Thursday, August 20, 2020
Trump campaign mocks Democratic convention's 'dismal, dark, depressing' vision of country
Following the third night of the Democratic convention,
Lara Trump, the president's daughter-in-law and his campaign's senior
advisor, said she felt the featured speakers gave a "dismal, dark,
depressing vision of America."
"Who wants to live in their America? I don't," she on the campaign's convention recap show "The Real Joe Biden."
Stacy Washington, the co-chair of Black Voices for Trump, agreed Wednesday wasn't any better than Tuesday, "which isn’t saying much. We’re getting a lot of [speakers] coming out and complaining about the president and not a lot of ideas."
“This whole night was low energy,” Boris Epshteyn, Trump 2020 strategic adviser, added.
Trump campaign senior adviser Corey Lewandowski said he thought Wednesday was the party's best chance to make its pitch. The evening featured former President Obama and vice presidential nominee Kamala Harris. "They put their best heavy hitters tonight," he said.
Washington said she had problems with the Clintons playing a big role at the convention. “They have problems," she explained. "They don’t have any solutions. They don’t even bring any coalitions anymore.”
She said it would have been better for the Democratic Party to have younger, fresher speakers except all of them are “hard left” and not “palatable” for the target Middle America audience.
Washington agreed that Obama didn’t have the same “luster” he from when he was president.
“Not only did he not bring it, but…it was actually a letdown," she said.
Lewandowski said he thought it was “demeaning” that Biden’s criteria for picking Harris was “not the best person for the job” but rather that she was a Black woman. “Joe Biden panders to race and he will lose because of it,” he said.
Paris Dennard, senior communications adviser to the RNC, said he thinks Harris will continue to “turn people off."
“When you look at this speech that she gave tonight it just reinforces that she’s an opportunist and that she’s a phony," he said.
Looking ahead to the last night of the convention, Lewandowski said it would be “Joe Biden’s moment in the sun. I don’t think it’s going to shine very brightly…but this is very important for Joe Biden."
"There’s no way the convention will end on a high note because they’re closing with Biden, Dennard added. “Hopefully [Biden] can stay on script, read the teleprompter, sit down and let us go forward with the vision to make American great again with this great American comeback that’s happening not because of Joe Biden or Kamala Harris but solely because of President Trump and the leadership he’s provided this nation.”
"Who wants to live in their America? I don't," she on the campaign's convention recap show "The Real Joe Biden."
Stacy Washington, the co-chair of Black Voices for Trump, agreed Wednesday wasn't any better than Tuesday, "which isn’t saying much. We’re getting a lot of [speakers] coming out and complaining about the president and not a lot of ideas."
“This whole night was low energy,” Boris Epshteyn, Trump 2020 strategic adviser, added.
Trump campaign senior adviser Corey Lewandowski said he thought Wednesday was the party's best chance to make its pitch. The evening featured former President Obama and vice presidential nominee Kamala Harris. "They put their best heavy hitters tonight," he said.
Washington said she had problems with the Clintons playing a big role at the convention. “They have problems," she explained. "They don’t have any solutions. They don’t even bring any coalitions anymore.”
She said it would have been better for the Democratic Party to have younger, fresher speakers except all of them are “hard left” and not “palatable” for the target Middle America audience.
Washington agreed that Obama didn’t have the same “luster” he from when he was president.
“Not only did he not bring it, but…it was actually a letdown," she said.
Lewandowski said he thought it was “demeaning” that Biden’s criteria for picking Harris was “not the best person for the job” but rather that she was a Black woman. “Joe Biden panders to race and he will lose because of it,” he said.
Paris Dennard, senior communications adviser to the RNC, said he thinks Harris will continue to “turn people off."
“When you look at this speech that she gave tonight it just reinforces that she’s an opportunist and that she’s a phony," he said.
