Archive for the ‘Donald Trump’ Category

Trump says Republicans would never be elected again if it was easier to vote – The Guardian

Donald Trump admitted on Monday that making it easier to vote in America would hurt the Republican party.

The president made the comments as he dismissed a Democratic-led push for reforms such as vote-by-mail, same-day registration and early voting as states seek to safely run elections amid the Covid-19 pandemic. Democrats had proposed the measures as part of the coronavirus stimulus. They ultimately were not included in the $2.2tn final package, which included only $400m to states to help them run elections.

The things they had in there were crazy. They had things, levels of voting that if youd ever agreed to it, youd never have a Republican elected in this country again, Trump said during an appearance on Fox & Friends. They had things in there about election days and what you do and all sorts of clawbacks. They had things that were just totally crazy and had nothing to do with workers that lost their jobs and companies that we have to save.

Democrats often accuse Republicans of deliberately making it hard to vote in order to keep minorities, immigrants, young people and other groups from the polls. And Republicans often say they oppose voting reforms because of concerns of voter fraud which is extremely rare or concerns over having the federal government run elections. But Trumps remarks reveal how at least some Republicans have long understood voting barriers to be a necessary part of their political self-preservation.

I dont want everybody to vote, Paul Weyrich, an influential conservative activist, said in 1980. As a matter of fact, our leverage in the elections quite candidly goes up as the voting populace goes down.

Trumps Monday comments showed he saw voter suppression as part of his re-election strategy, the Democratic National Committee (DNC) said in a statement Monday. Ensuring that Americans can vote during the Covid-19 crisis is fundamental to maintaining our democracy. It is shocking that Trump is essentially admitting that when the American people vote, Republican lose, said Xochitl Hinojosa, a DNC spokeswoman. Trump knows that suppressing the vote is the only way he and Republicans win in November.

Shortly after he was elected, Trump falsely claimed he would have won the popular vote had it not been for millions of illegal votes. There is no credible evidence to support the claim. In December, a Trump campaign aide was recorded saying: Traditionally its always been Republicans suppressing votes in places. The aide later told the Associated Press he was saying that Republicans have traditionally been accused of voter suppression.

The $400m that Congress allocated so far is just a small fraction of what the Brennan Center for Justice estimated election officials need to run elections in November if coronavirus still lingers. Officials need that money to pay for postage, personnel and equipment to process an influx of mail-in ballots.

The urgency of getting election officials those resources should not be lost in the political fighting, said Myrna Perez, director of the Brennan Centers voting rights and elections program.

What cannot be lost in all the back and forth among politicians is that election administrators at the state and local level need substantial resources now to ensure that the elections in November go off smoothly and safely, she said.

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Trump says Republicans would never be elected again if it was easier to vote - The Guardian

Last Week Tonight: John Oliver Unpacks How Donald Trump Has Failed To Give Coronavirus Crisis The Seriousness It Requires – Deadline

In a new episode of Last Week Tonight with John Oliver, the host, like many others, is hosting from home. He said that they shot on Saturday and told viewers not to feel awkward about the absence of laughing that many are used to with the regular telecast.

I started my comedy career doing standup in England, said Oliver. I am more than used to making jokes to silence.

After getting excited for being celebrated by the Tik Tok hamster he praised in the previous episode, he dove into the only thing making headlines as of late: coronavirus. In particular, he used this opportunity to continue his dragging of Donald Trump and how he has handled the crisis which has clearly gotten worse.

As more confirmed coronavirus cases begin to surface, Oliver said, The president has only recently realized the gravity of the situation. He points out that only a month ago Trump said We have it very much under control and more recently he said Ive felt it was a pandemic long before it was called a pandemic. He then addressed how Trump said he wanted to open the country and economy by Easter.

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If you are going to pick a holiday to break a quarantine you can do a lot worse than one honoring the time Jesus was supposed to stay inside but didnt, Oliver joked about Trumps irresponsible attitude with relaxing measures way too soon.

Unlike Trump, governors are taking this crisis seriously while Floridas Ron DeSantis has not issued a statewide stay at home order. More than that, Texas Lieutenant Governor Dan Patrick took things even further by agreeing with Trump about how economic damage of a lockdown is too great to bear.

