Archive for the ‘Donald Trump’ Category

Donald Trump’s most bone-chilling tweet – CNN

Here is Trump's truly jaw-dropping tweet from Saturday morning: "The opinion of this so-called judge, which essentially takes law-enforcement away from our country, is ridiculous and will be overturned!" Why is this so concerning? It's OK to argue about whether the judge should or shouldn't have issued this order. But Trump is apparently attempting to delegitimize our federal judiciary by calling Judge James Robart, a George W. Bush-appointed judge, a "so-called" judge while arguing that his decision is "ridiculous."

Let's be blunt, because the stakes demand it: An independent federal judiciary is our last, best hope at preventing Trump from violating the US Constitution and illegally grabbing power. And Trump has to understand that, hence his attempt to undermine it.

The President truly appears to be leading a master class in transforming the United States into a dictatorship. Trump -- and it's fair to assume it is by design -- has sought to undermine anyone or anything that tries to counter him.

Trump has clearly begun the process of destroying their credibility so if they come forward in the future to oppose his views or offer facts to undermine his position, he will tell his followers they also aren't to be believed.

And now Trump, who attacked a judge during his campaign, citing his Mexican heritage, has turned on our judiciary again. But this time it's far more disturbing given Trump is not a candidate, but president of the United States. The rationale must be assumed to be the same, namely that Trump wants to delegitimize the judiciary so that court decisions Trump disagrees with will be viewed by his followers as at the least horribly partisan, or at worst invalid.

Arkansas Gov. Orval Faubus had refused to follow the Court's decision and instead surrounded an all-white high school in his state with National Guard troops to prevent its integration. Eisenhower responded by federalizing the Arkansas National Guard to enforce the Supreme Court's seminal decision and allow black students to attend the school.

Would Trump do the same if he had passionately disagreed with the Court's decision or would he simply ignore it while attacking the legitimacy of our judiciary, sparking a constitutional crisis? And would certain Trump-supporting federal agency heads, or even federal officers, refuse to follow court orders (or at least do it very slowly) because Trump has convinced them the federal judiciary's decisions cannot be trusted?

The Founding Fathers enshrined a separation of powers in our Constitution so that there would be inherent checks and balances to avoid a situation where a president could become a king. After all, the Founders had just risked life and limb rebelling against the King of England.

Trump's concerted attacks to delegitimize our media, our intelligence community and now our federal judiciary would have no doubt alarmed them. And it should be terrifying to every American who truly believes in our Constitution and in the promise of America.

See original here:
Donald Trump's most bone-chilling tweet - CNN

Donald Trump Appears to Draw Parallels Between US, Vladimir Putin’s Russia – Wall Street Journal


Deadline
Donald Trump Appears to Draw Parallels Between US, Vladimir Putin's Russia
Wall Street Journal
WASHINGTONPresident Donald Trump appeared to draw an equivalence between Russian President Vladimir Putin and the behavior of the U.S. when he responded to a remark about Mr. Putin being a killer by saying: We got a lot of killerswhat, you ...
Donald Trump To Bill O'Reilly On Killer Putin: Our Country's So Innocent?Deadline
Putin's a Killer But We Are, TooTMZ.com
Trump defends Putin: "You think our country's so innocent?"CNN
The Independent -Fox News Insider -The Guardian
all 164 news articles »

Visit link:
Donald Trump Appears to Draw Parallels Between US, Vladimir Putin's Russia - Wall Street Journal

SNL’s Donald Trump declares war on Australia and Sean Spicer imprisons journalists for reporting on ‘fake news’ – New York Daily News

NEW YORK DAILY NEWS

Sunday, February 5, 2017, 1:04 AM

A bored Donald Trump ignited baseless wars with U.S. allies but cowered during a failed attempt to belittle Zimbabwe on the latest Saturday Night Live.

Alec Baldwin returned to SNL's cold open as the President after a weeks-long hiatus. He was flanked by White House chief strategist Steve Bannon, as the Grim Reaper, who was the mastermind behind Trump's late night dialing.

The results was a testy phone call that appeared to mirror the real moment that sparked a diplomatic fissure with Australian Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull.

"America first. Australia sucks. Your reef is failing. Prepare to go to war," Baldwin's Trump said, hanging up on Beck Bennett as Turnbull as he urged Trump to honor President Obamas decision to accept more than 1,000 of their refugees.

