Tag: Donald Trump

  • Donald Trump Named 2024 Time Person of The Year

    Donald Trump Named 2024 Time Person of The Year

    Time Magazine has named Donald Trump as its person of the year for the second time – he previously won the honour after winning the presidential election in 2016.

    In his letter to readers, Time Editor-in-Chief Sam Jacobs credited Trump with “marshalling a comeback of historic proportions” and “driving a once-in-a-generation political realignment” that reshaped the American presidency and altered the US’s role in the world.

    The Republican president-elect rang the opening bell at the New York Stock Exchange on Thursday to mark the honour alongside several of his family members and chants of “U-S-A”.

    In an interview with Time magazine, Trump reiterated some of his plans for his second term.

    He pledged to look “case-by-case” at the convictions of his supporters who rioted at the US Capitol in January 2021, having previously pledged to issue pardons.

    In further comments before ringing the stock exchange opening bell, he promised “an economy the likes of which nobody’s ever seen before”, and he vowed to cut taxes “very substantially”.

    Time magazine’s tradition – which started in 1927 as “Man of the Year” – recognises a person or movement that “for better or for worse… has done the most to influence the events of the year”.

    Other previous winners include climate change activist Greta Thunberg, former President Barack Obama, Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg, Pope Francis and Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky.

    Time Magazine editors ultimately decide who wins the award.

    The outlet was considering 10 people for the person of the year award, including Vice-President Kamala Harris, the Princess of Wales and Tesla CEO Elon Musk, now a close confidante of Trump set to lead an advisory board called the Department of Government Efficiency.

    In a description of Trump on the short list, Time said he won the 2024 election “in a stunning political comeback”.

    “He has reshaped the American electorate, activating young male voters who propelled him to a decisive victory that saw him win the popular vote for the first time and turn every swing state red,” the outlet said.

    “His 2024 win is history-making in multiple ways: he will be the oldest President in U.S. history, and he was convicted earlier this year by a New York jury of 34 counts of fraud, making him the first convicted felon to be elected President.”

    Trump sat for interviews with the magazine in April this year during the campaign season. He talked about his plans for a second term, including his goals of reforming the US immigration system and deporting millions of people.

    Trump complained in 2015 when he was not chosen for the magazine cover during his first run for office, when the award went to former German Chancellor Angela Merkel.

    But after he was named person of the year following his election win, he called it a “great honour”.

    “It means a lot, especially me growing up reading Time magazine. And, you know, it’s a very important magazine,” he said at the time.

    He has, however, continued to criticise the magazine’s choices since winning, including the selection of Taylor Swift as Time’s person of the year in 2023.

  • Trump Invites China’s Xi Jinping To Attend His inauguration

    Trump Invites China’s Xi Jinping To Attend His inauguration

    US President-elect Donald Trump has reportedly invited his Chinese counterpart Xi Jinping to participate in his presidential inauguration next month.

    Sources revealed that Trump extended the invitation to Xi in early November, shortly after the election, but it remains unclear whether the Chinese president has accepted, CBS News reported late Wednesday.

    The report said that officials are making plans for more foreign dignitaries to attend the swearing-in ceremony on Jan. 20.

    According to Trump’s team, there are more leaders who may attend the presidential inauguration.

    “World leaders are lining up to meet with President Trump because they know he will soon return to power and restore peace through American strength around the globe,” Trump transition spokesperson Karoline Leavitt said, according to CBS News.

    Trump said in an interview with NBC News conducted on Friday that he “got along with very well” with Xi and that they had “had communication as recently as this week.”

    It would be unprecedented for a leader of China, a top U.S. geopolitical rival, to attend a U.S. presidential inauguration.

    Trump has named numerous China hawks to key posts in his incoming administration, including Senator Marco Rubio as secretary of state.

    The report of the invitation came days after Trump threatened to raise tariffs on Chinese goods.

    The president-elect has said he will impose an additional 10% tariff on Chinese goods unless Beijing does more to stop trafficking of the highly addictive narcotic fentanyl. He also threatened tariffs in excess of 60% on Chinese goods while on the campaign trail.

    In late November, China’s state media warned Trump that his pledge to slap additional tariffs on Chinese goods over fentanyl flows could drag the world’s top two economies into a mutually destructive tariff war.

    The invitation also comes at a time when the US set a Jan. 19 deadline, the day before the inauguration, for ByteDance, the Chinese parent company of TikTok, to sell the social media app or face a ban in the country.

  • Trump’s Mass Deportation Would ‘Crash’ US Economy, Senators Told

    Trump’s Mass Deportation Would ‘Crash’ US Economy, Senators Told

    President-elect Donald Trump’s plans for the largest deportation of migrants in US history would crash the economy, sending inflation and unemployment soaring while undermining trust in the military, senators heard Tuesday.

    The Republican leader has vowed to declare an immigration national emergency when he takes office in January,

    and use troops to round up and expel the country’s estimated 13 million undocumented migrants.

    But a Democratic-led Senate session focusing on ways the move could harm Americans heard from witnesses including a former army chief and immigration experts, who said the proposals were a threat to the wellbeing of all Americans.

    “The president-elect’s mass deportation plans would crash the American economy, break up families and take a hammer to the foundations of our society by deporting nearly four per cent of the entire US population,” Aaron Reichlin-Melnick, a senior fellow at the nonpartisan American Immigration Council, told the Judiciary Committee hearing.

    He estimated that mass deportations would cost nearly $1 trillion and shave 4.2 per cent to 6.8 per cent from the economy — matching the devastation wreaked by the global financial crash of 2008.

    The US government has struggled for decades to manage its border with Mexico, and Trump claimed on the 2024 campaign trail that an “invasion” was underway by migrant rapists and murderers.

    But Reichlin-Melnick said more than 90 per cent of undocumented migrants have no criminal record and that most are either in education or employed in sectors such as construction, restaurants and childcare that would suffer under Trump’s plan.

    Retired US Army Major General Randy Manner said diverting the military to mass deportations would be divisive and harm operational readiness and morale, arguing that troops were not trained or equipped for immigration enforcement.

    – ‘We’re coming after you’ –

    The senators also heard from Foday Turay, a married father and an assistant district attorney in Philadelphia, who testified that he was born in Sierra Leone and only discovered he was undocumented when he applied for a driver’s license.

    “On a societal level, mass deportation would be devastating,” he told the panel.

    “As a prosecutor, I know how delicate the ties between law enforcement and immigrants can be. If immigrants are afraid to cooperate with the police — or prosecutors like myself — because they’re afraid of deportation, we all suffer.”

    But there was pushback from the Republicans’ witnesses, including Patty Morin of Maryland, whose daughter Rachel was beaten, raped and strangled in a 2023 case in which the alleged murderer had been deported three times.

    “At this very moment, I think deportation is necessary,” she said.

    “The American people should not feel afraid to live in their own homes,” Morin added.

    “We need to follow the laws that are already on the books, we need to close our borders.

    We need to protect American families.”

    Art Arthur, of the Center for Immigration Studies, cautioned against critiquing a plan that Trump has not yet finalized — but added that whatever policy Trump settled on would “comport with law.”

    Lindsey Graham, the committee’s top Republican, said most Americans were “sympathetic, kind-hearted people” who nevertheless felt betrayed by the immigration policies of President Joe Biden’s administration, which saw soaring illegal entries before a lull in 2024.

    “If you’re here illegally, get ready to leave. If you’re a criminal, we’re coming after you,” Graham said.

  • Trump Calls For Immediate Ukraine Ceasefire

    Trump Calls For Immediate Ukraine Ceasefire

    (Reuters) – U.S. President-elect Donald Trump called on Sunday for an immediate ceasefire and negotiations between Ukraine and Russia to end “the madness”, prompting Ukrainian President Volodymr Zelenskiy and the Kremlin to list their conditions.

    Trump made his comments just hours after meeting Zelenskiy in Paris for their first face-to-face talks since Trump won last month’s U.S. election. Trump has vowed to bring about a negotiated end to the conflict, but so far has not provided details.

    “Zelensky and Ukraine would like to make a deal and stop the madness,” Trump wrote on his social media platform Truth Social, adding that Kyiv had lost some 400,000 soldiers. “There should be an immediate ceasefire and negotiations should begin.”

    “I know Vladimir well. This is his time to act. China can help. The World is waiting!” Trump added, referring to Russian President Putin.

    Trump, in Paris for the reopening of Notre-Dame Cathedral, sat down with Zelenskiy on Saturday for about an hour, along with host President Emmanuel Macron.

    Trump and Zelenskiy shook hands and smiled, but it was unclear how the conversation had gone. Accounts of the talks from the French and Ukrainian sides said only that the discussions had been good and productive.

