President
Trump formally launched his 2020 re-election campaign Tuesday night
before a jam-packed crowd in Orlando's Amway Center arena, and quickly
unloaded on the media organizations and government actors he said tried
their hardest with "everything they had" to bring down both his
candidacy and presidency.
To chants of "USA," Trump took the stage
after brief remarks by Vice President Mike Pence and first lady Melania
Trump, and recalled his unlikely rise to power.
"We stared down
the unholy alliance of lobbyists and donors and special interests who
made a living bleeding our country dry," Trump said. "The swamp is
fighting back so viciously and violently. For the last two and a half
years, we have been under siege.”
And after polling the boisterous crowd, Trump appeared to settle on a new campaign slogan: "Keep America Great."
He
went on to tout the economy and the planned Space Force, celebrate the
"obliteration" of ISIS, and declare that "Republicans believe that every
life is a sacred gift from God" amid a newly energized national
pro-life movement.
Just over four years ago, Trump descended
through the pink marble and brass atrium of Trump Tower to announce his
candidacy for president, the first step on a journey few analysts
believed would take him all the way to the White House.
This time, thousands of Trump supporters arrived more than 40 hours in advance to secure a spot in the Amway Center, despite sweltering heat. Some had been camped in chairs for several nights.
Trump
told attendees he had begun not only a "great political campaign but a
great movement" committed to the idea that a government must "care for
its own citizens first."
He called his election that year as a
"defining moment in American history" -- and then directed the crowd to
"ask them, right there," referring to the media assembled in the back,
which many in the crowd jeered.
In one of the most dramatic
moments of the rally, Trump charged that Democrats want a "do-over" of
Special Counsel Robert Mueller's report -- and then, his voice
approaching a shout, Trump blasted Democrats' apparent lack of interest
in misconduct within their party.
Supporters of President Trump waiting in line hours before the
arena doors opened Tuesday in Orlando. (AP Photo/John Raoux)
"Our patriotic movement has been under assault from the very first day," Trump said. He specifically called out the "phony" dossier used by the FBI to secure a secret surveillance warrant to surveil one of his former aides, Carter Page.
After
Trump noted that the dossier was funded by the Hillary Clinton campaign
and Democratic National Committee (DNC), the crowd again broke into a
chant, this time cheering, "Lock her up."
"If you want to know how
the system is rigged, just look at how they came at us for three years
with everything they had, versus the free pass they gave to Hillary and
her aides after they set up an illegal server, destroyed evidence,
deleted and acid-washed 33,000 emails, exposed classified information,
and turned the State Department into a pay-for-play cash machine," Trump
said, his voice rising with the crowd's.
"Lock her up," the crowd responded again.
"33,000
emails deleted, think of it!" Trump said. "You know, there was a lot of
corruption on the other side. But, you know, they get a subpoena from
the United States Congress, and they decide they're not gonna give it,
so, Lindsey Graham, they delete and they acid wash -- which is very expensive, nobody does it -- those emails, never to be seen again!
"But
we may find them again somewhere deep in the State Department," Trump
mused. "Can you imagine if I got a subpoena? Think of this -- if I
deleted one email, like a love note to Melania, it's the electric chair
for Trump."
For
the most part, the rally focused on Trump's policy successes, on a
range of matters including criminal justice reform and the economy.
"Our
country is soaring to incredible new heights," Trump asserted, to loud
applause. "Our economy is the envy of the world, perhaps the greatest
economy we've had in the history of our country, and as long as you keep
this team in place -- we have a tremendous way to go -- our future has
never, ever looked brighter or sharper."
Trump continued: "The fact is, the American Dream is back. It's bigger, and better, and stronger than ever before."
The
president emphasized his success in appointing federal judges,
and lamented Democrats' treatment of now-Justice Brett Kavanuagh,
telling the crowd, "They didnt just try to win, they tried to destroy
him with false and malicious accusations" in the name of "political
dominance and control."
Trump called Kavanaugh a "great gentleman"
who is "highly respected" throughout the judiciary, and said Democrats
also targeted his family. Kavanuagh, speaking to Fox News last year,
said his wife had received numerous death threats.
"Just imagine what this angry left-wing mob would do if they were in charge of this country," Trump said.
"We
just finished [confirming judge] number 107, already approved, sitting
on the bench -- how about that?" Trump then asked. "By the time we're
finished with the rest, we will have record percentages [of judges
appointed] -- our percentage will be a record, except for one person.
One person has a higher percentage ... George Washington."
At one point, outgoing Press Secretary Sarah Sanders took the stage, bringing the crowd to its feet.
