Tag: Ex-President Donald Trump

  • Trump ordered to pay back New York Times $392,00 in legal fees

    Trump ordered to pay back New York Times $392,00 in legal fees

    Ex-President Donald Trump has to give nearly $400,000 to the New York Times for legal fees because he lost a lawsuit.

    Mr Trump is suing the newspaper and his niece, Mary Trump, for $100 million. He says they were trying to secretly get his tax records.

    Last year, a judge threw out the case because it didn’t meet the requirements of the law.

    Articles about Mr. Trump’s money won a big prize called the Pulitzer.

    On Friday, a judge in New York ordered Donald Trump, who is a Democrat, to pay the New York Times for the costs of a lawsuit he lost.

    The judge decided that the amount of money, $392,638, was fair after thinking about a lot of things, like how complicated the case was and how good the newspaper’s lawyers are.

    The lawsuit is about a 2018 investigation that said the old president was involved in shady tax plans. It says three journalists who wrote about it were teaming up with Mr. Trump’s niece to hurt him. It said that they kept following her and convinced her to give them some papers.

    Judge Reed decided in May that the case is over. He said that the law allows reporters to do their job of gathering news without any problems.

    The judge said that the activities were very important to the First Amendment, which allows people to speak freely.

    The BBC asked Mr. Trump’s lawyer for a comment.

  • Biden faces significant political risks as a result of the banking crisis

    Biden faces significant political risks as a result of the banking crisis

    President Joe Biden might face eternal damnation if he fails to save the banks.

    The abrupt crisis that erupted just over a week ago still poses a serious political risk, as seen by another significant industry intervention to support a bank on Thursday. This intervention was carried out under the administration’s direction rather than by the government.
    Additionally, it placed the administration on a more precarious limb that might break if the bank crisis worsened.

    JPMorgan Chase, Wells Fargo, Citigroup, and Truist, some of the nation’s most formidable banks, joined forces to support First Republic Bank in a $30 billion cash infusion designed to calm market jitters, prevent a chain reaction of additional bank failures, and show that the sector still has a strong foundation.

    This occurred days after the White House guaranteed deposits in Silicon Valley Bank, which failed last week, and Signature Bank, which regulators closed down, using the Deposit Insurance Fund, a $100 billion facility supported by premiums banks pay to the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation.

    The picture here is of the banking industry saving itself – and not of the government bailing out rich bankers whose recklessness put the savings, prosperity and peace of mind of Americans at risk.

    It’s a narrative that the president badly needs to stick.

    Even so, the administration’s repeated assurances that no taxpayer cash was involved – necessitated by public fury over bailouts after the 2008 Great Recession banking crisis – do set up some potential political vulnerability. While there is no suggestion yet that isolated banking upheaval could mushroom into a major systemic meltdown, any future use of public funds could hand Republicans, who are already inaccurately blasting administration moves as a “bailout,” an opening to lambast Biden.

    The events of this week show how the administration is on a knife-edge over the banking crisis – large aspects of which it has no capacity to control. This daunting reality was stressed on Wednesday when problems overwhelmed Credit Suisse, a huge global player whose existing problems were catalyzed into a crisis by the turbulence in the US. It required emergency loan offers by authorities in Berne to stave off a failure that would have had global reverberations.

    The situation is so politically dicey for Biden because the most prudent political move in some senses would be to allow small banks like SVB and Signature Bank to fail. Biden has based his entire political mythology on lifting up working- and middle-class Americans, despite long serving as senator for the US finance industry haven of Delaware.

    But presidents face multiple and often competing demands on their attention and political capital. Any hesitation about propping up SVB last weekend might have unleashed a chain of consequences that tipped the entire sector into a crisis that would have required a far greater government intervention – and potentially taxpayer-funded bailouts. This would have had disastrous consequences for Biden’s reputation for economic stewardship and the likely reelection campaign that must, to succeed, sketch a case for an American bounce back after the worst pandemic in a century, high inflation and political turmoil.

    The roller-coaster ride in the banking sector this week is all taking place in the ominous shadow of the 2008 economic crisis, which is informing a strategy that is based, above all else, on a mantra of no bailouts.

    The situations in 2008 and 2023 are not the same. In the former case, the worst financial crisis since the Great Depression was triggered by mountains of subprime mortgages piled up by lax lending practices and easy credit that saddled banks with trillions of dollars in almost worthless loans. The problems last week at SVB, and a subsequent bank run, were caused by managers who invested in government bonds whose prices fell because of the Fed raising interest rates to combat high inflation. In most cases, the assets backing up the bank’s actual business were sound. There is a clear distinction here between the government bailing out bankers and banks in 2008 and what is effectively a federal insurance fund securing depositors now.

    Such nuance, however, is lost outside the finance industry. Banking calamities are hard to explain to the public, at least by political leaders who lack the genius for distilling an existential moment into a national rallying the way that President Franklin Roosevelt did during the 1933 banking crisis.

