The news – plus barbs from social media trolls and other critics -- may be too much for CNN’s Don Lemon to bear much longer.
The host of “CNN Tonight” told an audience in New York City on Thursday that the current “level of toxicity” in society – which he attributed to the Trump presidency – has him questioning whether he’ll still be on the air when the 2020 presidential election rolls around, according to reports.
“I
don’t know if it’s worth this level of toxicity,” the 53-year-old Lemon
said about continuing in his current position, the Daily Beast
reported.
“I’m
10 years older than when he rode down the escalator in July 2015,”
Lemon added, referring to Donald Trump's campaign announcement four
years ago.
Lemon made the remarks at the Financial Times’ “Future of News” conference.
The anchor also spoke about the negative, unsolicited feedback he sometimes receives.
“I
was doing a shoot in the park the other day and someone shouted at me,
‘I’m sick of watching you. We built this country. I can’t wait for CNN
to fire your black a--, you f----t,'” he recalled, according to
Deadline.
“So, all of those sorts of people call you on the phone
and say those things, or they write you. I don’t go on social media
anymore, it’s so toxic,” he added.
Lemon went on to blame the Trump era, and even the president himself.
“I’m
black and gay on cable television in prime time — a unicorn — and I’m a
target of the right, a target of white extremists, neo-Nazis and of the
president,” Lemon said, according to Deadline.
He added later, “ I wonder how long I will continue to do this particular job,” the Daily Beast reported.
Lemon speculated he might be happier as a celebrity chef, or perhaps doing journalism “in a different way.”
Mexican authorities stop a migrant caravan that had earlier
crossed the Mexico - Guatemala border, near Metapa, Chiapas state,
Mexico, Wednesday, June 5, 2019. (AP Photo/Marco Ugarte)
With just days to go until the Trump administration is set to impose punishing tariffs
on Mexico unless the country halts the unprecedented flow of illegal
immigrants across the southern border, numerous signs that Mexico would
capitulate emerged Thursday -- but it remained unclear Friday
morning whether their efforts would satisfy the White House.
Reports in
the evening indicated that Mexico's negotiators with Washington have
offered to immediately deploy 6,000 National Guard troops to the border
with Guatemala. Additionally, Mexico has reportedly agreed to a major
overhaul of reasonable asylum protocols, which would require asylum
applicants to seek permanent refuge in the first country they arrive in
after fleeing their home countries.
For virtually all Central
American migrants, that country would not be the United States. The
Trump administration has already begun requiring asylum applicants to wait in Mexico
while their claims are processed, saying too many applicants were using
the system fraudulently to escape into the country. Last month, the
Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals denied a request to stop that practice temporarily.
However,
two administration officials tell Fox News that while talks have been
going well with Mexico, and that Mexico is making some fresh proposals,
there is not yet a deal that U.S. officials are sure to imminently
accept.
Also on Thursday, Mexico's financial intelligence agency
announced it had frozen the bank accounts of 26 people who it claimed
"have presumably participated in migrant smuggling and the organization
of illegal migrant caravans."
The agency said it had detected
money transfers from central Mexico to six Mexican border cities
presumably related to the caravans.
Mexican President Andrés
Manuel López Obrador insisted on Thursday that the Mexican government
does not "act against anybody to please any foreign government."
Mexican authorities stop a migrant caravan that had earlier
crossed the Mexico - Guatemala border, near Metapa, Chiapas state,
Mexico, Wednesday, June 5, 2019. (AP Photo/Marco Ugarte)
Meanwhile, some 200 Mexican military police,
immigration agents and federal police blocked the advance of about 1,000
Central American migrants who were walking north along a southern
Mexico highway on Wednesday, once again showing a tougher new stance on
attempts to use the country as a stepping-stone to the U.S.
The
group of migrants, including many women and children, set out early from
Ciudad Hidalgo at the Mexico-Guatemala border and was headed for
Tapachula, the principal city in the region. State and local police
accompanied the caravan.
The officials blocked the highway near the community of Metapa, about 11 miles from Tapachula.
Unarmed
agents wrestled some migrants who resisted to the ground, but the vast
majority complied and boarded buses or immigration agency vans. Some
migrants fainted and fell to the ground. One young man who collapsed was
taken for medical attention.
