how widespread the issue really is when we tracked a shipment of face masks from one of those companies to the U.S. If you want to see more work like this, let us know what we should investigate next, and don’t forget to subscribe for more Visual Investigations.”

Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/2020/07/20/world/coronavirus-cases.html

Democratic leaders are warning that Congress is being targeted by a foreign interference campaign geared toward disrupting November’s presidential election. 

The top two Democrats in Congress and the leaders of the House and Senate intelligence committees released a letter on Monday to FBI Director Christopher Wray saying they are “gravely concerned” that Congress “appears to be the target of a concerted foreign interference campaign.”

They wrote that the campaign “seeks to launder and amplify disinformation in order to influence congressional activity, public debate, and the presidential election in November.”

The brief letter, which is marked as unclassified, was sent on July 13 but was not available to the public before Monday. Markings on the letter suggest that it was accompanied by a classified attachment.

A congressional official, who declined to be named because the attachment was not public, said the document is based in large part on reporting and analysis from the executive branch.

The letter was signed by House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., House Intelligence Committee Chairman Adam Schiff, D-Calif., and Sen. Mark Warner, vice chairman of the Senate Intelligence Committee. 

The Democrats cited the “seriousness and specificity” of the threats and called for a defensive briefing to be provided to all members of Congress as quickly as possible. They asked Wray to outline a plan for the briefing by Monday.

Carol Cratty, a spokesperson for the FBI, declined to comment beyond confirming that the bureau received the letter.

Investigations by the U.S. intelligence community and Congress have determined that Russia interfered in the 2016 election with the intention of benefiting President Donald Trump.

Former special counsel Robert Mueller, who was tasked with investigating Russian interference, found no conspiracy between the Trump campaign and Russia but did find that the Trump campaign expected to benefit from the country’s actions. 

Presumptive Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden said earlier this month that he had begun receiving intelligence briefings and warned that Russia and China were both seeking to meddle in the race. 

Earlier this year, Sen. Bernie Sanders was reportedly warned by U.S. officials that Russia was seeking to bolster his bid for the Democratic nomination. 

Source Article from https://www.cnbc.com/2020/07/20/democrats-say-congress-appears-to-be-target-of-foreign-interference.html

Acting Department of Homeland Security Secretary Chad Wolf slammed Portland’s mayor and his “completely irresponsible” comment that members of his department and other federal agents are “sharply escalating the situation” in the city.

“The facts don’t lie and the facts are that these violent anarchists and extremists were violent well before DHS surged federal assets into Portland,” Wolf told “Fox & Friends” on Monday, the morning after the 53rd consecutive night of protests in Oregon’s largest city.

Over the weekend rioters broke into the Portland Police Association building and set it on fire, as demonstrations over the death of George Floyd intensified for another night, according to Portland Police.

President Trump has denounced the violent demonstrations in Portland and the Trump administration has enlisted federal agents, including the U.S. Marshals Special Operations Group, to protect federal property.

The unrest had frustrated Mayor Ted Wheeler, a Democrat, and other local officials who had said a small group of violent activists was drowning out the message of peaceful protesters. Wheeler also said the presence of federal law enforcement in Portland was exacerbating the situation.

Wheeler said Friday, “Keep your troops in your own buildings, or have them leave our city.”

“The words and actions from President Trump and the Department of Homeland Security have shown that this is an attack on our democracy,” Wheeler added.

Speaking on CNN’s “State of the Union” on Sunday, Wheeler doubled down on his statements.

“The president has a complete misunderstanding of cause and effect,” Wheeler said. “What’s happening here is we have dozens, if not hundreds of federal troops descending upon our city and what they’re doing is they are sharply escalating the situation. Their presence here is actually leading to more violence and more vandalism.”

“We haven’t asked them here. In fact we want them to leave,” he added, calling the intervention, which he said is “a blatant abuse of police tactics by the federal government” and the Trump administration, “a direct threat to our democracy.”

Wheeler went on to say, “We’re all telling the Trump administration to stop the rhetoric, take these people out of our city, they are not helping us, they are hurting us.”

HUCKABEE SLAMS OREGON GOVERNOR

In response, Wolf said, “I believe it’s a completely irresponsible comment.”

“What we know is, before July Fourth, where we saw an escalation of violence in Portland, before that time there was violence ongoing and DHS had very few officers in the city,” he explained.

“At the end of the day we’re going to protect the courthouse and we’re going to protect our law enforcement officers there,” he went on to say,

Wolf pointed out that there have been “over 50 nights of violent activity targeting federal facilities and federal law enforcement officers,” and added that “it needs to stop.”

“DHS is not going to back down from our responsibilities,” he continued. “We are not escalating, we are protecting … federal facilities.”

He noted that “it’s our job” to protect federal property.

“It’s what Congress told us to do time and time again and so we’re going to do that,” Wolf said. “We’re going to investigate and we’re going to hold those accountable. We’re going to arrest them and hold those accountable that are doing this destruction.”

Oregon Public Broadcasting reported last week that some agents had been driving around in unmarked vans and snatching protesters from streets, not near federal property, without identifying themselves.

Tensions also escalated after an officer with the Marshals Service fired a less-lethal round at a protester’s head earlier this month, critically injuring him.