If you really want to die so the U.S. economy could boom, we already have a system in place for that its called Black Friday, Oliver said in response to Patrick.

As Spain and Iran has made mass graves you can see from space and ice skating rinks serving as makeshift morgues, Oliver points out how absurd it is that conservative pundits are co-signing the idea of people sacrificing themselves for the economy specifically Glenn Beck who recently spoke passionately about the topic.

The coronavirus is not The Hunger Games, said Oliver. You cant volunteer yourself as tribute.

He continued, What Glenn Beck is doing is much darker. [He is] actively volunteering others including all people of all ages to die. Even if these guys are okay with letting the coronavirus kill as many people as it feels like so the economy is protected there are I cant believe I have to say this significant drawbacks to thousands of people dying.

Its critically important for America to be getting a clear, consistent message about the severity of the threat were currently facing, Oliver explains. That is the only way we will be able to manage this virus, contain casualties and get back to something resembling normalcy.

Oliver went on to address the extreme shortage of basic equipment like ventilators and masks that hospitals are facing. And of course, Trump isnt addressing the problem. He is minimizing them. He could have helped solve this by enacting the Defense Production Act to compel companies to produce supplies sooner but he didnt. It is only recently made GM make ventilators.

Trump has failed to give this crisis the seriousness it requires, Oliver said.

As he played clips of a medical professional getting emotional about not having the equipment they need to fight this virus he reiterates that the agony of the virus has been profound.

It didnt need to be this hard, he added. That is why it is so profoundly disheartening that we are being led through this crisis by a man who may be less equipped to deal with this historical moment than anyone in recorded history.

Oliver admits that he was rooting for Trump to do better as handling a crisis well is not inherently political. He said how he doesnt necessarily agree with Ohio Governor Mike DeWine or New York Governor Andrew Cuomo but they are doing their jobs well.

I wish I could honestly say that we are going to be fine but I dont know that, Oliver said. Most of us will be but not all of us. The number that wont is up in the air right now.

A crisis of this magnitude ends up revealing a lot about who you are as a nation and not all that is being revealed is good, he said, adding that coronavirus has exposed vulnerabilities in our medical and political systems as well as the national psyche.

At the same time, this virus has exposed reserves of real strength in this country, he reiterates with hope. Weve seen extraordinary heroism, kindness and ingenuity in the essential lines of work. He goes on to praise grocery store workers, delivery people and medical professionals who he adds should get a parade whenever we are allowed to have parades again.

What we choose to do outside of our hospitals has a direct and significant impact on what happens inside of them, he said while urging social distancing to the maximum extent so that we can make it easier for healthcare workers to do their job.It is the only way to counteract an appalling federal response, he bluntly states.

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Last Week Tonight: John Oliver Unpacks How Donald Trump Has Failed To Give Coronavirus Crisis The Seriousness It Requires - Deadline

Donald Trump’s Cure for the Coronavirus: Good Vibes – The Daily Beast

The dire shortage of protective medical gear needed to handle the spread of coronavirus is not some great secret. For weeks, hospital administrators, medical professionals, and political leaders warned that this was a looming crisis. Increasingly, its not even looming. Over the past few days, photos have gone viral of nurses resorting to wearing trash bags and makeshift protective masks as they treat highly infectious patients.

And yet, to hear Donald Trump explain it, the current situation is remarkable only for just how extraordinary the government has been in solving it. The same day that a nurse died at one of those hospitals where giant black trash bags have been converted into hospital gowns, the president declared that when it came to filling medical equipment needs, Its hard not to be happy with the job were doing. The next day began with Trump tweeting Congratulations AMERICA! after the Senate passed a $2 trillion coronavirus stimulus plan on a unanimous vote and ended with the news that America now has more coronavirus cases than any other nation in the world.

The story is playing out in parallel universes: one where an abject crisis is causing historic economic disruption and human suffering on a global scale, and one constructed by Trump, in whichthrough his ingenuity and stewardshipAmerica is on the precipice of putting this all behind us.

