Archive for the ‘Obama’ Category

Are the Obama sisters the new Olsen twins? – The Face

Once upon atime, the Olsen twins were the arbiters of enigmatic style, their monochromatic dress code and aloof chain-smoking pap snaps inspiring ageneration of depressed Tumblr girls and would-be fashion editors to wear more black and use less shampoo. But nothing lasts forever, especially in the fickle whosin-whosout world of #fashion TikTok. Mary-Kate and Ashley, now 36, are and always will be cool, yes. But now, anew sibling duo seem primed to take their spot as the worlds coolest sisters. Now, its all about the Obamas.

When you think about it, Malia, 25, and Sasha Obama, 22, are the Olsens natural successors. Like the Olsens, they have been the most famous children on the planet for the majority of their lives, having moved into the White House aged 10 and seven, respectively. And although they didnt have lucrative careers as child stars to simultaneously shake off and one-up as they entered adulthood, they did have adad who was once the most powerful man in the world. How do you step out of ashadow as colossal as the presidency?

Short answer: you dont even try. Over the past few years, Malia and Sasha Obama have become accidental internet style icons in spite of their efforts to stay (sort of) under the radar and live (sort of) normal lives. Seven years ago, 15-year-old Sasha got asummer job waiting tables and they both sacked off the usual nepo baby behaviour to go to uni Harvard for Malia, University of Southern California for Sasha. And, crucially, they stay off social media.

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Are the Obama sisters the new Olsen twins? - The Face

PARKER: Tim Scott could unify America where Obama failed – Sharonherald

Republican Sen. Tim Scott of South Carolina has announced the formation of an exploratory committee for his candidacy for president.

You may have noticed that Scott is Black. We may ask, in this woke age of ours, the extent to which this matters in his candidacy.

I think it does matter, which requires some explanation given that I am adamantly opposed to identity politics in all its shapes and forms.

Should Scott run and win, he will not be Americas first Black president. When Americas first Black president, Barack Obama, did run and win, it was widely viewed as a turning point in American history.

Many thought that, at last, the era of racial politics had come to an end. Now, the thinking went, that Americans showed that a Black man could run for and win the presidency, we would move on from our national obsession with race and move on to dealing with issues confronting the nation as they impact every citizen, regardless of race.

But it didnt happen.

The American people twice chose Obama as their president, and today, perhaps more than ever, racial awareness and politics permeate our day-to-day realities.

They permeate practically all political institutions, corporate boardrooms, athletics, universities, K-12 schools and our day-to-day marketplace.

And its why Scotts candidacy is so important and why his race matters.

Early in Obamas first term he traveled to Europe for a NATO meeting, and in the press conference after, he was asked by a reporter from the Financial Times if he believes in American exceptionalism.

For Obama to say yes would have been for him to state in this international forum that there is something unique and special about his country that sets it apart from and above others.

By standards of political correctness, a yes answer would have been most incorrect. Obamas finely tuned political skills immediately kicked in and he answered in a most politically correct way.

I believe in American exceptionalism, he said, just as the Brits believe in British exceptionalism, and the Greeks in Greek exceptionalism.

Americas first Black president is a very politically correct man. and its why his presidency changed nothing regarding racial realities in America.

Tim Scott is not a politically correct man, and it is why his potential presidency can change everything.

He does believe America is exceptional, and he is not afraid to say it. His recent book, America, A Redemption Story: Choosing Hope, Creating Unity, recounts what he has learned growing up poor, becoming a successful businessman and making his way to the U.S. Senate and now, maybe, the presidency.

His personal success story is not about government programs, but about perseverance and grit, only possible with faith and freedom.

Scott is pro-freedom, pro-private property, pro-personal responsibility and initiative and pro-life.

We must understand that the collapse of these core issues and principles, so vital to a genuinely free society, is threatening our nation both domestically and internationally.

As David McCormick and James Cunningham show in their new book, Superpower in Peril: A Battle Plan to Renew America, our collapsing culture is endangering national security, as the Army falls short of recruitment goals with more and more young Americans unwilling or unable to serve.

Tim Scott is Black man in America who knows that this is an exceptional country and that the exceptionalism is rooted in faith and freedom.

Scott understands that out future starts in the hearts and minds of every American citizen of every background and that our future does not start in Washington.

