President Trump presents the "President's Cup" to the Tokyo Grand
Sumo Tournament winner Asanoyama, at Ryogoku Kokugikan Stadium, on
Sunday, in Tokyo. (Associated Press)
President Trump is accustomed to congratulating sports stars in the United States. But no president before him has ever presented a championship trophy to a sumo wrestler in Japan.
Trump
on Sunday awarded a giant, eagle-topped “President's Cup” to wrestler
Asanoyama, a 25-year-old athlete who clinched a tournament win a day
earlier.
The president -- the first American to participate in the
tournament -- then congratulated Asanoyama on his “outstanding
achievement.”
President Trump presents the "President's Cup" to the Tokyo Grand
Sumo Tournament winner Asanoyama, at Ryogoku Kokugikan Stadium, on
Sunday, in Tokyo. (Associated Press)
Then, with a little help, Trump handed the heavy cup to the champ. The White House said the 54-inch-high trophy weighs 60 to 70 pounds.
Asanoyama, whose real name is Hiroki Ishibashi, weighs 390 pounds, according to the Associated Press.
Earlier,
Trump sat ringside and watched some wrestling action, accompanied by
first lady Melania Trump and Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe and his
wife, Akie – along with a crowd of about 11,500 wrestling fans.
President Trump attends the Tokyo Grand Sumo Tournament with
Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe at Ryogoku Kokugikan Stadium, on
Sunday, in Tokyo. First lady Melania Trump is at top right. (Associated
Press)
The size of the crowd was half the normal capacity,
as part of security preparations for Trump’s visit, and spectators went
through security checks, the Associated Press reported.
The
president is in Japan on a four-day visit that will include meeting
Japan’s new emperor and discussing trade issues with the Asian nation’s
leaders. The Associated Press contributed to this story.
President Donald Trump greets troops after landing at Joint Base
Elmendorf-Richardson for a refueling stop en route to Japan Friday, May
24, 2019, in Anchorage. (Associated Press)
President Trump greeted military personnel in Alaska during a refueling stop on Friday while on his way to Japan for a state visit.
Trump talked with American troops on the tarmac at Joint Base Elmendorf-Richardson, posed for photos and signed caps.
“Nice stop,” he was heard saying while walking across the tarmac.
“We’re
here in Alaska, we’re on our way to Japan, we’re with our great
military. These are great, great future leaders, right?” Trump said in a
video posted on Twitter.
“We just got off the plane, I wanted to
say hello, and these are tremendous people,” he continued, pointing at
the troops. “So thank you very much.”
Trump also met with Gov.
Mike Dunleavy during the stop, discussing issues concerning Alaska such
regulations affecting Alaska economy.
Trump was set to arrive in
Japan on Saturday evening local time, with the president being the first
foreign leader to meet Japan’s new emperor, Naruhito.
The latest charm offensive from Japan comes amid
fears among Japanese leaders that the potential U.S. tariffs on cars
could be devastating to the economy.
Japanese Prime Minister
Shinzo Abe likely to use his close relationship with Trump to make sure
his country is spared of the tariffs.
To
make that happen, the organizers of the state visit will show Trump the
country’s traditions, including meeting the emperor and attending sumo
wrestling matches. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
Actor Jon Voight expressed his support for President Trump, declaring him "the greatest president since Abraham Lincoln" in a two-part video message posted on Twitter on Friday night. Voight, one of the very few outspoken conservative actors in Hollywood, spoke directly to the "people of the Republican Party."
"I
know that you'll agree with me when I say that our president has our
utmost respect and our love," Voight began. "This job is not easy for
he's battling the left and their absurd words of destruction. ... Our
nation has been built on the solid ground from our forefathers and there
is a moral code of duty that has been passed on from President
Lincoln."
The Academy Award-winning actor told his followers that
he wanted to "acknowledge the truth" that "our country is stronger,
safer, and with more jobs" because President Trump "has made every move
correct."
"Don't
be fooled by the political left because we are the people of this
nation that is witnessing triumph," Voight continued. "So let us stand
with our president, let us stand for this truth that President Trump is
the greatest president since Abraham Lincoln. God bless America."
Voight
is best known for his lead role as Joe Buck in the 1969 film "Midnight
Cowboy." His decades-long career includes movie roles in "Deliverance,"
"Mission: Impossible," "Anaconda," "Zoolander," and "Transformers" as
well as television roles in "24" and "Ray Donovan."
President Trump and first lady Melania Trump landed in Japan
on Saturday, kicking off a highly anticipated state visit -- with the
president to become the first foreign leader to meet Japan’s new Emperor
Naruhito.
The trip, which will last through Tuesday, comes amid
fears among Japanese political and business leaders that U.S. tariffs on
the auto industry will have a crippling effect on the Asian nation's
economy.
