WASHINGTON — An American woman who miscarried after being shot five times has been charged by Alabama authorities in the death of her fetus, a move abortion rights groups condemned.

The arrest of Marshae Jones came amid heightened tensions around abortion after more than a dozen states in the southern and midwestern United States, including Alabama, passed restrictive abortion laws that are currently being challenged in court.

“Marshae Jones was indicted for manslaughter for losing a pregnancy after being shot in the abdomen five times. Her shooter remains free. We’re going to get Marshae out of jail,” tweeted The Yellowhammer Fund, an Alabama-based group that gives financial help to people seeking abortions.

Jones, 27, was shot in December during a fight with another woman. While the shooter was initially charged by a grand jury, prosecutors dropped that case and instead brought charges against Jones, who was arrested on Wednesday.

“The investigation showed that the only true victim in this was the unborn baby,” Danny Reid, a police lieutenant in the town of Pleasant Grove where the December shooting took place, said according to the web site AL.com.

“It was the mother of the child who initiated and continued the fight which resulted in the death of her own unborn baby,” he added.

Last May, Alabama adopted a law banning abortion even in cases of rape or incest, equating it with homicide.

The law is set to come into force in November, but is likely to be blocked in court because it goes against the 1973 US Supreme Court Roe v Wade ruling that legalized abortion.

The National Abortion Federation (NAF), which supports access to abortion, said Jones’s case was one of many where women who miscarried as a result of misfortunes like prescription drug overdoses and car accidents are being prosecuted.

“This is how people — especially women of color — are already being punished & having their pregnancies criminalized,” the NAF tweeted, referencing Jones, who is black.

Most of the new restrictive abortion measures are expected to face legal challenges and eventually end up before the Supreme Court, with the laws’ supporters hoping the justices will hand down a decision restricting the right to abortion nationwide.

The top US court is now dominated by a conservative majority, including two justices appointed by President Donald Trump.

Source Article from https://www.timesofisrael.com/shot-alabama-woman-who-miscarried-faces-homicide-charge/

Daylong demonstrations on Monday in Hong Kong drew tens of thousands of people and culminated in heavy damage to the building that houses the territory’s Legislative Council.

Protests that were mostly peaceful were first marred by morning clashes with the police, who used batons and pepper spray against protesters outside a ceremony commemorating the 22nd anniversary of Hong Kong’s return to Chinese control. Later, the demonstrations again turned destructive when a group of protesters stormed the legislature and worked for hours to move deeper into the building, even while tens of thousands of others marched peacefully outside.

One group of protesters used makeshift battering rams to destroy the legislature’s glass windows and doors as they made their way into the building.

The following photographs give a visual timeline of the day’s events, which began around 5:30 a.m., when protesters attempted to disrupt a speech by the territory’s chief executive Carrie Lam.

Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/2019/07/01/world/asia/hong-kong-protest-photos.html

President Obama was dishonest while empowering Iran. President Trump is incoherent while squeezing Iran. Obviously, the latter is better. But can it work in the long term?

Trump wisely renounced Obama’s non-binding nuclear deal with the mullahs, the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action. Even if its murky terms were followed, the JCPOA would put Iran on a glide path toward becoming a nuclear-weapons power. Besides permitting the regime to continue enriching uranium and operating advanced centrifuges, the JCPOA infused Tehran with desperately needed funding (mainly in the form of sanctions relief) while obliging the United States to support its development of an industrial strength nuclear energy program (purportedly for civilian purposes only).

Moreover, Obama lined Iran’s pockets with $1.7 billion in cash and other curious money transfers that could easily be diverted to the regime’s support for international terrorism. Simultaneously, he incentivized the regime to abduct more Americans by making these cash payments a ransom for hostages. Yet, the JCPOA did not even make a pretense of curbing Iran’s promotion of jihadist violence (Iran remains the world’s leading state sponsor of terrorism), nor did it abate Iran’s ballistic-missile programs.

HUSBAND OF AID WORKER JAILED IN IRAN SAYS HIS WIFE IS BEING USED AS ‘BARGAINING CHIP

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Trump has reimposed sanctions on Iran and deftly pressured other nations (in particular, foreign corporations and financial institutions) to resist dealing with Iran for fear of being cut off from the U.S. financial system. Increasingly a pariah, Iran has seen its oil and gas export revenues shrivel and its economy contract, and it has been forced to tap its fast-diminishing foreign-currency reserves in order to finance its basic needs as well as its military aggression.

Put succinctly, the “Death to America” regime is facing an existential crisis. The intense economic pressure from without is intensifying the political opposition from within. The restive population, whose 2009 uprisings drew no meaningful support from Obama, is stirring again.

