Archive for the ‘Obama’ Category

Trump: Leaked transcripts of Mexico, Australia calls ‘disgraceful’ – Fox News

PALM BEACH, Fla. President Trump on Saturday denounced the leaks of transcripts of his telephone conversations with leaders of Australia and Mexico as disgraceful and said his administration was searching very, very hard for the leakers.

Trump, speaking to Fox News, accused Obama people of giving news organizations embarrassing details of his recent tense phone conversations with his Australian and Mexican counterparts, and said that the holdovers from the Obama administration still serving on his White House and National Security Council staff were being replaced.

Its a disgrace that they leaked because its very much against our country, Trump said, without stating why he believed that career civil servants who work in Democratic and Republican administrations were the source of the leaks. Its a very dangerous thing for this country, he said.

Trump said that media reports of what appeared to be angry exchanges between him and the two foreign leaders had been mischaracterized, and insisted that he had positive relations with both countries and their leaders.

Meanwhile, hours before a federal judge in San Francisco turned down the Trump administrations request to reinstate travel restrictions on refugees and foreign travelers, President Trump defended his administrations travel ban, saying the temporary halt was needed while the administration reviewed vetting procedures to prevent people with bad intentions from entering the country.

I just want a safe country, and you cant have a safe country with open and weak bordersyou cant, he said.

Trump said that the FBI had informed him that the bureau had 1,000 investigations ongoing into potential terrorist threats and lacked sufficient manpower to pursue them all.

Finally, he disputed press reports which characterized the sanctions he imposed last week on Iran as weak and ineffective. He said that punishing Tehran for violating United Nations Security Council restrictions on ballistic missile testing was the right thing to do, and argued that the sanctions were already beginning to constrain Iranian aggression. Iran, he said, was trying to undermine and destabilize U.S. allies by exporting sensitive technology to countries around the world and that such aggressive conduct had to be countered. The sanctions were already working, he asserted. Have you noticed theyve been very quiet in the last two days?

Trump made these and other comments in a conversation with three journalists whom he had invited to join him after the 60th annual International Red Cross ball, a fundraiser for the charity that was held this year at his club, Mar-a-Lago.

In his first trip back to his home in Palm Beach since becoming president, Trump answered several questions on wide-ranging topics from this reporter, Christopher Ruddy, founder and chief of Newsmax Media, and Melanie Dickinson, president and publisher of the South Florida Business Journal, an online and print business publication. Trump and his wife Melania lingered on after the ball to mix with admirers and some of the estimated 800 Red Cross supporters attending the black-tie event at Mar-a-lago, which has become known as The Winter White House.

While wealthy supporters of the charity rubbed shoulders with one another and clustered around the table occupied by Trump and his wife, eager to congratulate him and take photos with First Couple, some 4,000 people turned out for an anti-Trump march in West Palm Beach. Hundreds of protesters made their way from Trump Tower in West Palm Beach to a staging area near Palm Beach on Bingham Island, and then to the entrance of the exclusive club, where they shouted anti-Trump slogans and yelled chants against the new administrations policies. Many of the protesters, most of whom were peaceful, carried placards criticizing Trump, his immigration and other policies, and several of his wealthy Cabinet nominees. The protest was among the largest, if not the largest, in recent Palm Beach county history.

Inside the huge ornate ballroom, Trump seemed particularly insistent on disputing the notion that his travel restrictions now being challenged by several courts were unpopular. Theyre very popular, he insisted. But, he added, he would have imposed them whether or not Americans approved of them. Im not doing it for popularity. Im doing it because our country is like a sieve for people coming in, he said.

He said that he had learned in his meetings with FBI officials that the bureau was having a difficult time staffing the more than 1,000 investigations it was conducting into potential threats to the country. Theres no manpower to do them.