That afternoon, in Mexico City,
police detained Irineo Mujica, the head of migrant aide group Pueblo Sin
Fronteras, and Cristobal Sanchez, a migrant activist.
Vice
President Mike Pence, monitoring the talks from his travels in
Pennsylvania, said the U.S. was "encouraged" by Mexico's latest
proposals but, so far, tariffs still were set to take effect Monday.
Trump, in announcing the tariffs last week, promised that they would swiftly increase if no action was taken. The president declared Wednesday evening that "not nearly enough" progress was being made in last-minute negotiations with Mexico.
"On
June 10th, the United States will impose a 5% Tariff on all goods
coming into our Country from Mexico, until such time as illegal migrants
coming through Mexico, and into our Country, STOP," Trump said on May 30. "The
Tariff will gradually increase until the Illegal Immigration problem is
remedied, ... ..at which time the Tariffs will be removed. Details from
the White House to follow."
Fox News is told the tariff on all
goods by land, sea, and air from Mexico will hike to 10 percent on July 1
-- and potentially increase substantially from there.
"If Mexico
still has not taken action to dramatically reduce or eliminate the
number of illegal aliens crossing its territory into the United States,
Tariffs will be increased to 15 percent on August 1, 2019, to 20 percent
on September 1, 2019, and to 25 percent on October 1, 2019," Trump said in a statement released
later by the White House on Thursday. "Tariffs will permanently remain
at the 25 percent level unless and until Mexico substantially stops the
illegal inflow of aliens coming through its territory."
The
statement added: "Thousands of innocent lives are taken every year as a
result of this lawless chaos. It must end NOW! ... Mexico’s passive
cooperation in allowing this mass incursion constitutes an emergency and
extraordinary threat to the national security and economy of the United
States."
Specifically, White House sources told Fox News that
Mexico would need to step up security efforts on the border, target
transnational smugglers, crack down on illicit bus lines and align with
the U.S. on a workable asylum policy. Mexico could use certain so-called
choke points on the southern border to curb illegal migration sharply,
according to the sources.
Arrests along the southern border have
skyrocketed in recent months, with border agents making more than
100,000 arrests or denials of entry in March, a 12-year
high. Immigration courts that process asylum claims currently have faced
a backlog of more than 800,000 cases and asylum applicants increasingly
have been staying in the U.S. even after their claims for asylum have
been denied.
More than 4,000 individuals have been apprehended at
the border with children who are not their own in recent
months, administration officials tell Fox News.
FILE - This May 29, 2019 file photo released by U.S. Customs and
Border Protection (CBP) shows some of 1,036 migrants who crossed the
U.S.-Mexico border in El Paso, Texas, the largest that the Border Patrol
says it has ever encountered. (U.S. Customs and Border Protection via
AP, File)
And, Customs and Border Protection said it
apprehended or turned away over 109,000 migrants attempting to cross the
border in April, the second month in a row the number has topped
100,000.
In a dramatic moment, more than 1,000 illegal immigrants were apprehended by border agents near the U.S.-Mexico border
last week -- the largest ever group of migrants ever apprehended at a
single time, sources told Fox News. The group of 1,036 illegal
immigrants found in the El Paso sector included migrants from Guatemala, El Salvador and Honduras, according to sources.
The
Trump administration has heavily focused on asylum law reforms, making
the current reported Mexican overtures in that area particularly
important. Asylum law, conservatives point out, is intended to shield
individuals from near-certain death or persecution on account of
limited factors like religious or political affiliation — not poor
living conditions and economic despair.
Last year, the Justice Department eliminated gang violence and domestic abuse as a possible justification for seeking asylum.
Most
asylum applicants are ultimately rejected for having an insufficient or
unfounded personalized fear of persecution, following a full hearing of
their case before an asylum officer or an immigration judge. Fox News' John Roberts and The Associated Press contributed to this report.
President Trump has taken the gloves off in his ongoing feud with House Speaker Nancy Pelosi.
Speaking exclusively to Fox News’ Laura Ingraham
in Normandy, France, in an interview that aired Thursday, the president
first took time to pay tribute to the heroes who fought on D-Day 75
years ago, describing them as “incredibly brave people” who displayed
incredible “valor.”