In his next cold call, Baldwin attempted an Abbott and Costello comedy routine with the shows depiction of Mexico President Pea Nieto.

Trump says, Hola? Guy whos going to pay for the wall says what?

Que, Pea Nieto responds, confusing the U.S. leader by taking Trump at his word and speaking in Spanish.

He calls Germanys Angela Merkel only to learn the chancellor still yearns for her "Barach" Obama.

He faltered as Bannon inspired him to call Zimbabwe's Robert Mugabe and "show them who's boss."

"I will rip out your spine and drink from your skull," said Kenan Thompson as the 92-year-old Mugabe. "You can not even walk downstairs you little white b----."

"Don't ever call Zimbabwe again."

The show packed a world of political satire in the first 30 minutes with actress Melissa McCarthy spoofing Sean Spicer. Next week, Alec Baldwin is slated to return not as SNLs guest Trump, but as host.

Host and actress Kristen Stewart detailed a history of each time Trump offered dating advice to her ex-boyfriend and former "Twilight" co-star Robert Pattinson.

"I don't think he hated me, I think he's in love with Robert," she said.

If Trump was watching, she had a message for the commander-in-chief.

"I am like so gay, dude." said Stewart, before mistakenly dropping an f-bomb during the opening monologue.

McCarthy made her surprise visit to Saturday Night Live and imagined herself as Spicer delivering a raucous White House press briefing where diaper-clad CNN correspondents are caged for reporting on fake news and journalists are soaked with "soapy water" for daring to call out the Trump administrations lies.

One such reporter was sprayed while asking about the White Houses decision to omit Jewish victims from a statement on Holocaust remembrance.

"I'm washing that filthy lie out of your mouth," said McCarthy.

McCarthys Spicer demanded reporters depict Trumps Supreme Court nomination in a particular fashion their own.

The crowd greeted him with a standing ovation for a full 15 minutes. You can check the tape, she said as Spicer. Everyone was smiling, everyone was happy. The men all had erections and every single one of the women was ovulating.

More:
SNL's Donald Trump declares war on Australia and Sean Spicer imprisons journalists for reporting on 'fake news' - New York Daily News

Donald Trump might be more popular than you think – Politico

Just how popular is Donald Trump? Two weeks into the new presidents term, its a matter of some dispute.

Traditional phone polls that use live interviewers including some of the most trusted polls in politics and media report limited support for Trump and the controversial executive orders hes signed. But automated phone and Internet-based surveys tell a different story. Once the element of anonymity is added, the presidents approval ratings suddenly look a lot better.

Story Continued Below

Its reigniting the campaign debate over whether pollsters are accurately measuring Trumps popularity or the breadth of support for his policies. The White House is already seizing on the issue, and forcefully pushing back against the early narrative that the president is suffering from historically bad polling numbers.

At Fridays White House press briefing, when asked to comment on a newly-released CBS News poll conducted by live interviewers which put Trumps approval rating at only 40 percent, press secretary Sean Spicer was ready with an alternate data point.

I think theres also a Rasmussen poll that showed he had a 51-percent approval rating, Spicer replied sharply.

In referring to an automated poll that put the presidents popularity in the black, Spicer actually understated Trumps level of support. According to Rasmussen Reports most recent survey released Friday, 54 percent of likely voters approved of the presidents job performance.

The debate is a flashback to last falls election in which Trump ran ahead of his poll numbers, particularly in the Upper Midwest states that propelled him to victory. And just like during the campaign season, theres evidence suggesting that Americans may be less willing to admit they support the president and his actions if they are talking to another person on the phone, compared to polls completed with the anonymity of the internet or an automated phone interface.

I think youre getting two things, said John McLaughlin, a Republican pollster who worked for Trump during the campaign. One, the online surveys, people are more likely to put in an honest answer because theyre not speaking to a human being.

McLaughlin notes there are other differences. Some polls, like Rasmussen Reports, survey likely voters, though it isnt clear in which election the respondents are likely to vote. The POLITICO/Morning Consult poll is conducted among registered voters, while Gallup and CNN/ORC survey all adults.

Generally, polls of all adults are more Democratic-leaning, while likely-voter polls tilt more toward Republicans. Self-identified Republicans have been more likely to turn out in recent elections than their counterparts in the other party.

A poll of all adults about the new administration will tell you what a possible electorate will look like if everyone showed up, McLaughlin said. But they dont.