Looking ahead to the last night of the convention, Lewandowski said it would be “Joe Biden’s moment in the sun. I don’t think it’s going to shine very brightly…but this is very important for Joe Biden."
"There’s no way the convention will end on a high note because they’re closing with Biden, Dennard added. “Hopefully [Biden] can stay on script, read the teleprompter, sit down and let us go forward with the vision to make American great again with this great American comeback that’s happening not because of Joe Biden or Kamala Harris but solely because of President Trump and the leadership he’s provided this nation.”
Trump campaign releasing Hunter Biden ad as Joe Biden accepts nomination: report
The Trump campaign reportedly plans to release a new digital ad targeting Hunter Biden Thursday, the same day his father, former Vice President Joe Biden, will accept the Democratic Party’s nomination for president.
The
campaign ad, part of a seven-figure buy, will focus on Hunter Biden’s
dealings with China while his father was vice president, suggesting he
used his father's position for personal profit, according to Politico.
The ad shows a reporter asking Hunter Biden if negotiations for a joint investment fund with a Chinese bank took place during a 2013 flight with the vice president for a Bejing trip they took together.
The ad will run on YouTube.
In July 2019, the president asked Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky in a private phone call to investigate Hunter Biden’s involvement with Ukrainian oil company Burisma and in the fall he told reporters he thought China should also investigate the Bidens, “cause what happened with China is just about as bad as what happened in Ukraine.”
Biden’s work with the Burisma has come under scrutiny after Trump alleged that Joe Biden inappropriately used his diplomatic influence in Ukraine to help his son.
Hunter Biden said in an interview last year business never came up on the Bejing flight and said he was on the trip because of his daughter, according to Politico.
The ad also broadly paints Joe Biden as pro-China, The Hill reports.
Trump’s Ukrainian phone call eventually led to his impeachment on abuse of power and obstruction of Congress charges. He was acquitted in February.
No evidence of wrongdoing has been found on the part of either Biden and both men deny the allegations. Hunter Biden has since pledged to avoid business deals with foreign entities if his father becomes president.
The Senate has also been investigating Hunter Biden’s involvement in Ukraine.

The ad shows a reporter asking Hunter Biden if negotiations for a joint investment fund with a Chinese bank took place during a 2013 flight with the vice president for a Bejing trip they took together.
The ad will run on YouTube.
In July 2019, the president asked Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky in a private phone call to investigate Hunter Biden’s involvement with Ukrainian oil company Burisma and in the fall he told reporters he thought China should also investigate the Bidens, “cause what happened with China is just about as bad as what happened in Ukraine.”
Biden’s work with the Burisma has come under scrutiny after Trump alleged that Joe Biden inappropriately used his diplomatic influence in Ukraine to help his son.
Hunter Biden said in an interview last year business never came up on the Bejing flight and said he was on the trip because of his daughter, according to Politico.
The ad also broadly paints Joe Biden as pro-China, The Hill reports.

No evidence of wrongdoing has been found on the part of either Biden and both men deny the allegations. Hunter Biden has since pledged to avoid business deals with foreign entities if his father becomes president.
The Senate has also been investigating Hunter Biden’s involvement in Ukraine.
Bill de Blasio attempts to defend his wife's $1.1M salary for staff
New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio
attempted to defend first lady Chirlane McCray against backlash on
Wednesday after it was discovered she had private staff that's getting
paid millions in taxpayer money.
McCray, who is reportedly looking to run for Brooklyn borough president, has a staff of 14 people, sources told The CIty.
McCray’s office provided The CIty with names of eight full-time employees whose salaries added up to about $1.1 million. However, according to current and former employees in the Mayor’s office -- and public records -- McCray’s staff makes closer to $2 million.
"That article [referring to The City story] didn't take into account the work that's being done," de Blasio said. "This work is about the needs of the people of this city."
He added, "The mental health crisis is much deeper because of the coronavirus, across the whole city, that's one of the things she's been working on intensely, but also as the co-chair of the internal task force this extraordinary task force on racial inclusion that has been moving big policy changes."
