Advertisement

Everything President Trump has tweeted (and what it was about)

His tweets have the power to shape international relations, send stock prices up — or down — and galvanize the American public.

We watched how Donald Trump used this platform of unfettered communication during his first year as commander in chief. Here is everything he tweeted. In many cases, we looked at what he was reacting to and whether what he said was accurate. And, as much as possible, we related what else was going on at the time.

See anything we missed? Drop us a line

Trump promotes son’s ‘Justice with Judge Jeanine’ interview

President Trump promoted via Twitter an interview with his son Eric Trump just before it aired Saturday night on Fox News’ “Justice with Judge Jeanine.”

Eric Trump called into the show to defend his father from criticism prompted by the first government shutdown in more than four years, as well as a series of Women’s March events that saw protesters in dozens of cities take to the streets to oppose the president’s policies.

Speaking to host Jeannine Piro — who is reportedly an old friend of the president’s — Eric Trump offered effusive praise for his father, ticking off glowing statistics to illustrate the strength of the U.S. economy and gains against Islamic State fighters overseas.

“My father’s working like no one’s ever worked before to bring back this country and to fulfill his promise to make America great again,” said the executive vice president of the Trump Organization.

He also repeated a sentiment recently expressed on Twitter by his father: That Democratic lawmakers forced a government shutdown on the anniversary of the president’s inauguration in a bid to distract from his achievements.

“You look at this whole government shutdown, and the only reason they want to shut down government is to distract and to stop his momentum,” Eric Trump said. “I mean, my father has had incredible momentum. He’s gotten more done in one year than arguably any president in history.”

Trump tweets: ‘a perfect day for all Women to March’

President Trump hailed the nationwide Women’s March gatherings Saturday.

On Twitter, the president called it “a perfect day for all Women to March,” seeming to imply that those taking part were celebrating his administration’s accomplishments:

Participants in the marches across the United States were actually seeking to deliver a powerful rebuke to Trump’s policies and mount a crucial mobilization for this year’s midterm elections.

But Trump continued to tout his administration’s “unprecedented success” in tweets sent later in the day:

In addition to the roll call of major American cities where women’s marches took place — including New York, Washington, Los Angeles, Dallas, Philadelphia, Chicago, San Francisco, Atlanta — protesters also raised their voices in suburbs and small towns, reflecting the aim of coalescing a broad-based movement on the anniversary of Trump’s inauguration to oppose the president’s stance on immigration, healthcare, racial divides and an array of other issues.

Read MoreThis post contains reporting from Times staff writer Laura King.

Advertisement

Trump calls shutdown a ‘present’ from Democrats

President Trump is blaming Democrats for the government shutdown — tweeting that they wanted to give him “a nice present” to mark the one-year anniversary of his inauguration:

That comes after Senate Democrats late Friday killed a GOP-written House-passed measure that would have kept agencies functioning for four weeks. Democrats were seeking a stopgap bill of just a few days in hopes that would build pressure on Republicans, and they were opposing a three-week alternative offered by GOP leaders.

Democrats have insisted they would back legislation reopening the government once there’s a bipartisan agreement to preserve protections against deporting about 700,000 immigrants — known as “Dreamers” — who arrived in the United States illegally as children.

Trump on Saturday accused Democrats of “holding our Military hostage over their desire to have unchecked illegal immigration”:

Democrats are laying fault for the shutdown on Republicans, who control both chambers of Congress and the White House and have struggled with building internal consensus.

In a series of tweets hours after the shutdown began, the president tried to make the case for Americans to elect more Republicans to Congress in November “in order to power through this mess”:

He noted that there are 51 Republicans in the 100-member Senate, and it often takes 60 votes to advance legislation:

The stopgap spending measure won 50 votes in the Senate, including five from Democrats.

Although the House and Senate were in session Saturday, it was unclear whether lawmakers would take any votes of consequence.

Trump had been set to leave Friday afternoon for a fundraiser at his estate in Palm Beach, Fla., where he intended to mark the inauguration anniversary. But he remained in Washington and ended up scrapping his plans to attend the Saturday fundraiser.

Read More

Trump tweet casts doubt on likelihood of averting shutdown

President Trump appeared to cast doubt on the likelihood of reaching a deal to avert a government shutdown Friday night in a tweet.

Trump also sought to blame Democrats for what would be the first shutdown since 2013.

His message came just hours before the midnight deadline by which lawmakers must pass a measure to fund government agencies, or some operations will cease.

Despite last-minute negotiations Friday between Trump and Senate Minority Leader Charles E. Schumer, Congress remained deadlocked over a spending bill and the federal government was headed toward a shutdown at midnight.

Senate Democrats — joined by some GOP deficit hawks and immigration allies — were set to filibuster a stopgap funding bill approved by the House on Thursday. A Senate vote was planned for 10 p.m. Eastern, and even White House officials predicted it would fail.

Read More This post contains reporting from Times staff writer Lisa Mascaro.

Advertisement

Trump signs surveillance law after confusing tweets

President Trump on Friday signed a bill into law to renew a foreign intelligence surveillance program, announcing his action in the latest in a series of confusing tweets about the spy program:

Trump’s tweet on Jan. 11 created chaos in the House just before it voted to reauthorize what is known as Section 702 of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act. He linked the intelligence program to a dossier that alleges his presidential campaign had ties to Russia.

That caused people to wonder if he didn’t support the program that allows U.S. spy agencies to collect intelligence on foreign targets abroad.

Trump and other Republicans have alleged that Obama administration officials improperly shared the identities of Trump presidential transition team members mentioned in intelligence reports. Democrats say there is no evidence that happened.

Shortly before the House vote, and after conferring with House Speaker Paul Ryan, Trump did an apparent about-face.

“This vote is about foreign surveillance of foreign bad guys on foreign land,” he tweeted. “We need it! Get smart!”

In his tweet announcing that he had just signed the bill, Trump wrote: “This is NOT the same FISA law that was so wrongly abused during the election. I will always do the right thing for our country and put the safety of the American people first!”

There are no obvious links between the dossier Trump spoke of, which includes salacious but unsubstantiated allegations against him, and the reauthorization of the spying program, or between the program and Trump’s oft-repeated claims that the Obama administration conducted surveillance on Trump Tower during the presidential campaign.

Trump, Schumer proclaim ‘progress’ after talk to avoid shutdown

After a surprise meeting with President Trump as a government shutdown loomed, Senate Minority Leader Charles E. Schumer (D-N.Y.) said Friday that “progress” had been made and negotiations would continue.

Schumer dashed to the White House earlier in the day at the invitation of Trump. Schumer cut a previous budget deal with Trump last fall over the strong objections of GOP leaders.

“We discussed all of the major outstanding issues,” Schumer told reporters. “We made some progress. But we still have a good number of disagreements. The discussions will continue.”

With less than seven hours before the shutdown deadline, Trump tweeted that he’d had an “excellent preliminary meeting” with Schumer and was “making progress.”

But the president said he still preferred a four-week stopgap bill that was passed Thursday by the House but was expected to be blocked Friday in the Senate.

The meeting came as Congress pushed the federal government to the brink of a shutdown. Senate Democrats — joined by some GOP deficit hawks and immigration allies — were set to filibuster the stopgap funding bill ahead of a midnight deadline in Washington.

Lawmakers scrambled to assign blame for what would be the first federal shutdown since 2013, when Republicans led the unpopular 16-day closure in their failed effort to repeal the Affordable Care Act, or Obamacare.

Republicans assailed Democratic senators for holding the funding “hostage” as Democrats demanded deportation protections for “Dreamers,” the young immigrants brought to the United States illegally as children. Their protected status could expire soon as Trump ends the Obama-era Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program.

Trump tweeted Friday morning:

The Trump administration is scrambling to soften the blow of a possible shutdown with plans to keep as much of the government open as possible. Their blueprints, though, could quickly unravel.

“We are going to manage this shutdown differently,” said Mick Mulvaney, the White House budget director, who accused the previous administration of using the 2013 budget stalemate to score political points, making the repercussions more painful for Americans than necessary.

“We are not going to weaponize it. We are not going to try to hurt people,” he told reporters at the White House.

Trump shared via Twitter a link to the briefing:

Whatever the White House’s intentions, however, some hurt from a shutdown is unavoidable. The law places the federal government under extremely restrictive constraints.

“Shutting down the government is a very serious thing,” Sen. Dianne Feinstein (D-Calif.) told CNN on Thursday night. “People die, accidents happen. You don’t know. Necessary functions can cease. … There is no specific list you can look at and make a judgment: ‘Well, everything is going to be just fine.’ You can’t make that judgment.”

Trump quoted Feinstein in a tweet:

A spokesman for Feinstein on Friday said that the senator “was trying to get at the uncertainty that a government shutdown could create,” but that she “remains committed” to voting against the funding bill because it doesn’t include protections for Dreamers.