"We
want people to come into our country based on merit," Trump said, after
praising Immigrations and Customs Enforcement (ICE) officials as
underappreciated heroes securing the border.
He went on to condemn "crazy" Bernie Sanders, and vowed again that America would "never" become a socialist country.
The
festive and lively environment was evident both outside and inside the
arena. Caps and shirts and mugs and ponchos were being hawked in corners
far and wide in Orlando, with slogans ranging from "God, Guns and
Trump" to "Trump’s Deplorables" to "Working to Defeat Liberals since
1854."
"Think of this -- if I deleted one email, like a love note to Melania, it's the electric chair for Trump." — President Trump
"Bikers
For Trump" volunteer security members managed traffic in and out of the
rally areas as jubilant Trump devotees partied to a band while in line,
occasionally breaking into "USA, USA" chants.
Others wandered the blocks around the venue urging people to sign a petition to "prevent voter fraud."
"Only U.S. citizens should be able to vote," explained Donny, a Jacksonville native. "That’s what we want in Florida."
Joe
Biden, the frontrunner among Democrats in both polling and fundraising,
sought to blunt the momentum from the Tuesday launch shortly before
Trump took the stage.
"Donald
Trump is launching his campaign for re-election tonight and the
American people face a choice -- we can make Trump an aberration or let
him fundamentally and forever alter the character of this nation," Biden
Deputy Campaign Manager Kate Bedingfield said in a statement.
Hats and other merchandise were flying off the racks Tuesday
afternoon in Orlando, ahead of Trump's rally. (AP Photo/John Raoux)
"Our country cannot afford four more years of Trump
diminishing America's role on the world stage, cutting access to health
care, ignoring the climate emergency that is an unprecedented threat to
our national security, tearing children from their parents at the
border, giving enormous new tax breaks to big corporations and the
wealthy at the expense of working families, and dividing our country by
embracing toxic bigotry and racism that's antithetical to who we are,"
Bedingfield added.
Sanders, meanwhile, hosted an "Ask Me Anything" open forum
on Reddit on Tuesday. The self-described democratic socialist condemned
what he called Trump's "rejection of science," and lamented the
"incredible attacks against working families that have taken place under
unfettered capitalism."
Sanders, in a video response to Trump's address later in the day, issued a series of personal insults. He called Trump a "racist" and "sexist," among other attacks.
"The
working class of this country has been decimated for decades by a
coordinated attack from corporate America," Sanders told one Reddit
user. "Bad trade deals have allowed corporations to ship millions of
jobs abroad, companies have bitterly resisted unionization and the
minimum wage has not been raised for almost 10 years."
Not all of
the participants in Sanders' Reddit event gave him a warm welcome,
however, with some pointing out Sanders' recent, dramatic rise to
wealth.
"People
like you have destroyed the working class by taking more of their taxes
to fund a corporate-run utopia that never can exist," one user replied.
"Wealth is decided by the rarity of your skill set, not how hard you
work, Mr. 3 mansions and an Audi R8." Trump is ahead of his Democrat rivals in key battleground states and "voters overall" support re-electing him, a Republican National Committee (RNC) memo
obtained by Fox News claimed. The memo came amid reports of the
president struggling in polls putting him up against potential 2020
opponents, including Biden. A Fox News poll showed similar numbers.
But, according to the RNC, its own massive data operation told
a different story. According to the committee's numbers, Trump has a
higher approval than disapproval rating in the battleground states of Ohio and Pennsylvania while a majority of Florida voters (53 percent) supported re-electing him.
Trump
has an unprecedented $40.8 million in cash-on-hand, as of the start of
the second quarter of fundraising on April 1. While that would be a
massive war chest on its own, the Trump campaign, the Republican
National Committee and their joint fundraising committees had a combined
$82 million cash-on-hand going into the second quarter. Fox News' Mike Emanuel, Hollie McKay, Sam Dorman, Paul Steinhauser, and The Associated Press contributed to this report.
CNN anchor Don Lemon made what he himself described as a "extreme" comparison between President Trump and Adolf Hitler while arguing that such "bad people" shouldn't be given a platform.
During
their nightly hand-off, his primetime colleague Chris Cuomo began by
describing 2020 as the most "definitional" election in his lifetime.
Lemon appeared to attempt to shame Trump supporters, and asked them if
they will "continue to fall for the o-ke-doke." But then he questioned
the media's responsibilities in covering Trump's candidacy.
The
"CNN Tonight" anchor urged Cuomo to "think about the most despicable
people in history" and warned him that he was going to use an "extreme
example."