CLICK HERE TO READ THE REST OF THIS OPINION PIECE IN THE  NATIONAL REVIEW

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Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/opinion/andrew-mccarthy-regime-change-iran

President Donald Trump has drawn fire after announcing plans to relax the ban on US companies doing business with the Chinese tech giant Huawei.

At the G20 summit in Osaka, Japan, on Saturday, Trump told the press he would allow US companies to continue to sell to Huawei, despite having placed Huawei on a trade blacklist in May over national security concerns. The Commerce Department ban meant no US business could sell parts and components to Huawei without a special license, though many firms reportedly skirted the ban.

Read more: Wall Street was ready for the latest twist in the trade war. Here’s how experts think Trump and Xi’s trade truce will play out.

In a later tweet, Trump said he’d reached the decision following pressure from US “High Tech companies” and Chinese President Xi Jinping. The Financial Times reported last month that Google was furiously lobbying Washington to keep doing business with the company.

Sen. Marco Rubio of Florida was quick to respond, tweeting that loosening the restrictions on Huawei would constitute a “catastrophic mistake.”

“If President Trump has in fact bargained away the recent restrictions on #Huawei, then we will have to get those restrictions put back in place through legislation,” Rubio added.

The administration’s top economic adviser, Larry Kudlow, the director of the National Economic Council, downplayed Trump’s relaxing of the ban, saying in an interview with CBS on Sunday that it applied only to “general merchandise,” which he described as “various chips and software and other services that are available all around the world, not specific to the US.”

“The president is not backing off on the national security concerns — we understand the huge risks regarding Huawei,” Kudlow said, adding that talks with China over Huawei were ongoing. “The last word is not going to come till the very end of the talks.”

Asked specifically about Rubio’s criticisms, Kudlow said: “I hope that when President Trump comes back, that he and others of us will be able to persuade Senator Rubio that there will be no national security violations.”

Source Article from https://www.businessinsider.com/larry-kudlow-responds-to-marco-rubio-huawei-criticism-2019-7

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Source Article from https://www.cnn.com/2019/06/30/media/canadian-cartoon-trump/index.html

  • People are editing Ivanka Trump into historic photos and artworks after a video went viral showing her having an awkward exchange with world leaders at the G20 summit.
  • With the hashtag “#UnwantedIvanka,” people edited Ivanka into moments from the D-Day landings to a Muhammad Ali fight.
  • The video appeared to show Ivanka try to join in talks between leaders of the UK, France, and the IMF, and sparked new criticism of her senior White House role.
  • Democratic Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez said that “being someone’s daughter actually isn’t a career qualification” and said Trump should bring a “qualified diplomat” to the summit.

People are editing Ivanka Trump into historic scenes with the hashtag “#UnwantedIvanka” after a video of her having an odd conversation with world leaders at the meeting of G20 leaders went viral.

The video, shared by the French government, appeared to show Ivanka trying to engage in conversation with UK Prime Minister Theresa May, Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, French President Emmanuel Macron, and IMF chairwoman Christine Lagarde. 

The conversation seems awkward, and sparked new debate about how Ivanka, who is the eldest daughter of US President Donald Trump, landed her role as White House advisor and why she was at the summit.

Ivanka has been edited into photos of the D-Day landings, Martin Luther King’s speech, and famous artwork

Ivanka has been edited into some of history’s most important photos, from the D-Day landings, to the signing of the US Declaration of Independence, to some of the most important moments in cultural history.

Footage of the awkward talk led to renewed scrutiny over Ivanka’s role

The video, shared by the Élysée Palace — France’s equivalent to the White House — government, shows Ivanka appear to interrupt world leaders. They have shifted their bodies away from her and look away as she speaks.

You can see the video, shared on Twitter by BBC journalist Parham Ghobadi, here: 

While it is not totally clear, Ivanka seems to interrupt Macron as to agree him as he says something about “social justice.” May then says: “As soon as you talk about the economic aspect of it though, a lot of people start listening who wouldn’t otherwise listen.”

Read more:‘Painful to watch’: The French government released a video of Ivanka Trump having an awkward chat with world leaders

Ivanka then says, with a smile: “And it’s the same with the defense side. In terms of the whole ecosystem, it’s been very male-dominated.”