As we look forward, the president said on Tuesday, we begin to see the light at the end of the tunnel. The next day, the number of deaths in the U.S. reached a new peak.

That Trump has built this alternate reality is not the least bit shocking. He has spent much of his life constructing and reconstructing tales of his grandeur. Public relations is his primary skill. So its only natural that he would apply it to a medical epidemic as well.

What goes underappreciated, is just how unorthodox such an approach is in politics. Under the usual constructs, no politician in his or her right mind would act in his manner. Indeed, the truism of crisis management is that leaders should avoid talking up how quickly things are improving, lest they come off as insensitive to those still suffering.

That certainly was the guiding principle in the wake of the last comparable economic disaster: the market collapse in 2008. In the early months of their administration, Barack Obama and his team found themselves navigating a difficult balancing act: selling their legislative interventions and, simultaneously, nodding to widespread suffering by concedingthat they still had work to do.

On the occasions when they would try to put a positive gloss on their record (the so-called recovery summer and the talk of green shoots of economic optimism) it would usually result in admonitions about them being detached from reality.

It was one of the biggest questions we faced, which is how to show we were on the right track without sounding out of touch, recalled Eric Schultz, who was running communications for the Democratic Partys Senate campaign arm during that cycle. Atmospherically, Republicans and the entire rightwing media were trying to talk down the economy and were obstructionists at the time. And so our ability to tell a positive story was harder in the face of that. Theyd make the case of how out of touch we were and theyd be able to find plenty of case studies to show it was true.

By the time the 2010 cycle rolled around, Obama had settled on a hackneyed electoral pitch: the economy was a car which Republicans had driven into a ditch. As he would say: Weve been pushing and shoving and sweating, trying to get this car out of the ditch while Republicans have been standing there, sipping on a Slurpee, watching us and saying, Youre not pushing hard enough!

Not surprisingly, the elections were a disaster for Democrats. And in the aftermath, some in the party criticized Obama for actually being too rosy in his salesmanship.

A metaphor about a car in the ditch when people are in trouble and angry at Wall Street is just out of touch with what is going on, Stan Greenberg, the longtime Democratic pollster said after the electoral bloodbath.

But if Obama was being too rosy back then, Trump is acting positively Pollyannaish now. After a few days of sober talk about the coronavirus spreadconceding that it could sideline Americans well into the summerhe has spent the past week describing a disease that is close to being conquered. He has talked about reopening Americas economy by Easter, overstated basic facts about the availability of treatments, tests and therapies, and blamed his predecessor and foreigners for any perceived failure, all while giving himself a perfect score for his handling of the epidemic.

To his critics, hes become the living embodiment of the this is fine memewith the only question being if he is consciously aware of the fires that surround him.

We often debated the balance between touting progress and acknowledging reality, but we almost always erred on the side of acknowledging the pain and hardship that people were experiencing as a result of the financial crisis, said Jon Favreau, Obamas former speechwriter. I suppose it was fine for Trump to brag about the economy when the economy was in fairly good shape, but a few months from now, how will the absurd self-congratulation appear to people whove lost a job or lost a loved one to this virus? You cant spin your way out of double-digit unemployment.

But while Trumps unorthodox approach seems fraught with risk, his detractors sense that there is a chance it works. Its not just because hes constructed a universe in which he will pass off any blame (if not China for failing to contain the virus, than Obama for not leaving him with the exact right bureaucratic infrastructure to handle it; or the media for over-hyping it; or Democratic governors for keeping their states locked down because of it).

Its also because he is giving the public something it craveswhich is hope. Indeed, Trump has been fairly explicit about this being the primary motivation behind his happy talk. The infamous exchange he had with NBCs Peter Alexander over what message hed send to frightened Americans is remembered for the fact that he petulantly responded by calling Alexander a terrible reporter. The more illuminating comment, however, came moments later.

I think its a very bad signal that you are putting out to the American people, Trump said. Theyre looking for answers and theyre looking for hope.

The presidents ability to keep Americans hopeful is limited, of course. Three million Americans filed for unemployment insurance this week. Upwards of 40 percent of the country believes the president has done a bad job managing coronavirus. And epidemiologists and medical experts warn that his desire to loosen public health measures will only prolong the crisis and, in turn, make the economic damage far worse.