    Politics – Biden’s secondary problem after preventing a banking meltdown – rarely reward complexity. Presidential primary campaigns, for instance, profit from simplicity and soundbites and often use fear to trigger momentum. So even a false perception that a president is handing out the cash of taxpayers who are struggling to make ends meet can be political gold.

    Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen tried yet again in a high-stakes hearing on Thursday to explain what’s happening now – and why it’s not what happened in the past. Her delicate task was to reassure Americans that the banking system is safe thanks to the administration’s efforts without inviting comparisons to 2008.

    “Shareholders and debt holders are not being protected by the government. Importantly, no taxpayer money is being used or put at risk with this action,” Yellen told the Senate Finance Committee.

    Her reassurances, however, will not prevent the administration’s critics from seeking to portray the government actions as tantamount to the dreaded “b” word – bailout.

    Republican presidential candidate Nikki Haley, for instance, argued this week that “Joe Biden is pretending this isn’t a bailout,” and misleadingly posited that if the Deposit Insurance Fund were to run dry, all bank customers would be on the hook. And she falsely claimed that depositors at healthy banks were being forced to subsidize SVB mismanagement. But unlike Biden, the former South Carolina governor is in the enviable position of being able to criticize without having responsibility.

    Another Republican potential candidate, Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, twisted the situation to claim that the banks’ “woke” preoccupation with diversity, equity and inclusion initiatives had caused the industry to plummet. The conceit advanced the DeSantis strategy of weaponizing a culture war to please conservative base activists. And while it didn’t correctly diagnose the current banking problems, his theory will be solidified in the minds of many Republican voters because of the power of conservative media.

    Biden intimately understands the political risks he faces here. As vice president in the Obama administration, he was inside the somber meetings that made fateful decisions about government bailouts after a new president inherited the worst financial crisis in more than 70 years.

    Bailouts to banks helped save the US economy but nevertheless stoked a political backlash that nurtured the Tea Party movement, which wiped out House Democrats in the 2010 midterms. It also sowed a festering sense of resentment that was a fertile incubator for ex-President Donald Trump’s economic populism and backlash politics.

    Barack Obama wrote in his autobiography, “A Promised Land,” that while Americans early in his term were frustrated with the glacial recovery from the 2008 crisis, “The bank bailout sent them over the edge.”

    “Across the political spectrum, voters considered the bank bailouts a scam that had allowed the barons of finance to emerge from the crisis relatively unscathed,” Obama wrote.

    Biden’s political future may depend on avoiding such voter fury.

  • White House blasts Trump for meeting with white supremacist

    White House Deputy Press Secretary Andrew Bates said bigotry, hate, and anti-Semitism have no place in the United States.

    The White House has condemned former President Donald Trump for meeting at his Florida estate with a prominent white supremacist and rapper Kanye West, who is embroiled in a storm over anti-Jewish remarks.

    Trump acknowledged having dinner with West, who legally changed his name to Ye, on Tuesday night at Mar-a-Lago and said he brought along friends, one of whom was Nick Fuentes, an outspoken anti-Semite and racist.

    “I didn’t know Nick Fuentes,” Trump posted on his Truth Social account late Friday.

    White House Deputy Press Secretary Andrew Bates condemned Trump’s meeting with Fuentes.

    “Bigotry, hate, and anti-Semitism have absolutely no place in America – including at Mar-a-Lago. Holocaust denial is repugnant and dangerous, and it must be forcefully condemned,” Bates told CNN on Saturday.

    President Joe Biden, who is spending the holiday weekend in Nantucket, dodged a question about Trump’s dinner by saying: “You don’t wanna hear what I think.”

    Fuentes is a Holocaust denier whose YouTube channel was permanently suspended in early 2020 for violating the platform’s hate speech policy.

    Trump announced his plans in mid-November to seek reelection in 2024, and his embrace of a white nationalist unsettled some of his onetime administration officials.

    David Friedman, who was Trump’s former ambassador to Israel, blasted the dinner at Mar-a-Lago.

    “Even a social visit from an anti-Semite like Kanye West and human scum like Nick Fuentes is unacceptable,” Friedman said in one of several tweets.

    “Anti-Semites deserve no quarter among American leaders, right or left,” he said.

    Axios, a news website, cited what it said was a source familiar with the dinner as saying Trump “seemed very taken” with Fuentes, even though he didn’t seem to know anything about his background.

    Ye has lost major brand partnerships with the German sportswear company Adidas and US retailer Gap over recent anti-Jewish statements and associations with hardliners.

    Source: Aljazeera.com 

  • US elections: John Fetterman’s victory in Pennsylvania boosts Democrats

    For TV personalities-turned-politicians, Pennsylvania delivered a stinging rebuke in this election. Not only for Mehmet Oz, the celebrity doctor who came to fame on The Oprah Winfrey Show, but for Donald Trump too, the – well, you know the back story.