RELATED: Ivanka Trump as first daughter

Nick Ayers, chief of staff to Vice President�Mike Pence, from left, Jared Kushner, senior White House adviser, and Ivanka Trump, assistant to U.S. President Donald Trump, listen during a cabinet meeting at the White House in Washington, D.C., U.S., on Monday, April 9, 2018. Trump�promised U.S. farmers that they will emerge from a trade dispute with China better off despite threats from Beijing to impose tariffs targeting American agricultural products. Photographer: Al Drago/Bloomberg via Getty Images

Jared Kushner, senior White House adviser, left, and Ivanka Trump, assistant to U.S. President Donald Trump, listen during a cabinet meeting at the White House in Washington, D.C., U.S., on Monday, April 9, 2018. Trump�promised U.S. farmers that they will emerge from a trade dispute with China better off despite threats from Beijing to impose tariffs targeting American agricultural products. Photographer: Al Drago/Bloomberg via Getty Images

Shinzo Abe, Japan’s prime minister, left, and Ivanka Trump, assistant to U.S. President Donald Trump, pose for photographers as they arrive for a dinner in Tokyo, Japan, on Friday, Nov. 3, 2017.�Ivanka Trump lauded the Japanese governments efforts to increase female workforce participation during a speech in Tokyo on Friday, giving a high-profile boost to Prime Minister Shinzo Abe’s ‘Womenomics’ initiative. Photographer: Kimimasa Mayama/Pool via Bloomberg

Shinzo Abe, Japan’s prime minister, left, and Ivanka Trump, assistant to U.S. President Donald Trump, pose for photographers as they arrive for a dinner in Tokyo, Japan, on Friday, Nov. 3, 2017.�Ivanka Trump lauded the Japanese governments efforts to increase female workforce participation during a speech in Tokyo on Friday, giving a high-profile boost to Prime Minister Shinzo Abe’s ‘Womenomics’ initiative. Photographer: Kimimasa Mayama/Pool via Bloomberg

Shinzo Abe, Japan’s prime minister, left, and Ivanka Trump, assistant to U.S. President Donald Trump, pose for photographers as they arrive for a dinner in Tokyo, Japan, on Friday, Nov. 3, 2017.�Ivanka Trump lauded the Japanese governments efforts to increase female workforce participation during a speech in Tokyo on Friday, giving a high-profile boost to Prime Minister Shinzo Abe’s ‘Womenomics’ initiative. Photographer: Kimimasa Mayama/Pool via Bloomberg

Ivanka Trump, assistant to U.S. President Donald Trump, right, speaks as Jim Yong Kim, president of the World Bank Group, listens during a panel discussion at the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and World Bank Group Annual Meetings in Washington, D.C., U.S., on Saturday, Oct. 14, 2017. Near-term risks to world financial stability have declined since April amid improving macroeconomic conditions and the subsiding risk of emerging-market turmoil, the IMF said in its latest Global Financial Stability Report released yesterday. Photographer: Andrew Harrer/Bloomberg via Getty Images

(FILES) Ivanka Trump and Jared Kushner arrive for a joint press conference by US President Donald Trump and Israel’s Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu in the East Room of the White House on February 15, 2017 in Washington, DC.
While the new US president has shown a capacity to change, both his tone and his positions, he has been unable to show the world a ‘new’ Trump, with a steady presidential style and a clearly articulated worldview. As the symbolic milestone of his 100th day in power, which falls on April 29, 2017, draws near, a cold, hard reality is setting in for the billionaire businessman who promised Americans he would ‘win, win, win’ for them. At this stage of his presidency, he is the least popular US leader in modern history (even if his core supporters are still totally behind him.) / AFP PHOTO / MANDEL NGAN / TO GO WITH AFP STORY, US-politics-Trump-100days (Photo credit should read MANDEL NGAN/AFP/Getty Images)




The footage renewed scrutiny about Ivanka’s role in the White House, which began as she started informally advising her father when his presidency began.

It continued after she was made an official adviser in 2017, as people questioned whether she was qualified to be part of the administration’s staff.

Ivanka spoke at the G20 summit’s women’s empowerment event, where she called on G20 leaders to do more to strengthen economic freedom for women around the world.

Kyodo News via Getty Images

The footage led Democrats to question why Ivanka was able to attend the G20 summit and in the position to engage with world leaders.

Democratic Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez shared the video, saying that Trump should bring a “qualified diplomat” to the summit.

“It may be shocking to some, but being someone’s daughter actually isn’t a career qualification. It hurts our diplomatic standing when the President phones it in & the world moves on,” she tweeted.

“The US needs our President working the G20. Bringing a qualified diplomat couldn’t hurt either.”

And Democratic Congressman Ted Lieu said he wanted to “hear Ivanka Trump’s explanation about this video” and asked why her husband, Jared Kushner, still has security clearance.

Kushner is also an adviser to Trump, his father-in-law, and has come under scrutiny for his high-level security clearance and his close relationships with foreign governments as he spearheads some of Trump’s policies in the Middle East.

Ivanka has previously said that neither she nor Kushner received preferential treatment while being granted clearances.

But Trump has fanned the flames by suggesting that he would put Ivanka forward for more senior roles, including leading the World Bank.

NOW WATCH: Fox News pundits are using white supremacist language tied to ‘The Great Replacement’ conspiracy theory

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Source Article from https://www.aol.com/article/news/2019/07/01/ivanka-trump-is-being-edited-into-historic-scenes/23760591/

Border agents at an El Paso, Texas, holding facility for illegal immigrants feared riots breaking out because of the complex’s poor conditions.