    Zelenskiy reacted to Trump’s message on Sunday saying peace was not just a piece of paper, but needed guarantees.

    “When we talk about effective peace with Russia, we must first and foremost talk about effective guarantees for peace. Ukrainians want peace more than anyone else,” he said on X.

    “It (the war) cannot simply end with a piece of paper and a few signatures. A ceasefire without guarantees can be reignited at any moment, as Putin has already done before. To ensure that Ukrainians no longer suffer losses, we must guarantee the reliability of peace and not turn a blind eye to occupation.”

    It appeared Trump’s figure of 400,000 Ukrainian soldiers lost in the war meant both killed and wounded. Zelenskiy said 43,000 soldiers had been killed in the war and that there had been 370,000 wounded soldiers.

    Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov convened a conference call with reporters to address Trump’s comments.

    Peskov said Russia was open to talks, but that they had to be based on agreements reached in Istanbul in 2022 and on current realities on the battlefield where Russian forces have been pushing forward at their fastest rate since the early days of the war in 2022.

    Putin has said repeatedly that a preliminary agreement reached between Russian and Ukrainian negotiators in the first weeks of the war at talks in Istanbul, which was never implemented, could serve as the basis for future talks.

    “Our position on Ukraine is well known,” said Peskov.

    “The conditions for an immediate stop to hostilities were set out by President Putin in his speech to the Russian Foreign Ministry in June of this year. It is important to recall that it was Ukraine that refused and continues to refuse negotiations,” he said.

    Putin has said that Ukraine must not join the NATO military alliance and that Russia should be left fully in control of four Ukrainian regions his troops partially control at the moment for a peace deal to be done.

    Peskov noted that Zelenskiy had banned contacts with the Russian leadership through a special decree, which Peskov said would have to be revoked if talks were to proceed.

  • Trump Hosts Meta CEO Zuckerberg For Dinner At his Mar-a-Lago Club In Florida

    Trump Hosts Meta CEO Zuckerberg For Dinner At his Mar-a-Lago Club In Florida

    President-elect Donald Trump hosted Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg for dinner at his Mar-a-Lago Club resort in Florida on Wednesday, CBS News reported.

    The meeting brought together the former president, banned from the platform previously, and the founder of Facebook.

    A Meta spokesperson confirmed the dinner to CBS News, saying Zuckerberg was grateful for the invitation and the opportunity to meet with members of Trump’s team about the incoming administration.

    Stephen Miller, appointed deputy chief of staff for Trump’s second term, also said Zuckerberg, like other business leaders, wants to support Trump’s economic policies.

    “Mark, obviously, he has his own interest, and he has his own company, and he has his own agenda,” Miller said in an interview with Fox News.

    “But he’s made clear that he wants to support the national renewal of America under Trump’s leadership,” he added.

  • Details Of Ruto’s Phone Call With Donald Trump Emerge

    Details Of Ruto’s Phone Call With Donald Trump Emerge

    President William Ruto has spoken with U.S. President-elect Donald Trump, discussing several key issues.

    Top of the agenda was the Kenya-led peacekeeping mission in Haiti, which Ruto has championed for months.

    “I briefed President Trump on the Kenya-led Multinational Security Support Mission in Haiti and possible areas of cooperation with the US government on this important conflict-resolution initiative,” said Ruto.

    The two leaders also explored ways to strengthen Kenya-US trade, investment, security, and bilateral relations.

    This call came shortly after Ruto spoke with U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken about the Haiti mission on Thursday evening.

     “Secretary of State Antony J. Blinken spoke with Kenyan President William Ruto on November 7 to thank him for Kenya’s continued leadership of the Multinational Security Support Mission in Haiti as it works with Haitian counterparts to restore peace and security for the Haitian people,” read a statement from Blinken’s office.

    Ruto’s outreach is part of a concerted effort to gain more support for the peacekeeping mission in the Caribbean nation.

    Last month, he urged the international community to honour their commitments to support the Haiti mission, saying there is an urgent need for personnel, logistics, and financial resources to sustain and expand the security mission.

    The talks follow Trump’s election as the 47th president of the United States, raising questions about the future of Kenya-US relations.

    Several trade and security agreements established under outgoing President Joe Biden’s administration now face uncertainty with Trump’s impending leadership.

  • Putin Hails ‘courageous’ Trump After Election Win

    Putin Hails ‘courageous’ Trump After Election Win

    • Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky said he had a “very warm” and “productive conversation” with the president-elect.
    • US Special Counsel Robert Mueller investigated allegations of collusion between Trump’s campaign and Russia in 2016, but said in a report three years later that had found no evidence of conspiracy.

    Vladimir Putin has congratulated Donald Trump on his election victory, calling him a “courageous man”.

    Speaking at an event in the Russian city of Sochi, the Russian president said that Trump was “hounded from all sides” during his first term in the White House.

    Putin also said that Trump’s claim that he can help end the war in Ukraine “deserves attention at least”.

    During his campaign, Donald Trump repeatedly said he could end the war “in a day” but has never elaborated on how that could happen.

    During Putin’s address, which lasted several hours and covered a wide range of topics, he also spoke of the assassination attempt on Donald Trump in July, saying it “made an impression” on him.

    After being shot, Trump punched his fist into the air and mouthed the words “fight, fight, fight”, before being hauled away by Secret Service agents.

    “He behaved, in my opinion, in a very correct way, courageously, like a man,” Putin said.

    Asked if he was ready to have discussions with Donald Trump, Putin replied: “We’re ready, we’re ready.”

    Trump had already said on Thursday that he was prepared to speak with Putin, telling NBC News: “I think we’ll speak”.

    The Kremlin was widely accused of interfering in the 2016 presidential election to boost Donald Trump’s campaign against Hilary Clinton, claims rejected by Moscow.

    US Special Counsel Robert Mueller investigated allegations of collusion between Trump’s campaign and Russia in 2016, but said in a report three years later that had found no evidence of conspiracy.

    Elsewhere on Thursday, leaders gathering for the European Political Community in Budapest discussed Trump’s return to the White House.

    Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky said he had a “very warm” and “productive conversation” with the president-elect.

    “But we have to do everything to ensure that the results of our interaction between Ukraine and America, the whole of Europe and America, are productive and positive,” he added.

    Many in Ukraine and Europe are worried that Trump might slow, if not halt, the flow of American military aid to Kyiv upon taking power in January.

    UK Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer assured Zelensky at the summit that the UK’s support for Ukraine in its war with Russia remains “iron-clad”.

    Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban – who previously said he celebrated Trump’s win by “tapping into the vodka supply happily” – said the US and Europe now face tough talks on trade.

    Orban, who is a close ally of Trump, told a press conference that “the trade issue with the US will come up and it will not be easy”.

    Before winning the election, Trump said he would impose tariffs of 10% on all imports.

    “There was an agreement that Europe should assume greater responsibility for its own peace and security in the future. To put it even more bluntly, we cannot expect Americans to be the only ones to take care of us,” Orban said.

  • Who is Susie Wiles, The “ice maiden” Who Will Be Trump’s Chief Of Staff?

    Who is Susie Wiles, The “ice maiden” Who Will Be Trump’s Chief Of Staff?

    • Wiles got her start working for Republican President Ronald Reagan’s successful 1980 campaign.
    • Wiles is the daughter of Pat Summerall, who was a prominent football player and sportscaster.

    (Reuters)-Republican President-elect Donald Trump named campaign chief Susie Wiles as his White House chief of staff on Thursday.

    It was his first appointment since winning Tuesday’s election against Democratic Vice President Kamala Harris.

    Here are some key facts about Wiles, who is set to run day-to-day operations at the White House:

    Wiles, a longtime Republican strategist, is widely credited – along with co-campaign manager Chris LaCivita – with running the most disciplined and sophisticated of Trump’s three presidential campaigns.

    She did not always succeed at stopping Trump from going off-script, but she kept damaging media leaks to a relative minimum, launched a bold and successful strategy to win over some Latino and Black voters and led the former president to a decisive win.

    Wiles got her start working for Republican President Ronald Reagan’s successful 1980 campaign. For years, she worked with some moderate Republicans who promoted dramatically different policies than those of Trump.

    Early in her career, she worked for Republican US representatives Jack Kemp, an ardent advocate of free trade, and Tillie Fowler, who was widely considered a moderate on several issues, including gun control.

    She also served briefly as the manager of former Utah Governor Jon Huntsman Jr.’s 2012 presidential campaign. Huntsman was arguably the most moderate Republican in the field that year. He sharply criticized Trump after the January 6, 2021, attack on the US Capitol by Trump’s supporters.

    Later in her career, Wiles started working for more combative party figures, some of whom would become Trump allies, including US Senator Rick Scott of Florida.