This news comes as the mayor is considering laying off up to 22,000 municipal workers in the fall due to budget constraints related to COVID-19.
Fellow contender for the Brooklyn borough presidency, City Councilman Antonio Reynoso (D-Brooklyn), slammed the spending, according to The New York Post.
“With over 22,000 layoffs of city workers looming, the mayor can’t seriously expect to keep funding full-time, highly paid speechwriters and professional videographers for his wife’s political ambitions. It’s wrong, and it needs to stop,” Reynoso said.
McCray, who is reportedly looking to run for Brooklyn borough president, has a staff of 14 people, sources told The CIty.
McCray’s office provided The CIty with names of eight full-time employees whose salaries added up to about $1.1 million. However, according to current and former employees in the Mayor’s office -- and public records -- McCray’s staff makes closer to $2 million.
"That article [referring to The City story] didn't take into account the work that's being done," de Blasio said. "This work is about the needs of the people of this city."
He added, "The mental health crisis is much deeper because of the coronavirus, across the whole city, that's one of the things she's been working on intensely, but also as the co-chair of the internal task force this extraordinary task force on racial inclusion that has been moving big policy changes."
This news comes as the mayor is considering laying off up to 22,000 municipal workers in the fall due to budget constraints related to COVID-19.
Fellow contender for the Brooklyn borough presidency, City Councilman Antonio Reynoso (D-Brooklyn), slammed the spending, according to The New York Post.
“With over 22,000 layoffs of city workers looming, the mayor can’t seriously expect to keep funding full-time, highly paid speechwriters and professional videographers for his wife’s political ambitions. It’s wrong, and it needs to stop,” Reynoso said.
President shoots holes in Obama, Harris praise of 'Slow Joe' in ALL-CAPS tweetstorm
As Kamala Harris was giving her vice-presidential nomination speech, President Trump called to mind tensions between Democratic nominee Joe Biden and his running mate that played out during the primary season.
And as former President Barack Obama delivered his own address during the Democratic Convention, the president questioned why Obama had waited so long to endorse his former running mate.
“BUT DIDN’T SHE CALL HIM A RACIST???” Trump wrote on Twitter as the third night of the convention concluded with Harris’ remarks. “DIDN’T SHE SAY HE WAS INCOMPETENT???”
“WHY DID HE REFUSE TO ENDORSE SLOW JOE UNTIL IT WAS ALL OVER, AND EVEN THEN WAS VERY LATE? WHY DID HE TRY TO GET HIM NOT TO RUN?” Trump wrote as Obama delivered a speech which, in a rare move for the stately former president, called his successor out by name.
"HE SPIED ON MY CAMPAIGN, AND GOT CAUGHT!" Trump added later.
Obama did not endorse Biden until April, when he was all but assured the nomination. Bernie Sanders had already dropped out of the race and endorsed Biden. There were reports of tension between Obama and Biden all throughout the campaign trail, with the New York Times reporting Obama told Biden last August “you don’t have to do this.” One Democrat who spoke with Obama said he reportedly told him: “Don’t underestimate Joe’s ability to f--k things up.”
While Harris has not called Biden ‘a racist,’ she did condemn the former vice president for bragging of his work with segregationist senators last summer during the height of primary debates.
Biden touted his ability to “get things done” decades ago by working with southern segregationist senators.
"It concerns me deeply,” Harris told Fox News in 2019 of Biden’s comments.
She continued, "If those men had their way, I wouldn't' be in the United States Senate and on this elevator right now."
Later, Harris made her mark, if short-lived, on the primary campaign trail in a personal moment when she called her now-running mate out for his past stance against bussing.
"There was a little girl in California who was part of the second class to integrate her public schools and she was bused to school every day. That little girl was me," Harris, of Indian and Jamaican descent, said at the time.