Department of Homeland Security’s Office of the Inspector General reviewed conditions at the unnamed facility on May 7, according to an internal report obtained by NBC News. The inspectors found the facility severely overcrowded with many detainees lacking basic hygienic products, such as soap and clean clothes.

“With limited access to showers and clean clothing, detainees were wearing soiled clothing for days or weeks,” the report said.

One holding cell was overcrowded by more than 4 times its holding capacity of 35, holding 155 adult males. The cell contained one sink and toilet.

Border agents at the facility remained armed in holding areas. Agents feared that the detainees would riot and attempt to break out of the facility over the poor conditions.

The internal report leaked after DHS Acting Secretary Kevin McAleenan told reporters on Friday that news reports describing poor conditions at a holding facility for illegal migrant children in Clint, Texas, were “unsubstantiated.”

The press conference was the first McAleenan had held in three months since taking over as acting DHS secretary. McAleenan spoke for about 11 minutes and took four questions before exiting.

The debate over the conditions at holding facilities for illegal immigrants has roiled Washington, D.C. The House passed a $4.6 billion bill for border funding last week after Democratic House Majority Leader Nancy Pelosi conceded the border funding battle.

The Senate had already approved its version of the bill with an overwhelming bipartisan majority, placing Pelosi in a difficult position to use the bill as leverage against the Trump administration.

The DHS did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Source Article from https://www.washingtonexaminer.com/news/border-agents-feared-riots-at-severely-overcrowded-border-facility

One of the board’s recommendations is that the Defense Department share its low-band spectrum to accelerate the commercial development of the technology in the United States.

While sharing spectrum comes with its own security challenges, the board raised the prospect of some unique, surprising benefits: “Integration of government and civil use may provide a layer of security by allowing military traffic to ‘hide in plain sight’ as traffic becomes more difficult to see and isolate. Similarly, adversaries might be deterred from jamming this spectrum because they might be operating on the same bands.”

None of this is meant to suggest that Huawei does not represent a national security threat if the Chinese government were to use it to spy on foreign adversaries in the future. (Though, it is worth saying, there is no evidence presented publicly by any American agency that the company’s hardware has been used that way — yet.)

Nor should it be read as an apology for Huawei’s record of stealing intellectual property, which has been well chronicled.

Sharing spectrum should be only the start, however. Policymakers must grasp that the “market” in the United States isn’t working the way it should, especially when state actors like China are supporting companies like Huawei.

If the United States is going to lead the world, Washington needs to think hard about the incentives it provides companies — not only for research and development, where we are still leading, but also for manufacturing the technology that is in our national interest to control as well as what mergers it allows.

One morning in late February, Mr. Trump typed out a message on Twitter: “I want the United States to win through competition, not by blocking out currently more advanced technologies.”

Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/2019/07/01/business/dealbook/huawei-5g-national-security-trade.html

HONG KONG – Combative protesters tried to break into the Hong Kong legislature Monday as a crowd of thousands were marching in that direction on the 22nd anniversary of the former British colony’s return to China.

With a crowd of a hundred or so people around them, a small group of people repeatedly rammed a cargo cart and poles into a glass panel. After they managed to get the cart wedged into the damaged panel, police grabbed the cart away from them. They also posted a sign saying to the protesters, stop charging before we use force.

The unexpected disruption delayed the march, but the crowd of thousands soon began moving out of Victoria Park even as police asked the marchers to change their route or cancel the march.

Both the combative protesters and the marchers oppose a government attempt to change extradition laws to allow suspects to be sent to China to face trial. The proposal has increased fears of eroding freedoms in the territory that was returned to China in 1997.

More: Hong Kong activists: We’re protesting for our freedom from brutal Chinese authoritarianism

More: What’s next for Hong Kong? Controversial extradition bill suspended, not scrapped

The embattled leader of Hong Kong pledged to be more responsive to public sentiment in a speech at a flag-raising ceremony. Carrie Lam has come under withering criticism for trying to push through the legislation. She said a series of protests and marches that have attracted hundreds of thousands of students and other participants in recent weeks have taught her that she needs to listen better to the youth and people in general.

“This has made me fully realize that I, as a politician, have to remind myself all the time of the need to grasp public sentiments accurately,” she said in a five-minute speech to the gathering in the city’s cavernous convention center.

She insisted her government has good intentions, but said “I will learn the lesson and ensure that the government’s future work will be closer and more responsive to the aspirations, sentiments and opinions of the community.”

Security guards pushed pro-democracy lawmaker Helena Wong out of the room as she walked backward shouting at Lam to resign and withdraw the “evil” legislation. She later told reporters she was voicing the grievances and opinions of the protesters, who could not get into the event.