Responding to criticism, Wolf said “local leaders in Portland have fostered this environment that allows” people to “attack the courthouse” and do “violent” and “destructive” acts “night after night after night.”

“They congregate around midnight and they go until about 4:00 to 4:30 a.m. every single night [for] over 50 nights, while the Portland leaders there do nothing about it,” Wolf said.

He stressed that DHS officers and other federal agents are protecting federal property and as they come across people performing criminal acts, “we’re going to investigate and we’re going to arrest them and we have the authority to do that.”

“We’re not trying to escalate, we’re trying to hold those folks accountable,” he explained. “What we’re not going to do is allow them to attack a courthouse and then simply step across the street on to city property and say you can’t touch me. That’s not how this works.”

Wolf noted that “almost all of our activity has taken place in the one, two or three blocks around that courthouse and will continue to do so.”

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“There are other parts of city and other parts of Portland that are having destructive acts taking place. DHS is not anywhere near that,” Wolf said. “We’re focused on protecting federal facilities, that is our mission and we’re going to continue to do that.”

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/media/dhs-chad-wolf-portland-mayor-feds-unrest

Lawmakers were returning to a Capitol still off-limits to tourists, another sign of the nation’s difficulty containing the coronavirus. Rather than easing, the pandemic’s devastating cycle is rising again, leaving Congress little choice but to engineer another costly rescue. Businesses are shutting down again, many schools will not fully reopen and jobs are disappearing, all while federal aid expires.

Source Article from https://www.chicagotribune.com/coronavirus/ct-nw-second-coronavirus-stimulus-check-updates-20200720-hvyh7hhwnbegblt4nmxbh43znq-story.html

“I think she cried for a week and that’s just in D.C.,” she said. “He was her only child.”

Judge Salas was the first Hispanic woman to serve as a federal judge in New Jersey.

President Barack Obama nominated her to the United States District Court for New Jersey in 2010. She had previously served as a magistrate judge and an assistant federal public defender.

Last week, Judge Salas was assigned to a class-action lawsuit a group of investors filed against Deutsche Bank, contending that the firm failed to flag questionable transactions that were made from the account of the financier Jeffrey Epstein, who died last August while in jail awaiting trial on sex trafficking charges.

In 2014, Judge Salas sentenced two married stars of the “Real Housewives of New Jersey” television show to prison time after the couple pleaded guilty to fraud charges.

Judge Salas sentenced one of the stars, Teresa Giudice, to 15 months in prison and her husband, Giuseppe Giudice, known as Joe, to 41 months. The judge staggered the sentences because of the couple’s four young daughters, The Associated Press reported.

Judge Salas met her husband, a defense lawyer, when he was a prosecutor in the Essex County Prosecutor’s Office, according to a 2018 profile of her in New Jersey Monthly.

“We’ve been inseparable since 1992,” she told the magazine.

Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/2020/07/19/nyregion/shooting-nj-judge-esther-salas.html

Two generations ago, Richard Nixon sweated his way to losing the first ever presidential debate on television to a young, fit and cool John F Kennedy.

It was the kind of rookie mistake you could put down to the newness of TV.

So how do you explain – 60 years later – the drenching sweat that trickled down the face of the reality TV star who is now living inside the White House?

Of the very few things Donald Trump is supposed to know in any modicum of detail, TV sits right at the tippity-top. There are more historic crises challenging his presidency than there are cable news channels, but that doesn’t stop him tweeting about all the TV he’s watching all day.

For a man who still measures his manhood by his own TV ratings, it was a curious choice to sit outside in the humid steamer of a Washington summer, caked in his glowing orange make-up, to field the pesky questions of the best interviewer on Fox News.

“Hot enough for you here, Mr President?” asked Chris Wallace.

“It’s hot,” said Trump. “It’s about, well, sort of almost record-breaking stuff.”

“You know, we wanted to do it inside,” replied Wallace. “This is your choice.”

Trump has made so many more consequential blunders than failing to prepare for his double-sided grilling by the weather and Wallace. But this chargrilled interview laid bare how the Wicked Wizard of the West Wing is melting before our eyes.

For four years we have been told that populist leaders – especially this one – are peerless showmen: experts not in government but in hijacking the public attention.

His pithy nicknames and catchphrases supposedly destroyed his rivals in 2016. They came up with 12-point plans while he was going to make America great again. He threatened North Korea with his big nuclear button, then fell in love with the North Korean leader in a summit staged just for the cameras.

But now his repeated attempts to smear Joe Biden have flopped and the great showman is reportedly asking aides if he should try to find another nickname.

With every new poll showing him losing the election, both nationally and in all the battleground states, Trump’s despair dribbled through all his pores on Sunday’s interview.

When asked if Biden was senile, Trump answered with the kind of half-baked half-thoughts of a mind cooking slowly in the heat of the presidency. “I’d say he’s not competent to be president,” he warmed up. “To be president, you have to be sharp and tough and so many other things.”

What are these so many other things, pray tell?

“He doesn’t even come out of his basement. They think, ‘Oh this is a great campaign.’ So he goes in.”

It wasn’t clear who they were or what he was going into. But it seemed totally clear to our sharp and tough president, who is also so many other things.