And as former President Barack Obama delivered his own address during the Democratic Convention, the president questioned why Obama had waited so long to endorse his former running mate.
“BUT DIDN’T SHE CALL HIM A RACIST???” Trump wrote on Twitter as the third night of the convention concluded with Harris’ remarks. “DIDN’T SHE SAY HE WAS INCOMPETENT???”
“WHY DID HE REFUSE TO ENDORSE SLOW JOE UNTIL IT WAS ALL OVER, AND EVEN THEN WAS VERY LATE? WHY DID HE TRY TO GET HIM NOT TO RUN?” Trump wrote as Obama delivered a speech which, in a rare move for the stately former president, called his successor out by name.
"HE SPIED ON MY CAMPAIGN, AND GOT CAUGHT!" Trump added later.
Obama did not endorse Biden until April, when he was all but assured the nomination. Bernie Sanders had already dropped out of the race and endorsed Biden. There were reports of tension between Obama and Biden all throughout the campaign trail, with the New York Times reporting Obama told Biden last August “you don’t have to do this.” One Democrat who spoke with Obama said he reportedly told him: “Don’t underestimate Joe’s ability to f--k things up.”
While Harris has not called Biden ‘a racist,’ she did condemn the former vice president for bragging of his work with segregationist senators last summer during the height of primary debates.
Biden touted his ability to “get things done” decades ago by working with southern segregationist senators.
"It concerns me deeply,” Harris told Fox News in 2019 of Biden’s comments.
She continued, "If those men had their way, I wouldn't' be in the United States Senate and on this elevator right now."
Later, Harris made her mark, if short-lived, on the primary campaign trail in a personal moment when she called her now-running mate out for his past stance against bussing.
"There was a little girl in California who was part of the second class to integrate her public schools and she was bused to school every day. That little girl was me," Harris, of Indian and Jamaican descent, said at the time.
Wednesday, August 19, 2020
UN crisis looms as US readies demand for Iran sanctions

FILE
- In this July 20, 2015, file photo, members of the Security Council
vote at United Nations headquarters on the landmark nuclear deal between
Iran and six world powers. The United States is planning a new
diplomatic line of attack on Iran after a resounding defeat in the U.N.
Security Council. Having lost its long-shot bid to indefinitely extend
an international arms embargo on Iran last week, the Trump
administration is poised to call for the re-imposition of all U.N.
sanctions that had been eased under the 2015 nuclear deal from which the
U.S. withdrew two years ago.(AP Photo/Seth Wenig, File)
UNITED
NATIONS (AP) — After a resounding defeat in the U.N. Security Council,
the United States is poised to call for the United Nations to reimpose
sanctions on Iran under a rarely used diplomatic maneuver — a move that
is likely to further isolate the Trump administration and may set off a
credibility crisis for the United Nations.
The
sanctions had been eased under the 2015 nuclear deal that President
Donald Trump withdrew from two years ago. But last week the U.S. lost
its long-shot bid to indefinitely extend an international arms embargo
on Iran and has now moved to a new diplomatic line of attack.
U.S.
Secretary of State Mike Pompeo is set to travel to New York on Thursday
to notify the Security Council president that the United States is
invoking the “snapback” mechanism in the council’s resolution that
endorsed the nuclear deal. It allows participants to demand the
restoration of all U.N. sanctions in a complicated procedure that cannot
be blocked by a veto.
The
State Department is expected to announce Pompeo’s travel plans on
Wednesday, but he and Trump have made no secret of their intention to
invoke snapback, especially since their attempt to extend the arms
embargo suffered an embarrassing defeat last Friday. The U.S. won just
one other “yes” vote, with China and Russia opposed and the 11 other
members abstaining.
Just
like the arms embargo extension, the administration’s snapback plan is
bitterly opposed by China and Russia as well as the other Security
Council members, including U.S. allies Britain and France, and could set
the stage for a battle over the legitimacy of the U.N.’s most powerful
body.