The annual march starting in the afternoon was expected to be larger than usual because the proposed extradition bill has awakened broader fears that China is eroding the freedoms and rights guaranteed to Hong Kong for 50 years under a “one country, two systems” framework. Two marches in June against the legislation drew more than a million people, according to organizer estimates.

The government has suspended debate on the bill indefinitely, but protest leaders want it formally withdrawn and Lam’s resignation. They also are demanding an independent inquiry into police actions during a June 12 protest, when officers used tear gas and rubber bullets to disperse protesters who blocked the legislature on the day debate on the bill had been scheduled to resume.

The police say the use of force was justified, but have largely since adopted softer tactics, even as protesters besieged police headquarters in recent days, pelting it with eggs and spray-painting slogans on its outer walls.

The area around Golden Bauhinia Square, where the flag-raising ceremony took place, was blocked off from Saturday to prevent protesters from gathering to disrupt it. Before the morning ceremony, protesters trying to gain access to the square were driven back by officers with plastic shields and batons, the retreating protesters pointing open umbrellas to ward off pepper spray.

“We are horrified, this is our obligation to do this, we are protecting our home,” said Jack, a 26-year-old office worker who would only give his first name. “I don’t know why the government is harming us. It’s harming the rule of law, the rule of law is the last firewall between us and the Chinese Communist Party.”

–––

Associated Press journalists Raf Wober, Alice Fung, Johnson Lai and Dake Kang contributed to this story.

Source Article from https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/world/2019/07/01/hong-kong-protests-escalate-handover-china/1615317001/

Members of the U.S. and South Korean military gave President Trump a token of appreciation in the form of a personalized golf jacket, during a Sunday meeting on the demilitarized zone between North and South Korea.

As the president wrapped up remarks to military members with South Korean President Moon Jae-in by his side, he noticed that he was being approached with a gift.

“What do you have over there? That looks good!” he quipped.

A service member then presented Trump with a jacket, saying, “We have a small token of appreciation in recognition of your visit here in the Republic of Korea. We’re grateful for your leadership —you and President Moon — and all that you do for the R.O.K.-U.S. alliance … everyone knows you’re a golfer.”

He noted the several personalized insignia on the jackets and pointed out the most important one, “Our motto here in Korea is ‘We go together.’ We hope that when you wear this on the golf course that you’ll think about the strength and the enduring nature of this R.O.K.-U.S. alliance. Mr. President, thank you very much.”

The president then shook hands of several service men and women from both nations.

Source Article from https://www.washingtonexaminer.com/news/service-members-give-trump-a-gift-in-korea

Following Saturday’s meeting between President Trump and Chinese President Xi Jinping at the G20 summit in Japan, it is clear that Trump’s strategic use of tariffs to end China’s rampant illegal trade cheating and intellectual property theft is putting pressure on the Chinese to negotiate a more balanced trade agreement.

It’s about time we had a president willing to stand firm and bargain hard with China to serve our national interest. 

Trump’s tough stand and refusal to turn a blind eye to China’s misconduct has the potential to open the door to trade that is genuinely free and fair between the world’s two largest economies. This could lead to a sweeping trade agreement that would be one of the most important economic compacts in world history and benefit both nations for decades to come.

TRUMP, XI REACH PLAN TO RESUME TRADE TALKS, TARIFFS ON HOLD FOR NOW

In an important vindication of Trump’s refusal to surrender to Chinese pressure, he and Xi agreed to resume stalled U.S.-China trade negotiations. Xi appears to have finally realized that unlike past American presidents, Trump is a master negotiator who will not surrender to Chinese pressure tactics. As Trump has pointed out before, a bad deal is worse than no deal.

While the talks proceed and as a show of good will, Trump said he would not impose tariffs on an additional $300 billion in Chinese imports, as he had planned to do.

However, the U.S. president wisely said he will maintain tariffs he imposed earlier on $250 billion in Chinese products to keep the pressure on China to reach a fair trade deal with the U.S.  China imposed tariffs on $60 billion in U.S. products in response to Trump’s earlier tariffs.

“We discussed a lot of things, and we’re right back on track,” Trump said after he and Xi concluded their talks. “We had a very, very good meeting with China.” Trump said the talks went “even better than expected.”

Trump also said that Xi agreed that China will buy a “tremendous amount” of U.S. agricultural products. That’s great news for America’s farmers.

In return for China’s agreement to buy more from our farmers, Trump agreed to allow

American companies to sell products to Chinese telecom giant Huawei Technologies. That’s a plus for the U.S. because it brings money from China into our country and supports jobs for American workers.

You would think even Trump critics would acknowledge that the president has made great progress in getting China to the negotiating table and open to reaching a final agreement. But sadly, the days when Democrats would support a Republican president negotiating with a global competitor seem to be a distant memory.

