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الجمعة، 27 مايو 2016

President Obama says world leaders are ‘rattled’ by Donald Trump’s ‘cavalier’ campaign

President Obama says world leaders are ‘rattled’ by Donald Trump’s ‘cavalier’ campaign 


President Obama showed his shame over Donald Trump's campaign during his Japan visit Thursday — saying he understands why world leaders are “rattled” by the GOP’s bully-in-chief.
Speaking at the G7 economies summit in Shima, Obama acknowledged that foreign leaders are “surprised by the Republican nominee,” and said he relates to the feeling all too well.
“They are rattled by it — and for good reason,” Obama told reporters at the summit.
“Because a lot of the proposals he has made display either ignorance of world affairs, or a cavalier attitude, or an interest in getting tweets and headlines.”

Donald Trump reaches delegates needed to win 

Republican presidential nomination 




WASHINGTON — Donald Trump on Thursday reached the number of delegates needed to clinch the Republican nomination for President, completing an unlikely rise that has upended the political landscape and sets the stage for a bitter fall campaign.
Trump was put over the top in the Associated Press delegate count by a small number of the party's unbound delegates who told the news wire service they would support him at the convention. Among them is Oklahoma GOP chairwoman Pam Pollard.
"I think he has touched a part of our electorate that doesn't like where our country is,” Pollard said. "I have no problem supporting Mr. Trump."
It takes 1,237 delegates to win the Republican nomination for president. Trump has reached 1,238. With 303 delegates at stake in five state primaries on June 7, Trump will easily pad his total, avoiding a contested convention in Cleveland in July.

الخميس، 26 مايو 2016

Trump spokeswoman: New Mexico Gov. Martinez was never under VP consideration



Trump spokeswoman: New Mexico Gov. Martinez was never under VP consideration


Donald Trump never wanted New Mexico Gov. Susana Martinez as his vice president anyway, according to the presumptive Republican nominee’s national spokeswoman, Katrina Pierson.

“I think it's safe to say the governor was never on the VP short list,” Pierson told CNN’s “
New Day" on Thursday.

Asked why Trump would not consider Martinez “even though she is a popular Republican
 governor and a Latina woman,” Pierson responded that “Mr. Trump doesn’t work that way.”
“And I’m really shocked that people are still surprised that he is not looking at race and gender when he makes his decisions,” Pierson said. “He definitely is looking at individuals, a lot of people are being submitted. They are being vetted. He wants the best person for the job. He doesn’t want to pick somebody just because of their race or gender.”
Campaigning in Albuquerque, New Mexico, on Tuesday night, Trump took several shots at the governor, who also chairs the Republican Governors Association and has thus far declined to endorse him as the party’s nominee.
Several Republicans who have expressed varying degrees of concern about Trump as their party’s standard-bearer rushed to Martinez’s defense, including former primary rivals Govs. Scott Walker of Wisconsin and John Kasich of Ohio, and Sen. Marco Rubio and former Gov. Jeb Bush, both of Florida.

Trump's Resume Unlike Any Previous US Leader

Trump's Resume Unlike Any Previous US Leader



There are a few well-worn paths to the U.S. presidency.  Hillary Clinton is following one of them.  Donald Trump is not.
Trump has never been vice president, elected to the U.S. Senate or House of Representatives, or served as the governor of one of the 50 U.S. states.  Of the 43 people who have been president, 37 of them held at least one of those positions prior to taking office.
For the six presidents with no major elected office on their resume, being a war hero like George Washington or Dwight Eisenhower or a Cabinet secretary like William Taft or Herbert Hoover was enough to mount a successful campaign.  Neither Trump nor Clinton were in the military.
Once officially selected as the Republican nominee in July, Trump will be the party's second consecutive candidate with a business background.  Mitt Romney ran in 2012, losing to President Barack Obama, but in addition to being a businessman he had also served a term as the governor of Massachusetts.
For Clinton, her credentials include both a major elected office and a Cabinet position.  She represented New York in the Senate until becoming Obama's secretary of state during his first term.  Obama was also a senator before running for president, as is Clinton's Democratic opponent Bernie Sanders.
But while Clinton's path was once a near certain way to become president, those days are distant American history

As Democratic race tightens in California, ads hit airwaves from Clinton, Sanders




As Democratic race tightens in California, ads hit airwaves from Clinton, Sanders





As the Democratic race between Hillary Clinton and Bernie Sanders in California grows tighter and the competition more fierce, both campaigns are now devoting additional money to television advertising.
A day after Sanders announced a new ad buy of less than $2 million in the state, Clinton announced her own television campaign.
Ads featuring actor Morgan Freeman as well as labor leader and civil rights activist Dolores Huerta will air beginning on Friday in Fresno, Sacramento, and Los Angeles media markets. Some ads will also target Latino voters and Asian American voters. The total value of the buy is about six figures according to the Clinton campaign.
The decision of both campaigns to begin airing television advertisements about two weeks before the state's primary on June 7 reflects the growing closeness of the race.
Recent polling data is scarce, but a new survey from the Public Policy Institute of California found that in the last month the race between Sanders and Clinton has tightened. Clinton now holds a 46-44 lead over Sanders compared to her 48-41 lead over Sanders in March.
Both Clinton and Sanders have campaigned intensely throughout the state this week. Sanders hopes to secure a large number of delegate's from the state's primary, when 475 are at stake. And while Clinton is likely to have enough delegates to secure her party's nomination before polls close in California on June 7, she is looking to avoid an embarrassing loss in the nation's most populous and one of its most liberal states.