This vital message was lost in the presidency of our first Black president, and great damage was done.

So, Scotts race matters not for woke reasons but for anti-woke reasons.

This is a candidacy that can make all the difference where Barack Obama failed.

STAR PARKER is president of the Center for Urban Renewal and Education and host of the weekly television show Cure America with Star Parker.

Creators Syndicate

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PARKER: Tim Scott could unify America where Obama failed - Sharonherald

Republican in-fighting gets heated in the most important governor’s … – POLITICO

Kelly Craft, a Trump-era U.N. ambassador and first-time candidate, and her allies have bombarded Kentucky airwaves with ads yoking her better-known opponent to former President Barack Obama. | Timothy D. Easley/AP Photo

A Republican mega-donor is opening her wallet in an effort to win the Kentucky governorship spending millions laying waste to the Republican frontrunner in an increasingly bitter primary.

Kelly Craft, a Trump-era United Nations ambassador and first-time candidate, and her allies have bombarded Kentucky airwaves with ads yoking her better-known opponent, Attorney General Daniel Cameron, to former President Barack Obama and portraying him as a soft establishment teddy bear. And thats to say nothing of the hits on him focused on coal and crime with one ad from a Craft-supportive super PAC drawing a fairly tenuous connection from Cameron to Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg, a bogeyman in the GOP for his prosecution of former President Donald Trump in New York.

The spending by Craft has upended GOP politics in Kentucky, rocketing someone who was almost entirely unknown in the commonwealth outside of major donor circles to the top tier of the primary heap.

Craft has bought herself into a two person race, said Scott Jennings, a well-known Republican operative in the state who has remained neutral in the contest. The question is is there enough runway left?

But the brutal primary between the two could also come at a cost. The Kentucky governorship is a prime target for Republicans this year with Democratic Gov. Andy Beshear occupying the governorship in a state Trump won by 26 points in 2020. The circular firing squad now unfolding in the GOP primary is giving an already popular Democratic incumbent an opening to peel off at least a sliver of Republican voters turned off by the in-fighting.

Public polling for the primary has been incredibly sparse in the race a recent poll from Emerson College/Fox56 released last week had Cameron at 30 percent and Craft at 24 percent but Republicans believe the race has tightened since the beginning of the year, when Cameron was broadly believed to have a yawning lead.

Republicans point to two big inflection points left on the calendar: The lone debate where all three of the top-tier candidates will share a stage a May 1 faceoff hosted by Kentucky Educational Television and arguably the biggest event all year in the state: The Kentucky Derby. It falls just 10 days before the primary election.

Craft has loaned her campaign $7 million since the start of the year, according to campaign finance reports filed on Tuesday night, with an additional $260,000 coming from other donors. Cameron, by comparison, raised just over $400,000 in that same time period.

Ryan Quarles, the state agriculture commissioner, is a possible viable third candidate in the race especially if the fight between Cameron and Kelly becomes hotter. Quarles was at 15 percent in the Emerson poll, the only other candidate sniffing double digits, and has touted a deep bench of endorsements from across the states 120 counties.

Crafts campaign and Commonwealth PAC, a super PAC supporting her bid, have been throwing most of the haymakers, with Craft until relatively recently having the TV airwaves all to herself.

A pair of ads from her campaign looked to tie Cameron to President Joe Biden, Beshear and Obama on the future of a West Virginia coal plant a deep blow in a state that has historically been the home to the coal industry.

And in a series of ads, the super PAC has used an extended motif of Cameron being a soft establishment teddy bear, literally transforming Cameron into a stuffed bear in a suit at the end of the ads. The most recent one is the Bragg ad, going after Cameron for at one point supporting cash bail reform. (Prosecuted Trump! the ad declares as a video of Bragg talking about bail reform plays.) It ends by morphing the two men into teddy bears.

Camerons backers have just started hitting back on the airwaves. On Tuesday, a pro-Cameron super PAC Bluegrass Freedom Action launched a new ad saying a desperate Kelly Craft falsely attacks Cameron, while noting that Trump has endorsed Cameron, not Craft. And in a statement to POLITICO, the super PACs general consultant Aaron Whitehead questioned if she was eligible to run for office under the states residency requirement.