"Think about Hitler. Think about any of those people...
if you could look back in history, would you say, 'Well, I'm so glad
that person was allowed a platform so that they could spread their hate
and propaganda and lies,' or would you say, 'That probably wasn't the
right thing to do to spread that because you knew in that moment that
was a bad person and they were doing bad things. And not only were they
hurting people, they were killing people."
"I think that the example matters," Cuomo responded. "And that's a very extreme example."
"Listen,
for people like me, how this the president feels about the Central Park
Five, that could be a life or death issue for people like me," Lemon
doubled down. "He took a big part of their life away... and demonizing
immigrants and talking about 'sh**hole countries' and saying that 'there
were very fine people on both sides.' For people of color in this
country, it is a life or death issue... so I'm just saying we just need
to be careful about having 'these are standard rules.' This is not
standard. This is not normal."
"Comparing
anything to an extreme like a Hitler- it weakens the argument," Cuomo
pushed back, "because you are now taking a guy who says things you don't
like and comparing him to a genocidal maniac."
"I'm not comparing
him to that," Lemon attempted to clarify. "I'm comparing the way you
would cover someone who is a bad person who does bad things."
Don't let a reporter from the Gray Lady catch you smiling at a Trump rally.
Senator Marco Rubio
hit back at a New York Times reporter after the writer tweeted that it
was “very strange” to see the Florida senator “smiling and chuckling” at
the president’s re-election rally in Orlando Tuesday evening.
“BREAKING,”
Rubio tweeted mockingly in response to Michael Barbaro. “In an
unprecedented move a Republican Senator attended a rally in his home
state in support of the re-election of a Republican President.”
In
another tweet directed at Barbaro, he aligned himself with several of
the president’s policies. “As opposed to smiling & chuckling at a
rally for a radical liberal candidate for President who will undo
policies to confront China, reduce regulations & taxes, defend
liberty in Venezuela & protect the unborn?” he asked rhetorically.
Rubio
also called out Barbaro, writing that after weeks of covering him in
2015, the reporter “uncovered that my wife had traffic tickets, I had a
fishing boat & my home has big windows.”
Tensions between
Rubio and Trump were high in the midst of the 2016 Republican primary
when Rubio called Trump the man “with the worst spray tan in America”
and joked with a rally crowd that then-candidate Trump may have wet his
pants during a debate and had small hands.
Trump dubbed him “Little Marco,”
said the senator “choked like a dog" during a debate and “couldn’t get
elected dog catcher" in Florida. Rubio dropped out of the race after he
lost his home state to Trump by double digits.
President Trump's
campaign is an inclusive venture that seeks to unite Americans in favor
of economic prosperity, according to Rep. Matt Gaetz, R-Fla.
Gaetz'
home state was "electric" Wednesday night during the president's
raucous rally in Orlando, the congressman from Pensacola said on Fox
News' "Hannity" after the event.
"What's
different about Donald Trump - and so special - is that it's an
inclusive movement that invites people in if they want better jobs,
better opportunity, and if they want America respected again," Gaetz
said.
"There's an electricity here in Florida that we think is going to pulse all around America with an enthusiasm for the Trump campaign," he added.
The House Judiciary Committee member said people at the rally, which he too attended, were invited to be part of the campaign.
"What
was so special today is that people really felt part of this movement,"
he said. "It was great to see the president reinforce those themes."
Gaetz added Trump will "excite the vibrance of this great country through his reelection campaign."
During
the rally, which served as an official kickoff event for Trump's 2020
re-election effort, the president told the Amway Center crowd he was
christening a new campaign slogan to replace "Make America Great Again."
"We've
made America great again, but how do you give up the number one -- call
it theme, logo, statement, in the history of politics -- for a new
one?" the president asked the crowd.
"You know there is a new one that really works, and that's called 'Keep America Great.' Right? 'Keep America Great.'"
Gov. Andrew Cuomo on Monday night signed legislation granting driver’s licenses to illegal immigrants — shortly after the controversial measure passed the state Senate.
Cuomo’s
action came despite throwing supporters a last-minute curveball by
asking the state’s top civil attorney, Solicitor General Barbara
Underwood, to review the measure for possible safety concerns —
threatening to veto it if he didn’t like her assessment.
“You could create a database for the feds to use to actually track
down undocumented people,” Cuomo said on WAMC radio. “California passed a
law, and they are now in litigation.”
But Underwood’s boss,
Attorney General Tish James, later released a statement amid the
Monday-night vote arguing that the bill is legally sound.
“The
legislation is well-crafted and contains ample protections for those
who apply for driver’s licenses. If this bill is enacted and challenged
in court, we will vigorously defend it,” she said.