While Democrats led the opposition, a few Republican senators also said they would reject the measure.

A mix of immigration advocates, including Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.) and deficit hawks such as Sen. Rand Paul (R-Ky.), have announced their opposition. Other Republicans may join them. Sen. Jeff Flake of Arizona, who has worked with Graham and Democrats for years on immigration issues, said he was “not inclined” to support the monthlong spending bill and wanted a short extension for a few days to keep government running while immigration talks continued.

Trump’s vulgar comments during an Oval Office meeting last week — he said he didn’t want immigrants coming to the U.S. from “shithole” countries — left a bipartisan working group skeptical the GOP would act in time to protect Dreamers.

Read MoreThis post contains reporting from Times staff writers Lisa Mascaro, Evan Halper and Sarah D. Wire.

Advertisement

Trump tells March for Life: ‘We are with you all the way’

President Trump on Friday delivered new support to the anti-abortion movement he once opposed, telling thousands of activists demonstrating in the annual March for Life, “We are with you all the way.”

In an address broadcast from the White House Rose Garden, Trump said he’s committed to building “a society where life is celebrated, protected and cherished.”

The moment marked the president personally stepping to the forefront of the anti-abortion movement in the United States as the anniversary of his inauguration approaches. Last year, Vice President Mike Pence addressed the crowd in Trump’s absence. In the year since, Trump has delivered on rules and policies he had promised in an effort to help curb abortion rights legalized 45 years ago. Chief among them is the confirmation of conservative Supreme Court Justice Neil Gorsuch.

Trump’s administration on Friday also announced more actions in line with long-standing demands from social and religious conservatives.

The Department of Health and Human Services spelled out plans to protect medical providers who refuse to perform procedures such as abortions because of moral or religious scruples. HHS also pulled back an Obama-era policy that posed a legal roadblock to conservative states trying to cut Medicaid funds for Planned Parenthood.

In tweet, Trump suggests that Pennsylvania trip is a political one

The White House press office was once again forced to walk back a tweet from President Trump on Thursday morning after he described a trip to Pennsylvania later in the day as a political one — a statement that would force the Republican Party, not taxpayers, to pay for the journey.

The White House had said Trump was going to an industrial equipment company outside of Pittsburgh to highlight the good economy and new tax cuts, making it an official, policy-oriented event.

It was widely assumed that the trip had a political cast — the area is holding a special election to fill a congressional seat vacated by a Republican who resigned. Trump, by his tweet, seemed to confirm that politics was the whole purpose:

Trump later shared via Twitter a pair of video clips of his speech at H&K Equipment, in which he touted the tax cuts he signed into law just before Christmas and tried to turn the conversation back to his accomplishments after weeks dominated by distractions, including questions about his mental health and comments about immigration that some considered racist:

The Republican National Committee, rather than the White House, is supposed to pay for political travel so that taxpayers are not financing party activities; for trips that combine policy and politics, parties have split the cost under past presidents. Neither the RNC nor the White House responded to emails sent Thursday asking who would pay.

White House Press Secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders released a statement later Thursday suggesting that taxpayers would foot the bill. She insisted that Trump would be conducting government business while in Pennsylvania.

Read MoreThis post contains reporting from the Associated Press and Times staff writer Noah Bierman.

Advertisement

Trump undermines House GOP leaders, his chief of staff and his press secretary in morning tweets

In a series of tweets Thursday morning, President Trump undercut a deal by Republican lawmakers to keep the government open past Friday and contradicted his chief of staff’s comments that Trump had “evolved” on his promised border wall.

By slamming the proposed government-funding plan, Trump also undermined White House Press Secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders, who told reporters Wednesday that the president supported the Republicans’ strategy.

Their bill would provide short-term funding for government operations and a six-year extension of the Children’s Health Insurance Program, which Republican leaders had attached to help attract support, particularly from Democrats who pushed for the program.

But Trump wrote on Twitter that funding for the program should be part of “a long term solution,” not the stopgap measure:

Some speculated that perhaps the president was not aware that the CHIP funding would be extended for six years, rather than the four weeks of the spending bill.

Republican leaders in Congress already were scrambling to gather votes for their plan to fund the government for another month until a longer-term deal can be made on federal spending and immigration. Trump’s comments threw voting into jeopardy, raising the odds of a shutdown.

Trump also pushed back against his own chief of staff, John F. Kelly, who told lawmakers Wednesday that Trump’s border wall promise was “uninformed” and Mexico was unlikely to pay for a wall. Kelly repeated his comments during a Fox News interview Wednesday night, saying Trump had “evolved” and changed his views on “a number of things” since entering the White House.

But Trump, in a note of discord with his top-ranking aide, denied he’s “evolved” on building a wall across the U.S.-Mexico border.

And he falsely claimed that Mexico is “now rated the number one most dangerous country in the world”:

A few hours later, the Mexican government fought back to challenge Trump.

The country released a statement — emailed to journalists, not posted on social media — that corrected Trump’s error and took the United States to task for its role in Mexico’s violence.

“Although Mexico has a significant problem of violence, it is openly false that Mexico is the most dangerous country in the world,” said the statement, released by Mexico’s Foreign Ministry.

The statement noted that although bloodshed is on the rise in Mexico — the country recorded more homicides in 2017 than in any year on record — other nations, including Venezuela and El Salvador, have much higher homicide rates.

The statement also pointed out what the Mexican government believes are major drivers of its violence: U.S. guns and U.S. demand for drugs.

Read More

Trump announces winners of ‘Fake News Awards’

President Trump announced the recipients of his “Fake News Awards” Wednesday night.

Trump tweeted a link to the winners list, which was hosted on GOP.com. The web page promptly went offline.

The “award” recipients included a mix of reporters for the New York Times, ABC News and the Washington Post, as well as reports published by CNN, Time, Newsweek and the New York Times. The winners list also included one topic: “Russia Collusion,” which the list called “perhaps the greatest hoax perpetrated on the American people.”

Here’s what the page looked like before it went offline:

Under the winners was a list of 10 of Trump’s accomplishments, among them the passage of the GOP tax cuts and the appointment of Neil M. Gorsuch to the Supreme Court.

Trump listed the highlights in subsequent tweets:

Earlier Wednesday, the president also shared some examples of what he considers “good news,” tweeting links to reports on companies that have announced plans to increase U.S. investment as a result of the tax cuts, as well as one on a jump in holiday retail sales:

Trump has battled the news media since taking office. He often accuses outlets of circulating “fake news” following the publication of stories that are critical of or unflattering to his administration.

The president first announced plans for his self-proclaimed “most dishonest & corrupt media awards of the year” via Twitter on Jan. 2.

He originally pledged to name the winners that Monday, but later delayed the reveal to Jan. 17, tweeting: “The interest in, and importance of, these awards is far greater than anyone could have anticipated!”

Read More

Advertisement

Trump tweets praise of Bob Dole after awarding him Congressional Gold Medal

Former Senate Majority Leader Bob Dole knew the art of the deal before President Trump published the 1987 book of the same name.

The two shared a stage under the Capitol dome Wednesday as Dole, 94, accepted Congress’ highest civilian honor, the Congressional Gold Medal, for his World War II service and decades of work in the House and Senate.

Trump later praised Dole in a tweet, attaching to his message a video composed of clips from the ceremony:

At the ceremony, the president saluted Dole as “a patriot” and gave tribute to Dole’s struggle as a veteran who worked his way back from a grievous shoulder wound he suffered in Italy.

“He knows about grit,” said Trump.

But it was Dole’s penchant for working across the aisle that earned him his latest award, according to the legislation.

“Bob Dole was known for his ability to work across the aisle and embrace practical bipartisanship,” reads the legislation Trump signed in September. Some of the award’s 300 recipients include George Washington and Mother Teresa, according to the Congressional Research Service.

Read More

Trump promotes son’s ‘Fox & Friends’ spot

President Trump promoted an appearance by his son, Eric Trump, on Fox News’ “Fox & Friends.”

Eric Trump appeared on the morning talk show to defend his father against accusations that he is racist.

He also denounced the news media, echoing past comments by his father.

Advertisement

Trump touts report that seeks to link terrorism cases with immigration

The Trump administration on Tuesday released a report attempting to link terrorism with migration, arguing that it was evidence of the need to dramatically reshape the nation’s immigration system.

The report, ordered by President Trump in an executive order last year, said that 75% of the 549 people convicted of terrorism charges since 9/11 were born outside the U.S. Administration officials called that a sign that the U.S. needs to scrap its policy of family preferences for visas, which they call “chain migration,” and a diversity visa lottery program.

But the report did not specify how many — if any — of the convicted terrorists entered the country through those means. It also did not detail how many of the convictions were related to attacks or plans in the U.S. versus overseas and how many involved people who went to fight overseas for the Islamic State or another terrorist group. Those details were not available, officials said.