Absentee Ambassador Kelly Craft was a no show for her previous job and now shes pulling the same trick on Kentuckians by trying to buy her way out of a scandal, Whitehead said. No one knows if she actually lives in Kentucky or still lives in Oklahoma which could disqualify her from the ballot.

The groups charge relies on reporting from POLITICO in 2019 that found she spent roughly a third of her time as U.S. ambassador to Canada in Kentucky or Oklahoma, along with federal and state political donations she has made through the 2022 cycle with an Oklahoma address. State law requires gubernatorial candidates to be a citizen and resident of Kentucky for at least 6 years next preceding his [sic] election.

Crafts campaign was dismissive of the broadside from the super PAC. The only thing more palpable than the momentum behind Kelly Craft is the Cameron teams desperation, Kristin Davison, a senior adviser for Craft, said in a statement.

Cameron could also lean more into Trump who endorsed his campaign last summer, shortly after Craft and her husband, coal magnate Joe Craft, were prominently pictured with the former president at the Kentucky Derby but months before her own campaign launch.

Kentuckys most powerful Republican in Washington, Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, meanwhile, has not publicly weighed in on the race. But he has close ties to both candidates.

Craft and her husband have been longtime financial supporters of McConnell and the Republican Party more broadly. The then-Senate majority leader was instrumental in getting Craft nominated and confirmed to be U.N. ambassador.

Cameron has perhaps even deeper ties. He worked in McConnells office for two years and was widely assumed to be the successor-in-waiting for McConnells seat in the Senate when he eventually retires. Camerons decision to run for governor caught many by surprise, both in Washington and Kentucky.

Davison, the adviser to Craft, took a swipe at that close relationship between the two men in her statement, saying Camerons team was having a bad morning after finding out their Mitch McConnell-groomed candidate has fallen a net 19 points over the last few weeks.

Madison Fernandez contributed to this report.

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Republican in-fighting gets heated in the most important governor's ... - POLITICO

Ex-Obama staffer blows whistle on Biden ‘kickback scheme’ after Hunter joined Burisma: ‘Malfeasance in office’ – Fox News

A former Obama administration staffer is blowing the whistle on the Biden family's business dealings, accusing President Biden of being involved in a "kickback scheme" in connection with his son Hunter's overseas business dealings while he was vice president.

Mike McCormick, a stenographer for the White House for 15 years, told "Fox & Friends First" the FBI has been ignoring his alarms on the matter despite his willingness to testify under oath before the federal grand jury investigating Hunter.

"In February, I went to the FBI and filed one of their tips on their website. If you do that, and you're lying to them, you go to jail. I'm not lying. I'm telling the truth, and I'm not going to jail," McCormick said Thursday. "Joe Biden is a criminal. He was conducting malfeasance in office to enrich his family. Jake Sullivan is a conspirator in that, and there's more... Obama officials involved in it, I believe."

BIDEN WISHES REPUBLICANS 'LOTS OF LUCK' IN PLANS TO INVESTIGATE SON HUNTER IF THEY TAKE THE HOUSE

McCormick, who worked with Biden from 2011 to 2017, detailed a key dialogue involving the vice president, aide Jake Sullivan and the press on Air Force Twobefore a trip to Kyiv, Ukraine, on April 21, 2014.

Sullivan, who is the current national security adviser, outlined in a White House transcript Biden's priorities for his trip to the country, which included U.S. investment in the Ukrainian energy sector days after Hunter joined the board of Burisma, according to the New York Post.

Months later, and well after the trip, Congress allocated $50 million to Ukraine's energy market.

"I'm sitting back there with a tape recorder. Jake Sullivan comes back and somebody asks about fracking. His answer is, well, we're bringing a lot of American assistance over for fracking. Burisma was the direct beneficiary of that fracking, and that's what I recorded, and that's in a White House transcript," McCormick said.

"In the transcript, you don't know who Jake Sullivan is. It's a senior administration official. I'm the witness that says Jake Sullivan is the guy who said it and he should be investigated because at the time Hunter Biden was on the board of Burisma and Joe Biden is bringing American taxpayer money to enrich that company and himself and his family," he continued.