    Notably, she was a key figure in Ron DeSantis’ successful 2018 Florida gubernatorial campaign. She was dismissed by DeSantis after he took office.

    When Trump and DeSantis squared off in the Republican presidential primary, she presided over an aggressive and successful strategy to portray her old boss as personally off-putting and out of touch on some key policy issues.

    While Wiles is personally friendly, she is relatively little-known and enigmatic for a political strategist of her stature. She rarely gives televised interviews and avoids speaking engagements. Like many successful campaign managers, she can be ruthless when merited.

    Her personality contrasted with that of LaCivita, who was notably garrulous and outspoken.

    During his victory speech, Trump referred to Wiles as the “ice maiden.”

    Wiles is the daughter of Pat Summerall, who was a prominent football player and sportscaster. Summerall played in the National Football League for a decade and later announced 16 Super Bowls. He died in 2013.

  • Lara Trump Net Worth, Career, Husband, Kids and Achievements

    Lara Trump Net Worth, Career, Husband, Kids and Achievements

    Lara Trump, a notable figure in American politics and media, has built a reputation not only through her ties to the Trump family but also through her work in television and entrepreneurial pursuits.

    As the daughter-in-law of former President Donald Trump, she has used her platform to support political causes and expand her business ventures.

    With an estimated net worth of about $10 million, her financial success comes from a blend of roles with the Trump Organization, media projects, and political endorsements.

    This article explores Lara Trump’s net worth, examining her income sources, accomplishments, and how her public presence has influenced her financial standing in today’s economic landscape.

    What is Lara Trump’s Net Worth?

    Lara Trump is an American television producer. Many people know her as the wife of Eric Trump, the third child of President Donald Trump. Her net worth is $10 million. She and Eric married in 2014 and have two children.

    Lara hosts and produces the Real News Update for Trump Productions. Before that, she worked as a producer for Inside Edition.

    Lara was born in Wilmington, North Carolina, in October 1982. She is a Republican and studied at North Carolina State University and the French Culinary Institute.

    From 2012 to 2016, she worked as a story coordinator and producer for Inside Edition.

    During the 2016 U.S. presidential campaign, she led the Trump-Pence Women’s Empowerment Tour. Lara also helped President Trump’s online presence and fundraising efforts.

    In 2020, she became a senior consultant for Brad Parscale’s team during the re-election campaign.

    That same year, reports showed that Lara earned a salary of $180,000 per year from a company connected to Parscale’s work.

    Career and Sources of Income

    Lara Trump has built a diverse career across television, politics, and digital media. Here are some key highlights:

    1. Television Producer: Lara started as a producer and story coordinator for *Inside Edition*, where she gained hands-on experience in media production and reporting.

    2. Trump Productions: She went on to produce and host “Real News Update,” a digital news segment by Trump Productions, providing news from a pro-Trump perspective.

    3. Political Consultant: Lara played an important role in Donald Trump’s presidential campaigns, serving as a senior consultant in 2020 and contributing to campaign strategy and outreach.

    4. Fundraising and Digital Strategy: She helped lead fundraising and digital media efforts for the campaign, using social media and online content to connect with supporters.

    5. Public Speaking: As a public figure, Lara regularly speaks at rallies and events, often representing the Trump family’s political viewpoints.

    6. Television Appearances: In addition to her production work, she has appeared on various news programs and talk shows, discussing political issues and sharing her perspectives.

    Through these roles, Lara Trump has made a name for herself as both a media professional and political strategist, actively shaping the Trump brand’s public image and outreach.

    Personal Life

    Lara Trump is married to Eric Trump, the second son of former President Donald Trump and Ivana Trump. Eric is an executive vice president at the Trump Organization, actively involved in the family business.

    Lara and Eric have three children:

    • Carolina Dorothy Trump: Born in August 2019, Carolina is their first child.
    • Eric Luke Trump: Known as “Luke,” he was born in September 2020 as their second child.
    • Third Child: In 2021, Lara announced her third pregnancy, and the baby was born in 2022.

    They are known for their close-knit family values, frequently emphasizing the importance of family and togetherness.

    Lara Trump Net Worth, Awards and Recognition

    Lara Trump’s wealth largely comes from her television career, involvement in the Trump Organization, and her role in political campaigns and endorsements. Her financial standing may vary based on portfolio changes and different estimates from sources.

    Awards and Recognition

    While Lara Trump hasn’t received many formal awards, she has gained recognition in several ways:

    • Political Influence: As an active figure in conservative politics and the Trump family, Lara earned recognition for her role in the 2016 and 2020 presidential campaigns, where she advocated for and promoted the Trump agenda.
    • Media Presence: Lara frequently appears on conservative media outlets like Fox News, where she’s recognized for her political commentary, adding to her public profile.
    • Social Media Influence: She has a strong social media following, where she connects with supporters and shares her views on political and social issues.
    • Family Legacy: As a Trump family member, Lara is closely tied to a prominent political and business legacy, which enhances her recognition in conservative circles.

  • Inside Trump’s Plan For Mass Deportations

    Inside Trump’s Plan For Mass Deportations

    (Reuters)- Donald Trump is expected to mobilise agencies across the US government to help him deport record numbers of immigrants, building on efforts in his first term to tap all available resources and pressure so-called “sanctuary” jurisdictions to cooperate, according to six former Trump officials and allies.

    Trump claimed victory in the 2024 presidential contest, telling supporters America had given him an “unprecedented and powerful mandate”.

    Trump backers – including some who could enter his second administration – anticipate the Republican president-elect will call on everyone from the US military to diplomats overseas to turn his campaign promise of mass deportations into a reality. The effort would include cooperation with Republican-led states and use federal funding as leverage against resistant jurisdictions.

    Trump recaptured the White House vowing a vast immigration crackdown. The centerpiece of his reelection bid was a promise to deport record numbers of immigrants, an operation Trump’s running mate JD Vance estimated could remove 1 million people per year.

    Immigrant advocates warn that Trump’s deportation effort would be costly, divisive and inhumane, leading to family separations and devastating communities.

    Trump struggled to ramp up deportations during his 2017-2021 presidency. When counting both immigration removals and faster “returns” to Mexico by U.S. border officials, Biden deported more immigrants in fiscal year 2023 than any Trump year, according to government data.

    But a deportation operation targeting millions would require many more officers, detention beds and immigration court judges. American Immigration Council, an immigrant advocacy group, estimated the cost of deporting 13 million immigrants in the US illegally as $968 billion over a little more than a decade.

    Tom Homan, a former acting director of U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) expected to join the new administration, said in a late October interview that the scale of the deportations would hinge on potential officers and detention space.

    “It all depends on what the budget is,” he said.

    While the incoming Trump administration could benefit from experience gained during his first term, it could again encounter resistance from ideologically opposed government employees, including officers that screen migrants for asylum.

    The American Civil Liberties Union and immigrant advocacy groups have been preparing for court battles if Trump again tests the bounds of his legal authority.

    Lee Gelernt, an ACLU attorney who led the fight against Trump’s contentious family separation policy, said more than 15 lawyers focused on immigration with the organization’s national office spent the year readying for the possibility of a Trump return.

    “We definitely need to be coordinated and have more resources, because I think they will come in much more prepared,” Gelernt said.

    The State Department in particular could be one place where Trump acts more aggressively than during his first term, several Trump backers said.

    A key factor will be whether other countries will accept their citizens, an issue Trump faced with limited success during his first term. The Trump administration also struggled at times to convince other nations in the region – including Mexico – to take steps to stop migrants from moving toward the U.S.-Mexico border.

    Ken Cuccinelli, former acting deputy secretary of the U.S. Department of Homeland Security under Trump, said the State Department was a “roadblock” for immigration enforcement and that aggressive appointees will be key.

    Christopher Landau, a former U.S. ambassador to Mexico from 2019-2021, recently said he was frustrated with the reluctance of some U.S. diplomats to tackle immigration enforcement.

    “Nobody really thought that was their problem,” Landau said in an October panel discussion by the Center for Immigration Studies, which favors restricting immigration.

    About half of ICE’s 21,000 employees are part of its Homeland Security Investigations unit, which focuses on transnational crime such as drug smuggling and child exploitation rather than immigration enforcement. Several Trump allies said the unit would need to spend more time on immigration.

    HSI has distanced itself from ICE’s immigration work in recent years, saying fear of deportation made it harder for its investigators to build trust in immigrant communities.

    Stephen Miller, the architect of Trump’s first-term immigration agenda, said in 2023 that National Guard troops from cooperative states could potentially be deployed to resistant states to assist with deportations, which would likely trigger legal battles.

    Trump plans to use a 1798 wartime statute known as the Alien Enemies Act to rapidly deport alleged gang members, an action that would almost certainly be challenged in court.