Trump Shows How Much He Really Cares About Veterans


Trump Shows How Much He Really Cares About Veterans





Donald Trump is rich as hell. I know this because he says so, often. His wealth has shaped his campaign's entire narrative. He can create jobs because he's a businessman who does important business things. He does all the best deals. He never settles. Trump is so rich he won't be beholden to lobbyists because he's self-funding his campaign, at least until recently. (In fact, he never entirely was.)
But he is rich! He reportedly made at least $557 million last year, although we can't be certain of that until he releases his taxes, which he definitely never will. But we know he's Richie McRicherson because he lives in the ugliest apartment you've ever seen, and that much ugly don't come cheap. Racist butlers don't either. And who but a rich man could have his businesses declare bankruptcy four times, screwing the vendors who supplied his casinos out of millions of dollars he owed them, and still rent his name out to people as a way to give their own ventures a sheen of legitimacy?
The nice thing about being rich (I imagine) is money can save you from all sorts of scrapes, from minor mishaps to murder charges. And Donald Trump is in a bit of a scrape.
It might be hard to remember, what with their kiss-and-make-up interview last week, but Donald Trump once hated Megyn Kelly so much he skipped an entire Republican debate. (Remember debates?) Instead of arguing with his fellow Republican candidates over who would deport the most Mexicans for having gay abortions, Trump staged his own event, dutifully covered live by every news network not holding the debate: a fundraiser for veterans' organizations. He claimed to have raised $6 million for the various charities — $5 million from others, $1 million from himself. That's real money when it comes to nonprofit budgets.
Only… he didn't.
Trump being Trump, we'll probably never know how much money he raised that night. But his campaign manager has admitted it wasn't the $6 million Trump claimed.
Trump, who went to a rich kids' military boarding school, got multiple deferments to get out of Vietnam, and has said he likes troops who "didn't get captured," loves to fashion himself a champion of veterans. That's what his counter-event that debate night was all about: selling himself as a generous friend of the men and women who serve our country in the military.
But just like the specious claims of "bone spurs" he used to get one of those deferments during Vietnam, the whole thing was a sham. He was slow to disburse the money to vets' organizations, and now it turns out he didn't even raised what he claimed.
But all of this is easy to fix. If you recall, we've established beyond a doubt that Donald Trump is, in fact, a rich man.
So if he didn't raise the full $6 million, why doesn't he just write a check and make up the difference? Hell, why wasn't that his first instinct?
No matter how much he's fallen short, the difference should be a drop in the bucket to Trump. He's already spent $43 million of his own fortune on his campaign for the White House. (Technically it's a loan, but he's said he won't pay it back now that he's raising money from the exact same special interests he claimed he wouldn't be beholden to because he's just so darned rich.)
Why didn't Trump come right out when the story broke and say, "Here's the rest"? He could have easily turned a negative story into a positive one. It would've been the right thing to do.
But when was the last thing Donald Trump did the right thing? His values, if they exist at all, are inside out and backwards. He's stuck in the world's worst feedback loop, surrounded by sycophants, with millions of suckers buying his shtick.
And it is a shtick. Trump's professed love for veterans is a perfect example. He makes a show — a literal television show — out of his devotion to vets. But his real feelings came out in that unguarded moment where he made fun of John McCain's stint as a prisoner of war. Someone who has given a moment's thought to the sacrifices and challenges of veterans would never, ever have said what he said.
It's not about the money. Trump may have given money to veterans' organizations in the past though, according to data shared by his own campaign, his charitable giving is better measured in rounds of golf than actual dollars. (His tax returns would shed more light on this, but we're not going to see them, ever.)
It's about values. It's about using veterans as a prop for his campaign, lying about how much money he raised for them, and then not fixing his lie once he was caught. It would have been easy.
After all, in case you hadn't heard, Trump is very rich.

It's time to take Donald Trump's scary foreign policy views seriously


It's time to take Donald Trump's scary foreign policy views seriously




After Ted Cruz's withdrawal from the race, Donald Trump is the presumptive Republican nominee for president. This is real, it's happening, and it means Trump has a legitimate shot at becoming president.
That means it is time to start taking the possibility of a Trump presidency seriously — starting with his views on foreign affairs. As president, Trump would have near-total control over America's policy toward other countries, in a way he wouldn't with many domestic policy issues.
So it's worth special consideration: What would a Trump presidency foreign policy look like?
Some observers have tried to identify something like a Trump doctrine, a unifying set of beliefs that would govern his actions. But as best anyone can tell, there is no such thing. Even in his allegedly major foreign policy speech, his rhetoric constituted mostly vague, quasi-emotional platitudes — make America look strong, save our jobs, make the best deal — that don't add up to a strategic doctrine.
But while Trump may lack an ideology, he definitely has policy views on key issues such as Russia, China, and ISIS. Some are nationalist, some economic nationalist, some more dovish, and some defy categorization. Many of these ideas track with what he's said about foreign policy for years. Put together, they're an eclectic plan to take US policy and put it on a totally new course — often in some fairly radical, and fairly scary, ways.