Calls to FBI headquarters regarding the number of ongoing terror investigations were not returned on this Super Bowl Sunday. But last summer, James Comey, the FBI director, testified that the bureau had about 1,000 open terror-related investigations in 2016 and at least one in all of the 50 states. Rep. Peter King, R-N.Y., who follows counter-terrorism efforts closely, confirmed that senior FBI officials have spoken of nearly 1,000 ongoing investigations. John Pistole, the former FBI deputy director, told Fox News last summer that the FBI lacked the resources and legal authority to maintain investigations on everybody they talk to, he said. The FBI had perpetrators of the terror attacks carried out in Orlando, San Bernardino, and Boston under surveillance for a time, but closed out their inquiries before the attacks.

Trump said Saturday night that many Americans did not realize the danger posed by Americas open borders and insufficient vetting. You dont realize it, he said.

However, groups helping asylum seekers, refugees, and other civil and human rights groups point out that no Americans have been killed in domestic terror attacks by asylum seekers and refugees from the seven Middle Eastern countries with majority Muslim populations who would be barred from entering the U.S. for 120 days while the administration reviews its immigration and vetting policies.

Under Trumps executive order, refugees from Syria would be permanently barred, exclusions whose legality several civil rights and civil liberties experts and groups have challenged. They also argue that political refugees are already among the most heavily vetted of all immigrants.

Im doing this because our country is like a sieve for people coming in, Trump said.

One former CIA official said that while the administrations implementation of its executive order was clumsy, the concerns behind it are real. But the constitutionality of the executive order seems headed for a Supreme Court challenge.

The FBI also did not return calls for comment Sunday on whether it was conducting an investigation into the leaking of transcripts of the president's telephone calls with foreign leaders. While White House press spokesman Sean Spicer recently said that the president had asked his team to to look into this because those are very serious implications," Trump had not previously discussed his own view of the embarrassing leaks. His comments Saturday underscored his concern about what has become widespread early on in his administration the unauthorized distribution of material highlighting numerous exaggerations and false statements by him and senior members of his White House and other incidents that seem to reflect incompetence or inexperience.

Trump seemed particularly anxious to reinforce his spokesmans descriptions of his conversations with the leaders of Australia and Mexico as candid," but respectful. Spicer noted that both leaders have disputed some of the details as reported.

Based on the transcripts, the Washington Post and several media outlets, for instance, reported that Trump hung up on Australian Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull after an angry discussion of a refugee swap negotiated by former President Obama. In a recent interview, Turnbull called his discussion with Trump frank but said that Trump had agreed to abide by the refugee swap negotiated by former President Barack Obama.In one interview, he said it had been a "good week" for Australia.

In an earlier call with Mexican President Enrique Pena Nieto, Trump apparently threatened to send the U.S. military to Mexico to stop drug cartels -- according to a transcript published by a Mexican news organization and the Associated Press. The White House later said the comments were intended to be lighthearted.

Judith Miller, a Fox News contributor, is an award-winning writer and author, and an adjunct fellow at the Manhattan Institute. The author of several books, her latest is "The Story: A Reporter's Journey" (Simon & Schuster, April 7, 2015) now available in paperback. Follow her on Twitter @JMFreeSpeech.

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Trump: Leaked transcripts of Mexico, Australia calls 'disgraceful' - Fox News

Can Republicans eliminate one of Obama’s national monuments? – Christian Science Monitor

February 5, 2017 Just a few days before leaving office, President Barack ObamadesignatedtheBears Ears landscape in Utah a national monument, one of several national monuments created by the president in the final weeks of his administration.But now, Utah Republicans in the State Senate and US Congress hope to eliminate or drastically reduce the size of Bears Ears.

No national monument of this size has ever been overturned.

On Friday, Utah GovernorGary Herbert signed a non-binding resolution asking President Trump to rescind Mr. Obama's order, which passed the State Senate with a strong majority vote of 22 to 6, largely along party lines. In Congress,Rep. Rob Bishop (R) of Utah, the chair of theHouse Committee on Natural Resources, has also pledged his help to eliminate the monument. But despite Republican unity on the issue, it could prove difficult to remove Bears Ears from federal protection.