“I’ll then make a speech. It’ll be a great speech. And some young guy starts writing, ‘Vice President Biden said this, this, this.’ He didn’t say it. Joe doesn’t know he’s alive, OK? He doesn’t know he’s alive.”

It may be tempting to blame all of this on the young guy whose writing clearly leaves a lot to be desired.

But it’s the old guy in the Oval we should be worried about. He doesn’t know he’s dying out there.

There have been some clues, of course. There was the disastrous riot of a photo op with a pretty bible and a ton of tear gas. There was the Tulsa rally for a million people who failed to show up. There was that weird Mount Rushmore speech about the fascists who say mean things about racists.

Then again, as Chris Wallace pointed out, there are the polls that show this desperate act isn’t working. And there’s all the endless video of our sharp and tough president predicting the pandemic would just disappear, like a miracle, with a little disinfectant injected inside. Or perhaps some bright light.

“I’ll be right eventually,” Trump insisted when confronted with his own cringe-inducing comments about the coronavirus. “I will be right eventually. You know I said, ‘It’s going to disappear.’ I’ll say it again.”

They say a stopped clock is right twice a day. But this broken timepiece will only be happy when all the clocks have stopped.

At this point in Trump’s Twilight Zone, the audience has a good sense of the plot twists that lie ahead in the next four months. It consists of as much concocted chaos as humanly possible.

There will be terrorist protesters in every major city, whisked off the streets by Trump’s paramilitaries in rented minivans. Thank goodness we have machine-gun-toting goons to protect us from all that graffiti.

There will be caravans of coronavirus-filled immigrants scaling the freshly-painted border wall, which has done such a fantastic job of protecting us all from the pandemic.

After Nixon sweated his way to defeat against Kennedy, he returned to win the presidency eight years later with a law and order campaign that promised to shut down civil rights protests and stop enforcing civil rights laws.

Our Trumpified version of Tricky Dick is a little less subtle than the original.

He claimed that people flying the confederate flag were “not talking about racism”. But when asked about removing the names of confederate generals from US military bases, Trump could only think about race. And some weird stuff about a couple of world wars.

“We’re going to name it after the Rev Al Sharpton? What are you going to name it, Chris? Tell me what you’re going to name it,” Trump sputtered.

“So there’s a whole thing here. We won two world wars, two world wars, beautiful world wars that were vicious and horrible. And we won them out of Fort Bragg. We won out of all of these forts that now they want to throw those names away.”

Ah yes, those beautiful world wars. So vicious and horrible. All at the same time. Like the man says, there is indeed a whole thing here.

“Let Biden sit through an interview like this,” Trump declared at another point. “He’ll be on the ground crying for mommy. He’ll say, ‘Mommy, mommy, please take me home.’”

In his own man-childish way, Trump thought he was proving his point about senility and sharpness and toughness. And so many other things.

But with every new interview, it sounds like he’s just asking his mommy to please take him home.

Source Article from https://www.theguardian.com/global/commentisfree/2020/jul/20/trump-interview-fox-news-election-polls-chances-melting-away

WASHINGTON — As the coronavirus crisis worsens across the country, Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., and House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy, R-Calif., are expected to meet with President Donald Trump and Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin at the White House on Monday to discuss another aid package.

In an interview on Sunday with Fox News, White House chief of staff Mark Meadows said that negotiations will “start in earnest” on Monday.

“I know that Leader McConnell and Leader McCarthy will be coming into meet with the president and Steven Mnuchin, who’s leading it from our side, to actually start to fine tune it,” he said.

Negotiations over another comprehensive aid package have been stalled on Capitol Hill for months. House Democrats passed their own $3 trillion proposal in May, but Senate Republicans have not taken up the legislation and they have not yet rolled out their own plan.

The White House is focused on expediting vaccines and treatments for the coronavirus, keeping people employed and bringing back manufacturing from overseas, Meadows said Sunday. The Trump administration has been coordinating with McConnell and other Republicans on a new aid measure, but those talks hit a snag over the weekend over funding for the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention as well as testing and tracing.

Senate Republicans are pushing back against a White House attempt to block billions of dollars for coronavirus testing and tracing contacts of individuals infected with the coronavirus, two Republican sources told NBC News Sunday.

News of the White House push to block the funding was first reported by The Washington Post.

Reacting to the reports, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., said in an interview on MSNBC’s “Morning Joe” on Monday, “What we heard over the weekend that the White House was thinking about no more testing. That defied … that goes beyond ignorance. It’s just beyond the pale.”

It’s a disagreement that underscores the worsening fracture between a president who wants to downplay the seriousness of the crisis and a Republican Party that sees its grip on power slipping away in the face of a failure to contain the virus, with testing and tracing key to any successful push to get the spread under control.

Another likely sticking point in negotiations is a payroll tax holiday that Trump has insisted should be part of any package. Senate Republicans have repeatedly rejected that proposal as too expensive and not helpful to the people who need it, and sources said Sunday that reality has not changed.

McConnell is also planning to push for a liability protection provision in the upcoming aid bill that would offer protections for schools, colleges, charities, businesses and frontline health care workers and employers who follow public health guidelines, according to a summary of the proposal obtained by NBC News.

Democrats, meanwhile, have opposed the liability protection idea and are calling instead for funding to state and local governments, funding for schools, an extension of the $600 unemployment insurance benefit and another round of direct payments to Americans, among other things.