Can hope withstand that? Perhaps not. But that, in Trumps mind, is a question and set of accompanying problems that he will tackle on another day.

The difference with Trump, at least in this case, is he is really looking ahead just one day. He wants to program the next episode of the TV show. And so I think he is going back to what works for him: you blame foreigners, you blame elites and experts who are out to get him, who dont know what he knows, and make it a partisan issue, said Ken Baer, a longtime Democratic operative who worked for Obama during the 2010 cycle. I think his bet is it will make him popular and get him through the next couple weeks. The question is: Whats the reality? And will it work when you have real pain?

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Donald Trump's Cure for the Coronavirus: Good Vibes - The Daily Beast

President Donald Trump To Prince Harry And Meghan Markle: They Will Have To Pay For Security – Deadline

Welcome to Southern California, Harry and Meghan. Now find and fund your own security team.

President Donald Trump tweeted out today that the couple, who reportedly are staying in a gated Malibu community as they search for permanent digs, will have to provide their own security. The US will not pay for their security protection, Trump tweeted. They must pay!

The former HRH couple and baby son Archie were living in Canada and stated that they wouldnt move to their presumed final destination of Southern California until Trump was no longer in the White House. While in Canada, they were under the protection of a combination of British security and the Royal Canadian Mounted Police. Published estimates put the cost at millions of dollars per year to protect the family.

The issue of who will pay for their security has been up in the air since they announced plans to no longer undertake official UK royal duties. They have since established their own charity, and Meghan has gotten voice-over work for Disney while Harry ponders his next move.

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President Donald Trump To Prince Harry And Meghan Markle: They Will Have To Pay For Security - Deadline

Andrew Cuomo: I’m not engaging Donald Trump in politics – The Washington TImes

New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo on Monday said hes not going to engage President Trump in politics, hours after Mr. Trump suggested Mr. Cuomo would have been a better Democratic presidential candidate than Joseph R. Biden.

I am not engaging the president in politics. My only goal is to engage the president in partnership, Mr. Cuomo said in response to a question at his daily briefing on the COVID-19 outbreak in his state.

Mr. Cuomo described himself as a tangler and disputed the notion that he was shying away from a political brawl with Mr. Trump. But the governor tried to say it was time to put politics aside amid the fight against the coronavirus.

Mr. Cuomo pointed out that he thanked Mr. Trump and the federal government for the arrival on Monday of the USNS Comfort, a hospital ship that will free up about 1,000 beds for COVID-19 patients at other hospitals.

If youre doing the right thing by New York, Ill say it. If hes doing the wrong thing by New York or the rest of the country, Ill say it, Mr. Cuomo said.

Earlier, the president had said part of the reason Mr. Cuomo is enjoying solid approval ratings is because of the help his state is getting from the federal government.

Now if hes going to run, thats fine. I wouldnt mind running against Andrew, Mr. Trump said on Fox & Friends. But Ill be honest, I think [hed] be a better candidate than Sleepy Joe. I wouldnt mind running against Andrew. I dont mind running against Joe Biden.

Former Vice President Joseph R. Biden has all but clinched the Democratic nomination, but he has been largely confined to his Wilmington, Delaware, home in recent weeks as the coronavirus has disrupted traditional political campaigning.

Mr. Cuomo said he wasnt going to get into a political dispute and that hes not running for president.

I was never running for president I said from day one I wasnt running for president. Im not running for president now, the governor said. Im not playing politics I just want partnership to deal with this.

Mr. Trump on Sunday had also questioned the uptick in the use of protective masks in at least one unnamed hospital in New York, saying somethings going on.

Where are the masks going? Are they going out the back door? How do you go from 10,000 to 300,000? he said.

The governor said he didnt want to hazard a guess as to what Mr. Trump might have been saying.

If he wants to make an accusation, then let him make an accusation, Mr. Cuomo said. But I dont know what hes trying to say by inference.

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Andrew Cuomo: I'm not engaging Donald Trump in politics - The Washington TImes