Alone
among the council’s 15 members, the U.S. argues that as an original
participant in the nuclear deal it retains the right to demand
restoration of sanctions. The others, which still support the deal,
maintain the U.S. lost that standing when Trump pulled out of the accord
in 2018, but it isn’t clear if they can stop the invocation of snapback
through technical procedural means.
The
U.S. argument is highly controversial. It has been ridiculed by the
Chinese, Russians and Europeans, and not even the biggest Iran hawks in
the United States all agree with it.
Former
Trump national security adviser John Bolton, no slouch when it comes to
anti-Iran positions, has long said that the U.S. lost its snapback
standing when it withdrew from the deal and that moving ahead is not
worth the damage it could do to U.S. veto power in the council.
In
a stunningly rare moment of agreement, Iran’s Foreign Minister Mohammed
Javad Zarif praised Bolton this week. “At least he is consistent — a
trait notably absent in this U.S. administration,” Zarif tweeted.
And,
former U.S. Undersecretary of State for Political Affairs Wendy
Sherman, a top Obama administration negotiator of the nuclear agreement,
said: “It was never expected that someone who withdrew from the (deal)
would have standing to in fact bring the snapback provision.”
Thus,
the administration’s insistence on moving ahead has set the stage for a
contentious dispute and the possibility that the U.S. call would simply
be ignored by other U.N. members. That outcome would potentially call
into question the Security Council’s ability to enforce its own legally
binding decisions.
Under
the terms of Security Council Resolution 2231, which enshrined the
nuclear deal and to which the U.S. remains a party, the invocation of
snapback for significant Iranian noncompliance starts a 30-day clock
during which the council must vote affirmatively to continue the
sanctions relief that Iran was given in return for curbs on its nuclear
program.
Pompeo
is expected to present evidence of significant noncompliance, likely
the latest reports of the U.N. nuclear watchdog, the International
Atomic Energy Agency, on Thursday. Iran does not deny violating some
terms of the deal but says its actions have been forced by the U.S.
withdrawal and the Trump administration’s reimposition of U.S.
sanctions.
As
envisioned by the Obama administration, which led the negotiations that
culminated in the nuclear deal, the United States or any other permanent
member of the council could use its veto to block the continuation of
sanctions relief. In theory, that would result in the reimposition of
sanctions.
But
whether any other council member will respond to the U.S. move by
introducing a resolution to extend sanctions relief is an open question.
Some U.N. experts believe the others will just ignore the Americans,
leaving the Trump administration in the possible position of having to
introduce its own resolution to extend sanctions relief for the sole
purpose of vetoing it.
“We
don’t know if any country will do that,” said Richard Gowan, the U.N.
director of the International Crisis Group. “If the general view of the
council is that the U.S. doesn’t have standing, it’s quite possible that
no council member will even engage at that level.”
“The
U.S. could actually table a resolution of its own and then veto it,
just to show that it is going through the procedural motions, although
that would look a little bit farcical,” Gowan said.
___
Lee reported from Washington.
After years of big moments, Bill Clinton’s DNC role shrinks

WASHINGTON (AP) — Few people ever have logged more time on Democratic National Convention stages than Bill Clinton.
But
when the former president delivered his 11th speech to his party’s
faithful gathered virtually on Tuesday, it was like none in his four
decades of convention moments.
Clinton’s
remarks to the fully online gathering were pre-recorded at his home in
Chappaqua, New York, like many of the speakers in a political year
upended by the coronavirus. And they were brief at just under 5 minutes,
which was all the former president was allotted by a party eager to
show it is moving out of the politics of the past.
Clinton
didn’t mince words. He tore into President Donald Trump repeatedly,
making reference to his own understanding of the demands of the role.
“If
you want a president who defines the job as spending hours a day
watching TV and zapping people on social media, he’s your man,” Clinton
said.