    The law has been used three times, according to the left-leaning Brennan Center for Justice: the War of 1812, World War One, and World War Two, when it was employed to justify internment camps for people of Japanese, German and Italian descent.

    The Brennan Center and others have called on Congress to repeal the law.

    “Many fear that a second Trump administration would seek to use this law to justify indefinite detention and remove people from the country swiftly and without judicial review,” Naureen Shah, the ACLU’s deputy director of government affairs, wrote in late October.

    George Fishman, a former DHS official under Trump, said the Trump administration would need to prove the immigrants were sent by a foreign government.

    “I worry a little about overpromising,” Fishman said.

  • What Does Trump’s Win Mean For Africa?

    What Does Trump’s Win Mean For Africa?

    (BBC)- As it became clear that Donald Trump had landed the US presidency for the second time, leaders from across Africa began tweeting their congratulations.

    “Zimbabwe stands ready to work with you”, wrote Zimbabwean President Emmerson Mnangagwa, eyeing a diplomatic reset, while Nigeria’s Bola Tinubu expressed hope that Trump’s second term would bring “reciprocal economic and development partnerships between Africa and the United States”.

    But will Trump 2.0 be good for the continent? During his first stint in the White House critics accused him of dismissing Africa, having cut some funding, curbed immigration and reportedly referred to some of its nations as “shithole countries”.

    However, he did also introduce schemes to increase investment in Africa – schemes that remain operational three years after he left office.

    But how might he approach Africa in this new climate?

    Joe Biden’s outgoing administration “tried really hard to create an impression that Africa was a valued and important partner”, W Gyude Moore, a fellow at the Center for Global Development and former Liberian minister, tells the BBC.

    Biden struggled to match this enthusiasm with substantial deals and partnerships, Mr Moore says, but that does not mean his Africa strategy was fruitless.

    For instance, the US was praised for investing in the Lobito Corridor – a rail line stretching through Angola, the Democratic Republic of Congo and Zambia that will be used to transport critical raw materials.

    In 2023, the US said it had invested more than $22bn since Biden came to power.

    But there are concerns Trump might roll back on this investment and trade. The soon-to-be president has more of a protectionist, insular outlook than Biden – one of the slogans for his first term was “America First”.

    The African Growth and Opportunity Act (Agoa), which has enabled eligible African countries to export some of their produce to the US without paying taxes since 2000, is a key source of concern.

    During his previous administration, Trump said the scheme would not be renewed when it expires in 2025.

    And during his 2024 campaign he pledged to implement a universal 10% income tariff on all foreign-made goods. This would make imported goods more expensive, and so African exporters would be likely to sell less of their produce in the large US market.

    Numerous commentators in South Africa – one of the largest exporters under the Agoa agreement – have predicted that cutting Agoa could have a significant impact on the economy.

    However, US think-tank the Brookings Institution predicts that South Africa’s GDP would shrink by “just 0.06%”. This is partly because many of the goods South Africa exports to the US – such as minerals and metal – do not actually benefit from Agoa, it said.

    Although Trump was not keen on Agoa, he recognised that if the US was going to counter China’s growing economic influence in Africa, it needed to maintain some level of partnership.

    In 2018 the Trump administration unveiled Prosper Africa – an initiative that assists US companies wanting to invest in Africa – and the Development Finance Corporation (DFC), which funds development projects in Africa and around the world. Biden kept both running after he took over and the DFC says it has so far invested more than $10bn (£8bn) in Africa.

    Given that China is still a major force in Africa and that Trump introduced these policies himself, he is likely to think twice before slashing them.

    Aid

    Africa gets most of its aid from the US, which said it had donated almost $3.7bn over this financial year.

    But Trump’s last administration repeatedly made proposals to slash foreign aid worldwide, according to reports. Congress – where foreign aid had bipartisan support – rejected these cuts.

    Had the cuts been implemented, “traditional US policies with respect to health, democracy promotion, and security assistance in Africa would have been eviscerated,” said the Council on Foreign Relations, a Washington think-tank.

    There may be less pushback to aid cuts if the Republicans win a significant majority in Congress following Tuesday’s elections, however. The party has already secured the Senate – Congress’ upper chamber – and currently has a majority in the lower chamber – the House of Representatives.

    There are also worries Trump might shut Pepfar, a long-running US initiative that has poured huge sums into fighting HIV in Africa.

    Last year, Republican lawmakers mounted significant opposition to Pepfar, alleging that the programme was promoting abortion services. It was granted a short-term extension until March next year, but Trump – known for being anti-abortion – may shut the door on this reprieve.

    Immigration

    Trump’s views on illegal immigration are clear – during his 2024 campaign he promised to deport one million people who do not have legal permission to be in the United States.

    This concerns Africa as in 2022, around 13,000 African migrants were recorded at the US-Mexico border, according to US Customs and Border protection data. By 2023, this figure had quadrupled to 58,000. Some of these hopefuls speak of fleeing war, persecution and poverty.

    This would not be his first dramatic anti-immigration policy. In his first term, Trump introduced measures that curbed immigration from several African countries, including Nigeria, Eritrea, Sudan and Tanzania.

    Kenyan newsite Taifo Leo reported that migrants from the East African country, who number about 160,000, are worried that they will face discrimination with Trump as president.

    Security and conflict

    While Trump has been away from the presidency, Russia has stepped up its presence in Africa.

    One of the main ways it has done this is through providing troops and arms to countries hit by jihadist militants, such as Mali, Niger and Burkina Faso.

    Russia’s foothold has alarmed the US – the two are historic rivals.

    Will Trump offer support to African countries in an attempt to push Russia out?

    “Even though the national security architecture in the United States perceives Russia as a threat, Trump personally has not acted as if he perceives Russia as a threat,” Mr Moore tells the BBC.

    There is speculation that Trump has a closer relationship with Russian President Vladimir Putin than he lets on.

    However, Trump has in the past stepped in to help Nigeria fight Boko Haram, a group of Islamist militants which has plagued the West African country for 15 years.

    “During [former President Barack] Obama’s tenure, Nigerian-Americans advocated tirelessly for him, yet he declined Nigeria’s requests for arms. When our communities in northern Nigeria were under attack by Boko Haram, it was Trump who ultimately approved the purchase of Tucano jets, allowing us to strengthen our defences,” former lawmaker Ehiozuwa Johnson Agbonayinmma told Nigerian news outlet the Vanguard.

    There is also the issue of Sudan’s civil war, which has been rumbling on for 18 months and has killed tens of thousands of people.

    “Trump is very transactional,” Mr Moore said. “I’m really doubtful that the Trump administration is going to care more about what’s happening in Sudan than, say, the Biden administration did.”

    But ultimately, there is no way to be totally sure what Trump will set his sights on once he is in office.

    As Mr Moore says: “Trump is very unorthodox in how he does everything. So one has to be pretty open to new things, not necessarily good things, but new things happening.”

  • Could Donald Trump Run Again In 2028?

    Could Donald Trump Run Again In 2028?

    (Sky News)- Donald Trump will be one of only two presidents to serve two non-consecutive terms after his US election win this week, second only to Grover Cleveland, who did it in the 1800s.

    It’s already a historic victory – but Mr Trump has made comments in the past hinting at a third term in office.

    An amendment in the Constitution, which is the supreme law of the United States, prohibits anyone from serving for more than two terms.

    But what has the incoming president said, how likely is he to pursue a third term in 2028 – and is it even possible?

    Has a third term been done before?

    Franklin Roosevelt served as US president four times from 1933 to 1945, because there was nothing in the original US Constitution which limited how many terms a president could serve.

    But later the 22nd Amendment limited presidents to two four-year terms, irrespective of whether they were served consecutively or not.

    Franklin Roosevelt during his third term as president in 1942. Pic: AP

    Congress passed the 22nd Amendment two years after Roosevelt’s death and it took effect from the 1952 election, which Republican Dwight D. Eisenhower won over Democrat Adlai Stevenson.

    No one has been able to serve more than two terms since.

    What has Trump said?

    It was in the lead-up to the 2020 election, which Mr Trump lost to Joe Biden, that he first started hinting at seeking a third term.

    At a rally in August 2020, he told supporters he would win the next election and then possibly “go for another four years” because “they spied on my campaign,” an apparent nod to his unsubstantiated claims that Barack Obama had his “wires tapped” before he was elected in 2016.

    According to Forbes, Mr Trump told another rally that if he were to win the 2020 election, he would “negotiate” a third term, adding he was “probably entitled to another four [years] after that” based on “the way we were treated”.

    But in an interview last year with Sky News’ US partner NBC News, Mr Trump was asked if there was any scenario in which he would seek a third term should he win the presidency next year, to which he responded: “No.”