The disparities between modes of polling are hard to miss. Majorities of Americans in Gallup, CBS News and CNN/ORC polls all live-interviewer released this week disapprove of both Trumps order temporarily banning citizens of seven predominantly Muslim countries from entering the U.S. and the indefinite suspension of the U.S.s Syrian refugee program. The presidents approval ratings are underwater in all of them, and two of the polls report a majority disapproves of Trumps performance to date.

Those results differ from other polls utilizing newer, more anonymous methodologies. Polls conducted over the internet from Reuters/Ipsos and Huffington Post/YouGov indicate, on balance, support for these initiatives is modestly higher among Americans than opposition. A Rasmussen Reports survey, conducted via automated telephone calls, pegs support for the order at 52 percent among likely voters, with 43 percent opposed. The Democratic automated-phone pollster Public Policy Polling finds opposition to the ban (49 percent) only marginally greater than support for it (47 percent) among registered voters.

Trumps average approval rating in live-caller surveys is only 41 percent, with 49 percent disapproving. But averaging together the five most recent internet or automated phone calls yields a 48-percent approval rating for Trump, with 46 percent disapproval.

This weeks POLITICO/Morning Consult poll, conducted over the internet, was among the most positive for Trump: 49 percent of registered voters approved of his job performance, while only 41 percent disapproved.

A supporter cheers as President Donald Trump and first lady Melania Trump walk in the inaugural parade after being sworn in at the 58th presidential inauguration on Jan. 20. | Getty

Kyle Dropp, Morning Consults co-founder and chief research officer, acknowledged that the polls online methodology could explain why it showed Trump in better shape than other, live-interview surveys.

There could be a mode effect at play like there was during the election, Dropp said.

Throughout the campaign, researchers studied whether shy Trump voters people who intended to vote for Trump but didnt want to admit it to pollsters existed, and whether they could tip the race to the New York businessman. A study from POLITICO and Morning Consult in October of last year showed only a slight difference between voters interviewed online and over the phone.

The presence of a live interviewer on the other end of the phone line isnt the only difference between the surveys. Each of the polls uses different question wording that may contribute to the differences between them with Rasmussens invoking of keeping out individuals who are terrorist threats perhaps leading to the strongest support measured by the polls thus far.

So far, polling on the performance of the nascent Trump administration is limited. And there are only a handful of readings for the most controversial of Trumps actions thus far: the immigration and refugee order issued just last Friday.

But the presidents first two weeks in the White House raise questions about whether Trump is better viewed than traditional measures indicate and whether the hard edge of some of his provocative stances and statements will make it difficult to accurately gauge his support right up until his likely reelection bid in 2020.

Pollsters are already studying the emerging phenomenon, though theres no consensus yet on whether social-desirability bias respondents reticence to express support for Trump because they believe he is viewed negatively by others is the main driver.

For now, the polling gap provides talking points for all sides.

The president understands this is a marathon, not a sprint, Spicer said at his Friday press briefing. As he continues to get people back to work [and] protect this country, I think the poll numbers will act in accord.

See more here:
Donald Trump might be more popular than you think - Politico

Donald Trump Is Still in Control of His Business Empire – Slate Magazine (blog)

Separate. Totally separate.

Timothy A. Clary/AFP/Getty Images

Remember when conflicts of interest, apparent and actual, mattered? Remember when being the president of the United States was considered an act of patriotic service not a business opportunity? That time in American history has passed. Donald Trump is the president, and along with hollowing out American norms, institutions, and reality, he is going to make money from being president. He is making money from being president. Mar-a-Lago, which Trump has dubbed the Winter White House, doubled its membership fee to $200,000 just days after the inauguration. And thats surely just the surface of the profiteeringshameless chump change compared to bigger, darker moves that have been hinted at by friends and family.

Trumpand his team of lawyers, financiers, and apologists, of coursewill point to stacks of paper and the fact that he appears to no longer be in control of the day-to-day operations of the Trump Organization as evidence that all is well. But, as a front-page story in the New York Times on Saturday outlines, Trump is still closely tied to his business interests; he still profits from them, and he still has ultimate control over them.

So lets just be clear about whats happening here: Donald Trump, temporary president of the United States, is still a businessman.

Original post:
Donald Trump Is Still in Control of His Business Empire - Slate Magazine (blog)