Then, the president switched gears, slamming
Pelosi, D-Calif., as a “nasty, vindictive, horrible person” -- after
saying he had “tried to be nice to her.”
“I think she’s a
disgrace. I actually don’t think she’s a talented person, I’ve tried to
be nice to her because I would have liked to have gotten some deals
done,” Trump said on “The Ingraham Angle.”
“She’s
incapable of doing deals, she’s a nasty, vindictive, horrible person,
the Mueller report came out, it was a disaster for them.”
Trump then referenced former Special Counsel Robert Mueller’s report, suggesting some Democrats hoped it would give them the so-called silver bullet to take him down.
More from Fox News Flash
“They
thought their good friend Bobby Mueller was going to give them a great
report and he came out with a report with 13 horrible, angry Democrats
who are totally biased against me,” the president told Ingraham.
“A couple of them worked for Hillary Clinton,
they then added five more, also Democrats. With all of that,
two-and-a-half years, think of it, from before I even got elected,
they’ve been going after me and they have nothing.”
Ingraham then
asked Trump if he cared whether or not Mueller would testify publicly
about his report. The president used the question as another chance to
unload on Pelosi.
“Let
me tell you, he made such a fool out of himself the last time she --
because what people don’t report is the letter he had to do to
straighten out his testimony because his testimony was wrong but Nancy
Pelosi, I call her nervous Nancy, Nancy Pelosi doesn’t talk about it,”
Trump told Fox News.
“Nancy Pelosi’s a disaster, OK, she’s a
disaster and let her do what she wants, you know what? I think they’re
in big trouble because when you look at the kind of crimes that were
committed, and I don’t need any more evidence, and I guess from what I’m
hearing there’s a lot of evidence coming in.
“And then ask Nancy,
why is her district [having] drug needles all over the place? It’s the
most disgusting thing what she’s allowed to happen to her district, with
needles, with drug addicts... with people living on the sidewalk.”
Trump continued, referencing Pelosi’s reported comment to fellow top Democrats that she would like to see him in “prison.”
“It
was a horrible, nasty, vicious statement while I’m overseas... She
didn’t want to – she is a terrible person and I’ll tell you her name,
it’s nervous Nancy because she’s a nervous wreck.”
Pelosi, as
Politico reported, made the remark while defending her stance against
impeaching the president in an evening meeting with House Judiciary
Chairman Jerry Nadler, D-N.Y., and other top Democrats.
“I
don’t want to see him impeached, I want to see him in prison,” she
said, according to multiple Democratic sources familiar with the
meeting. House Intelligence Chairman Adam Schiff, D-Calif., Oversight
Chairman Elijah Cummings, D-Md., Ways and Means Chairman Richard Neal,
D-Mass., and Foreign Affairs Chairman Eliot Engel, D-N.Y., also
reportedly attended the meeting.
Trump also discussed his potential 2020 opponent, former Vice President Joe Biden, during his interview with Ingraham.
After
being asked about Biden downplaying the potential threat of China to
the U.S. at a recent town-hall event, Trump said: “He just doesn't get
it, he just doesn't get it.”
“How happy would President Xi be to
have Joe Biden be the nominee of the Democratic party,” Ingraham
followed up, to which the president replied: “Well he wants him, he
wants him.”
Elsewhere during the president’s wide-ranging
interview with Ingraham, he said Mueller made “such a fool” out of
himself last week when he delivered his first and only public statement
about the Russia investigation.
“Let me tell you, he made such a
fool out of himself ... because what people don’t report is the letter
he had to do to straighten out his testimony because his testimony was
wrong,” Trump told Ingraham.
Trump was referring to Mueller’s
initial suggestion that the president was not charged with an
obstruction-of-justice offense because of longstanding Justice
Department policy.
“Charging
the president with a crime was not an option we could consider,”
Mueller said last week, citing an Office of Legal Counsel (OLC) opinion
stating that a sitting president could not be indicted.
“If we had
confidence that the president clearly did not commit a crime, we would
have said that. ... We concluded that we would not reach a determination
one way or the other about whether the president committed a crime,”
Mueller said. Fox News' Brooke Singman contributed to this report.
Rep. Ilhan Omar, D-Minn., rebuked a 2020 Democratic presidential candidate on Wednesday after he defended his offer to debate Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, D-N.Y.