HUNTER BIDEN INTERVIEW GOES OFF THE RAILS AS HOST SAYS HIS HANDS WERE TIED FROM ASKING POLITICAL QUESTIONS

Hunter joined the board of the Ukrainian natural gas firm on April 18, just three days before Biden and his team traveled to Kyiv. But that critical piece of the puzzle was not made public until May 12.

McCormick argued the timeline of the events suggests that Biden funneled American money overseas to "enrich" himself and his family, and used his own influence to aid his son's rookie energy career.

The former stenographer made it clear he wants to present the information under oath before the grand jury in Delaware probing Hunter's business dealings, which is led by U.S. Attorney David Weiss.

Hunter has been under federal investigation since 2018 for suspected tax and foreign lobbying violations.

The probe into Hunter's alleged violations began after suspicious activity reports (SARs) regarding suspicious foreign transactions were flagged.

VP BIDEN'S OFFICE TRIED TO QUASH BLOOMBERG STORY ABOUT HUNTER BIDEN AT HIS FIRM'S REQUEST, EMAILS SHOW

Those SARs involved money funneled from "China and other foreign nations," according to sources familiar with the probe.

And although reports suggested in months past that the investigation is approaching a critical juncture, Republican subpoena power is likely to accelerate the investigation.

"If David Weiss can't have me in front of his grand jury explaining what I know as a witness, that's a fraudulent grand jury," McCormick said. "It's a fraudulent use of the American judicial system to cover for Barack Obama and Joe Biden's crimes in office."

Biden has repeatedly claimed he has not spoken to his son regarding his overseas business dealings.

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McCormick argued the information he has incriminates Biden, and likely more officials he worked with, in connection with the alleged influence peddling scandal.

"If I went in there, I would tell them to have Barack Obama called in as a witness because he's part of the conspiracy. He's an ex-president. He has to answer who was in charge of this, putting Joe Biden into this role? Did Barack Obama know about it?" McCormick questioned.

"There's evidence I've seen and put in my Substack on April 16th, so two days before Hunter joins Joe Biden is with Hunter in the West Wing. They have a meeting, and then later that day in the evening, Joe Biden spends a day in the limousine in the back of Barack Obama's limousine in western Pennsylvania," he continued.

The White House did not immediately respond to Fox News' request for comment.

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Ex-Obama staffer blows whistle on Biden 'kickback scheme' after Hunter joined Burisma: 'Malfeasance in office' - Fox News

How President Obama wrote his love letter to Boston after the Marathon bombing – The Boston Globe

The bombing hit close to home for me as well. My mum hails from a large Irish Catholic family in Roslindale, and after I was born we lived in a small, second-story apartment on Durnell Avenue. Even after we moved to Falmouth, Boston brought our family together. At Christmas, aunts, uncles, and cousins crammed into my grandparents home on Havana Street, and for generations weve gathered for baptisms, weddings, and funerals at Holy Name Parish.

As a speechwriter, Ive always tried to write with someone specific in mind a real, living person the speech should connect with, deeply, emotionally. That week, I kept thinking of my family and friends across Massachusetts, especially one of my uncles, Dan Saunders. He was Boston to his core: an altar boy at Holy Name, Roslindale High class of 65, Army Reserve, and a season ticket holder to Boston College football and hockey games. He was also a fixture at more than a few Boston bars, including the Corrib Pub in West Roxbury and the old Green Briar in Brighton, where hed belt out ballads with the Irish musicians on Monday nights.

A staunch conservative, my Uncle Dan was no fan of Obama and he let me know it, which made for some lively discussions at Thanksgiving. Still, as I worked on the presidents remarks, I imagined Uncle Dan watching the speech at a pub with his friends. What would he want to hear?

The evening before the service, I sent a draft to Obama, who usually reviewed speeches in his study on the second floor of the White House. The next morning, his edits were waiting on a desk just outside the Oval Office. Much of what Id written was intact, but hed made extensive changes to just about every paragraph.

An early line in the speech quoted an E.B. White poem that described Boston as not just a capital or a place, but the perfect state of grace. In exquisite penmanship across the top of the page, Obama added an entire new paragraph that echoed the poem and touched on the healing that was needed:

And so we come together to pray, and mourn, and measure our loss. But we also come together today to reclaim that state of grace to reaffirm that the spirit of this city is undaunted, and the spirit of this country shall remain undimmed.