The law takes 180 days to go into effect, meaning the first licenses will be available in December.
The
measure on Monday passed the state Senate by a 33-29 count, often
eliciting emotional remarks from both sides of the aisle during the
floor vote.
Fox News host Sean Hannity blasted former CIA chief John Brennan Monday saying he pushed the "dirty dossier" authored by Christopher Steele.
"At
the very same time, Christopher Steele, Hillary Clinton's dirty Russian
dossier with Russian lies, misinformation, propaganda was allegedly
being pushed by then CIA Director, a guy by the name of John Brennan,"
Hannity said on his television show.
Hannity pointed out that everything he believes Brennan did that influenced the Russia investigation happened under the Obama administration's watch.
"All
of this happened on Obama and sleepy, creepy, crazy uncle Joe's watch,
not Donald Trump's. Brennan, now a paid official 24/7 Trump hater, on
conspiracy TV MSNBC... he should be very worried tonight. He has
previously called the president treasonous. But tonight it looks far
more likely, far more plausible that in fact, it was Brennan who used
his huge power and influence at the Central Intelligence Agency to
spread lies, propaganda, misinformation, to influence a presidential
election," Hannity said.
Hannity added, "How deep this goes we won't find out and it is not just Brennan who needs to be held accountable."
The
Fox News host also made it clear how powerful the nation's intelligence
community is but noted how it was important it is that they are not
"weaponized" politically.
"Now,
we do entrust what is absolutely, positively -- I'm proud of this
because we need them. The world's single most powerful tools of
intelligence to protect us against many enemies both foreign and
domestic. Those enemies are real," Hannity said.
"These powerful
tools, however, are never to be weaponized against the American people
for or political opponents or political campaigns."
Rep. Ilhan Omar, D-Minn,
one of Congress' most vocal critics of President Trump, placed the
blame squarely on the White House after Iran announced it could enrich
uranium up to 20 percent -- just a step below weapons-grade level.
The
tension between the U.S. and Iran has been increasing in recent days
after a high-profile attack on two oil tankers in the Strait of Hormuz.
The U.S. blamed Iran for the attacks, which the country denied.
Iran
said it would break a limit on uranium stockpiles established by the
2015 agreement with world powers that was intended to restrict the
Islamic Republic's nuclear program in exchange for an easing of
international sanctions.
Omar said, "none of this would be
happening if Trump didn't back out of the Iran nuclear deal." She said
the U.S. should get back to negotiations with Tehran and reinstate the
Iran nuclear deal.
Trump declared Iran was responsible for the attacks in the Gulf of Oman, pointing to video released by the U.S. Navy that they claimed showed an Iranian vessel removing an unexploded mine.
"Iran did do it and you know they did it because you saw the boat,” Trump said during an interview on "Fox & Friends" last Friday. "They're a nation of terror and they've changed a lot since I've been president, I can tell you."
Omar took to Twitter on Monday condemning Trump's decision to pull out of the Iran nuclear deal shortly before the Pentagon approved sending 1,000 more troops to the Middle East in response to the attack.
Critics slammed Omar for "appeasing the world's largest state sponsor of terrorism."
Iran's announcement raised pressure on Europeans trying to save the accord a year after the U.S. withdrawal.
President
Hassan Rouhani already has warned Europe that a new deal needs to be in
place by July 7 or the Islamic Republic would increase its enrichment
of uranium.
Rouhani, greeting France’s new ambassador to Tehran on Monday, similarly warned that time was running out on the deal.
“The
current situation is very critical and France and the other parties to
the (deal) still have a very limited opportunity to play their historic
role for saving the deal,” Rouhani said, according to his website. Fox News' Edmund DeMarche and The Associated Press contributed to this report
Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, D-NY, on Monday told her Instagram followers that the U.S. government is "running concentration camps on our southern border."
"That
is exactly what they are. They are concentration camps," Ocasio-Cortez
said during a live-stream that was viewed by Fox News.
Her office
did not immediately respond to Fox News' request for comment. The
freshman representative did, however, retweet a screengrab for the
Q&A with a caption that praised her accessibility.
She
told her followers she wants to talk to people "who are concerned enough
with humanity to say that 'never again' means something."
"The
fact that concentrations camps are now an institutionalized practice in
the Home of the Free is extraordinarily disturbing and we need to do
something about it," the freshman Democrat continued.
The New York representative insisted that "we are losing to an authoritarian and fascist presidency."
"I
don't use those words lightly," Ocasio-Cortez continued. "I don't use
those words to just throw bombs. I use that word because that is what an
administration that creates concentration camps is. A presidency that
creates concentration camps is fascist and it's very difficult to say
that."