    Mr Trump lent Dr Oz his endorsement in April, saying that his chosen candidate for the crucial Senate race would help “stop the Radical Left maniacs from destroying our country”.

    Instead, he’s gone down to a convincing defeat at the hands of his Democratic opponent John Fetterman, who successfully courted blue-collar Pennsylvanians with a traditionally left-wing raft of policies, including a promise to tackle corporate greed.

    And – in a further twist that could be right out of a Hollywood script – the slick TV physician came up short against a candidate who’s been struggling to overcome the debilitating effects of a stroke on the campaign trail.

    Dr Oz’s political demise arguably leaves Mr Trump’s role as Republican kingmaker on life-support, and the ex-president’s chance of a third tilt at the White House in 2024 now the subject of serious probing.

    Even his staunchest of allies are advising that he puts on pause a widely anticipated announcement, earlier teased to come next week.

    No wonder Pennsylvania is being so roundly cheered by Democrats.

    It is the highlight of an election that looks to have been about rejecting the Trumpian alternative at least as much as any condemnation of President Joe Biden’s handling of the economy.

    Ex-President Donald Trump talks to the press on the grounds of his Mar-a-Lago resort on midterm elections night, Palm Beach, Florida, 8 November 2022
    IMAGE SOURCE,REUTERS Image caption, Trump has said he will not take responsibility for those Republicans he supported but did not get elected

    Livid Trump, triumphant Fetterman

    And it is with no small degree of relish that insiders are sharing tweets – unconfirmed – suggesting that the former president is furious, with one claiming he has even begun blaming his wife Melania for the choice of Dr Oz.

    Mr Biden took Pennsylvania in the 2020 presidential vote by a narrow margin after appealing to white working-class voters and winning them back from Mr Trump.

    The hoodie-wearing, tattooed Mr Fetterman – once mayor of the former steel-town Braddock, and director of its youth programme – has used those credentials to do the same.

    But the health setback introduced a huge note of uncertainty on the campaign trail, particularly after he was seen to be struggling to articulate fluently in last month’s TV debate.

    How much would his stroke weigh on the minds of voters and raise questions about his fitness to govern?

    When we caught up with Mr Fetterman before polls opened, his minders were working hard to keep reporters at bay as he posed for photos outside a United Steelworkers Union chapter in Coatesville, a suburb of Philadelphia.

    “Are you feeling confident?” I shouted out over their heads, but there was no reply.

    However, as votes were counted into the early hours of the morning, it was clear he had overcome the doubters, and the personal and the political came together in an emotional victory speech.

    “I’m proud of what we ran on,” he told supporters.

    “Protecting a woman’s right to choose, raising our minimum wage, fighting for the union way of life, healthcare as a fundamental human right. It saved my life and it should be there for you if you all ever need it.”

    Did abortion help win it for Fetterman?

    Pennsylvania also brought another key election issue into sharp focus – the central role that abortion is playing across the US political landscape.

    Mr Fetterman referenced it in his victory speech, and it was something female voters we spoke to outside the polling stations mentioned, too.

    One young woman told us it was the only issue she was voting on – turning out for Mr Fetterman for his pro-choice stance.

    Another woman – an anti-abortion Republican mother – said she could no longer speak about politics to her voting-age daughter because they were so firmly in opposite camps.

    In his televised debate, Dr Oz’s weakest moment was seen by many to come when he said that abortion was an issue for “women, doctors [and] local political leaders” to decide.

    His strong anti-abortion stance was already known, but that formulation – seeming to conjure the image of lawmakers in the room alongside women and doctors – was considered a major blunder.

    Democrats may be buoyed by the midterm results, but they would be wrong to be complacent.

    Mr Trump still holds significant sway with a large swathe of the Republican base and still has a major financial war-chest at his disposal.

    And even if he is now politically weakened, he may have to face bigger threats out there.

    The triumph of Ron DeSantis in Florida – re-elected governor with a massively increased majority – is a victory for a culture warrior promising to make Florida a place where “woke comes to die”.

    The result is seen as raising his chances of winning the Republican 2024 nomination for the presidency.

    Some argue he may be a far more formidable rival for Democrats than Mr Trump – but harbouring the same anti-democratic instincts.

    The former president is certainly treating Mr DeSantis as a threat, warning this week that he would reveal things about the governor that “won’t be very flattering” if he does launch a presidential bid of his own.

    For now, though, Republicans appear to have snatched defeat from the jaws of victory as their predicted “red wave” is turning into little more than a ripple.

    And perhaps more than anywhere else, it is the victory in Pennsylvania of a man who – just a few months ago suffered a stroke that nearly killed him – that has kept Democrat hopes alive.

    Source: BBC.com