He added
of the pandemic, “Denying, distracting and demeaning works great if
you’re trying to entertain and inflame. But in a real crisis, it
collapses like a house of cards.”
Even
abbreviated, Clinton’s appearance was tricky for his party. Many
Democrats are searching for new leaders, even as they nominate former
Vice President Joe Biden, and pushing for a liberal agenda that leaves
behind the centrist politics of the Clinton era. Further complicating
the moment for Clinton is the #MeToo movement, which has forced some
women to reevaluate Clinton’s history of sexual misconduct allegations.
The
former president spoke early in the evening, shortly after former
President Jimmy Carter. Clinton’s remarks went beyond the blistering
speech he delivered during his 2016 convention address — when he helped
the party formally choose his wife, Hillary, as its presidential
nominee.
Clinton
stressed what he described as Trump’s economic failures amid the
coronavirus’ spread, arguing that the fallout on families and businesses
wouldn’t be nearly as dire had Trump not so bungled the federal
government’s response.
“At
a time like this, the Oval Office should be a command center. Instead,
it’s a storm center,” Clinton said. “There’s only chaos. Just one thing
never changes — his determination to deny responsibility and shift the
blame. The buck never stops there.”
Clinton
praised Biden, calling him a “go-to-work president. A down-to-earth,
get-the-job-done guy.” But he focused most of his energy on Trump,
imploring the audience, “You know what Donald Trump will do with four
more years: blame, bully and belittle.”
Clinton,
who turns 74 on Wednesday, is three years younger than Biden and
remains a force within the party — even though it has left behind many
of the market-based reforms and centrism he popularized in the 1990s.
Former
California Gov. Jerry Brown, who unsuccessfully ran against Clinton for
the Democratic nomination in 1992, said it’s impressive how the former
president has continued to carve out a role for himself in Democratic
politics. But nothing lasts forever.
“If you hang around long enough,” the 82-year-old Brown said, “you won’t fit.”
Clinton
was a visible part of the 2016 convention and campaign, even as Trump
repeatedly raised the former president’s past — and invited a group of
the former president’s accusers to attend a debate. The move was an
attempt to counter the criticism Trump received after video surfaced of
Trump bragging about kissing, groping and trying to have sex with women
who weren’t his wife.
This
time, Clinton’s role was limited in a way he hasn’t experienced since
the conventions of 1980 and 1984, when he spoke but wasn’t among the
keynote headliners. His debut for most of the country came in 1988 —
before rising star New York Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez was born —
when his speech was so long that he famously drew applause when he
declared, “In conclusion.”
Four
years later, Clinton was the nominee and delivered his acceptance
speech. He addressed the convention as president in 1996 and 2000. But
he may be best known for his convention speech in 2012, when he was
widely credited for making a more passionate and crisp case for why
Barack Obama deserved a second term than Obama did himself.
That
address from eight years ago went well over Clinton’s allotted time and
lasted nearly 50 minutes — or 10 times how long he spoke Tuesday.
___
Associated Press writer Kathleen Ronayne in Sacramento, Calif., contributed to this report.
Trumps vows to work with Kimberly Klacik to 'bring Baltimore back'
President Trump Tuesday praised the Republican woman running for the late Rep. Elijah Cummings’ former Baltimore seat as someone who will “bring Baltimore back.”
“Kimberly will work with the Trump Administration and we will bring Baltimore back, and fast,” the president said of Kimberly Klacik, 38, who is running against Rep. Kweisi Mfume, 71. Mfume defeated her in April's special election. They will now face each other again in November.
“Don’t blow it Baltimore, the Democrats have destroyed your city!” Trump added.
Klacik gained attention this week after a campaign ad she posted walking the streets of what she calls the “real” Baltimore: “crumbling infrastructure,” “abandoned homes” and “crime” went viral with hundreds of thousands of views.