    And in April 2024 he told Time magazine he “wouldn’t be in favour” of an extended term – but two vague comments he made in speeches this year have stoked rumours he could try it.

    One was during a National Rifle Association speech, when he asked supporters if he would be considered “three-term or two-term” – though this appears to be in reference to his unsubstantiated claims that he should have won the 2020 election but that it was rigged against him.

    Another came in July, when he told attendees at a conservative Christian event they wouldn’t “have to vote anymore” if he won the 2024 election, according to CBS News.

    After repeatedly telling them to vote “just this time”, he added: “In four years, you don’t have to vote again. We’ll have it fixed so good, you’re not going to have to vote.”

    Why Trump is unlikely to try it

    John Fortier, senior research fellow at the American Enterprise Institute, says the comments from the Christian event have been taken out of context, and that Mr Trump was simply trying to “encourage the sometimes reluctant Christian community to vote in this election”.

    “Trump in office would be able to address their concerns so much so that it would not matter if they chose to vote in future elections,” he explains.

    “It was not an indication that Trump would cancel future elections or try to serve beyond his second term.”

    Offering reasons why Mr Trump would likely not pursue an extra term, Mr Fortier points out that the president-elect has previously indicated he would not have run for office again in 2028 had he lost this election, adding he “expressed a kind of wistfulness about his final campaign for office”.

    He also says Mr Trump’s age is a factor.

    The 78-year-old, who is already the oldest person to be elected president, will be 82 by the end of his second term.

    “And president Biden’s withdrawal is evidence that the American people are attuned to age-related decline and will look sceptically on octogenarian candidates for president,” Mr Fortier adds.

    Could Trump do it if he wanted to?

    It would be “virtually impossible”, according to retired Commonwealth Court judge Joseph Cosgrove.

    He would have to amend the Constitution to do it, which Mr Cosgrove says is an “arduous task”.

    “The usual method requires two-thirds of both the House and Senate to propose an amendment, which would then require three-fourths of the states to approve,” he explains.

    “Given the extremely close political divisions in the United States, neither of these events is foreseeable. Even if the Republicans control both the House and Senate, their majority will be so slim that no revision of the 22nd Amendment could ever occur in this climate.”

    Mr Fortier, who agreed with Mr Cosgrove’s points, says some legal scholars have suggested there are loopholes that could be exploited to get around the two-term limit.

    “They argue that the 22nd Amendment prohibits someone from running for a third term [but] not from serving a third term,” he says.

    “And by an ingenious trick, a term-limited president could be elected to the vice presidency or placed in the line of succession and then ascend to the presidency when those ahead of him in the line of succession resign.”

    He adds that this theory, however, ignores a number of other amendments and other constitutional laws which indicate that a vice president or someone else in the line of succession “must meet the qualifications to become president”.

    And Mr Trump, or someone else who has already served two terms as president, would not meet that criteria thanks to the 22nd Amendment.

  • Where The Kamala Harris Campaign Went Wrong

    Where The Kamala Harris Campaign Went Wrong

    (CNN)- It was supposed to be everything short of a free ad – a panel of women not containing their excitement to welcome Kamala Harris, ready to introduce her to their committed daytime audience of exactly the type of women the vice president’s campaign always hoped were going to be critical to her base.

    It was a moment that encapsulated one of the biggest challenges facing her campaign – which, in the end, proved insurmountable.

    “What, if anything, would you have done something differently than President Biden during the past four years?” co-host of ABC’s “The View” Sunny Hostin asked Harris, looking to give her a set for her to spike over the net.

    “There is not a thing that comes to mind,” she said.

    Even Harris realized she had a problem, trying to adjust a moment later by saying she would put a Republican in her Cabinet.

    Aides didn’t wait until Harris was off the set to start trying to clean it up. A Democrat who had spoken with her told CNN at the time that she didn’t want to name her differences with President Joe Biden – including a higher capital gains tax rate, a bigger child tax credit and a tougher border policy – because she thought it would look disloyal to the man who had picked her as his running mate and then stepped aside for her.

    The thud fell in a campaign already struggling with a listless October, which had replaced the late summer exuberance and a September debate that nearly everyone political observer other than Donald Trump acknowledged she crushed.

    As aides new to the Harris orbit exerted control, she struggled with preparation. She grew hesitant, losing some of the confidence and swagger that had defined the early weeks of her reintroduction to the country. Aides who had successfully pushed her out of her comfort zone earlier in the year felt like they were running into the kind of walls she used to put up.

    CNN spoke with over a dozen senior Harriscampaign aides both in the Wilmington, Delaware, campaign headquarters and on the ground in the states, as well as multiple volunteers and local elected officials, over the course of the final weeks of the race.

    Soft pedal change

    A country crying out for change got a candidate who, at a crucial moment as more voters were tuning in, decided to soft-pedal the change she knew she represented.

    In the scope of a Democratic ticket that pulled off the biggest turnaround in approval ratings and the fastest consolidation around a new candidate in the history of modern presidential politics, this may have seemed like a minor moment. But it reflected deeper problems: some, like with the staff around her, that she might have been able to adjust; and one, with Biden, that she could never shake, with internal polls showing overwhelming majorities of voters thought the country was on the wrong track.

    By the time Harris got a clearer, sharper contrast answer out on the Biden question, the situation had congealed in ways she never got past – both among voters wavering in the center who wanted to hear her rebuff the president on his handling of the economy and voters on the left who wanted to hear her more forcefully disavow Biden’s support for Israel.

    But perhaps the bigger problem with Biden, top Democrats fumed in the aftermath of that fateful debate in June and then again as they watched the results turn red on Tuesday, is that he should have never been anywhere near the 2024 race.

    If he had stepped aside after the midterms, as some aides urged him to, the Democratic Party process could have played out in a primary campaign. Candidates’ kinks could have been worked out – or not.

    Almost certainly whoever emerged as the nominee would have gone into the final weeks without so many Americans complaining they didn’t know enough, as they said about Harris. Biden could have taken on a role as steward and elder statesman, rather than a guy the Harriscampaign never knew quite what do with.

    If the election had been two weeks ago, senior aides to Harris were admitting in recent days, the vice president probably would have lost. But they went into Tuesday feeling like she had gotten herself to a likely squeaker victory.

    One-on-one conversations volunteers were having as they knocked on doors seemed to be clicking. For the first time in his nine years dominating American politics,

    Trump’s character seemed to be breaking through as an actual weight on people who wanted to vote for him.

    Leading Democrats smiled just thinking about what it would mean to beat Trump with the first female president — a woman of color, a child of two immigrants, a prosecutor, and a candidate who talked about joy and offered up her smile against the scowl that had become his most common expression. Her candidacy sparked in them the unfamiliar feeling of hope.

    That sentiment evaporated by 11 pm on Tuesday. But for many anxious Democrats, this is just the beginning. Going into Election Day, many top Democratic operatives across the campaign and in the states told CNN different versions of the same thought: If this didn’t work – with the massive campaign they’d put together, with millions of doors knocked by volunteers who flooded into battleground states, with GOP former Rep Liz Cheney and former President Bill Clinton united under the same tent stumping hard for her, with celebrities from Bad Bunny and Arnold Schwarzenegger throwing their cultural weight behind her – what will?

    “I can’t imagine, I can’t even get my mind around what it would be like if Donald Trump won, because he is telling us such dark and sinister things that he’s going to do, and I believe him,” Sen Cory Booker told CNN after a campaignstop late Monday afternoon in Bucks County, Pennsylvania – one of the key swing districts in the crucial battleground state.

    The New Jersey Democrat said he had already warned his own staff about not giving up.

    “We need to get up the next morning and forge forward,” Booker said. “I told them how much I don’t like hearing people say, ‘Oh, if so-and-so wins, I’m going to go to Canada. That’s just not our history. We’ve seen really bad outcomes out of bad historical events in our country, and we’re here because of the resiliency, the toughness, the strength of our country — and people even in the worst of times dug in and tried to do the best for our country.”

    Internal fights

    Harris’ team would have gladly taken more time to introduce the vice president to the country, or to put together an operation, which, after the ticket switch in July, woke up every morning at campaign headquarters and in the states feeling behind on planning.But by the time the campaign pulled off its multi-state simultaneous rally across battleground states Monday evening – which ended with Lady Gaga singing her song “The Edge of Glory” and adding in, “I’m an American woman on the edge” on the steps of the Philadelphia Museum of Art – a nervous feeling of maybe having made a movement happen was spreading among Harris aides and top supporters.