The president’s first stop was a dinner with business
leaders at the U.S. ambassador’s residence in Tokyo after a brief
airport welcome.
Trump told reporters that he’s working to introduce “fairness and reciprocity” in the new American-Japanese trade agreement.
“Japan
has had a substantial edge for many, many years but that’s OK," Trump
said during remarks with the business leaders in Tokyo, noting that
negotiators were “hard at work” on the trade talks. “We’ll get it a
little bit more fair.”
“Japan has had a substantial edge for many, many years but that’s ok. We’ll get it a little bit more fair.” — President Trump
He added that the new trade deal will “address the trade imbalance” and eliminate the existing “barriers to U.S. exports.”
Japan
enjoys a $70 billion trade surplus with the U.S, while it imports just a
fraction of U.S. goods and imposes protective measures against
competition from other countries, a source of frustration for Trump, who sees tariffs as a corrective measure.
President Donald Trump speaks as he meets with Japanese business leaders, Saturday, in Tokyo. (Associated Press)
Japan is expected to use the state visit as a charm offensive to convince Trump to spare the country of the punitive tariffs.
To
fulfill this task, Trump is officially the first foreign leader invited
to meet with the country’s new Emperor Naruhito, who inherited the
throne earlier this month, a fact Trump gleefully acknowledged earlier
this week. The emperor will treat Trump to a meeting and host an
imperial banquet in Trump's honor.
“Prime Minister [Shinzo] Abe
said to me, very specifically, 'You are the guest of honor.' There's
only one guest of honor ... I'm the guest of honor at the biggest event
that they've had in over 200 years,” Trump said this week.
“So it's a great thing. And we get along very well with Japan. I get along very well with the prime minister.”
U.S. President Donald Trump, right, and first lady Melania Trump
arrive at the Haneda International Airport Saturday, May 25, 2019, in
Tokyo. (Associated Press)
During the first remarks in Japan, Trump also
stressed that Japan is buying military equipment from the U.S., which he
says was a sign of threats in the world.
“We make the best
equipment in the world -- the best jets, missiles, the best rockets, the
best everything,” he said. “So Japan is doing very large orders and we
appreciate that.”
“It's probably appropriate for everything going on,” he added. “The world is changing.”
U.S. President Donald Trump, right, is greeted by Japanese Foreign
Minister Taro Kono, left, on Trump's arrival at the Haneda
International Airport Saturday, May 25, 2019, in Tokyo. (Associated
Press)
On Sunday, Trump and Abe are expected to play golf
and then watch a sumo wrestling tournament in front-row seats. Trump
previously called the sport “fascinating.”
Only on Monday will the
two leaders sit down to talk about trade. A possibility of a trade deal
is reportedly on the table, but officials on neither side committed to
such goal. (Because of the Japan trip, Trump paid a pre-Memorial Day visit to Arlington National Cemetery on Thursday, to honor America's war dead.)
The
U.S. and Japanese leaders will also discuss the threat from North
Korea, an issue that comes in the wake of U.S. national security adviser
John Bolton’s comments on Friday that a series of short-range missile
tests by North Korea last month was a violation of U.N. Security Council
resolutions.
U.S. President Donald Trump, second from left, reviews an honor
guard during a welcome ceremony, escorted by Japanese Prime Minister
Shinzo Abe at Akasaka Palace in Tokyo, Nov. 6, 2017. (Associated Press)
But it remains to be seen whether the celebrations
and close relationship between Trump and Abe will be enough to force
Washington to reconsider imposing tariffs on Japanese auto exports.
The Trump administration is currently embroiled in a trade war against China over the country’s treatment of American companies.
Yet
the administration has been tough and criticized both Japan and the
European Union for, in its view, unfair trade practices that exploit the
U.S. economy. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
Several conservative commentators who were previously employed by CNN
are now speaking out against the network, claiming its current identity
is "anti-Trump" instead of neutral, as it claims to be. One claims the
network "openly despises conservatives."
"Most of us got squeezed out involuntarily,” Jack Kingston, a former Georgia
congressman who appeared on the network, told Mediaite. “I was there
for two years and was certainly willing to continue. It was clear to me
in the end that the Republicans they prefer are anti-Trump Republicans.”
"Most
of us got squeezed out involuntarily. I was there for two years and was
certainly willing to continue. It was clear to me in the end that the
Republicans they prefer are anti-Trump Republicans.” — Jack Kingston, former Georgia congressman
Former U.S. Rep. Jack Kingston and his wife Libby are seen in Atlanta, May 20, 2014. (Associated Press)
Conservatives come and go
Pro-Trump
contributors at CNN seem to have come and gone in recent months. Last
week, the network fired former Virginia Attorney General Ken Cuccinelli
as reports indicated he was being considered for a high-ranking
immigration post in the Department of Homeland Security.