“Do you care about Black lives? The people that run Baltimore don’t,” Klacik says in the video titled “Black Lives Don’t Matter To Democrats” as she walks through empty streets.
Her video also got attention from other prominent Republicans, including Donald Jr. and Eric Trump, Trump senior adviser Brad Parscale and Rep. Dan Crenshaw, R-Texas, who wrote, “Wow. Just wow.”
Trump has been sharply critical of Democrats’ leadership in Baltimore in the past, including Cummings, calling the city once a “rodent infested mess.”
"I really just want to get in office and show people that you [can] have a better quality of life," Klacik told Laura Ingraham Tuesday. "It is possible, especially if you vote Republican."
Klacik has excited Republicans over potentially flipping the seat, but political scientist Matthew Crenson called her bid for the deeply blue district “practically impossible," according to WJZ-TV.
Mfume held the 7th District seat for a decade until 1996 when he left to become president of the NAACP, according to the Baltimore Sun.
“Kimberly will work with the Trump Administration and we will bring Baltimore back, and fast,” the president said of Kimberly Klacik, 38, who is running against Rep. Kweisi Mfume, 71. Mfume defeated her in April's special election. They will now face each other again in November.
“Don’t blow it Baltimore, the Democrats have destroyed your city!” Trump added.
Klacik gained attention this week after a campaign ad she posted walking the streets of what she calls the “real” Baltimore: “crumbling infrastructure,” “abandoned homes” and “crime” went viral with hundreds of thousands of views.
“Do you care about Black lives? The people that run Baltimore don’t,” Klacik says in the video titled “Black Lives Don’t Matter To Democrats” as she walks through empty streets.
Her video also got attention from other prominent Republicans, including Donald Jr. and Eric Trump, Trump senior adviser Brad Parscale and Rep. Dan Crenshaw, R-Texas, who wrote, “Wow. Just wow.”
Trump has been sharply critical of Democrats’ leadership in Baltimore in the past, including Cummings, calling the city once a “rodent infested mess.”
"I really just want to get in office and show people that you [can] have a better quality of life," Klacik told Laura Ingraham Tuesday. "It is possible, especially if you vote Republican."
Klacik has excited Republicans over potentially flipping the seat, but political scientist Matthew Crenson called her bid for the deeply blue district “practically impossible," according to WJZ-TV.
Mfume held the 7th District seat for a decade until 1996 when he left to become president of the NAACP, according to the Baltimore Sun.
Trump campaign on Biden's formal nomination: ‘His supervisors from the radical left are now formally in charge'
The Trump campaign reacted to the second night of the Democratic National Convention by arguing that now that Joe Biden is officially the Democratic nominee for president, "his supervisors from the radical left are now formally in charge."
"Someone should have explained to Joe Biden that he is now the official nominee of the Democrat Party, meaning his supervisors from the radical left are now formally in charge," Trump 2020 communications director Tim Murtaugh said in a statement.
Murtaugh said that while the Democratic Convention was counting delegates Tuesday night, "somebody should have been totaling the $4 trillion in new taxes Joe Biden would heap on Americans if elected."
Biden has proposed raising income taxes and Social Security taxes on those who make over $400,000.
"Another informative exercise would have been for each state delegation to announce how many jobs Biden’s failed policies have killed in their communities, through high taxes and regulations, disastrous trade deals, and coddling of economic rivals like China," Murtaugh said.
At the same time, former Secretary of State John Kerry accused President Trump in the convention's second night of "writing love letters to dictators."
"When this president goes overseas, it isn’t a goodwill mission, it’s a blooper reel. He breaks up with our allies and writes love letters to dictators," Kerry said.
"While television networks will never get that time back, someone should have explained that Biden will give taxpayer-funded healthcare to illegal aliens and award them work permits so they can compete with Americans for jobs," Murtaugh continued.
Biden has proposed an expansion of the Affordable Care Act which would provide the 12 million immigrants who are here illegally with "a public option and they'd be able to buy in just like anyone else could."