"No means no!" Omar said, using the language surrounding consent.
She was responding to former Rep. John Delaney, D-Md., who pushed to debate Ocasio-Cortez after she told him to "sashay away" from the 2020 field, citing his position on "Medicare-for-all"
Delaney appeared to provoke the ire of California Democrats on Saturday when he told the state's Democratic convention that "Medicare-for-all" was bad policy.
“We
should have universal health care. We should have universal health
care, but it shouldn’t be a kind of health care that kicks 150 million
Americans off their health care. That’s not smart policy," Delaney said.
When
Ocasio-Cortez, a prominent "Medicare-for-all" supporter, criticized
Delaney's statement, he requested a debate with the progressive
congresswoman.
Her
refusal prompted the response that Omar blasted on Wednesday. "At a
minimum, we have to be tolerant of different views on achieving the same
goal: universal healthcare," Delaney tweeted, alongside an article
about Ocasio-Cortez's refusal.
"That's why I responded to @aoc tweet with a debate offer. This isn't about slogans - people's lives are at stake. We need debates and the truth."
"AOC
and Rep Omar are incredibly intelligent women and rising stars inside
of the Democratic party. Instead of tweeting at our campaign and taking
pot shots, we should be sitting down and talking about the best path
forward," said Michael Starr Hopkins, the Delaney campaign's national
press secretary. "We’re on the same team. It’s okay to disagree, but
refusing to have a substantive conversation helps no one, especially not
the Americans who so desperately need us to solve this healthcare
crisis."
Delaney, on Wednesday, also lamented the Democratic Party's "intolerance to different ideas." He told Fox News that "Medicare-for-all" made it difficult for Democrats to beat Trump in 2020.
“In
the Medicare-for-all bill, it makes private insurance illegal. And
there are 150 million Americans who have private insurance and most of
them like it," he said.
"And
I think the Republicans are not going to be afraid to talk about this
and they’re going to pound it over the American people’s heads and make
them afraid that the Democrats are going to make them lose their health
insurance, and tell them that they’ve got to go on a government website
to get their health insurance,”
Their exchange came as 2020
Democrats faced scrutiny over how they would pay for the program as well
as whether or not it would kick millions off of their private health
insurance plans.
Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt., an ally of Ocasio-Cortez, said at the end of May
that he would likely pay for the program with a progressive income tax
increase and a payroll tax on employers. The program has been estimated
to cost more than $30 trillion, according to two right-leaning think
tanks that looked at the issue.
The Trump administration has blasted the proposal as "the biggest threat to the American health care system." Fox News' Paul Steinhauser contributed to this report.
House Speaker Nancy Pelosi told senior Democrats on Tuesday that she ultimately wants to see President Trump “in prison,” according to a report.
The
speaker reportedly made the remark while defending her stance against
impeaching the president in an evening meeting with House Judiciary
Chairman Jerry Nadler and other top Democrats, according to Politico.
“I
don’t want to see him impeached, I want to see him in prison,” she
said, according to multiple Democratic sources familiar with the
meeting. House Intelligence Chairman Adam Schiff, Oversight Chairman
Elijah Cummings, Ways and Means Chairman Richard Neal and Foreign
Affairs Chairman Eliot Engel also reportedly attended the meeting.
“I don’t want to see him impeached, I want to see him in prison.” — Remark attributed to House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, according to a report
Pelosi
wants to hold the president accountable, the sources said, but thinks
voters should get him out of office in 2020, after which he could
possibly face criminal charges.
Nadler and dozens of Democrats
have been pressing Pelosi to hold impeachment hearings, but the speaker
reportedly believes there should be public and bipartisan support to
launch the process, according to Politico.
Pelosi has previously said the president’s actions “are villainous to the Constitution of the United States."
A Pelosi spokesperson told the New York Post
the lawmakers “had a productive meeting about the state of play with
the Mueller report. They agreed to keep all options on the table and
continue to move forward with an aggressive hearing and legislative
strategy, as early as next week, to address the president’s corruption
and abuses of power uncovered in the report.”
The spokesperson did not directly address whether Pelosi made the remark about Trump that was attributed to her.
The House will hold hearings next week "focused on the alleged crimes and other misconduct laid out in Special Counsel Robert Mueller's report."