Earlier this year, CNN fired economic analyst Stephen Moore after President Trump nominated him to serve on the Federal Reserve Board. But Moore withdrew from consideration after CNN and other outlets reported old derogatory remarks he made about women and the Obamas.
Previously, CNN let go other commentators who supported President Trump.
Contributors Jeffrey Lord and Ed Martin were fired for remarks they
made outside the network. Paris Denard was let go after he was
accused of sexual misconduct from a previous job. The contracts of
Kingston and former South Carolina Lt. Gov. Andre Bauer were not
renewed. And former Trump campaign and administration officials Corey
Lewandowski, Marc Short and Jason Miller all had short-lived paid
contributorships.
Perceived animus
In
addition to Kingston, other ex-CNN contributors weighed in on the
perceived animus toward them at the so-called "neutral" cable news
network in a report by Mediaite.
Moore has particularly been outspoken about his frustration with CNN.
“Who
are the Republicans, John Kasich? He hates Trump!” Moore said,
referring to the former Republican governor of Ohio, whom CNN recently
hired. "CNN is the 'hate Trump' network. They just trash Trump every
single hour of every single day. All they’ve talked about for two years
is the Mueller report and how bad does it make them look now that it
proved nothing."
"Who are the Republicans, John
Kasich? He hates Trump! CNN is the 'hate Trump' network. They just trash
Trump every single hour of every single day." — Stephen Moore, writer and commentator
Stephen Moore left CNN after President Trump nominated him to serve on the Federal Reserve Board.
Former Trump campaign deputy communications
director Bryan Lanza left the network, claiming CNN's only identity is
"anti-Trump," not "conservative versus liberal.”
'Last-place performance'
“If
you hate Trump, you tune to CNN to validate your hatred,” Lanza told
Mediaite. “Not sure it’s a winning formula -- and I’m validated by their
last-place performance against other outlets.”
“If you hate Trump, you tune to CNN to validate your hatred.” — Bryan Lanza, former Trump campaign deputy communications director
“CNN
used to pretend it accepted right-wing voices for balance, but now it
openly despises conservatives who are pro-Trump,” former CNN contributor
Buck Sexton, a former CIA intelligence officer, said. “Today the entire
enterprise clings to a fundamental dishonesty: that it has no political
agenda. Taking down Trump is obviously the agenda. And in this regard,
some of CNN’s ‘hard news’ anchors are the biggest journalistic frauds of
all.”
“CNN used to pretend it accepted right-wing
voices for balance, but now it openly despises conservatives who are
pro-Trump. ... Taking down Trump is obviously the agenda.” — Buck Sexton, former CIA intelligence officer
Former CIA intelligence officer Buck Sexton says, "CNN’s ‘hard news’ anchors are the biggest journalistic frauds of all."
Sexton, however, did leave the door open to return to the network "if CNN stopped being crazy.”
A
spokesperson for CNN told Mediaite that the network is "always looking
to add new perspectives from across the political spectrum" and
highlighted conservatives commentators Scott Jennings, David Urban, and
Steve Cortes, as well as former Republican officeholders such as Kasich,
former U.S. Sen. Rick Santorum of Pennsylvania and former U.S. Rep. Mia
Love of Utah.
CNN did not immediately respond to Fox News' request for comment.
The New York federal judge who ruled on Wednesday
that the Trump administration must comply with two subpoenas from the
House Financial Services and Intelligence Committees has donated in the
past to a slew of big-name Democrats -- including two who currently sit
on those committees, according to federal election filings.
After an hour of oral arguments, Barack Obama-appointed
U.S. District Judge Edgardo Ramos ruled the subpoenas to Deutsche
Bank and Capital One have "a legitimate legislative purpose," and that
Trump was unlikely to prevail in a lawsuit to quash the requests. Judges
have the option to recuse themselves if there is an appearance of bias. Federal election records show
that, when he was a partner at the law firm Day Pitney LLP and before
he was appointed to the bench in 2011, Ramos sent $350 to Connecticut
Democrat Rep. Jim Himes from 2007 to 2008, as well as $500 to elect New
York Rep. Nydia Velazquez in 2010.
Himes sits on both the Intelligence and Financial Services Committees, while Velazquez sits on Financial Services.
(U.S. District Judge Edgardo Ramos (Federal Bar Council))
Ramos
also contributed $1,000 to Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand's Senate campaign in
2009, another $1,000 to the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee,
and several thousand dollars over several years to Obama for America.
His political donations apparently stopped after his elevation to the
judgeship, in line with ethical standards.
Trump’s lawyers had
asked Ramos to temporarily block Congress from gaining access to the
records. They said it was a "safe bet" they would appeal his decision.
Ramos' ruling came two days after another federal judge in Washington upheld a separate congressional subpoena seeking financial documents dating back to 2011 from Trump accounting firm Mazars USA.