The night featured speeches from prominent Democrats such as Sen. Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, D-N.Y., Caroline Kennedy and Sally Yates. Bush administration Secretary of State Colin Powell also delivered an adrdress. One of the nation's more controversial speakers was former President Bill Clinton.
The Trump campaign and Republican National Committee, ahead of their convention next week, hit right back at the night's speakers.
"Pres. Trump has spent his presidency righting the wrongs of Bill Clinton & Joe Biden’s record of failed policies," the RNC tweeted.
Kayleigh McEnany, White House press secretary, mocked the convention format as a metaphor, ripping "transitionless doldrums of unenthusiastic Biden surrogates, very emblematic of his base."
Republicans and Democrats seemed to agree that Biden's wife, Jill's, address, which concluded the night, was one of the more powerful moments.
"Tonight, Jill Biden did a very good job representing herself and Joe in the causes they believe in," tweeted Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C. "She’s an outstanding person who has led a consequential life."
"Jill Biden seems like an amazing person," wrote Trump's former acting Director of National Intelligence Richard Grenell. "I love that she taught at a community college."
"Honestly, this Jill Biden pitch is the best pitch for Biden. And perhaps the only pitch for Biden. She's doing a really good job with this," conservative commentator Ben Shapiro wrote on Twitter.
"Someone should have explained to Joe Biden that he is now the official nominee of the Democrat Party, meaning his supervisors from the radical left are now formally in charge," Trump 2020 communications director Tim Murtaugh said in a statement.
Murtaugh said that while the Democratic Convention was counting delegates Tuesday night, "somebody should have been totaling the $4 trillion in new taxes Joe Biden would heap on Americans if elected."
Biden has proposed raising income taxes and Social Security taxes on those who make over $400,000.
"Another informative exercise would have been for each state delegation to announce how many jobs Biden’s failed policies have killed in their communities, through high taxes and regulations, disastrous trade deals, and coddling of economic rivals like China," Murtaugh said.
At the same time, former Secretary of State John Kerry accused President Trump in the convention's second night of "writing love letters to dictators."
"When this president goes overseas, it isn’t a goodwill mission, it’s a blooper reel. He breaks up with our allies and writes love letters to dictators," Kerry said.
"While television networks will never get that time back, someone should have explained that Biden will give taxpayer-funded healthcare to illegal aliens and award them work permits so they can compete with Americans for jobs," Murtaugh continued.
Biden has proposed an expansion of the Affordable Care Act which would provide the 12 million immigrants who are here illegally with "a public option and they'd be able to buy in just like anyone else could."
The night featured speeches from prominent Democrats such as Sen. Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, D-N.Y., Caroline Kennedy and Sally Yates. Bush administration Secretary of State Colin Powell also delivered an adrdress. One of the nation's more controversial speakers was former President Bill Clinton.
The Trump campaign and Republican National Committee, ahead of their convention next week, hit right back at the night's speakers.
"Pres. Trump has spent his presidency righting the wrongs of Bill Clinton & Joe Biden’s record of failed policies," the RNC tweeted.
Kayleigh McEnany, White House press secretary, mocked the convention format as a metaphor, ripping "transitionless doldrums of unenthusiastic Biden surrogates, very emblematic of his base."
Republicans and Democrats seemed to agree that Biden's wife, Jill's, address, which concluded the night, was one of the more powerful moments.
"Tonight, Jill Biden did a very good job representing herself and Joe in the causes they believe in," tweeted Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C. "She’s an outstanding person who has led a consequential life."
"Jill Biden seems like an amazing person," wrote Trump's former acting Director of National Intelligence Richard Grenell. "I love that she taught at a community college."
"Honestly, this Jill Biden pitch is the best pitch for Biden. And perhaps the only pitch for Biden. She's doing a really good job with this," conservative commentator Ben Shapiro wrote on Twitter.
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