Operation
Overlord — or D-Day as it came to be known — was the highest risk
venture of World War II. Researching my upcoming book, "Three Days at the Brink: FDR’s Daring Gamble to Win World War II," I was struck by the drama involved in the decision to launch an invasion across the English Channel on Western Europe.
At a critical conference in Tehran
in November 1943, the “Big Three” – President Franklin Delano
Roosevelt, British Prime Minister Winston Churchill and Soviet leader
Josef Stalin –fiercely debated the wisdom and timing of such a launch.
They all knew it was a high-stakes gamble and that failure could lead to
a catastrophic bloodbath that would turn the war in German leader Adolf
Hitler’s favor. And yet, they decided it must be done.
Supreme Commander Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower was aware that, despite the peril, Overlord was a necessity.
"Every
obstacle must be overcome, every inconvenience suffered and every risk
run to ensure that our blow is decisive," Eisenhower wrote to his
commanders. "We cannot afford to fail."
He had devised an elaborate plan, choreographed to the last detail, but he knew that some circumstances were out of his control.
On
June 4, 1944, hearing discouraging weather reports and already having
delayed the invasion a day because of storms, Eisenhower faced an
agonizing moment of decision: to go on June 6 or wait for better
weather.
When President Trump delivers his D-Day
remarks Thursday at the U.S. Cemetery in Normandy, he has the rare
opportunity to pay tribute with emotion, personal stories, and soaring
words to the service and the sacrifice of those who died on those
beaches and saved the world.
At Southwick House, the
invasion headquarters in the southern English town of Portsmouth,
Eisenhower sat bowed, head in hands, and contemplated a seemingly
impossible choice. He wasn’t all-knowing; he could only judge
circumstances as they were set before him.
Further delay
might mean scrapping the mission altogether; the tides allowed only the
narrowest window for invasion, and the troops were already poised. "How
can you keep this invasion on the end of a limb and let it hang there?"
he asked.
On the other hand, if Allied forces invaded as a storm
rolled across the Channel, landing craft would be overwhelmed, air
support would be impossible, and thousands could perish to no avail.
Indeed,
unbeknownst to Eisenhower, German Gen. Erwin Rommel had already decided
the Allies would never risk the invasion and had left the theater to
meet with Hitler in Germany.
Eisenhower finally rose from his
seat, unwilling to decide just yet. He suggested to his team that they
try to get a few hours sleep and reconvene later.
At 3:30 a.m. on
June 5, Eisenhower brought his team back together and polled them for
their opinions, pacing the room as they spoke. He was heartened by an
improved weather forecast.
After everyone had finished speaking, he paused, and then said, "OK, we’ll go."
The invasion was on for the following day.
FILE -- June 6, 1944: U.S. Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower, left, gives
the order of the day to paratroopers in England prior to boarding their
planes to participate in the first assault of the Normandy invasion.
(U.S. Army Signal Corps via AP)
Back in his quarters, Eisenhower privately agonized
over the decision. He wrote a note in longhand, which he folded into his
wallet, accepting responsibility in the event of Overlord’s failure.
The
note said: "Our landings in the Cherbourg-Havre area have failed to
gain a satisfactory foothold and I have withdrawn the troops. My
decision to attack at this time and place was based upon the best
information available. The troops, the air, and the navy did all that
Bravery and devotion to duty could do. If any blame or fault attaches to
the attempt it is mine alone."
That night Eisenhower drove to
Newbury, where the 101st Airborne Division was preparing to fly out. He
walked among the paratroopers, with their blackened faces, and spoke to
as many of them as he could. Then he waited until the last of them were
in the air before returning to headquarters around midnight, his mind
filled with thoughts of the brave men who would risk their lives at
dawn.
On
Thursday, as we commemorate the 75th Anniversary of D-Day, we know the
story of what happened on the Normandy coast. The scenes of courage, of
horror, of loss and ultimately triumph are stamped on our minds.
It
was the beginning of the end for Hitler, and although VE Day would not
occur until May 8, 1945, we know we have the brave forces who fought on
D-Day to thank for our victory.
On the evening of June
6, as the early positive reports from the invasion reached his desk in
the Oval Office, President Roosevelt, who had accepted the risk of the
invasion back in Tehran, was filled with a mixture of relief and also
heartache over the sacrifices suffered that day. He chose to broadcast
to the nation — not a speech, but a prayer.