Mnuchin earlier this month said that the Trump administration backed another round of direct stimulus payments in the next aid package and said that Congress must pass it by the end of the month. Any Republican-led proposal would then have to be negotiated with Democratic House Speaker Nancy Pelosi to become law.

Congress doesn’t have much time to negotiate and pass the legislation — lawmakers have only a few weeks left in Washington before their annual summer recess in August which will be focused on campaigning and the two parties’ conventions.

Source Article from https://www.nbcnews.com/politics/congress/mcconnell-mccarthy-expected-meet-trump-amid-worsening-coronavirus-crisis-n1234324

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

Source Article from https://www.cnn.com/2020/07/20/investing/premarket-stocks-trading/index.html

A black man carrying an American flag confronted protesters outside a federal courthouse in Portland on Sunday, telling the mostly white crowd that “none of you guys represent black lives.”

The unidentified man can be seen in video footage attempting to stop the protesters from breaking through a gate and “occupying” the steps of the graffiti-covered courthouse.

“If you came here for justice, come here and stand with me,” the man says. “I’m here for justice. I’m not here to tear down this f–king fence. I’m not here to spray-paint.”

He adds: “If you don’t wanna get gassed: Stop!”

When a member of the group tries to tell the man they have a right to peacefully assemble he replies: “This ain’t peaceful.”

Source Article from https://nypost.com/2020/07/20/man-with-american-flag-confronts-protesters-in-portland/

President Trump on Sunday declined to say whether he will accept the results of the 2020 election, adding that he will “have to see.”

The president also claimed without evidence that “mail-in voting is going to rig the election,” during an interview aired on “Fox News Sunday.”

In response, Fox News host Chris Wallace asked: “Are you suggesting that you might not accept the results of the election?”

“No. I have to see,” Trump replied, before saying it was Hillary Clinton who had “never accepted her [2016] loss” and “looks like a fool.”

“But can you give a, can you give a direct answer you will accept the election?” Wallace pushed.

Trump responded that “I have to see. Look, you – I have to see.”

“No, I’m not going to just say yes. I’m not going to say no, and I didn’t last time either,” he added, referring to being asked the same question in the 2016 election.

During the wide-ranging sit-down, Wallace debuted the results of Fox News’ latest national poll, which showed Democratic presidential candidate Joe Biden leading Trump by eight points.

The commander-in-chief downplayed the findings as “fake polls.”

“First of all, I’m not losing because those are fake polls,” he said. “They were fake in 2016 and now they’re even more fake.”

Later in the interview, Trump was also asked whether he was a “good loser,” generally.

“I’m not a good loser. I don’t like to lose. I don’t lose too often. I don’t like to lose,” Trump responded.

Source Article from https://nypost.com/2020/07/19/trump-wont-say-whether-hell-accept-2020-election-results/

The son of U.S. District Court Judge Esther Salas was fatally shot and her husband critically wounded when a gunman dressed as a FedEx driver entered her home near North Brunswick, N.J., Sunday afternoon, according to local media.

Salas herself was reportedly unharmed in the attack, the New Jersey Globe reports. Daniel Anderl, Salas’ 20-year-old son, was killed. Her husband, Mark Anderl, a criminal defense attorney and former assistant Essex County prosecutor, reportedly underwent surgery at Robert Wood Johnson Hospital in New Brunswick, and is listed in critical but stable condition.

The FBI in Newark tweeted that it was “investigating a shooting that occurred at the home of Judge Ester Salas” and that the bureau was “looking for one suspect.”

A New Brunswick Police dispatcher told NPR that he could not confirm any details of the incident, but confirmed an ongoing investigation.

Salas, the first Latina to serve as a federal district judge in New Jersey, was nominated to her current position in 2010 by President Barack Obama.

The Globe said it was not immediately clear whether Salas, who it said had received threats in the past, was the target of the shooting. She has presided over high-profile cases, including the 2013 fraud trial of The Real Housewives of New Jersey stars Joe and Teresa Giudice.

New Jersey Gov. Phil Murphy tweeted late Sunday: “Judge Salas and her family are in our thoughts at this time as they cope with this senseless act.”

Sen. Bob Menendez, D-N.J., said: “I know Judge Salas and her husband well, and was proud to recommend her to President Obama for nomination to NJ’s federal bench.”

“My prayers are with Judge Salas and her family, and that those responsible for this horrendous act are swiftly apprehended and brought to justice,” Menendez was quoted by the Globe as saying.

Source Article from https://www.npr.org/2020/07/20/892923945/gunman-dressed-as-fedex-driver-kills-son-wounds-husband-of-new-jersey-federal-ju

House Democrats on Sunday called for an immediate investigation into reports that federal law enforcement agents have unlawfully arrested protestors in Portland, Oregon in recent days. 

House Judiciary Committee Chairman Jerry Nadler, Homeland Security Committee Chairman Bennie Thompson, and Oversight and Reform Committee Chairwoman Carolyn Maloney co-signed a letter on Sunday condemning the recent law enforcement actions authorized by the Trump administration in Portland and last month in Washington D.C. and called for the Inspectors General of the Department of Justice and Department of Homeland Security to open investigations.