The report, due last year, is being released in a highly charged moment in the immigration debate, as Trump and some Republicans in Congress seek tough new border and immigration measures in return for a deal protecting the 690,000 people in the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program.

Trump also fired off a pair of tweets on the topic earlier Tuesday:

“The focus of our immigration system should be assimilation,” a senior administration official said on Tuesday, speaking on condition that his name not be used. He said the nation should give priority to potential immigrants who speak English, who have an education and those who are “committed to supporting our values — not family members of people already here.”

The official said the timing of the report was coincidental.

Read More

Trump tweets welcome to president of Kazakhstan

President Trump said Tuesday that he and the president of Kazakhstan are united in a shared determination to prevent North Korea from “threatening the world with nuclear devastation.”

Trump and President Nursultan Nazarbayev discussed North Korea along with other issues during meetings at the White House.

Trump said Kazakhstan, once part of the Soviet Union, is a “valued partner in our efforts to rid the Korean peninsula of nuclear weapons.”

“Together we are determined to prevent the North Korean regime from threatening the world with nuclear devastation,” he said, as both presidents addressed journalists between meetings.

Nazarbayev noted that his country once had one of the world’s largest nuclear arsenals but voluntarily gave it up after the Soviet Union collapsed. He said his country is in talks with Iran, which was the focus of a global deal that lifted some economic sanctions in exchange for Iran’s curbing its nuclear program.

Trump has sharply criticized the Iran nuclear deal and threatened last week to pull out soon unless other countries fix what he says are “terrible flaws.”

Read More

Advertisement

Trump proclaims ‘religious freedom day’

President Trump proclaimed Tuesday “religious freedom day.”

The date was chosen because it was the 232nd anniversary of the adoption of Thomas Jefferson’s Virginia Statute for Religious Freedom, according to the text of the proclamation.

Trump falsely claims his approval rating among black Americans has doubled

President Trump lashed out at the news media Tuesday morning in a tweet denouncing the special counsel investigation into Russian meddling in the 2016 election and possible collusion among members of his campaign team.

It wasn’t immediately clear exactly what prompted the president’s tweet, but it appeared as though he was watching “Fox & Friends.”

A short time later, Trump tweeted a headline from a report that aired during that morning’s episode:

The segment focused on the latest survey results from conservative watchdog Media Research Center, which purportedly analyzed the evening news broadcasts on ABC, CBS and NBC from Jan. 20 to Dec. 31 and found that 90% of the statements made about Trump were negative.

“But believe it or not, through all this negative coverage, they did a survey of 600,000 people about how black America views this president,” co-host Brian Kilmeade said. “His numbers have actually doubled in approval.”

Trump highlighted the statement in another tweet:

But it’s not true.

The claim appears to have originated from a misreading of data from the online polling firm SurveyMonkey, according to factcheck.org.

The firm polled 600,000 Americans in 2017 and found that Trump’s approval rating among blacks actually dropped from 23% early in his presidency to about 17%, as of the week ending Jan. 3.

Some conservative outlets, including Breitbart, produced an average from those and other SurveyMonkey figures and compared them to the scores Trump received from black voters in the 2016 exit polls.

That methodology is not sound. And since the statistics measure different things, the comparison is misleading.

Advertisement

Trump goes after senator who surfaced his immigration remark

President Trump turned his Twitter torment Monday on the Democrat in the room where immigration talks with lawmakers took a famously coarse turn, saying Sen. Richard J. Durbin misrepresented what he had said about African nations and Haiti and, in the process, undermined the trust needed to make a deal.

“Senator Dicky Durbin totally misrepresented what was said at the DACA meeting,” Trump tweeted, using a nickname to needle the Illinois senator. “Deals can’t get made when there is no trust! Durbin blew DACA and is hurting our Military.”

Trump was referring to the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program, which protects young people who came to the United States illegally as children. Members of Congress from both parties are trying to strike a deal that Trump would support to extend that protection.

Trump also cast doubt on the likelihood of reaching an agreement in tweets sent earlier Monday:

On a day of remembrance for the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr., Trump spent time at his golf course with no public events, bypassing the acts of service that his predecessors staged in honor of the civil rights leader. Instead, Trump dedicated his weekly address to King’s memory, saying King’s dream and America’s are the same: “A world where people are judged by who they are, not how they look or where they come from.”

That message was a distinct counterpoint to words attributed to Trump by Durbin and others at a meeting last week, when the question of where immigrants come from seemed at the forefront of Trump’s concerns. Some participants and others familiar with the conversation said Trump challenged immigration from “shithole” countries of Africa and disparaged Haiti as well.

Without explicitly denying using that word, Trump lashed out at the Democratic senator, who said Trump uttered it on several occasions.

Read More

Trump thanks pundit for laudatory ‘Fox & Friends’ spot

President Trump thanked Fox News personality Stuart Varney after Varney praised Trump during an appearance on “Fox & Friends.”

In a pair of tweets early Sunday, Trump quoted from Varney’s commentary, in which he argued that Trump deserves more credit for the booming economy.

The pundit, who also hosts a show on Fox Business Network, cited moves by some corporations to raise workers’ minimum wage or pay out one-time bonuses in response to the GOP tax cuts.

Varney was reacting to a quote from House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi (D-San Francisco), who on Thursday called the bonuses handed down to workers “pathetic” in comparison to the gains corporations are expected to see from the tax cuts.

“In terms of the bonus that corporate America received versus the crumbs that they are giving to workers to kind of put the schmooze on is so pathetic,” Pelosi told reporters. “It’s pathetic.”

Varney shot back Sunday that the bonuses, along with “explosive” stock market growth, are “enriching all Americans.”

“This is a huge shot in the arm, it’s the result of this tax cut deal and I think President Trump should get the credit for it,” he said.

The sweeping tax plan passed last month lowers the corporate tax rate from 35% to 21% and cuts personal income taxes.

Analysts say the benefits will largely flow to corporations and the wealthy, as they’re more likely to be in positions to share in corporate profits.

For instance, Wells Fargo & Co., which responded to news of the tax overhaul by announcing it will raise workers’ pay to at least $15 an hour, also reported that it expects to pay an effective tax rate of 19% this year, down from about 31% in previous years. That should amount to tax savings of more than $3 billion annually.

On average, middle-class Americans are expected to see a very small tax cut in the near term and a tax increase after 2025, when all of the tax cuts for individuals expire. The tax cuts for corporations, however, are permanent.

This post contains reporting from Times staff writer James Rufus Koren.

Advertisement

Trump tweets that DACA ‘is probably dead’

President Trump tweeted Sunday that a program that protects immigrants who were brought to the United States illegally as children is “probably dead,” casting a cloud over already tenuous negotiations just days before a deadline on a government funding deal that Democrats have tied to immigration.

At issue is the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program created by President Obama to shield hundreds of thousands of these individuals, known as “Dreamers,” from deportation.

Trump, who has taken a hard stance against illegal immigration, announced last year that he will end the program unless Congress comes up with a solution by March.

Republicans and Democrats were already at odds over funding the government, and the negotiations became more complicated after Democrats — whose votes are needed to pass a government funding bill — insisted immigration be included. Government funding expires at midnight Friday without a deal in place, and some government functions will begin to go dark.

Further roiling the talks are comments by Trump during an Oval Office meeting in which he questioned the need to admit more Haitians to the U.S., along with Africans from “shithole” countries, according to people briefed on the conversation but not authorized to describe it publicly. He also said in the Thursday meeting that he would prefer immigrants from countries like Norway instead. The White House has not denied that Trump said the word “shithole,” though Trump did push back on some depictions of the meeting.

The president also rejected as insufficient an immigration deal drafted by the bipartisan group of lawmakers who attended that meeting. The deal had included a pathway to citizenship for Dreamers that would take up to 12 years, as well as $1.6 billion for border security, including Trump’s promised wall along the U.S.-Mexico border. Trump’s staunchest supporters consider any route to citizenship for the Dreamers amnesty for lawbreakers.

Trump has said any deal must include funding for the wall as well as changes to make the immigration system a more merit-based structure.

Read More

Trump disputes Wall Street Journal quote attributed to him on North Korea

President Trump is disputing a quote attributed to him during a newspaper interview about relations with North Korea’s leader.

The Wall Street Journal on Thursday quoted Trump as saying: “I probably have a very good relationship with Kim Jong Un.”

Trump tweeted Sunday:

White House Press Secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders and the newspaper have released separate audio clips.

The Wall Street Journal says it stands by its reporting.

Advertisement

Trump lashes out at tell-all author in tweet

President Trump is continuing to denounce an unflattering new book on his presidency, as well as media outlets that have reported on its contents.

Michael Wolff’s “Fire and the Fury: Inside the Trump White House,” portrays the 45th president as surrounded by aides who believe he’s unfit for the office he holds. The White House has called it “complete fantasy.”