Trump’s tough stand and refusal to turn a blind eye to China’s misconduct has the potential to open the door to trade that is genuinely free and fair between the world’s two largest economies.

Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., made the point Saturday following the president’s obviously successful trip to Japan. Schumer criticized Trump for supposedly giving up “one of few potent levers we have to make China play fair on trade” by agreeing that American companies can sell products to Huawei.

Of course, China isn’t going to enter into an agreement where it gets nothing in return. In any negotiation, you have to give something to get something.

So what exactly did Trump give?  As stated by the president: “U.S. companies can sell their equipment to Huawei” but only “equipment where there’s no great national security problem with it.” 

Trump neither conceded nor suggested that he was backing off plans to prohibit the import of Huawei equipment for U.S. 5G telecommunications networks. That issue is the main concern of America’s intelligence community.  

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There is nothing wrong with American companies generating more revenue to support American jobs by selling non-secure products to a large Chinese company. If that’s the best criticism Schumer and his allies have got, you have to feel pretty good about the way the negotiations are going for the Trump administration – and for America.

There will certainly be hard bargaining ahead to make long-overdue repairs to our trading relationship with China. We won’t know for certain if a deal will be reached until the talks conclude. But both parties are at the table and, importantly, all Americans can have confidence that President Trump will drive a hard bargain that prevents China from continuing to take advantage of our country with unfair and illegal practices.

CLICK HERE TO READ MORE BY ANDY PUZDER

Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/opinion/andy-puzder-trumps-china-trade-strategy-could-lead-to-historic-agreement-benefiting-both-nations

A Canadian cartoonist lost his freelance contract with a newspaper after tweeting an illustration that depicted Donald Trump golfing over the bodies of two drowned migrants.

Political cartoonist Michael de Adder claimed that he lost the contract due to the Trump image — but the company disputes his assertion.

“This is a false narrative which has emerged carelessly and recklessly on social media,” Brunswick News Inc. said in a statement on Sunday.

The cartoon was posted on de Adder’s Twitter account on June 26 and depicted Trump standing over a recreation of the photo of Óscar Alberto Martínez Ramírez and his 23-month-old daughter, Angie Valeria, lying in the the Rio Grande.

“Do you mind if I play through?” the cartoon reads.

Brunswick News said that the decision to bring back another cartoonist had been made “long before this cartoon.”

The artist, however, insisted that the his ousting was political.

“Does it matter if I was fired over one Donald Trump cartoon when every Donald Trump cartoon I submitted in the past year was axed?” he tweeted.

“It got to the point where I didn’t submit any Donald Trump cartoons for fear that I might be fired.”

Source Article from https://nypost.com/2019/07/01/cartoonist-loses-job-after-depicting-trump-golfing-over-drowned-migrants/

Sarah Sanders, the former White House press secretary, fired back at freshman Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez who called out Ivanka Trump for accompanying her father to the G-20 summit.

Ocasio-Cortez called out Ivanka and said on Twitter that “being someone’s daughter actually isn’t a career qualification.”

“It hurts our diplomatic standing when the President phones it in & the world moves on. The US needs our President working the G20. Bringing a qualified diplomat couldn’t hurt either,” the freshman representative continued.

Ivanka represented the U.S. in meetings with leaders from China, Japan, Russia, India and Australia during the summit in Osaka, the South China Morning Post reported.

Sanders, who just recently stepped down from her role at the White House, said “phone it in @AOC is wasting your time on Twitter while destroying jobs in NY.” She said President Trump and Ivanka have created “millions of new jobs and continue to make the US stronger on the global stage but thank you for reminding Americans everyday why they elected Trump.”

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Ocasio-Cortez played a major role in thwarting Amazon’s plans to build part of its HQ2 in Long Island City. She was one of several elected officials who pushed back on Amazon’s planned expansion pointing at the secrecy of the deal itself, the lack of public input and the potential for gentrification and displacement resulting from 25,000 new highly paid tech workers in the area.

Fox News’ Christopher Carbone contributed to this report

Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/politics/sanders-hits-back-at-aoc-after-ivanka-trump-dig

President Trump speaks at a rally in Orlando, Fla., in June to kick off his reelection campaign. Trump has lent his support to a new Republican small-donor fundraising platform, WinRed, that launched last week.

Mandel Ngan/AFP/Getty Images


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President Trump speaks at a rally in Orlando, Fla., in June to kick off his reelection campaign. Trump has lent his support to a new Republican small-donor fundraising platform, WinRed, that launched last week.

Mandel Ngan/AFP/Getty Images

This story is published in partnership with The Center for Public Integrity

The headline posed a straightforward question: “Where is the Republican ActBlue?”

Very of the moment — except it was published more than a decade ago, during George W. Bush’s administration.

Since then, Republicans have repeatedly tried and failed to harness online political contributions as effectively as Democrats have with the ActBlue fundraising platform, which has been around since 2004.