That judge, Obama appointee Amit Mehta, donated to the Obama-Biden campaign in 2012.
The
White House has aggressively pushed back against Democrat-led
investigations in the wake of Special Counsel Robert Mueller's report,
saying Democrats simply want a "do-over" of Mueller's lengthy
investigation that ultimately found no evidence of any Trump-Russia
collusion.
Trump this week blocked former White House lawyer Don
McGhan, a central figure in Mueller's report, from appearing before the
House Judiciary Committee.
Some congressional Republicans have
also characterized the subpoenas as an abuse of authority and blasted
the Trump-focused investigations.
Rep. Jim Jordan, R-Ohio, the
ranking member of the House Oversight Committee, called the inquiry into
Mazars USA "an unprecedented abuse of the Committee’s subpoena
authority to target and expose the private financial information of the
President of the United States.” Fox News' Bill Mears contributed to this report.
In a biting monologue Thursday night, Fox News' Laura Ingraham went after Nancy Pelosi,
saying the House speaker has an "obsession" with President Trump,
calling her "the leader of the do-nothing party" and questioning her
mental fitness.
"Nancy Pelosi doesn't seem well," Ingraham said on "The Ingraham Angle.
"The Pelosi I remember was a hard-charging California congresswoman
with big, bold legislative ideas. Although Republicans opposed her
Obama-era tax-and-spend, the stimulus or her ObamaCare cramdown, at
least she was doing something. But now she spends her days obsessed with
President Trump, muttering and sputtering,"
Ingraham mocked Pelosi, playing clips of the lawmaker from San Francisco struggling to find her thoughts at news conferences.
The back-and-forth between Trump and Pelosi continued Thursday with the speaker asking the president's family to hold an intervention with the president due to his meeting walkout Wednesday. Trump responded by saying Pelosi was "not the same person, she's lost it."
Ingraham agreed with Trump.
"Number
one, when you cannot produce a coherent thought, maybe it's time to
hang it up. Number two, you've had the gavel for four months and you
have nothing to show for it but resistance. And number three, you as
leader of the Democrats are doing a grave disservice and real damage to
America by repeatedly refusing to recognize the legitimacy of the duly
elected president of United States and his appointed Cabinet," Ingraham
said.
Ingraham also played clips of Democratic presidential
candidate Joe Biden struggling with his speech and implied that both
Biden, 76, and Pelosi, 79, were too old to hold positions of power in
the Democratic Party.
"Both
Joe Biden, the 2020 front-runner, and Speaker Pelosi are not just out
of step for the American people on key issues, to watch and to observe
them, we see that they have lost a step or two or three. Period,"
Ingraham said.
"They look like they belong in commercials for
Visiting Angels. They shouldn't have their hands on any levers of power.
Stay away. Yesterday she seemed to struggle with the whole
subject-verb-direct-object thing."
Visiting Angels is a senior home care provider.
Famed
former Secretary of State Henry Kissinger will mark his 96th birthday
Monday, but he hasn't retired from sharing his insights on global
affairs.
At a gathering in Washington last week, Kissinger spoke about the Trump administration’s upcoming Middle East peace plan, dubbed the “Deal of the Century.”
Other
veteran diplomats in attendance included national security adviser John
Bolton and former Israeli ambassador Zalman Shoval.
Former U.S. Secretary of State Henry Kissinger addresses the
Senate Armed Services Committee, Jan. 25, 2018, with former U.S.
Secretary of State George Shultz in the background. (Associated Press)
Both Kissinger and Shoval reportedly spoke about the Middle East peace plan, set to be unveiled in Bahrain in June.
Kissinger
-- who served as secretary of state and national security adviser under
presidents Richard Nixon and Gerald Ford -- went on to praise Israeli
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, saying he “correctly analyzes the
situation."
"Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu correctly analyzes the situation." — Henry Kissinger
The
first part of the Trump plan, which has been two years in the making,
will be revealed June 25-26 during a conference that will bring together
government and business leaders from around the world in a bid to
increase investment in the Palestinian economy.
The conference
won’t be addressing the most contentious parts of the conflict between
Israel and the Palestinians -- such as borders, the status of Jerusalem,
Palestinian refugees and Israel’s security.
In
a statement with Bahrain, the White House said the June workshop will
give government, civil and business leaders a chance to gather support
for economic initiatives that could be possible with a peace agreement.
The
U.S. hopes Arab countries will invest in Palestinian territories, fix
crumbling infrastructure and support other industrial projects in an
effort to convince the leadership to accept the peace plan.
“The
Palestinian people, along with all people in the Middle East, deserve a
future with dignity and the opportunity to better their lives,” Trump’s
senior adviser and son-in-law, Jared Kushner, said in a statement
Sunday.
“Economic progress can only be achieved with a solid economic vision and if the core political issues are resolved.”