In a tweet Saturday afternoon, Trump called Wolff “a mentally deranged author, who knowingly writes false information.”

The book has prompted questions about Trump’s own mental fitness.

Trump has pushed back, tweeting that he’s “a very stable genius.”

And earlier in the week, he said he’s going to be taking “a strong look at our country’s libel laws,” blasting the current standards as “a sham and a disgrace.”

On Friday, Trump received his first medical checkup at Walter Reed military hospital, and a White House physician declared him in “excellent health.”

Read MoreThis post contains reporting from the Associated Press and Times staff writer Alex Wigglesworth.

Trump revisits ‘America First’ campaign slogan in morning tweets

President Trump on Saturday sought to blame “all talk and no action” Democrats for the lack of an immigration deal.

“I don’t believe the Democrats really want to see a deal on DACA. They are all talk and no action,” Trump tweeted from Florida as he arrived at his private golf club in West Palm Beach.

Trump last year ended the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program, which provided young immigrants with protection from deportation along with the ability to work legally in the United States. He gave Congress until March to come up with a legislative fix.

On Thursday, he rejected a bipartisan immigration deal drafted by six senators.

During a closed-door meeting to discuss the proposal, Trump reportedly questioned why the U.S. would accept more immigrants from Haiti and “shithole countries” in Africa.

The comments revived charges that Trump is racist and roiled the already tenuous immigration talks.

The senators had been working for months on how to balance protections for young immigrants with Trump’s demands for border security, an end to a visa lottery aimed at increasing immigrant diversity, and limits to immigrants’ ability to sponsor family members to join them in America.

The president has previously described the U.S. immigration system as a threat to national security. He’s also faulted immigrants for taking Americans’ jobs and driving down wages.

Early Saturday, he tweeted:

The slogan, which Trump started using in the later months of his presidential campaign, despite requests from the Anti-Defamation League that he drop it, has an anti-Semitic and isolationist history going back to the years before the U.S. entry into World War II.

Trump also sought Saturday to draw attention to the U.S. economy, highlighting an announcement by Fiat Chrysler that it will move production of heavy-duty trucks from Mexico to Michigan in response to the passage of the GOP tax cuts.

Trump predicted that other companies will follow suit, tweeting: “American business is hot again!”

One of the six senators who crafted the bipartisan immigration deal, Democrat Michael Bennet of Colorado, said Saturday that the proposal “has everything the president asked for on the border.” He said if Trump can’t support it, “it’s difficult to see how we could get him to agree to anything that could pass in Congress.”

It was unclear now how a deal might emerge, though both sides insist the clock is ticking. Failure could affect government operations.

Lawmakers have until Friday to approve a short-term government spending bill, and Republicans will need Democratic votes to push the measure through. Some Democrats have threatened to withhold support unless an immigration pact is forged.

Advertisement

Trump touts MLK proclamation in tweet, but ceremony is overshadowed by reports of racist remarks

President Trump signed a proclamation Friday for Martin Luther King Jr. Day, noting the contributions of a “great American hero.”

Overshadowing the event was mounting backlash from Trump’s comments during a private meeting with lawmakers the day before.

A short time after the meeting, which was called to discuss a possible immigration deal, reports emerged that Trump had asked participants why the United States should accept immigrants from “shithole countries” in Africa, Central America and the Caribbean. Illinois Sen. Richard Durbin, the Senate’s second-ranking Democrat, appeared to confirm those reports on Friday.

Trump did not respond Friday to several questions about the incident, including whether he actually used vulgar language to describe African nations, or if he is racist.

The president said at the White House that “love was central” to the slain civil rights leader. Trump said the nation celebrates King for “standing up for the self-evident truth Americans hold so dear, that no matter what the color of our skin or place of our birth, we are all created equal by God.”

This post contains reporting from Times staff writer Noah Bierman.

In morning tweets, Trump concedes using ‘tough’ language but implies he didn’t say ‘shithole countries’

President Trump conceded early Friday that he used “tough” language during a closed-door immigration meeting the day before, but implied that reports he complained about the United States accepting migrants from “shithole countries” were wrong.

Trump tweeted:

In other tweets posted Friday morning, Trump complained about a bipartisan immigration deal that senators outlined to him at the White House meeting.

He said it would force the U.S. “to take large numbers of people from high crime … countries which are doing badly.”

The tweets backed up the notion that Trump views immigration policy in terms of favorable and unfavorable countries, not on the individual merit of would-be immigrants, as he says.

Read More

Advertisement

Trump tweets that he’s canceled London trip — and blames Obama

President Trump confirmed via Twitter late Thursday that he will no longer attend the opening of the new U.S. Embassy in London.

Trump wrote that he decided to cancel his trip because he believes the Obama administration made a “bad deal” in choosing to sell the old embassy and build a new one:

With a budget of about $1 billion for the entire project, the new U.S. Embassy in London is one of the most expensive ever built.

That’s in part because Congress ruled in 2011 that all U.S. embassies must sit behind a 100-foot “seclusion zone” in order to protect staff and visitors.

The State Department said it proved simply too expensive to renovate the old embassy to the standards required and the new location was chosen because it was a blank canvas.

Other U.S. government properties in London, including the old embassy site, were sold so that the project could be financed without taxpayer money.

Trump’s tweet followed reports in British media that he had canceled his visit to London, expected to take place next month, amid fears of mass protests.

Trump drew widespread condemnation from British lawmakers and members of the public in November, when he retweeted a trio of inflammatory videos posted by a leader of anti-Muslim hate group Britain First.

This post contains reporting from Times special correspondent Christina Boyle and staff writer Alex Wigglesworth.

Trump criticizes Democrats in tweet calling for stricter immigration rules

President Trump hit out at Democrats on Thursday night in a tweet calling for stricter immigration rules.

Trump wrote that members of the party “seem intent on having people and drugs pour into our country” from the border with Mexico:

It wasn’t immediately clear exactly what prompted the tweet.

Earlier Thursday, Trump rejected a bipartisan compromise to resolve the standoff over so-called Dreamers, young immigrants who were brought to the United States illegally as children but have temporary permits to work, attend school or serve in the military.

The president drew widespread condemnation after reports emerged that he had asked participants in an Oval Office meeting about the proposal why the United States should accept immigrants from “shithole countries” in Africa, Central America and the Caribbean.

Read More

Advertisement

Trump rattles national security community with tweets inspired by ‘Fox & Friends’

President Trump publicly contradicted a major policy position of his administration Thursday — the second time he did so in a week in which the White House has sought to beat back questions about his stability and grasp of policy details.

The incident provided a new and striking example of the contradiction between Trump’s dueling identities as an individual often guided by impulses, grievances and what he sees on television and Trump the president, responsible for taking a broader view of government and security issues.

The events began Thursday morning when Trump sent a tweet that rattled the national security community and Republican lawmakers, nearly derailing a vote in the House on one of the administration’s top national security priorities — renewing the National Security Agency’s broad authority to conduct surveillance of foreigners, without warrants, including those communicating with U.S. citizens:

The bill eventually passed the House, 256-164, but only after Speaker Paul D. Ryan and others intervened with Trump, prompting him to send a second tweet that partly walked back his earlier criticism of the surveillance law:

The extension of surveillance authority still faces uncertainty in the Senate, where Kentucky Sen. Rand Paul, a Republican, has threatened a filibuster.

Trump’s initial tweet insisted, angrily and contrary to all known evidence, that the NSA’s surveillance program might have been used to spy on his campaign during the 2016 election.

The tweet came shortly after “Fox & Friends,” Trump’s favorite program and a frequent inspiration for his Twitter account, aired a segment in which Andrew Napolitano, a commentator, offered scathing criticism of the surveillance program.

“Mr. President, this is not the way to go,” he said, looking at the camera:

White House officials would not say whether Napolitano’s comment prompted Trump’s tweet.

Trump also tweeted about several other topics covered during Thursday morning’s episode of “Fox & Friends.”

He waded back into the controversy surrounding a dossier of salacious allegations about his ties to Russia, tweeting a series of questions about the document’s provenance:

That followed a “Fox & Friends” segment speculating about whether the FBI used information in the dossier as a pretext to spy on Trump’s presidential campaign.

It featured an appearance from Trump advisor Kellyanne Conway:

Trump also touted a new Quinnipiac poll that shows 66% of voters feel the economy is excellent or good:

That too was discussed during Conway’s interview:

Trump also tweeted what appeared to be a direct quote from “Fox & Friends” reporting a 45-year low in illegal immigration. He appended the show’s Twitter handle to his message:

The statistic was cited by the acting director of U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement, Thomas Homan, who appeared on “Fox & Friends” to discuss a series of federal immigration actions staged Wednesday at 7-Eleven locations across the nation:

“Under this president, we had a 45-year low in illegal immigration on the border this year,” Homan said. “That is not a coincidence. He is successful, he has allowed us to do our job.”