The primary obstacle is the Antiquities Act, which authorizes US presidents to protect ancientartifacts, ruins, and areas of scientific interest. The act also allows for the creation of federally-protected land around these areas, forbidding any new development of the area, with some exceptions for grandfathered leases that existed before the monument was designated. More to the point, however, these areas can be designated only by the President, without approval from Congress.

"Under the Antiquities Act, there is no ability of having any input," Rep. Bishop told NPR.

President Theodore Roosevelt signedthe Antiquities Act into law in 1906, and it has remained in place ever since. But for many Utah lawmakers, Obama's Bears Ears proclamation in the final days of his tenure went one step too far.

"I think the voice of the people needs to weigh in on these decisions," Utah Senate President Wayne Niederhauser told St. George News. "And that's the Congress of the United States."

The main objection laid out by supporters of the resolution, which was sponsored by Mr. Niederhauser and Utah House Speaker Greg Hughes, was not that none of the land deserved protection, but that the unilateral protection of such a wide area was made without the consultation of the people of Utah.

Governor Herbert agreed with the sentiment in a Facebook post, saying, "These lands deserve our protection, but a unilateral monument designation is not the way to do it. "

But the Antiquities Act leaves little wiggle room for Republicans. While Congress can overturn a president's decision to create a national monument,University of Colorado law professor Mark Squillace, an expert on the Antiquities Act, told NPR that that getting the votes will be difficult, if not impossible.

"It turns out that the designation of national monuments is very popular with the public," he says.

While a direct appeal to President Trump might seem like an compelling workaround of this problem, Professor Squillace also says that the Antiquities Act is structured so that a president can "modify or revoke" proclamations of national monuments. But that limitation has never been legally tested before.

There is also another significant problem for Republicans.When Obama designated Bears Ears last December, he evoked the spiritual traditions of the native Americans, to whom the land once belonged. As Henry Bruinius previously reported for The Christian Science Monitor:

Indeed, at the start of hisproclamation protecting 1.35 million acres of landin the Four Corners region of southeastern Utah, Mr. Obama noted the many native words for the distinctive twin buttes that dominate the landscape: HoonNaqvut, Shash Ja, Kwiyagatu Nukavachi, Ansh An Lashokdiwe or Bears Ears, in English. The region is, he said, profoundly sacred to the Ute, Navajo, Hopi, and Zuni tribes.

The star-filled nights and natural quiet of the Bears Ears area transport visitors to an earlier eon, Obama said. Against an absolutely black night sky, our galaxy and others more distant leap into view. As one of the most intact and least roaded areas in the contiguous United States, Bears Ears has that rare and arresting quality of deafening silence.

Many native American leaders have already expressed their support for the national monument designation at Bears Ears, and have vowed to resist Republican attempts to rescind it.Utah Dine Bikeyah, a coalition of Native American tribes who support the monument, have said they will fight to keep the monument in place, condemning the resolution to appeal to Trump.

"It's going to go into lawsuit and tribes will file the lawsuits against this because this was an illegal action," a representative of the group told Fox 13. "The delegation has never consulted with the tribes."

Ultimately, the Bears Ears monument could also prove beneficial to the region as well. San Juan County, the county in which Bear Ears was designated, is one of the poorest in Utah, and it could potentially boost the localtourism and recreation industries if the national monument stays.

But Bishop says that it is important for locals to have a real voice in the decision rather than simply accepting a one-sided decision from the executive branch.

"No one ever gets to have a say, you don't work out things in advance," Bishop says. "It has to be a gotcha moment where the president unveils something unilaterally."

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Can Republicans eliminate one of Obama's national monuments? - Christian Science Monitor

Trump and Obama’s first Super Bowls as president looked very different – Mashable


Mashable
Trump and Obama's first Super Bowls as president looked very different
Mashable
In case you needed any more proof that President Trump and President Obama are very different people, the 2017 Super Bowl offered yet another example. As the Atlanta Falcons tried to make Tom Brady a very sad man, Donald Trump spent his first Super ...