Last week, Republicans launched a new online fundraising tool called WinRed. It’s a platform they hope will close the gap between the GOP and Democrats, even though the digital highway is littered with their several previous failed attempts.

WinRed, backed by President Trump’s reelection campaign and Republican Party committees and congressional leaders, has the party’s imprimatur in a way previous efforts did not. The effort is a partnership between Data Trust, a nonprofit clearinghouse for Republican data, and for-profit payment-processing firm Revv, and Republicans say the “green wave” of money that Democrats rode in 2018 will provide momentum for their own efforts.

It’s unclear whether this latest gambit will succeed, with political committees just starting to phase in WinRed. Even if it succeeds, it will certainly take time to catch up to ActBlue.

Take the 2018 midterm elections, when Democratic House and Senate candidates outraised Republicans more than two to one in contributions from individuals. Republicans pointed to ActBlue, which helps donors more easily give money to Democratic candidates and liberal political groups, as a big reason why.

The fundraising gap brought new urgency — and a bigger push from Republican leaders and donors seeking to narrow that gap ahead of the 2020 elections.

But for WinRed to ever work as intended, it will have to overcome doubts in the party.

Operatives say that candidates will have to agree to use it and that the Republican fundraising culture must change — significantly.

“Every election cycle, there is a story of how now they’re getting behind an initiative to try and set up a competitor to ActBlue,” said David Karpf, a professor at George Washington University who studies how campaigns and advocacy groups use the Internet to build power in the digital age. “They haven’t done it yet.”

Planting a tree

Those involved with WinRed say they are prepared for skepticism. They openly acknowledge how far behind Republicans are with small-dollar fundraising efforts.

“The best time to plant a tree is 20 years ago; the second best time is now,” tweeted Parker Hamilton Poling, executive director of the National Republican Congressional Committee, one of the party committees supporting the WinRed launch.

ActBlue, a Somerville, Mass.-based nonprofit that operates separately from the Democratic Party, was founded by two friends who wanted to empower grassroots donors. It started small but grew into a behemoth.

During the 2016 presidential election, Hillary Clinton, the Democratic Party’s eventual nominee, didn’t use ActBlue. Sen. Bernie Sanders did — and his small-dollar strategy generated more than $200 million, primarily from grassroots donors, and sustained his presidential bid beyond expectations.

Sanders’ fundraising success has inspired Democrats’ sharp turn toward the grassroots during the current presidential campaign. Now, all major Democratic presidential candidates use ActBlue to raise money, and small-dollar donors are prized.

ActBlue says it now has nearly 7 million donors who have saved their information on the platform so they can give to any campaign using ActBlue with a single click. Candidates can easily fundraise through joint solicitations and divide the proceeds, creating an easy way for the party as a whole to share the wealth when someone — say, Beto O’Rourke during his surprisingly strong U.S. Senate bid last year — compels grassroots donors.

Of course, your average donor doesn’t care what tool a politician uses to process a payment. But Republicans covet ActBlue efficiencies and features that make it easier and faster for donors to give, resulting, potentially, in more dollars raised.

ActBlue and Democrats “built an ecosystem that helped everybody,” said Josh Holmes, a Republican strategist who was heavily involved with discussions about what to do in the wake of the 2018 election. “They could fundraise off of each other, and they could come to a centralized platform that ultimately lifted every single boat, and Republicans just frankly didn’t have it.”

Republicans’ main barrier to creating their own ActBlue-like platform hasn’t been technology so much as ideology.

Republicans, who generally support free markets, have had several different for-profit fundraising platforms competing for a share of Republican political committees’ business.

This approach has had consequences: It meant the GOP didn’t get the same scale and efficiencies as Democrats, whose market consolidated as more and more candidates flocked to ActBlue. Also, donors who save their information when giving to one Republican candidate might not be able to make a spontaneous one-click contribution to another.

In addition, Holmes, a former chief of staff and campaign manager for Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, said Republicans missed an opportunity to ride a wave of conservative outrage during the hearings for then-Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh last year. He points to a speech that Sen. Lindsey Graham, a South Carolina Republican, gave defending Kavanaugh.

“If he would have had WinRed access at that time, I can’t imagine you’d raise a penny less than $10 million,” Holmes said.

WinRed makes no bones about imitating ActBlue.

“They Act. We Win,” boasts the text on the WinRed homepage, and a blog post describes WinRed as “modeled after years of studying ActBlue.”

Some are signaling that WinRed must imitate ActBlue, a nonprofit, in other significant ways, such as its long track record of updating its tools with new features. In a Wall Street Journal opinion piece last week, Republican strategist Karl Rove said WinRed must also show “processing fees are being reinvested in enhancements, algorithms and list building, rather than big consulting fees and salaries.”