Trump appeared to be watching “Fox & Friends” again later Thursday.

In a tweet sent more than 12 hours after he wrapped up his early-morning volley of messages, Trump quoted from a segment featuring Adam Levine, a contributor to blog the Federalist:

Levine appeared on the show to discuss an op-ed he penned for the Federalist on how it was more difficult for him to come out as a Trump supporter than it was to tell his family and friends that he is gay.

Trump also renewed his attack against Sen. Dianne Feinstein after Fox News reported that the San Francisco Democrat had “seemed to blame a ‘bad cold’” for her decision to release testimony from the co-founder of Fusion GPS, the research firm behind the notorious dossier.

In a tweet, Trump wrote that Feinstein’s move was “very disrespectful” to members of the Senate Judiciary Committee “and possibly illegal:”

Feinstein has said that she didn’t do anything illegal: She had the ability to release the transcripts as the top Democrat on the committee, and her staff helped conduct the interview.

Republicans have argued that the tangled history of Fusion GPS’s research — it was first backed by anti-Trump Republicans and then by Democrats during the 2016 race — raised doubts about the credibility of investigations into whether any of Trump’s aides assisted Russia’s efforts to meddle in the election.

Feinstein said in a statement Tuesday that she released the testimony to counteract “innuendo and misinformation” about the co-founder’s testimony.

This post contains reporting from Times staff writers Noah Bierman, Lisa Mascaro, Chris Megerian, David S. Cloud, Joseph Tanfani and Alex Wigglesworth.

Trump praises companies’ plans to pass along some expected gains from tax cuts

President Trump praised a plan by Wal-Mart Stores Inc. to lift its minimum wage to $11 an hour for its U.S. workers and provide them with a one-time cash bonus of up to $1,000 due to expected gains from the new tax law.

Trump shared via Twitter a video clip of a Fox Business Network report on the announcement:

The nation’s largest retailer, with about 1.5 million U.S. employees and nearly $500 billion in global revenue, also said it would expand its workers’ maternity and parental leave benefits.

“We are building on investments we’ve been making in associates, in their wages and skills development,” Wal-Mart Chief Executive Doug McMillon said in a statement.

The new tax law lowers the U.S. corporate tax rate to 21% from 35%, among other things, and McMillon said Wal-Mart was “in the early stages of assessing the opportunities tax reform creates for us to invest in our customers and associates and to further strengthen our business, all of which should benefit our shareholders.”

Later, Trump also thanked Fiat Chrysler after the company announced it is moving production of heavy-duty trucks from Mexico to Michigan and paying bonuses to U.S. workers in response to the passage of the tax cuts:

The automaker will invest $1 billion in its Warren Truck Assembly Plant to make the Ram Heavy Duty Truck starting in 2020. That truck is currently made in Saltillo, Mexico, where workers will continue to make commercial vehicles.

FCA says the Warren plant will add 2,500 new jobs.

The company also plans to pay $2,000 bonuses this spring to about 60,000 hourly and salaried U.S. employees.

In his tweets, Trump suggested that other corporations will follow suit:

“All business is just at the beginning of something really special!” he pledged:

This post contains reporting from Los Angeles Times staff writer James F. Peltz and the Associated Press.

Advertisement

Trump touts bill aimed at improving border screening for fentanyl

President Trump signed legislation Wednesday aimed at giving Customs and Border Protection agents additional screening devices and other tools to stop the flow of illicit drugs.

Speaking at a surprise bill-signing ceremony while flanked by members of Congress from both parties in the Oval Office, Trump described the bill as a “significant step forward” in the fight against powerful opioids such as fentanyl, which he called “our new big scourge.”

He echoed that language Thursday in a tweet:

The legislation will pay for new portable and fixed chemical screening devices to detect and intercept fentanyl at ports of entry and in the mail, along with other laboratory equipment and personnel, including scientists.

Trump has made fighting the opioid epidemic a centerpiece of his administration, though critics say he hasn’t dedicated nearly enough money or resources to make a difference.

Trump suggested during his remarks on Wednesday that he’d like to take a more aggressive approach to the drug crisis — but the country’s not ready for what he has in mind.

“So we’re going to sign this. And it’s a step. And it feels like a very giant step, but unfortunately, it’s not going to be a giant step, because no matter what you do, this is something that keeps pouring in,” he said.

“And we’re going to find the answer. There is an answer. I think I actually know the answer, but I’m not sure the country’s ready for it yet,” he added. “Does anybody know what I mean? I think so.”

Trump applauds news that Toyota-Mazda plant is slated for Alabama

Japanese automakers Toyota and Mazda on Wednesday announced plans to build a mammoth, $1.6-billion joint-venture plant in Alabama that will eventually employ about 4,000 people.

President Trump lauded the news in a tweet:

Several states had competed for the project, which will be able to turn out 300,000 vehicles per year and produce the Toyota Corolla compact car for North America and a new small SUV from Mazda. Alabama Gov. Kay Ivey and company executives held a news conference to announce that the facility is coming to the Huntsville area not far from the Tennessee line.

Production is expected to begin by 2021.

The decision to pick Alabama is another example of foreign-based automakers building U.S. factories in the South. To entice manufacturers, Southern states have used a combination of lucrative incentive packages, low-cost labor and a pro-business labor environment, because the United Auto Workers union is stronger in Northern states.

Read More

Advertisement

Trump highlights call for border wall in tweets on visit with Norway’s prime minister

President Trump praised Norway’s prime minister in a tweet on Wednesday after Erna Solberg became the first foreign leader to visit with the president in 2018.

Trump also shared via Twitter a video clip of a joint news conference he held with Solberg on Wednesday afternoon.

In the clip, Trump responds to a question from a reporter by saying there can be no bipartisan immigration deal absent funding for his long-promised wall along the U.S. border with Mexico.

Republican and Democratic lawmakers have been seeking a solution for hundreds of thousands of so-called Dreamers, young people who were brought to the United States as children and are living here illegally.

“We need the wall for security, we need the wall for safety, we need the wall for stopping the drugs from pouring in,” Trump said Wednesday. “… Any solution has to include the wall because without the wall, it all doesn’t work.”

On Tuesday, Trump drew widespread attention when he said during a meeting with a bipartisan group of lawmakers that he would be “agreeable” to signing a stand-alone bill to protect the Dreamers, before moving on to a more comprehensive immigration bill.

That contradicted the Republican consensus that Dreamers’ fate needed to be part of a broader immigration bill that would include some version of Trump’s promised border wall and other immigration reforms.

Trump backed away from a stand-alone Dreamer bill in subsequent tweets and public comments.

Read MoreThis post contains reporting from Los Angeles Times staff writer Noah Bierman.

Trump praises Cabinet in tweet touting meeting

President Trump promoted a meeting of his Cabinet on Wednesday, sharing via Twitter a link to a video of the session posted on the White House YouTube account.

In his tweet, Trump thanked his Cabinet “for working tirelessly on behalf of our country” and wrote that the last year has been one “of monumental achievement.”

The former reality television star continued to dispense accolades at the meeting Wednesday, greeting reporters in the Cabinet Room by saying: “Welcome back to the studio.”

Then he proceeded to relive a Cabinet Room session from the prior day, when he had allowed reporters and TV cameras to stick around for much of his meeting with a bipartisan group of legislators on the thorny issue of immigration.

“It was a tremendous meeting. Actually, it was reported as incredibly good. And my performance — you know, some of them called it a performance — I consider it work,” Trump said.

Trump went on to say he had received letters from news anchors calling it “one of the greatest meetings they’ve ever witnessed.” He added that “the media will ultimately support Trump in the end, because they’re going to say, if Trump doesn’t win in three years, they’re all out of business.”

Asked for examples of letters received from news anchors, the White House said it had received “private communications.” It also offered a series of positive on-air comments and tweets from journalists about the unusual access to the meeting.

During his remarks, Trump swung from praising his own meeting coverage to telling journalists that they were dependent on his presidency for ratings to threatening a “strong look” at libel laws.

Still, Trump thanked the journalists in front of him, joking: “You’ve gotten very familiar with this room. I appreciate your nice comments yesterday.”

Advertisement

Trump lashes out at Russia investigations and ‘Sneaky Dianne Feinstein’

President Trump lashed out at investigations by the Justice Department and Congress into potential coordination between Russia and the Trump campaign.

In a tweet Wednesday morning, Trump urged Republicans to take control of the inquiries and repeated his contention that they are a “witch hunt.”

In a separate tweet, Trump accused Sen. Dianne Feinstein (D-Calif.) of being “underhanded and a disgrace” for disclosing details of a dossier of allegations about his ties to Russia during the presidential campaign.

A day earlier, Feinstein, who faces a primary challenge in her reelection this year, released the transcript of the Senate Judiciary Committee’s closed-door August interview with an official from the political opposition research firm Fusion GPS, which commissioned the dossier. She released the transcript of Glenn Simpson’s interview over the objections of the committee’s Republican chairman, Iowa Sen. Chuck Grassley.