President
Roosevelt said this prayer to radio listeners: "Almighty God: Our sons,
pride of our nation, this day have set upon a mighty endeavor, a
struggle to preserve our Republic, our religion, and our civilization,
and to set free a suffering humanity ... they will need Thy blessings.
Their road will be long and hard. For the enemy is strong. He may hurl
back our forces. Success may not come with rushing speed, but we shall
return again and again; and we know that by Thy grace, and by the
righteousness of our cause, our sons will triumph … Some will never
return. Embrace these, Father, and receive them, Thy heroic servants,
into Thy kingdom."
When President Trump delivers his D-Day remarks
Thursday at the U.S. cemetery in Normandy, he has the rare opportunity
to pay tribute with emotion, personal stories, and soaring words to the
service and the sacrifice of those who died on those beaches and saved
the world.
President Trump planned
to join other world leaders in Europe on Thursday to commemorate the
75th anniversary of the D-Day invasion, a monumental event that was
largely responsible for shaping the outcome of World War II.
The ceremony was to take place on the edge of Omaha Beach in Normandy where thousands of American and Allied soldiers lost their lives.
Trump,
continuing the tradition of his predecessors, will stand alongside
leaders from Britain, Canada, France, and even Germany to pay homage to
the troops who stormed the fortified Normandy to help turn the tide of
the war.
Udo Hartung from Frankfurt, Germany, a World War II reenactor,
holds the U.S. flag as he stands at dawn on Omaha Beach, in Normandy,
France on Thursday. (Associated Press)
In a Twitter message early Thursday, the president seemed to be looking forward to the day's events.
"Heading over to Normandy to celebrate some of the bravest that ever lived. We are eternally grateful!" the president wrote.
The message included a Defense Department video featuring remembrances of some veterans who participated in the D-Day invasion.
Earlier, the president tweeted an excerpt from his D-Day remarks.
"They
did not know if they would survive the hour," the president wrote.
"They did not know if they would grow old. But they knew that America
had to prevail. Their cause was this Nation, and generations yet
unborn."
Remembrances will continue to take place throughout the
day. Trump will deliver a speech later Thursday at the Normandy American
Cemetery and Memorial, where more than 9,000 American military dead are
buried.
On Wednesday, Trump joined British Prime Minister Theresa May
and about 300 veterans – ages 91 to 101 – on the southern coast of
England where he read a prayer delivered by President Franklin Roosevelt
on D-Day.
floral tributes are placed at the National Guard Monument Memorial
as members of the USAREUR band play in the background near Omaha Beach,
in Normandy, France, on Thursday. (Associated Press)
D-Day was the largest invasion – by both air and sea –
in history. On June 6, 1944, 160,000 Allied troops carried by 7,000
boats landed on the beaches code-named Omaha, Utah, Juno, Sword, and
Gold.
When
the day was over, 4,414 Allied troops – including 2,501 Americans –
were killed, and 5,000 were injured. That summer, Allied troops would
advance their fight, take Paris, and race against the Soviets to control
as much German territory as possible by the time Hitler committed
suicide in a Berlin Bunker in May 1945. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
Reporter Jake Tapper and his panel on Tuesday took presidential candidate Joe Biden to task over his 30-year-old claim that he marched during the civil rights movement.
"More
than once" Biden's advisors reminded him during 1988 presidential
campaign that he, in fact, had not marched for civil rights, but Biden
continued to make the claim to voters, The New York Times reported.
“That is really, really weird,” Tapper commented on the report.
“When
he gets really comfortable out on the stump,” Jeff Zeleny, a CNN
reporter, told Tapper, “he has tended to embellish.” He added that
Biden’s aides said, “he was in office marching for the idea of civil
rights.”
CNN anchor Jake Tapper hosts "The Lead."
(Reuters)
“That’s not what the word marching means,” Tapper laughed in response.
In the age of social media, Zeleny said, Biden would not be able to get away with the same embellishments reported in The New York Times
story. “So that’s his big challenge,” he added, explaining that those
lies were why Biden ended up having to drop out of the race before the
Iowa caucuses - "because he plagiarized a speech."