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Trump and Obama's first Super Bowls as president looked very different - Mashable

The two quotes that show the difference between Trump and Obama – The indy100

Picture: Jack Gruber-Pool/Getty Images

As Donald Trump's presidency continues, we get moreopportunities to comparehowdifferently hes handling certain situations in comparison with his predecessorto Barack Obama.

It makes for interesting, if maddening, reading.

Take for instance, Obamas opening remarks (after a few thanks-yous) at the 2016 National Prayer Breakfast.

And on this occasion, I always enjoy reflecting on a piece of scripture thats been meaningful to me or otherwise sustained me throughout the year.

And lately, Ive been thinking and praying on a verse from Second Timothy: For God has not given us a spirit of fear, but of power and of love and of a sound mind.

For God has not given us a spirit of fear, but of power and of love and of a sound mind.

So what did Trump include at the start his speech, one year later? With a boast about his TV ratings, and a dig at Arnold Schwarzenegger.

We had tremendous success on The Apprentice. And when I ran for president, I had to leave the show. Thats when I knew for sure that I was doing it. And they hired a big, big movie star, Arnold Schwarzenegger, to take my place.

And we know how that turned out.

The ratings went down the tubes. Its been a total disaster and Mark will never, ever bet against Trump again.

And I want to just pray for Arnold if we can, for those ratings, OK?

Heres Obamas speech in full.

And the beginning of Trumps.

HT: Christian Democrats of America

More: Arnold Schwarzenegger had the best response to Donald Trump

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The two quotes that show the difference between Trump and Obama - The indy100

Obama rejects comparison between Trumps immigration policy …

Former president BarackObama rejected the idea Monday that President Trump based his immigration executive order on a policy adopted by his own administration, and he endorsed the protests that have been taking place across the country in response to the new restrictions.

Trump has said that his move to ban the entry of citizens of seven Muslim-majority countries into the United States, and to suspend temporarily the admission of refugees, was based in part on a decision in 2011 by then-President Obama to ban the admission of Iraqis to the country after evidence surfaced that two Iraqis seekingresettlement had been linked to terrorist activity in their homeland. The Obama and Trump administrations also identified the same seven countries as harboring terrorism threats.

Former Obama administration officials have denied that there was ever a halt to the awarding of visas to Iraqis, though the processing of these applications slowed after they were subject to more intense scrutiny.

[Trumps facile claim that his refugee policy is similar to Obamas in 2011]

Obama, who has remained publicly silent about his successor since leaving office 10 days ago, pledged before leaving office to only speak about Trump's policy moves where I think our core values may be at stake. On Monday, his spokesman, Kevin Lewis, said in a statement, With regard to comparisons to President Obamas foreign policy decisions, as weve heard before, the President fundamentally disagrees with the notion of discriminating against individuals because of their faith or religion.

Alluding to the widespread protests taking place in major airports and cities in response to the new immigration policy, Lewis said that Obama is heartened by the level of engagement taking place in communities around the country.

Hundreds of protesters gathered at the arrivals gate of Washington Dulles International Airport to push back against President Trump's executive order that targeted citizens from seven predominantly Muslim countries. A federal judge in New York blocked deportations nationwide late Saturday of those detained on entry to the United States. (McKenna Ewen/The Washington Post)

In his final official speech as President, he spoke about the important role of citizen and how all Americans have a responsibility to be the guardians of our democracy not just during an election but every day, Lewis said. Citizens exercising their Constitutional right to assemble, organize and have their voices heard by their elected officials is exactly what we expect to see when American values are at stake.

Read more from Politics:

Unnamed White House official on implementing travel ban: It really is a massive success story.

Dissent memo circulating in the State Department over Trumps policy on refugees and immigrants

Trump says all is going well on immigration order amid questions and confusion

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Obama rejects comparison between Trumps immigration policy ...