The material wasn’t classified, and Feinstein said Wednesday that she didn’t do anything illegal. And as the top Democrat on the committee, she didn’t need authorization from Grassley to release it. Her staff helped conduct the interview with Simpson, who had also asked for the interview to be released.

Still, the release was a blow to the two lawmakers’ earlier attempts at bipartisanship on the committee’s Russia investigation. Feinstein told reporters that she didn’t tell Grassley beforehand, and “I owe him an apology and I will give him an apology as soon as I see him.”

Trump has derided the dossier as a politically motivated hit job. Following his lead, several GOP-led committees are now investigating whether the dossier formed the basis for the FBI’s initial investigations. That has angered Democrats, who say those charges are distractions from the Russia investigations.

In a statement accompanying the release of the transcript, Feinstein said that she was trying to set the record straight after speculation about the interview.

Read More

Trump blasts DACA ruling in tweet calling courts ‘broken and unfair’

President Trump denounced the federal courts Wednesday as “broken and unfair” after a district judge in San Francisco issued a nationwide injunction keeping protections in place for so-called Dreamers.

Trump tweeted:

On Tuesday night, U.S. District Judge William Alsup in San Francisco temporarily blocked the Trump administration’s decision to phase out the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program, known as DACA, which has protected from deportation some 700,000 people who came to the country illegally as children.

Alsup granted a request by the state of California, the University of California and other plaintiffs to stop Trump from ending DACA on March 5.

The administration’s decision to end DACA, which was announced in September, was based on a “flawed” legal analysis, Alsup wrote in his decision. Dreamers would be irreparably harmed if their DACA protections, which allow them to live and work legally in the U.S., were stripped away before the courts had a chance to fully consider their claims, he ruled.

The action is the mirror image of a ruling in 2015 by a federal judge in Texas who ruled in favor of that state when it sought to block President Obama from expanding DACA to include the parents of Dreamers. Trump administration officials praised that judicial ruling. By contrast, they sharply criticized Alsup’s decision.

Read More

Advertisement

Trump thanks lawmakers for ‘productive’ immigration meeting, says deal must include border wall

President Trump thanked a bipartisan group of lawmakers for participating in a meeting on immigration legislation on Tuesday.

Much of the discussion involved so-called Dreamers, an estimated 700,000 young people who were brought to the country illegally as children and are now facing deportation.

In a tweet, Trump wrote that “there was strong agreement to negotiate” a bill to protect Dreamers, as well as put into place some of the reforms favored by Republicans.

The most notable exchange of the meeting came when Sen. Dianne Feinstein, the San Francisco Democrat, asked Trump whether he would be “agreeable” to signing a stand-alone bill to protect the Dreamers, before moving on to a more comprehensive immigration bill.

“Yeah, I would like to do it,” Trump responded.

The statement drew widespread attention because it contradicted the Republican consensus that Dreamers’ fate needed to be part of a broader immigration bill that would include some version of Trump’s promised border wall and other immigration reforms.

Trump later backed away from a stand-alone Dreamer bill, tweeting that a wall along the U.S. border with Mexico must be part of any deal:

Pressure has been mounting for Congress to broker an immigration deal by Jan. 19 as part of a must-pass budget package to fund the government.

This post contains reporting from Times staff writer Noah Bierman.

Trump thanks officers and veterans in tweets

President Trump doled out a slew of accolades Tuesday via Twitter.

He thanked the nation’s law enforcement officers, including in his message a hashtag denoting a day of appreciation organized by a national support group for law enforcement families.

Trump later expressed gratitude for federal immigration agents, in particular:

The president thanked veterans as he cited his administration’s efforts to curb the number of veteran suicides by improving mental health treatment for the high-risk group:

Trump’s tweet included photos of the president signing an executive order Tuesday directing the secretaries of Defense, Homeland Security and Veterans Affairs to develop a plan to provide “seamless” access to mental health and suicide prevention resources for 12 months for members leaving the armed forces.

Also on Tuesday, Trump touted a law he signed the day before designating the birthplace of the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. a national historic park:

And he thanked House Majority Leader Kevin McCarthy (R-Bakersfield) for sharing a video compilation comprised of clips of politicians and commentators praising the GOP’s tax cut bill:

This post contains reporting from the Associated Press and Times staff writer Alex Wigglesworth.

Advertisement

Trump hails tax bill in tweets recapping speech to farmers

Connecting with rural Americans, President Trump on Monday hailed his tax overhaul as a victory for family farmers.

“Farm country is God’s country,” Trump told the annual convention of the American Farm Bureau Federation.

Trump became the first president in a quarter-century to address the federation’s convention. His Southern swing also included a stop in Atlanta for the national college football championship game.

Joined by Agriculture Secretary Sonny Perdue, Senate Agriculture Committee Chairman Pat Roberts (R-Kan.) and a group of Tennessee lawmakers, Trump said most of the benefits of the tax legislation are “going to working families, small businesses, and who — the family farmer.”

The package Trump signed into law last month provides generous tax cuts for corporations and the wealthiest Americans, and more modest reductions for middle- and low-income individuals and families.

The president vastly inflated the value of the package in his speech, citing “a total of $5.5 trillion in tax cuts, with most of those benefits going to working families, small businesses and who? The family farmer.”

The estimated value of the tax cuts is actually $1.5 trillion for families and businesses because of cuts in deductions and the use of other steps to generate offsetting tax revenue.

From Nashville, Trump traveled to Atlanta to watch Alabama’s Crimson Tide and Georgia’s Bulldogs face off Monday night in the College Football Playoff National Championship.

Before departing for the game, Trump referenced his ongoing defense of the American flag and the national anthem, saying there was enough space for people to express their views. “We love our flag and we love our anthem, and we want to keep it that way,” he said.

Trump tweet hails drop in unemployment rate for African Americans

President Trump touted a drop in the unemployment rate for African Americans on Monday in a tweet.

The rate fell to 6.8% in December, the lowest level since the government began tracking such data in 1972.

The reasons range from a greater number of black Americans with college degrees to a growing need for employers in a tight job market to widen the pool of people they hire from.

Trump also hailed the development via Twitter on Saturday.

His latest tweet on the topic came about an hour after it was discussed during an episode of “Fox & Friends,” according to Mediaite.

Advertisement

Trump talks up the economy and dresses down the media in Sunday tweets

With President Trump cheering from the sidelines, the White House on Sunday pressed its defense of the president’s fitness to govern, as fired former aide Stephen K. Bannon reversed course and apologized for his role in a new book’s explosive portrait of Trump.

The president’s critics, meanwhile, said Trump’s stream of taunts and insults in response to the book — “Fire and Fury: Inside the Trump White House,” released last week — served only to underscore the author’s unsettling portrayal of Trump’s year-old presidency, depicting a leader whose own aides consider him childish, ignorant and dangerously erratic.

Trump provided more ammunition Sunday morning, as he continued to attack the book via Twitter while preparing to depart Camp David for the White House:

The most vehement defense of Trump on Sunday came from senior advisor Stephen Miller, a onetime Bannon acolyte who distanced himself from his former mentor. In a combative appearance Sunday on CNN’s “State of the Union,” Miller called the book “grotesque” and writer Michael Wolff “the garbage author of a garbage book.”

Trump is known to closely monitor aides’ televised performances in putting forth his case, and he gleefully weighed in within moments of Miller’s televised clash with host Jake Tapper. CNN has long been a particular target of Trump’s ire.

Trump’s reaction, however, seemed to bolster Tapper’s on-air depiction of Miller as using his appearance on the show to play to the president rather than addressing questions put to him. “I get it — there’s one viewer that you care about,” the host said exasperatedly after Miller turned the discussion repeatedly to negative news coverage of the president while deflecting specific queries.

Later on Twitter, Trump took up two themes that have been prevalent on his social media feeds recently.

The president again went after the news media, tweeting that the recipients of his self-proclaimed “most dishonest & corrupt media awards of the year,” which he promised earlier in the week to announce on Monday, would actually be revealed the following Wednesday:

Trump later lauded a New York Post opinion piece that compared him favorably with his predecessor, President Obama, as well as Democratic presidential nominee Hillary Clinton. In quoting the op-ed, Trump initally misspelled “consequential” as “consensual,” but he deleted those tweets and re-sent the messages.

Trump also continued talking up the economy, which has been enjoying a period of strong gains.

In addition to Miller, other senior administration officials made the rounds of Sunday news talk shows to decry the claims made in Wolff’s book. CIA Director Mike Pompeo said Wolff’s characterization of Trump as averse to digesting classified briefing material was “ludicrous,” and the ambassador to the United Nations, Nikki Haley, insisted that that those around Trump “love their country and respect their president.”

Read MoreThis post contains reporting from Times staff writer Laura King.