Tricky negotiations

When Republicans in January initially announced WinRed — then known as Patriot Pass — they said it would launch in February.

But that and other expected dates came and went, sparking questions about why the new fundraising platform wasn’t operational. The quiet name change after the announcement — reportedly driven by New England Patriots owner Robert Kraft’s complaints that the name sounded too much like that of his NFL team — didn’t help.

Meanwhile, behind-the-scenes negotiations, meant to resolve a tangle of competing interests and tricky questions about how the WinRed effort would be structured, took months to resolve.

The discussions involved a battalion of lawyers tasked with determining who would control the new effort and how WinRed would secure campaigns’ data.

That was a particularly difficult issue as the party committees considered how their single biggest asset — their list of donors’ personal information — would be used.

Say you’re a donor giving $100 to your favorite candidate or candidates of choice.

If you’re a Republican giving via WinRed, the fee charged to the campaign will be 3.8%, or $3.80 — plus a 30-cent flat fee, for a total of $4.10. If you choose the option of dividing your $100 donation among multiple candidates, the single credit card charge will still incur only one 30-cent fee.

If you’re a Democrat making a $100 contribution using ActBlue, the fee charged to the campaign is a straightforward 3.95%, or $3.95. ActBlue also asks users to contribute voluntary “tips” as a donation to the platform.

Based on those rates, ActBlue is less expensive for contributions less than $200. WinRed’s fees are cheaper for larger contributions.

WinRed is built on Revv, the payment processor used by Trump’s campaign. Revv is headed by Gerrit Lansing, a former chief digital officer for the Republican National Committee and the National Republican Congressional Committee. Those involved with WinRed have been careful to say they aren’t telling campaigns to drop other fundraising-platform vendors in favor of the anointed effort — but they’re hoping the fact that the president’s campaign and party committees are using WinRed will prove its own inducement.

Trump himself trumpeted the launch with a tweet. “This new platform will allow my campaign and other Republicans to compete with the Democrats money machine,” he said, calling WinRed “a priority of mine.”

Trump, who does well with small-dollar donors, is the key to attracting WinRed users. Trump donors who allowed WinRed to save their personal information would be empowered to donate money to other WinRed-using conservatives with a single click or screen tap.

Even so, donors often give money only when they’re asked, and Republicans need to invest in building email lists and small-dollar donor programs via online surveys, merchandising and other outreach early in an election cycle, even if doing so doesn’t provide immediate dividends, said Eric Wilson, a Republican online strategist who has worked on campaigns.

“We can build the best technology platform in the world bar none, but if you’re not growing your email list, you’re not going to raise money online,” Wilson said.

One of the biggest outside groups supporting Republicans agrees with Wilson.

In a statement last week, Dan Conston, president of the Congressional Leadership Fund super PAC, which spent $138 million supporting Republican House candidates in 2018, said the only way WinRed will work is if candidates engage in such efforts.

And from now on, Conston said, the super PAC “will be adding small dollar fundraising to our evaluation of GOP campaigns” as it decides which candidates will benefit from the millions of dollars it has to spend.

In case the carrots offered by WinRed aren’t enough, that’s a big stick.

Chris Zubak-Skees contributed to this article.

The Center for Public Integrity is a nonpartisan, nonprofit investigative news organization in Washington, D.C. You can follow Carrie Levine on Twitter: @levinecarrie.

Source Article from https://www.npr.org/2019/07/01/736990455/red-shift-how-republicans-plan-to-catch-democrats-in-online-fundraising

President Trump on Sunday compared his daughter Ivanka and Secretary of State Mike Pompeo to “Beauty and the Beast.”

Trump was introducing the pair while addressing a gathering of Air Force personnel at Osan Air Base in Pyeongtaek, near the South Korean capital of Seoul, when he drew on the tale as old as time.

AOC ATTACKS IVANKA FOR NEPOTISM

“Mike, come up here Mike,” Trump told Pompeo, before telling the crowd, “And you know who else we have here, Ivanka — alright come up Ivanka,” as cheers rose from the gathered.

“What a beautiful couple — Mike — Beauty and the Beast,” he said, as the pair strode to the podium.

Just hours earlier, Trump had become the first sitting US president to step foot on North Korean soil when he met with leader Kim Jong Un on the northern side of the Demilitarized Zone separating the north and south.

The North in April demanded Pompeo, the nation’s top diplomat, be left out of peace talks — and issued a stinging rebuke of him Wednesday, accusing him of “reckless remarks” and “sophistry” for claiming sanctions on the Hermit Kingdom were bringing them to the negotiating table.

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Ivanka serves as a domestic adviser to Trump.

Trump was returning to Washington Sunday following a whirlwind trip east for the G20 summit in Japan.

Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/politics/trump-calls-ivanka-pompeo-beauty-and-the-beast