“The Attorney General of the United States does not have unfettered authority to direct thousands of federal law enforcement personnel to arrest and detain American citizens exercising their First Amendment rights. The Acting Secretary [Chad Wolf] appears to be relying on an ill-conceived executive order meant to protect historic statues and monuments as justification for arresting American citizens in the dead of night.” 

Reports surfaced that as early as July 14, federal law enforcement agents have been using unmarked vehicles in Portland to arrest those participating in protests, which were initially sparked by the Minneapolis police killing of George Floyd on Memorial Day weekend. Federal authorities, including the U.S. Marshals’ Special Operations Group, and a tactical unit from U.S. Customs and Border Protection, have allegedly arrested, searched and detained individuals without proper notification of their Miranda Rights.

On Sunday, Portland Mayor Ted Wheeler told CNN’s Jake Tapper on “State of the Union” that the presence of federal troops and enforcement officers is actually leading to “more violence and more vandalism,” adding that it’s not helping the situation. 

“The tactics that the Trump administration are using on the streets of Portland is abhorrent,” Wheeler says. “People are being scooped off the streets into unmarked vans and rental cars,” he added, saying that those detained are being denied their right to due process. 

U.S. Border Patrol said in a statement that its “agents have been deployed to Portland in direct support of the Presidential Executive Order and the newly established DHS Protecting American Communities Task Force (PACT).”

“As a law enforcement component under DHS, CBP will be providing support, as needed at the request of the Federal Protective Service, to protect Federal facilities and property,” Border Patrol said.

A Marshals’ Service spokeswoman told CNBC that while the agency does use unmarked vehicles, its personnel wear clear identification on their uniforms. Additionally agents do let individuals know why they are being detained.

Acting Secretary of Homeland Security Wolf condemned local leaders’ resistance to additional law enforcement, saying in a letter issued Thursday that Portland “has been under siege for 47 straight days by a violent mob while local political leaders refuse to restore order to protect their city.”

President Trump also defended sending in federal agents on Sunday, saying that his administration is “are trying to help Portland, not hurt it.”

In addition to the recent events in Portland, the House Democrats are also asking the inspectors general to investigate the actions taken by President Trump to clear protestors in Washington D.C. Last month, riot police from several federal agencies, including the Bureau of Prisons Crisis Management teams, were called in to forcibly clear protestors from Lafayette Square in front of the White House in Washington D.C. so President Donald Trump could participate in a photo-op in front of St. John’s Church.

“The legal basis for this use of force has never been explained—and, frankly, it is not at all clear that the Attorney General and the Acting Secretary are authorized to deploy federal law enforcement officers in this manner,” the Democratic lawmakers write.

Source Article from https://www.cnbc.com/2020/07/19/dems-call-for-an-investigation-into-trumps-use-of-force-against-protestors.html

House Democrats on Sunday called for an immediate investigation into reports that federal law enforcement agents have unlawfully arrested protestors in Portland, Oregon in recent days. 

House Judiciary Committee Chairman Jerry Nadler, Homeland Security Committee Chairman Bennie Thompson, and Oversight and Reform Committee Chairwoman Carolyn Maloney co-signed a letter on Sunday condemning the recent law enforcement actions authorized by the Trump administration in Portland and last month in Washington D.C. and called for the Inspectors General of the Department of Justice and Department of Homeland Security to open investigations.

“The Attorney General of the United States does not have unfettered authority to direct thousands of federal law enforcement personnel to arrest and detain American citizens exercising their First Amendment rights. The Acting Secretary [Chad Wolf] appears to be relying on an ill-conceived executive order meant to protect historic statues and monuments as justification for arresting American citizens in the dead of night.” 

Reports surfaced that as early as July 14, federal law enforcement agents have been using unmarked vehicles in Portland to arrest those participating in protests, which were initially sparked by the Minneapolis police killing of George Floyd on Memorial Day weekend. Federal authorities, including the U.S. Marshals’ Special Operations Group, and a tactical unit from U.S. Customs and Border Protection, have allegedly arrested, searched and detained individuals without proper notification of their Miranda Rights.

On Sunday, Portland Mayor Ted Wheeler told CNN’s Jake Tapper on “State of the Union” that the presence of federal troops and enforcement officers is actually leading to “more violence and more vandalism,” adding that it’s not helping the situation. 

“The tactics that the Trump administration are using on the streets of Portland is abhorrent,” Wheeler says. “People are being scooped off the streets into unmarked vans and rental cars,” he added, saying that those detained are being denied their right to due process. 

U.S. Border Patrol said in a statement that its “agents have been deployed to Portland in direct support of the Presidential Executive Order and the newly established DHS Protecting American Communities Task Force (PACT).”

“As a law enforcement component under DHS, CBP will be providing support, as needed at the request of the Federal Protective Service, to protect Federal facilities and property,” Border Patrol said.

A Marshals’ Service spokeswoman told CNBC that while the agency does use unmarked vehicles, its personnel wear clear identification on their uniforms. Additionally agents do let individuals know why they are being detained.

Acting Secretary of Homeland Security Wolf condemned local leaders’ resistance to additional law enforcement, saying in a letter issued Thursday that Portland “has been under siege for 47 straight days by a violent mob while local political leaders refuse to restore order to protect their city.”