Responding to book that mocks his intelligence, Trump tweets he’s ‘like, really smart’

President Trump declared himself a “very stable genius” on Twitter on Saturday and later in a televised news conference called the author of a book that questioned his mental fitness a “fraud.”

His comments came on a bone-cold day at Camp David during a weekend retreat with top administration officials and Republican congressional leaders strategizing on the year’s legislative agenda, including matters such as infrastructure, immigration, welfare reform and national security.

Still, Trump’s explosive rebuttal to author Michael Wolff’s claims not only opened the day, but it also ensured the president’s capability to fill the highest office in the land was a topic that would not go away.

In his early-morning tweets, Trump said two of his greatest assets “have been mental stability, and being, like, really smart.”

He noted that his former Democratic rival, Hillary Clinton, “played these cards [about competence] very hard and, as everyone knows, went down in flames. I went from VERY successful businessman, to top T.V. Star to President of the United States (on my first try).”

Read More

Advertisement

In morning tweets, Trump touts job numbers and takes digs at news media

President Trump used Twitter on Saturday morning to tout a drop in the unemployment rate for African Americans.

He also used the tweets as an opportunity to take digs at media outlets whose past coverage he has found to be critical.

The unemployment rate for African Americans fell to 6.8% in December, the lowest level since the government began tracking such data in 1972. The reasons range from a greater number of black Americans with college degrees to a growing need for employers in a tight job market to widen the pool of people they hire from.

Still, the rate for black workers remains well above those for whites and some other groups, something experts attribute in large part to decades of discrimination and disadvantages.

Robust job creation has lowered unemployment for all Americans. U.S. employers added nearly 2.1 million jobs in 2017 — the seventh straight year that hiring has topped 2 million.

In his tweet, Trump praised a report that noted the numbers, touting the fact that it appeared “in the Washington Post (of all places)”.

Minutes later, Trump renewed his attack on an ABC News reporter who was suspended last month after filing an erroneous report on Michael Flynn, Trump’s former national security advisor.

The reporter, Brian Ross, was reportedly reassigned within ABC News upon returning from his unpaid suspension. But on Saturday, Trump wrote that he should have been fired.

Trump’s tweets came hours before he was set to host congressional Republicans and administration officials at Camp David.

The meeting scheduled to begin at midmorning Saturday was expected to touch on the budget, infrastructure, immigration, welfare reform and the shape of the midterm election this fall.

Trump commends Sen. Rand Paul after he proposes eliminating all U.S. aid to Pakistan

President Trump commended Sen. Rand Paul after the Kentucky Republican announced plans to introduce legislation that would eliminate all U.S. aid to Pakistan.

Trump tweeted Friday night:

On Thursday, the Trump administration announced it was suspending security assistance to Islamabad until the country moves aggressively against local militants who have attacked U.S. troops in neighboring Afghanistan.

Trump has repeatedly expressed frustration at the apparent inability of Pakistani authorities to rein in militants who cross out of the country’s rugged tribal areas to attack U.S. troops in Afghanistan.

Read MoreThis post contains reporting from Times staff writer Tracy Wilkinson.

Advertisement

Trump continues to lash out at ‘Sloppy Steve Bannon’ in tweets on tell-all book

President Trump is praising a major Republican donor family for distancing themselves from his former advisor Steve Bannon.

Trump tweeted Friday:

Trump has continued to lash out at Bannon over an explosive new book that quoted his former aide as questioning Trump’s competence and describing a June 2016 meeting at Trump Tower among Donald Trump Jr., Trump campaign aides and a Russian lawyer as “treasonous” and “unpatriotic.”

On Thursday, billionaire GOP donor Rebekah Mercer issued a statement distancing her family from Bannon. Mercer is a co-owner of Breitbart, the populist website Bannon helps run.

“I support President Trump and the platform upon which he was elected,” Mercer said. “My family and I have not communicated with Steve Bannon in many months and have provided no financial support to his political agenda, nor do we support his recent actions and statements.”

The book, “Fire and Fury: Inside the Trump White House,” quickly shot atop Amazon’s best-seller list, and the publisher moved up its release date by four days, to Friday.

Trump took up the topic again on Twitter on Friday night, denouncing both Bannon and the book’s author, Michael Wolff, in starkly personal terms:

Trump’s message linked to a meme depicting a parody book cover titled, “Liar and Phony,” that featured a photo of Wolff and disparaging quotes about the author.

In a tweet sent earlier Friday morning, Trump suggested the book was intended to serve as a distraction from the FBI’s investigation into possible collusion between the Trump campaign and Russia, which Trump wrote “is proving to be a total hoax.”

That came amid reports that Trump directed his White House counsel to tell Atty. Gen. Jeff Sessions to not recuse himself from the Justice Department’s Russia investigation.

Trump’s effort to keep Sessions, a vocal and loyal supporter of his election bid, in charge of an investigation into his campaign offers special counsel Robert Mueller yet another avenue to explore as his prosecutors work to untangle potential evidence of obstruction.

Read More

Trump praises the economy ahead of meetings at Camp David

President Trump is praising the strength of the U.S. economy ahead of meetings at Camp David with congressional Republicans.

Trump tweeted early Friday:

The president also told reporters on the South Lawn that the “tax cuts are really kicking in” after Congress passed a package of tax cuts at the end of 2017.

And the president praised the December jobs report, which found U.S. employers added 148,000 jobs in December and the unemployment rate stayed at 4.1%, the lowest level since 2000.

The modest but steady pace of hiring is a reassuring sign for investors who have been buoyed by the just-passed Republican tax plan and have been sending stock market indexes roaring to uncharted heights.

The president is meeting with Republican congressional leaders and members of his Cabinet on Friday and Saturday to discuss the 2018 agenda.

Read More

Advertisement

Trump tweets as Dow ‘crashes through 25,000’

President Trump dispatched a congratulatory tweet as the Dow Jones industrial average rose above the 25,000-point mark Thursday, just five weeks after its first close above 24,000.

After the Dow closed above 25,000, Trump shared a graphic depicting the stock index’s record-setting rise.

Later in the day, the president was back on Twitter, complaining that news outlets had “barely” covered the stock market milestone.

He suggested that the strength of the economy would be the “biggest story on earth,” had it unfolded during the presidency of his predecessor.

The Dow broke past 1,000-point barriers in 2017 on its way to a 25% gain for the year, as an eight-year rally since the Great Recession continued to confound skeptics.

Strong global economic growth and good prospects for higher company earnings have analysts predicting more gains, although the market may not stay as calm as it has been recently.

The Dow has made a rapid trip since it reached 24,000 points Nov. 30, partly on enthusiasm over passage of the Republican-backed tax package, which could boost company profits this year with across-the-board cuts to corporate taxes.

Read More

Trump reacts to ‘Fire and Fury’ book in tweet lashing out at author and ‘Sloppy Steve’

President Trump lashed out at the author of a soon-to-be-released book about the chaotic first year of his presidency Thursday night.

In a tweet, Trump called “Fire and Fury: Inside the Trump White House,” a “phony book” and claimed that he’d never spoken to its author, Michael Wolff.

“Look at this guy’s past and watch what happens to him and Sloppy Steve!” Trump wrote. He appeared to be referring to former White House chief strategist Stephen K. Bannon, whose stunning criticisms of Trump and his circle figure prominently in the title.

Trump’s tweet came hours after he had his lawyer demand that Henry Holt & Co. and Wolff stop publication the book.

Instead, the publisher expedited the book’s release to Friday, four days before it was slated to hit bookstore shelves, in response to “unprecedented demand.” Published excerpts on Wednesday and Thursday whetted that appetite and roiled Washington.

Bannon’s comments, including that it was “treasonous” and “unpatriotic” for Trump’s son Donald Trump Jr., son-in-law Jared Kushner and campaign manager Paul Manafort to have met in 2016 with Russians said to have “dirt” on Democratic rival Hillary Clinton, prompted Trump on Wednesday to rebuke his former advisor, saying Bannon had “lost his mind.”

Read MoreThis post contains reporting from Times staff writers Brian Bennett and Alex Wigglesworth.

Advertisement

Trump thanks senators who attended meeting on immigration

President Trump tweeted thanks to Republican senators who attended a meeting about possible immigration legislation on Thursday.

In his message, Trump also listed his top priorities when it comes to any type of overhaul of the nation’s immigration system.

Trump’s tweet echoed his remarks at the beginning of Thursday’s meeting, when he insisted again that constructing a border wall and overhauling two legal immigration programs must be part of any deal with Democrats to protect the so-called Dreamers from deportation.

Two-year deportation protections and work permits given under the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program begin to expire March 6 under an executive order. Trump announced in September that he was ending the Obama-era program, but told Congress to draft a law to continue protections for people brought to the country illegally as children — a group that has widespread public support.

Read More This post contains reporting from Times staff writer Brian Bennett.