Reflecting on his time in the city, he added, Theres a piece of Boston in me, and for millions of us, what happened on Monday is personal. Toward the end, in a hopeful line about the future how the Sox, Patriots, and Bruins would be champions again, with parades down Boylston Street he added, to the chagrin of New York and Chicago fans.

I spent most of the flight on Air Force One making his changes and then circulated what I thought was the final version. Instead, Obama casually walked back and handed me another round of edits. He was still thinking, still trying to capture the essence of what had happened how the city, and the country, could move forward. His writing was taking on a more spiritual tone, weaving a passage of Scripture For God has not given us a spirit of fear and timidity, but one of power and love and self-discipline more deeply throughout the text.

There was only one problem. Air Force One was already descending into Logan, and the motorcade would head straight to the service. I didnt want to get stuck in a staff van, with spotty Internet, frantically trying to type in his final edits as we bounced through the streets of the South End. So I decided to stay behind and finish on the plane, which meant watching the service like most Americans on TV.

At the pulpit at the Cathedral of the Holy Cross, with some 2,000 people filling the pews, Obama started slowly, deliberately, pausing every few words to let his words sink in.

He painted a picture of a beautiful day to be in Boston fans at Fenway, runners lacing up their shoes in Hopkinton, people lining the streets to hand them cups of water and, then, how in an instant, the days beauty was shattered. He celebrated Boston as a city that opens its heart to the world, including the runners he described in a Whitmanesque sentence he had added earlier as a gathering of men and women of every race and every religion, every shape and every size; a multitude...

Obama paid tribute to the three lives lost in the blasts: Krystle Campbell, Lingzi Lu, and little Martin Richard, just 8 years old, whod been eating ice cream with his family. Obama spoke to the injured, some watching from hospital beds across the city, telling them You will run again!

Then, about halfway through his speech, Obamas tone shifted. He spoke directly to the people of Boston and channeled the spirit of defiance and resilience that had taken hold that week.

Your resolve is the greatest rebuke to whoever committed this heinous act. If they sought to intimidate us, to terrorize us, to shake us from those values...that make us who we are, as Americans well, it should be pretty clear by now that they picked the wrong city to do it.

The church erupted into applause, and the audience was on its feet. But Obama didnt stop. He leaned into the microphone and continued. Not here in Boston! Not here in Boston!

He described runners being knocked down by the blast, but getting back on their feet, Well pick ourselves up. Well keep going. We will finish the race!

Obama was turning a sermon into a rally not only about how to deal with death, but how to live our lives. As his remarks built to a crescendo, he rode the emotion in the church, practically yelling over the applause.

And this time next year, on the third Monday in April, the world will return to this great American city to run harder than ever, and to cheer even louder, for the 118th Boston Marathon. Bet on it!

The Bostonians in the pews were on their feet again, clapping and cheering. Some pumped their fists into the air. This wasnt a city in fear. It was a community, and a country, that was strong, resilient, refusing to be terrorized.

Back on Air Force One, David Simas, one of the presidents political advisers, and a native of Taunton, said the speech was a love letter to Boston. I felt that way, too. News coverage showed people gathered outside the cathedral and crowded into restaurants and bars, taking in Obamas words the way a speech is meant to be received together, a communal experience.

Sometime that afternoon, I noticed a new voice mail on my phone.

Terry, this is your Uncle Dan, he said, in his thick Boston accent.

I was surprised. He rarely called. He couldnt have known that Id helped with the speech, or that, as I worked on it, I was doing it for him. From the noise in the background, I could tell he was at one of his favorite pubs. I just watched the presidents speech. We all did, he said. He did a good job. It was a very fine speech, and I just wanted you to know that.

It wasnt much. But coming from my uncle, it was high praise. In an era when we seem perpetually divided, it was a glimpse, however brief, of the country we might yet become living proof of a line in the speech Obama had written himself.

Our faith in each other, our love for each other, our love for country, our common creed that cuts across whatever superficial differences there may be that is our power. Thats our strength. Thats why a bomb cant beat us.

Terry Szuplat served as a national security speechwriter and deputy director of White House speechwriting under President Obama. Send comments to magazine@globe.com.

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How President Obama wrote his love letter to Boston after the Marathon bombing - The Boston Globe