President Trump also defended sending in federal agents on Sunday, saying that his administration is “are trying to help Portland, not hurt it.”

In addition to the recent events in Portland, the House Democrats are also asking the inspectors general to investigate the actions taken by President Trump to clear protestors in Washington D.C. Last month, riot police from several federal agencies, including the Bureau of Prisons Crisis Management teams, were called in to forcibly clear protestors from Lafayette Square in front of the White House in Washington D.C. so President Donald Trump could participate in a photo-op in front of St. John’s Church.

“The legal basis for this use of force has never been explained—and, frankly, it is not at all clear that the Attorney General and the Acting Secretary are authorized to deploy federal law enforcement officers in this manner,” the Democratic lawmakers write.

Source Article from https://www.cnbc.com/2020/07/19/dems-call-for-an-investigation-into-trumps-use-of-force-against-protestors.html

Nearly four years into his wild and unlikely presidency, Donald Trump managed to shock the world again.

An interview with Chris Wallace of Fox News Sunday included a claim not to care what the military has to say about renaming its bases, and an argument about whether identifying an elephant was strong evidence of mental stability.

Part of the interview’s shock value lay in which network broadcast it: Fox News, which has only recently seen its cozy relationship with Trump start to erode.

But Wallace is known as a Fox News outlier, comfortable breaking ranks to ask tough questions of the president and members of his administration.

His Trump interview, which was taped at the White House on Friday, was a textbook example. At one point, Wallace referenced “mean tweets” that Trump posted about him, and asked if the president understood his responsibilities as a reporter.

“I’m not a big fan of Fox, I’ll be honest with you,” Trump said.

It was one of several surprising comments.

‘I’m not losing’

Wallace unveiled the results of a Fox News poll that showed Trump losing by eight points to the presumptive Democratic nominee, Joe Biden. Trump was also behind Biden on the response to the pandemic, on race relations and on the economy. He trails in other polls too.

Trump said: “I’m not losing, because those are fake polls.”

Not only did Trump deny the hard data, he also refused to say if he will accept the result of November’s presidential election if he comes out the loser.

“I have to see,” he said. “Look … I have to see. No, I’m not going to just say yes. I’m not going to say no, and I didn’t last time either.”

Anthony Scaramucci, Trump’s former director of communications, tweeted: “The Chris Wallace interview is Biden’s campaign ad.”

‘It’s an elephant’

The same Fox News poll showed that when asked if Biden and Trump had the mental soundness to serve as president, 47% of respondents said Biden did and 43% said Trump did.

More were certain Trump did not (51%) than Biden (39%).

Trump, 74, responded by asking that Biden, 77, immediately take a cognitive test. The president said last week that he “aced” an unspecified test. It is assumed he is referring to a cognitive assessment from 2018. Wallace, 72, said he had also taken the test, after seeing the president had.

“It’s not the hardest test,” he said. “They have a picture and it says ‘What’s that’ and it’s an elephant.”

Dave Itzkoff
(@ditzkoff)

Any interview that yields a split-screen like this must be going great pic.twitter.com/VvZ1vquv5m


July 19, 2020

Trump said Wallace was misrepresenting the test, a screening assessment widely used by doctors.

“I’ll bet you couldn’t. They get very hard, the last five questions,” he said.

‘I don’t care what the military says’

As global protests continue over racial inequality and police brutality, the Pentagon is considering renaming military bases that honor Confederate leaders. Trump, the commander-in-chief, said: “I don’t care what the military says. I’m supposed to make the decision.”

He also seemed to claim that the federal government could not find other names.

“We’re going to name it after the Rev Al Sharpton?” Trump asked, referring to the civil rights leader. “What are you going to name it?”

‘I’ll be right eventually’

The interview was especially combative when it touched on Covid-19, which has infected 3.7 million and killed more than 140,000 people in the US.

Wallace repeatedly pressed Trump about the death toll, which the president attempted to deflect by pointing to mortality rates in other countries and saying the US had “one of the lowest in the world”.

“That’s not true, sir,” Wallace said, correctly.

The argument continued, and Trump asked his press secretary, Kayleigh McEnany, to “please bring me the mortality rate”.

“You have the numbers, please?” Trump asked. “Because I hear we have the best mortality rate. Number, number one low mortality rate.”

Waving a paper, Trump said: “I hope you show this on air, because it shows what fake news is about.”

“I don’t think I’m fake news,” Wallace said.

Aaron Rupar
(@atrupar)

“I’ll be right eventually” — Trump defends his comment that the coronavirus will “disappear” on its own pic.twitter.com/OT5zf23emD


July 19, 2020

Wallace then showed a montage of Trump’s comments minimizing Covid-19, by saying it will “disappear” at some point.

“I’ll be right eventually,” Trump said. “It is going to disappear. I’ll say it again, it’s going to disappear and I’ll be right.”

Wallace asked if Trump’s past comments about coronavirus disappearing, which have not been borne out, discredited him.

“I don’t think so, you know why? Because I’ve been right probably more than anybody else.”

Trump went on to say masks can cause problems (they do not) and to say an increase in testing is why the US has such a high number of cases. It is not.

Trump also called White House expert Dr Anthony Fauci “an alarmist” and when asked about a daily death toll around 1,000, said: “It is what it is.”