    Those aides were a hodgepodge. Biden hadn’t just struggled as a candidate, but had failed to attract some top talent to his campaign because a generation of up-and-coming Democrats could never get excited about him. Harris tried to graft some of her own team onto them, even overlooking tensions between them from the early days of the Biden administration with campaign chair Jen O’Malley Dillon and keeping her in charge.

    But some of those who had been in Wilmington for a year before Harris became the candidate bucked at their new bosses. Alumni of Barack Obama – most prominently his 2008, campaignmanager David Plouffe, but also many others who moved into state operations – tried to flex a sometimes dated but often more incisive sense of how to win voters.

    Along the way, multiple aides told CNN how much they were grinding on one another. But the mission to beat Trump and the short timeline to try to get there helped paper over a lot of the infighting that might have exploded in a longer campaign. It instead just raged behind the scenes as aides like Stephanie Cutter moved to exert dominance over defining how and what Harris said what she said.

    And those tensions manifested from almost the start of this short campaign, in the internal wrangling over who Harris should pick as her running mate. The case for Pennsylvania Gov. Josh Shapiro was strong, and not just because Harris’ brother-in-law Tony West was telling her they looked like the future of the Democratic Party together, and that the popular governor would make sure she won Pennsylvania.

    Right-wing media types weren’t the only ones who noticed how much Shapiro had made himself into an Obama clone, as much a Jewish guy from the Philadelphia suburbs could be: The Obama alumni suddenly rushing onto her campaign were pushing for Shapiro.

    Harris liked Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz, though. She liked his line about Republicans being weird. She liked the way he came off as easy and unassuming. She liked the way they’d gotten along in their interview, including his very open stress that he would mess up in a debate with Trump’s running mate, Ohio Sen. JD Vance. And she liked the way Walz had been so deferential to however she would define the job for him.

    In the end, Harris made a decision that simultaneously reflected her newfound confidence and her long-standing insecurity, solid with trusting her own instincts, fine with going against her family and against the Obama orbit, but also with no interest in having anyone who would possibly outshine her.

  • What Elon Musk Could Gain From A Trump Presidency

    What Elon Musk Could Gain From A Trump Presidency

    Donald Trump’s return to the White House might also prove to be a win for one of his most visible supporters: Elon Musk.

    The world’s richest man spent election night in Florida with Trump at his Mar-a-Lago resort as returns came in.

    “The people of America gave Donald Trump a crystal-clear mandate for change tonight,” Musk wrote on the social media platform X as Trump’s victory began to appear all but certain.

    At his victory speech at the Palm Beach Convention Center, Trump spent several minutes praising Musk and recounting the successful landing of a rocket manufactured by one of Musk’s companies, SpaceX.

    Musk threw his support behind the Republican almost immediately after the assassination attempt on Trump in Butler, Pennsylvania in July.

    As one of the president-elect’s most important backers, the tech billionaire donated more than Ksh15.3 billion to fund a Super PAC aimed at re-electing Trump.

    He also spent the last weeks before election day running a get-out-the-vote effort in the battleground states, which included a daily giveaway of Ksh129 million to voters in those states. The giveaway became the subject of a legal challenge, though a judge later ruled they could go ahead.

    After throwing his name, money, and platform behind Trump, Musk has plenty to gain from Trump’s re-election.

    The president-elect has said that in a second term, he would invite Musk into his administration to eliminate government waste.

    Musk has referred to the potential effort as the “Department of Government Efficiency,” or DOGE, the name of a meme and cryptocurrency that he has popularized.

    Space X

    The businessman could also benefit from Trump’s presidency through his ownership of SpaceX, which already dominates the business of sending government satellites to space.

    With a close ally in the White House, Musk could seek to further capitalise on those government ties.

    Musk has criticised rivals including Boeing for the structure of their government contracts, which he says disincentive to finishing projects on budget and on time.

    SpaceX has also moved into building spy satellites just as the Pentagon and American spy agencies appear poised to invest billions of dollars into them.

    Musk’s electric vehicle maker Tesla could meanwhile reap gains from an administration that Trump has said would be defined by “the lowest regulatory burden.”

    Just last month, the US agency in charge of regulating road safety revealed it was probing Tesla’s self-driving software systems.

    Musk has also come under fire for allegedly seeking to block Tesla workers from unionising. The United Auto Workers filed unfair labour practice charges against both Trump and Musk after the two talked about Musk supposedly firing striking workers during a conversation on X.

    Trump has also pledged to lower taxes on corporations and the wealthy.

    That’s another promise Musk is likely hoping he will keep.

  • Donald Trump Elected 47th President Of US

    Donald Trump Elected 47th President Of US

    Republican candidate Donald Trump surpassed 270 Electoral College votes needed to win the 2024 US presidential election, The Associated Press said on Wednesday.

    Trump defeated his Democratic rival Vice President Kamala Harris in Tuesday’s race, winning 277 Electoral College votes and securing his spot as the nation’s 47th president.

    He won key swing states, including North Carolina, Georgia, Pennsylvania, and Wisconsin, as well as Indiana, Kentucky, West Virginia, Florida, Tennessee, South Carolina, Oklahoma, Mississippi, Alabama, Arkansas, North Dakota, South Dakota, Wyoming, Nebraska, Louisiana, Ohio, Texas, Missouri, Utah, Montana, Kansas, Iowa, and Idaho.

    Trump has thanked Americans “for the extraordinary honor of being elected your 47th president and your 45th president,” referring to his earlier term in office, 2017-2021, before Joe Biden won four years as the 46th US president.

    “This is a magnificent victory for the American people that will allow us to make America great again,” he said.

    The win would make Trump only the second US president to serve non-consecutive terms, following Grover Cleveland, who served two separate terms in the late 1800s, with President Benjamin Harrison in between.

  • Trump Claims Victory After Fox News Projects He Has Won US Presidency

    Trump Claims Victory After Fox News Projects He Has Won US Presidency

    (Reuters) – Republican Donald Trump claimed victory in the 2024 presidential contest after Fox News projected that he had defeated Democrat Kamala Harris, which would cap a stunning political comeback four years after he left the White House.

    “America has given us an unprecedented and powerful mandate,” he said early on Wednesday to a roaring crowd of supporters at the Palm Beach County Convention Center.

    Other news outlets had yet to call the race for Trump, but he appeared on the verge of winning after capturing the battleground states of Pennsylvania, North Carolina and Georgia and holding leads in the other four, according to Edison Research.

    Harris did not speak to her supporters, who had gathered at her alma mater Howard University. Her campaign co-chair, Cedric Richmond, briefly addressed the crowd after midnight, saying Harris would speak publicly on Wednesday.

    “We still have votes to count,” he said.

    The former president was showing strength across broad swaths of the country, improving on his 2020 performance everywhere from rural areas to urban centers.

    Republicans won a U.S. Senate majority after flipping Democratic seats in West Virginia and Ohio. Neither party appeared to have an edge in the fight for control of the House of Representatives where Republicans currently hold a narrow majority.

    Trump went into Election Day with a 50-50 chance of reclaiming the White House, a remarkable turnaround from Jan. 6, 2021, when many pundits pronounced his political career to be over. That day, a mob of his supporters stormed Congress in a violent attempt to overturn the results of the 2020 election.

    Trump picked up more support from Hispanics, traditionally Democratic voters, and among lower-income households that have keenly felt the sting of price rises since the last presidential election in 2020, according to exit polls from Edison.

    Trump won 45% of Hispanic voters nationwide, trailing Harris with 53% but up 13 percentage points from 2020.

    About 31% of voters said the economy was their top issue, and they voted for Trump by a 79%-to-20% margin, according to exit polls. Some 45% of voters across the country said their family’s financial situation was worse off today than four years ago, and they favored Trump 80% to 17%.

    Global investors were increasingly pricing in a Trump win late on Tuesday. U.S. stock futures and the dollar pushed higher, while Treasury yields climbed and bitcoin rose – all flagged by analysts and investors as trades that favor a Trump victory.

    At Howard University, where a large watch party was being held for Harris, supporters were leaving in droves, anticipating that the vice president would not address the crowd on Tuesday night.

    Cedric Richmond, a co-chair of the Harris campaign, briefly addressed the crowd and said Harris would not speak. “We still have votes to count,” he said. “We still have states that haven’t been called yet.”

    TRUMP OUTPERFORMS 2020

    Trump was earning a bigger share of the vote than he did four years ago in nearly every corner of the country.

    By 12:30 a.m. ET, officials had nearly completed their count of ballots in more than 1,600 counties – about half the country – and Trump’s share was up about 2 percentage points compared to 2020, reflecting a broad if not especially deep shift in Americans’ support for the president they ousted four years ago.

    He improved his numbers in suburban counties, rural regions and even some large cities that are historically bastions of Democratic support; in high-income counties and low-income ones; and in places where unemployment was comparatively high and in places where it is now at record lows.

    Harris had banked on big margins among urban and suburban voters, but her support in those places was running well behind President Joe Biden’s in the 2020 election.

    Nearly three-quarters of voters said American democracy is under threat, according to the exit polls, underscoring the depth of polarization in a nation where divisions have only grown starker during a fiercely competitive race.
    Trump employed increasingly apocalyptic rhetoric while stoking unfounded fears that the election system cannot be trusted. Harris warned that a second Trump term would threaten the underpinnings of American democracy.

    Hours before polls closed, Trump claimed on his Truth Social site without evidence that there was “a lot of talk about massive CHEATING” in Philadelphia, echoing his false claims in 2020 that fraud had occurred in large, Democratic-dominated cities. In a subsequent post, he also asserted there was fraud in Detroit.

    “I don’t respond to nonsense,” Detroit City Clerk Janice Winfrey told Reuters.

    A Philadelphia city commissioner, Seth Bluestein, replied on X, “There is absolutely no truth to this allegation.”

    DIZZYING CAMPAIGN

    Trump voted earlier near his home in Palm Beach, Florida.

    “If I lose an election, if it’s a fair election, I’m gonna be the first one to acknowledge it,” Trump told reporters.

    Tesla CEO Elon Musk, a prominent Trump backer, watched the results at Mar-a-Lago with Trump.

    Millions of Americans waited in orderly lines to cast ballots, with only sporadic disruptions reported across a handful of states, including several non-credible bomb threats that the FBI said appeared to originate from Russian email domains.

    Tuesday’s vote capped a dizzying race churned by unprecedented events, including two assassination attempts against Trump, Biden’s surprise withdrawal and Harris’ rapid rise.

    No matter who wins, history will be made.

    Harris, 60, the first female vice president, would become the first woman, Black woman and South Asian American to win the presidency. Trump, 78, the only president to be impeached twice and the first former president to be criminally convicted, would also become the first president to win non-consecutive terms in more than a century.

  • When Will The US Election Results Be Announced?

    When Will The US Election Results Be Announced?

    (Reuters) – The U.S. presidential election will take place on Nov. 5, but the winner of the razor-thin race between Democrat Kamala Harris and Republican Donald Trump may not be known for days after the polls close.

    As ballots are counted, one candidate may appear to be leading based on early returns, only for a rival to close the gap as more votes are tallied.

    In 2020, some states experienced a “red mirage,” in which Trump appeared to be leading on election night, before a “blue shift” saw Democrat Joe Biden overtake him, a phenomenon Trump used to amplify his false claims that the election was stolen.

    Nothing untoward had occurred. Democrats tend to live in more populous urban areas, where counting votes takes longer. Democrats also have embraced mail voting more readily than Republicans after Trump’s false claims that mail ballots are untrustworthy, and those ballots take longer to count than Election Day votes. Trump has both encouraged and criticized early and mail-in voting in 2024.

    Democrats are outpacing Republicans in mail ballots once again this year, according to an early vote tracker maintained by the University of Florida’s Election Lab, though Republicans have narrowed the gap.

    There are seven battleground states likely to decide the election, each with its own rules for handling and counting ballots. Here’s what to expect on Election Day and beyond:

    ARIZONA

    Voting by mail is extremely popular in Arizona; nearly 90% of voters cast their ballots early, most by mail, in 2020. Election officials in Arizona can begin processing and tabulating mail ballots upon receipt, but results cannot be released until one hour after polls close.

    Any mail ballots dropped off on Election Day itself cannot be processed until the polls have closed. That is often a sizable number – in 2022, those “late early” votes comprised one-fifth of all ballots in Maricopa County, the state’s largest – and can take days to count.

    The initial results on election night should be mostly early votes, which could favor Harris, before the numbers shift toward Trump as Election Day votes are tallied.

    GEORGIA

    Early in-person voting is popular in Georgia, where officials expect 65% to 70% of ballots to be cast at early poll locations. Absentee or mail ballots, which may comprise around 5% of the vote, can be processed – which includes steps such as verifying signatures – starting two weeks before the election, though workers must wait until Election Day to begin counting them.

    All early votes – in-person and mail – must be counted and reported by 8 p.m. ET (0000 GMT) on election night, according to state law, which could create a “blue mirage” in Harris’ favor at first. Officials are aiming to have all votes, including those from Election Day, tallied by midnight.

    Ballots from overseas and military voters will be accepted up to three days after the election if postmarked by Nov. 5. There were more than 21,000 such ballots requested, so an extremely close election might not be resolved until those votes are tabulated.

    MICHIGAN

    Since the 2020 election, Michigan has instituted early in-person voting for the first time and begun permitting jurisdictions with more than 5,000 people to begin processing and tabulating mail ballots eight days before Election Day. Smaller jurisdictions can do so the day before Nov. 5.

    Officials hope those changes will allow the state to report results more quickly than in 2020, when mail ballots could not be processed in advance. That created a “red mirage” on election night, when the state’s early counts of Election Day votes favored Trump. Biden eventually surpassed Trump on the strength of mail ballots, which took longer to tally. Trump falsely claimed he was the victim of fraud.

    NEVADA

    Nevada’s slow vote counting in 2020 – news outlets did not call the state for Biden until five days after Election Day – launched countless memes, but officials say changes since then should speed up the process.

    Most notably, counties were permitted to begin processing and counting mail ballots on Oct. 21. In addition, workers can start tabulating early in-person votes at 8 a.m. PT (1500 GMT) on Election Day, rather than waiting until polls close.

    But Nevada still might not get called right away. Mail voting has grown popular in the state, and it is the only battleground that accepts late-arriving mail ballots. That could also create a “blue shift” as more votes are counted.

    Any ballot postmarked by Nov. 5 will still be counted if it arrives within four days. Those late ballots historically favor Democrats, so a shift toward Harris could occur as votes are counted after Election Day.

    NORTH CAROLINA

    Election officials start processing and scanning mail ballots ahead of Election Day. After polls close, the first reported results will likely be mostly mail ballots as well as early in-person votes. Election Day votes will be counted and reported throughout the evening, with full results expected by midnight.

    Harris may appear to lead early thanks to mail ballots, while Trump could close the gap as Election Day votes are counted.

    If the election is as close as polls suggest, the outcome in North Carolina may remain unclear for a week or more. Absentee ballots that arrive on Nov. 5, as well as ballots from overseas and military voters, are tallied during the 10-day canvass period that follows Election Day. In 2020, media outlets did not call North Carolina for Trump until Nov. 13, 10 days after the election.

    PENNSYLVANIA

    Perhaps the most important battleground, Pennsylvania did not have a clear winner in 2020 for four days after Election Day, as officials sifted through a huge backlog of mail ballots. The state is among only a handful that do not permit election workers to process or tabulate mail ballots until 7 a.m. ET on Election Day, which means it will likely again take days before the outcome is known.

    With more Democrats than Republicans voting by mail, the early results – based on in-person Election Day votes – will probably show Trump ahead, but his lead will likely shrink as more mail ballots are counted.

    That pattern in 2020 prompted Trump to falsely claim fraud. This year, a new law requires most counties to announce at midnight on election night how many mail ballots remain to be counted in an effort to forestall conspiracy theories.

    WISCONSIN

    Like Pennsylvania, Wisconsin is among the few states that do not allow election officials to process or count mail ballots until the morning of the election, which means there can be a delay in reporting the results of those early votes.

    In addition, many of the state’s largest cities transport mail ballots to a centralized location for processing and tabulating. That can lead to significant batches of votes getting reported all at once in the early morning after polls close.

    In 2020, Trump and his allies falsely claimed fraud after Milwaukee, the state’s largest city, reported nearly 170,000 absentee ballots around 3:30 a.m. CT (0830 GMT), giving Biden a huge spike that moved him into the lead for the first time. But that increase was expected due to the way the city processes those ballots and the fact that Democrats were more likely to vote by mail. A similar pattern is probable in 2024.

  • How Trump Is Preparing The Ground To Challenge The US Election

    How Trump Is Preparing The Ground To Challenge The US Election

    (FRANCE 24)-History, as the saying goes, doesn’t repeat itself, but it does often rhyme. Four years after refusing to concede to Joe Biden with unproven claims of electoral fraud that culminated in the January 6 assault on the Capitol, former president Donald Trump is once again casting doubt on the US presidential election.

    Now in a close race against Vice President Kamala Harris, Trump and his allies have prepared for years to challenge the outcome if he loses, with strategies aimed at questioning election integrity on multiple fronts.

    From the outset of his campaign, Trump has focused heavily on casting doubt on the election process. During the June presidential debate, he was asked three times if he would accept the results of the 2024 election. His answer: he would only do so if the election was “fair and legal and good”.