A surprise for Congress

Trump also made the astounding claim that in two weeks’ time, he will sign a new healthcare plan.

On the campaign trail in 2016, he promised to overturn the Affordable Care Act, commonly known as Obamacare, which provides health insurance to those who cannot otherwise afford it. An effort to do so in Congress failed. Late last month – during a pandemic – the White House wrote a brief in support of a lawsuit seeking to bring the ACA down.

Wallace pointed out that in three years, Trump has not unveiled his promised replacement.

Trump responded: “We’re signing a healthcare plan within two weeks, a full and complete healthcare plan that the supreme court decision on DACA [an immigration decision which went against the administration] gave me the right to do.

“So we’re going to solve – we’re going to sign an immigration plan, a healthcare plan, and various other plans. And nobody will have done what I’m doing in the next four weeks.”

Source Article from https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2020/jul/19/donald-trump-fox-news-sunday-chris-wallace-interview

President Trump, in an exclusive interview with Fox News, challenged his critics on his handling of the coronavirus pandemic, threatened a veto for the defense bill, and speculated on whether he will accept the results if his Democratic challenger wins the presidency in November.

Trump, in a contentious sitdown that aired Sunday, told “Fox News Sunday” host Chris Wallace that recent statistics regarding COVID-19 cases and deaths are misleading. Early in the discussion, the president disputed Wallace’s claim that the U.S. currently has the seventh-highest mortality rate in the world.

PRESIDENT TRUMP PAYS TRIBUTE TO JOHN LEWIS, A ‘CIVIL RIGHTS HERO’

“I think we have one of the lowest mortality rates in the world,” Trump said, offering White House statistics that differed from the ones Wallace cited.

Wallace then explained that his numbers came from Johns Hopkins University, which ranked the U.S. seventh in mortality, ahead of the UK and worse than Brazil and Russia. He noted that the White House’s chart, which uses data from the European Centre for Disease Protection and Control, has the U.S. ahead of Spain and Italy, but worse than Brazil and South Korea, with Russia and other countries not included in the chart.

From there, Trump pushed back against statements from leading U.S. doctors, specifically CDC Director Robert Redfield and National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases Director Anthony Fauci. Redfield said last week that he expects the coming fall and winter to be among “the most difficult times that we’ve experienced in American public health.”

When asked if he agrees with Redfield, Trump said he was unsure, but pointed to mistakes that doctors have made.

“I don’t know and I don’t think he knows,” Trump said. I don’t think anybody knows with this. This is a very tricky deal. Everybody thought this summer it would go away and it would come back in the fall. Well, when the summer came, they used to say the heat — the heat was good for it and it really knocks it out, remember? And then it might come back in the fall. So they got that one wrong.”

Trump then addressed perceived tension between him and Fauci, who was targeted by Trump aide Daniel Scavino, who tweeted a cartoon depicting Fauci as a leaker and an alarmist. When asked about this, Trump appeared to partially agree with it.

“Well, I don’t know that he’s a leaker,” Trump said before adding, “He’s a little bit of an alarmist. That’s OK. A little bit of an alarmist.”

The president insisted that he and Fauci have “a great relationship,” but claimed that “he was wrong” early in the pandemic by saying it would pass and that Trump’s ban on travel from China was a mistake.

“He then admitted that I was right,” Trump said.

When confronted with the notion that he, too, has made errors, Trump did not push back.

“I guess everybody makes mistakes,” the president said, then added, “I’ll be right eventually. I will be right eventually,” referring to his past prediction that the virus would eventually go away.

“It’s going to disappear and I’ll be right,” he said.

In the meantime, Trump says that he takes responsibility for what happens to the nation during the pandemic, as critics claim that the U.S. does not have a national plan.

ANTHONY FAUCI PRAISES NEW YORK’S CORONAVIRUS RESPONSE: ‘THEY DID IT CORRECTLY’

“Look, I take responsibility always for everything because it’s ultimately my job, too. I have to get everybody in line,” Trump said, while stating that governors have to lead as well.

“Some governors have done well, some governors have done poorly,” he said.

Trump downplayed the recent rise in national case numbers, claiming that it is the result of increased testing, with the implication that it is not a true rise in the severity of the pandemic, a claim that leading health experts have disputed. Trump pointed to new cases that include people with minor symptoms who recover quickly. Early on during the pandemic, it was mainly those with serious symptoms were getting tested.

“No country has ever done what we’ve done in terms of testing. We are the envy of the world,” he said.

The Trump administration announced that they are supporting a lawsuit to overturn ObamaCare. When asked why he would oppose something that people are relying on during a pandemic, Trump said he will be replacing it soon, and is “signing a health care plan within two weeks.”

Shifting to how Washington will help Americans facing an ongoing economic crisis that has developed due to the pandemic, Trump warned that he may not sign a new stimulus bill if it does not include certain provisions.

With the current stimulus bill running out later this month, Republicans want new legislation to include liability limits as states reopen, people go back to work and businesses deal with customers. Trump himself has pushed strongly for a payroll tax cut, which would help employers.

Asked if he would only sign a bill if it included these items, Trump did not give a firm answer.