    At his campaign rallies, Trump has urged supporters to anticipate a victory while implying that any loss would be due to corruption.

    “I’d love to win the popular vote with them cheating. Let them cheat, because that’s what they do; they do it very well, they’re very professional. But I think we have a really good chance to win the popular vote,” he told supporters at a rally in Salem, Virginia, on Saturday.

    On social media, he has amplified claims of fraud, especially in battleground states like Pennsylvania, where he recently posted allegations about “fake ballots” and other claims of supposed irregularities.

    “We caught them CHEATING BIG in Pennsylvania. Must announce and PROSECUTE, NOW!” Trump wrote on Truth Social, adding, “Who would have ever thought our country could be so CORRUPT?”

    This rhetoric sparked rapid responses from officials. Democratic Pennsylvania Governor Josh Shapiro responded on X, saying, “In 2020, Donald Trump attacked our elections over and over. He’s now trying to use the same playbook to stoke chaos, but hear me on this: we will again have a free and fair, safe and secure election – and the will of the people will be respected.”

    Secretary of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania Al Schmidt, a Republican, echoed this, telling CNN that any allegations of fraud were “completely and totally unfounded”. “Voters should have confidence we will have a fair election in 2024, just like we had in 2020,” Schmidt said.

    Lawsuits galore

    After Trump’s loss in 2020, his team initiated 60 court cases across multiple states to challenge the results, alleging widespread fraud, though none succeeded. This experience led Trump’s team to refine their approach for 2024. According to Olivier Richomme, an electoral law expert and professor of American history at Lyon 2 University, the strategy this time is broader and more calculated.

    “Trump has an army of lawyers, co-ordinated by his political adviser Stephen Miller,” Richomme explained. “They’ve already initiated lawsuits well ahead of the election and intend to continue afterward.”

    The Republican National Committee (RNC) filed more than 120 lawsuits in 26 states from 2020 through August this year, contesting various election rules. An RNC spokesperson claimed the party’s primary goal was to address issues in voting systems to prevent illegal ballots before Election Day.

    “Our Election Integrity operation is focused on securing transparency and fairness for every legal vote,” RNC spokesperson Claire Zunk told Reuters last month. “This ensures voters feel confident that their ballots are counted properly, which ultimately inspires voter turnout.”

    Launched in April, the Election Integrity Network is the largest initiative of its kind in US history, enlisting thousands of lawyers and volunteers to address perceived election interference. A number of high-profile conservative donors contributed over $140 million to some 50 groups working to support this effort, according to the Wall Street Journal, funding a comprehensive network for election monitoring, and extensive litigation.

    But investigations have found that voter fraud is actually quite rare. A comprehensive audit of elections in the US state of Georgia released last month found that only 20 noncitizens had tried to registered to vote out of 8.2 million registered voters; an additional 156 were flagged for further investigation. Claims that voting machines can be rigged to “flip” votes from one candidate to another have also circulated for years. But “every single” such instance is attributable to human error and not a hacked machine, according to David Becker, founder of the Center for Election Innovation and Research, in an interview with CBS News.

    Breeding distrust for future elections

    Unlike four years ago, Trump no longer holds presidential powers, which limits his influence over US institutions. Without a vice president on his side or a direct line to the attorney general, Trump’s means of challenging the election are reduced.

    However, Trump’s years of sowing doubt in the electoral process have done irreparable damage to public confidence. “The real problem is that he has planted the idea in the minds of the American people that there is a problem with electoral fraud,” Richomme said. “We’re seeing a growing part of the electorate suspicious of elections.”

    Trump’s allies within the GOP are mirroring his rhetoric, with nearly half of Republican candidates for Congress or state office publicly questioning the upcoming election’s integrity. For instance, Illinois House Representative Brian Babin recently posted on X, claiming that “Democrat counties refuse to clean up voter rolls, are counting aliens in censuses, and are using Harris’ open borders to replace US voters to hold a perpetual majority”.

    Richomme warns that this rising tide of mistrust could alter American politics well beyond this election.

    “There are more and more cases of Republican elected officials who make a habit of questioning election results. They will run for office but refuse to accept election results when they don’t go their way.”

    ‘A weakening of American democracy’

    Democrats are also gearing up for a contested election, including any premature declarations of victory from Trump. Vice President Kamala Harris announced plans for a rapid-response strategy to counter any such claims.

    “We are sadly ready if he does and, if we know that he is actually manipulating the press and attempting to manipulate the consensus of the American people … we are prepared to respond,” Harris said during an interview with ABC in late October.

    Democrats have also prepared a team of thousands of lawyers to respond to any legal challenges lodged by the Trump campaign.

    However, in the event of an actual Trump win, Democrats have signaled they would refrain from questioning the results. As Richomme points out, “It’s not in the Democrats’ tradition, and they campaigned against such actions when Trump was doing it. They’ve made it clear they believe the electoral system functions effectively.”

    Regardless of the outcome, this election will likely leave a significant impact on American democratic institutions. Richomme observes that the damage from Trump’s rhetoric may linger long after the votes are counted.

    “We are witnessing a weakening of American democracy. This erosion of confidence in the electoral system poses serious threats,” he warned.

    With Americans increasingly sceptical of the integrity of US elections, the November vote could prove a defining moment for the future of US political norms.

  • Elon Musk Pumps $75 Million Into Donald Trump’s Presidential Run

    Elon Musk Pumps $75 Million Into Donald Trump’s Presidential Run

    Reuters– Elon Musk gave around $75 million to his pro-Donald Trump spending group in the span of three months, federal disclosures showed on Tuesday, underscoring how the billionaire has become crucial to the Republican candidate’s efforts to win the Nov. 5 presidential election.

    America PAC, which is focused on turning out voters in closely contested states that could decide the election, spent around $72 million of that in the July-September period, according to disclosures filed to the Federal Election Commission.

    That is more than any other pro-Trump super PAC focused on turning out voters. The Trump campaign is broadly reliant on outside groups for canvassing voters, meaning the super PAC founded by Musk – the world’s richest man – plays an outsized role in the razor-thin election between Trump and Democrat Kamala Harris.

    Musk, the CEO of electric car manufacturer Tesla, was the sole donor to the group in that period.

    Musk, who has said he has voted for Democratic presidential candidates in the past, has taken a sharp turn to the right this election. He endorsed Trump in July and appeared with him at a rally in Pennsylvania earlier this month. Musk’s donations to America PAC propel him into the exclusive club of Republican mega donors, a list that also includes banking heir Timothy Mellon and casino billionaire Miriam Adelson.
    However, Reuters reported earlier this month that Musk has secretly funded a conservative political group for years, well before his public embrace of Trump.

    America PAC declined to comment on the Musk donations. Musk did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

    America PAC is focused on encouraging Americans who like Trump but don’t always vote to cast ballots this cycle, a high-risk, labor-intensive strategy by the Trump campaign.

    The group, which started its work later in the election than other PACs, has encountered some problems with hiring and its contractors. Since July, it has fired two major contractors it has hired to knock on doors.

    It has also struggled to hire door knockers in several battleground states in part because by the time the PAC became operational many other canvassing groups had already staffed up, a half-dozen sources briefed on the issues told Reuters.

    The group had around $4 million left on hand by the end of September, the filings show.

    Separate filings earlier on Tuesday showed that Miriam Adelson, the casino magnate, donated $95 million to another pro-Trump super PAC, Preserve America PAC, in the same period.
  • US Vice President Harris Calls Trump Presidency ‘Huge Risk For America’

    US Vice President Harris Calls Trump Presidency ‘Huge Risk For America’

    In the US, Democratic nominee and Vice President Kamala Harris in a Pennsylvania rally called Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump “unstable and unhinged” for wanting “unchecked power.”

    Harris addressed a rally in Pennsylvania’s Erie County on Monday, using a big screen to show clips of Trump’s calls to outlaw dissent.

    “A second Trump term would be a huge risk for America. And dangerous. Donald Trump is increasingly unstable and unhinged. And he is out for unchecked power,” Harris claimed, as the crowd chanted her words against the rival candidate.

    Explaining the consequences of having Trump in power, she emphasized measures a Trump presidency could take to undermine Americans’ quality of life, saying, “He wants to send the military after American citizens. He has worked to prevent women from making their own health care decisions.”

    This week, Harris kicked off a series of rallies across the northern states of Pennsylvania, Michigan, and Wisconsin, a trio of states that are expected to be key indicators of election results.​​​​​​​

    “With just three weeks until Election Day, Vice President Harris and Governor Walz are leaving it all on the field — blanketing the battlegrounds with an aggressive campaign schedule,” according to an email from a Harris campaign official obtained by NBC.