“Well, we’re going to see. But we do need protections because businesses are going to get sued just because somebody walked in. You don’t know where this virus comes from. They’ll sit down at a restaurant. They’ll sue the restaurant, the guy’s out of business.”

Trump then said he “would consider not signing” a bill that did not include the payroll tax cut.

Another bill that Trump has threatened to veto is the National Defense Authorization Act, because it includes a provision for renaming military bases currently named for Confederate generals, even — as Wallace pointed out — if the military supports it.

“I don’t care what the military says. I do – I’m supposed to make the decision,” Trump said. “Fort Bragg is a big deal. We won two World Wars, nobody even knows General Bragg. We won two World Wars. Go to that community where Fort Bragg is, in a great state, I love that state, go to the community, say how do you like the idea of renaming Fort Bragg, and then what are we going to name it? We’re going to name it after the Reverend Al Sharpton?”

Trump said he did not want to erase the names of bases used in those past wars, and claimed “most other people are” against it as well.

The bill would also give soldiers a pay raise, but Trump insisted that “they’ll get their pay raise.”

TRUMP ENVISIONS BEATING CORONAVIRUS AND REBUILDING ECONOMY IN POTENTIAL SECOND TERM

Later in the interview, Trump touted a recent stock market surge and his hopes for an economic recovery that will help him come November.

“I think the economy is expanding and growing beautifully,” he said. “Now, the Democrats want to keep it closed as long as possible because they think that’s good for elections. But I think the economy is doing very well. Now we’re coming back and we’re coming back at a level that nobody would have thought possible.”

Trump pointed to the NASDAQ hitting an all-time high recently, and the Dow Jones nearing a record high.

“We’re gonna have a stock market perhaps on November 3rd that’s the highest in history,” Trump predicted.”

The conversation eventually took a turn toward a recent wave of violent crime in several major U.S. cities. Trump said that the cities in question are led by Democrats and “are stupidly run.”

“It was always bad but now it’s gotten totally out of control and it’s really because they want to defund the police,” Trump said.

The president then claimed that his presumptive November opponent, former vice president Joe Biden, wants to defund police, citing a charter that he signed with Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt. Biden and Sanders formed a Unity Task Force that has brought the more progressive wing of the Democratic party together with the more moderate side.

Wallace noted that the charter does not call for defunding police, but that Biden has called for reallocating money previously meant for police to go toward other programs such as mental counseling. The concept of redistributing certain police funds to other programs has been closely tied to those calling for defunding.

Asked about racial tension in the wake of George Floyd’s death, Trump recognized how Black Americans are feeling. When asked if he understands why Black people are angry about being disproportionately shot and killed by police compared to White people, Trump said he does.

“Of course I do. Of course I do,” Trump said. At the same time, the president noted that “many Whites are killed also,” and that “this is going on for a long time, long before I got here.”

Turning to the upcoming election, Trump had strong words for Joe Biden, taking political and personal shots at the presumptive Democratic nominee.

TRUMP SAYS BIDEN WOULD ‘ABOLISH THE SUBURBS’ AND REPLACE IT WITH ‘SOCIALIST NIGHTMARE’

“Biden wants to come in and ruin our country, triple your taxes,” Trump said, claiming that if he becomes president, Biden will be pushed to the left. “He will destroy this country, but it won’t be him. It will be the radical left. The same type ideology that took over Venezuela, one of the richest countries in the world. They now have no water, they have no food, and they have no medicine.”

In the past, Trump has taken shots at Biden’s mental capabilities, and he continued to go down that path.

“Biden can’t put two sentences together,” Trump said. “They wheel him out. He goes up — he repeats — they ask him questions. He reads a teleprompter and then he goes back into his basement. You tell me the American people want to have that in an age where we’re in trouble with other nations that are looking to do numbers on us.”

Wallace asked Trump if he thinks Biden is senile, but Trump refused to go there, but still continued his attack.

“I don’t want to say that. I’d say he’s not competent to be president. To be president, you have to be sharp and tough and so many other things. He doesn’t even come out of his basement. They think, ‘Oh this is a great campaign.’ So he goes in, I’ll then make a speech, it’ll be a great speech, and some young guy, starts writing, ‘Vice President Biden said this, this, this, this.’ He didn’t say it. Joe doesn’t know he’s alive, OK? He doesn’t know he’s alive.”

Later on, Trump said that this is why he will be victorious.

“[Y]ou know why I won’t lose, because the country, in the end, they’re not going to have a man who – who’s shot. He’s shot, he’s mentally shot,” Trump said.

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Asked about the possibility of losing, however, Trump noted that he does not handle losing well, and may not handle it well if it happens in November.

“I’m not a good loser. I don’t like to lose,” he said. “I don’t lose too often. I don’t like to lose.”

When asked if he is gracious, Trump said, “You don’t know until you see. It depends.” He then claimed that mail-in voting, which Democrats have pushed as a response to the coronavirus pandemic, “is going to rig the election.”

Asked if this means that he will not accept the election results, Trump said, “No. I have to see.”

Asked again if he would accept the results, Trump said, “No, I’m not going to just say yes. I’m not going to say no, and I didn’t last time either.”

Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/politics/trump-pushes-back-against-critics-on-coronavirus-addresses-whether-he-will-accept-election-results-in-exclusive-interview