Trump resumes Twitter war against kneeling NFL players

President Trump has resumed his Twitter war against NFL players who kneel during the national anthem to protest social injustice and racial inequality.

In a tweet early Thursday, Trump replied to a supporter who shared a meme that appears to depict family members lying on the grave of a fallen soldier with the caption: “This is why we stand.”

“Show this picture to the NFL players who still kneel!” Trump wrote.

The president has denounced players who kneel during the anthem in previous tweets. He’s also called for the firing of players who do so.

His latest message came amid news that the NFL finished the regular season with TV ratings that fell nearly 10% below the previous season.

Analysts attribute the drop to controversies facing the league, as well as changing viewing habits and a possible saturation point in the number of games available.

Read MoreThis post contains reporting from Times staff writers Stephen Battaglio and Alex Wigglesworth.

Advertisement

Trump credits himself with facilitating talks between North and South Korea

President Trump says his tough stance on nuclear weapons on the Korean peninsula is helping push North Korea and South Korea to talk.

Trump tweeted early Thursday:

That assertion is in conflict with some of the president’s own statements. Last year, he ridiculed Secretary of State Rex Tillerson for talking about negotiations with the North.

This week, Trump seemed open to the possibility of an inter-Korean dialogue after North Korean leader Kim Jong Un made a rare overture toward South Korea in a New Year’s Day address. But Trump’s ambassador to the United Nations insisted that talks won’t be meaningful unless the North is getting rid of its nuclear weapons.

The overture about talks came after Trump and Kim traded more bellicose claims about their nuclear weapons.

In his New Year’s Day address, Kim repeated fiery nuclear threats against the United States. Kim said he has a “nuclear button” on his office desk and warned that “the whole territory of the U.S. is within the range of our nuclear strike.”

Trump mocked that assertion Tuesday evening in a tweet.

After disbanding his vote fraud panel, Trump still says voting system is ‘rigged’

One day after disbanding his troubled voter fraud commission without any findings of fraud, President Trump continued to call the U.S. voting system “rigged” and said states should require that Americans have voter-identification cards.

In two tweets on Thursday morning, Trump blamed the commission’s failure on the lack of cooperation from “mostly Democrat States” that refused to hand over voter rolls “because they know that many people are voting illegally.” However, voting supervisors in Republican-led states refused as well, objecting on privacy and other grounds.

Despite Trump’s assertions, analysts have not found evidence of widespread voter fraud.

Trump created the Presidential Advisory Commission on Election Integrity in May after alleging, without proof, that millions of illegal votes were cast for Hillary Clinton in the 2016 election. Trump was elected after winning a majority in the electoral college, but the nationwide count showed Clinton received nearly 3 million more votes.

The commission sought personal data on voters across the country and faced mounting lawsuits in recent months over privacy concerns.

Read More

Advertisement

Trump touts ‘another good day for stocks,’ credits tax cut

President Trump touted “another good day” for the stock market Wednesday in a tweet.

Big gains for technology and healthcare stocks helped U.S. indexes set records again Wednesday. Some analysts attributed the surge to investor enthusiasm for Trump’s $1.5-trillion tax cut.

All told, Wall Street analysts estimate the tax package should boost earnings for companies in the Standard & Poor’s 500 index by roughly 8% this year. That’s much more generous than the average tax cut of 1.6% that middle-class families will receive, according to the Tax Policy Center.

The public has been less enthusiastic about the tax law. A Monmouth University poll last month found that nearly half of Americans disapproved of it, with only 26% in support.

Still, as Trump also noted on Twitter, some workers have seen a benefit: So far, dozens of companies have announced bonuses and higher minimum wages as a result of the tax cut. AT&T, Comcast, Bank of America, and American Airlines have all pledged to pay $1,000 bonuses to their employees.

Investors also appear less concerned than many politicians about how the additional profits will be used. The Trump administration says it expects companies will plow much of the extra profit back into their businesses, purchasing more software, machinery, and other equipment. Those investments will make workers more productive and provide a key boost to the economy’s long-run growth. They should also boost wages and salaries for employees.

Opponents of the tax law respond that companies are more likely to pass the windfall on to shareholders in the form of higher dividend payments and share buybacks, which raise the price of those shares still in investors’ hands. Previous cuts in corporate tax rates, in the United States and overseas, haven’t always led to higher wages.

For Wall Street, it’s all good, at least in the short run. Most analysts take the view that either way, companies and the economy will benefit.

Trump reacts to death of Mormon Church president

President Trump mourned the death of Mormon Church leader Thomas S. Monson on Wednesday evening.

Trump tweeted a link to a statement in which he said that Monson “demonstrated wisdom, inspired leadership, and great compassion” and delivered a message of “optimism, forgiveness, and faith.”

A church bishop at the age of 22, Monson became the youngest church apostle ever in 1963 at the age of 36. He served as a counselor for three church presidents before assuming the role of the top leader of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints in February 2008.

After a life of church service, Monson died Tuesday at his home in Salt Lake City, according to church spokesman Eric Hawkins. He was 90.

Read More

Advertisement

Trump tweets that Iranian protesters will see ‘great’ U.S. support ‘at the appropriate time’

President Trump continued to express support for Iran’s anti-government protesters on Wednesday.

In a tweet, Trump commended the protesters and pledged that the United States will support them “at the appropriate time.”

Trump’s tweet Wednesday morning came as Iranian Ambassador Gholamali Khoshroo sent a letter to United Nations officials complaining that Washington was intervening “in a grotesque way in Iran’s internal affairs.”

“The President and Vice-President of the United States, in their numerous absurd tweets, incited Iranians to engage in disruptive acts,” the ambassador wrote to the U.N. Security Council president and U.N. Secretary-General Antonio Guterres.

The U.S. didn’t immediately respond to the letter, which maintains that Washington “has crossed every limit in flouting rules and principles of international law governing the civilized conduct of international relations.”

At least 21 people have been killed and hundreds arrested in Iran during a week of anti-government protests and unrest over economic woes and official corruption. Meanwhile, tens of thousands of people took part in counter-demonstrations Wednesday backing the clerically overseen government, which has said “enemies of Iran” are fomenting the protests.

Trump has unleashed a series of tweets in recent days backing the protesters, saying Iran is “failing at every level” and declaring that it is “time for change” in the Islamic Republic.

Trump congratulates Sen. Orrin Hatch upon news of his retirement

President Trump congratulated Sen. Orrin Hatch for “an absolutely incredible career” upon news of Hatch’s impending retirement.

In a tweet Tuesday afternoon, Trump called Hatch “a tremendous supporter” and wrote that “he will be greatly missed” in the Senate.

Hatch’s decision to retire from the Senate after four decades lets the Utah Republican walk away at the height of his power after helping to push through an overhaul of the tax code and persuading Trump to downsize two national monuments.

Retirement also preserves the 83-year-old’s legacy by allowing him to avoid a bruising reelection battle that would have broken his promise not to seek an eighth term.

Read More

Advertisement

Trump tweet exaggerates progress in improving veterans’ care

President Trump played up “tremendous progress” in improving care for veterans in his first year on Tuesday in a tweet.

His message linked to an Instagram video describing eight accomplishments that show Trump is “fighting for our veterans.” But it overstates the impact of these steps.

Of the eight achievements cited, two are ceremonial proclamations recognizing National Veterans and Military Families Month and National Pearl Harbor Remembrance Day.

Two are pieces of legislation that extended the troubled Veterans Choice program on a temporary basis. This became necessary because the Trump administration repeatedly miscalculated the amount of taxpayer dollars available to pay for care from private doctors outside the Veterans Affairs system when veterans had to endure long waits for treatment at VA medical centers. The department’s poor budget planning caught lawmakers off guard.

A fifth claim involves “telehealth,” a step letting doctors practice medicine across state lines using digital technology. Announced in August, it has yet to take full effect because a proposed VA regulation hasn’t been completed. The VA wants authority to practice across state lines to come from legislation, not a regulation. On Wednesday, the Senate approved a telehealth measure that now goes to the House.

A sixth claim refers to legislation that streamlines the appeals process for disability compensation claims within the VA. This step has had limited effect so far because it applies to new disability claims, not the 470,000 pending claims.

The last two initiatives make it easier for the VA to discipline employees. The department has pointed to more than 1,300 employees who have been fired under Trump’s watch. Because their infractions are not detailed in public documents, the effect on veterans’ care is not fully known.

Trump unleashes his first tweetstorm of 2018

President Trump clearly didn’t resolve to change his Twitter habits this year.

With nine disparate tweets over three hours on Tuesday morning, the first working day of 2018, Trump continued to exploit social media to be the most aggressive commentator in chief in American history. For any other president, his posts would have made for a monumental day of (mis-)statements. Yet for Trump, the series — attacks on political foes and media, provocations of foreign leaders and self-praise for events he had nothing to do with — was all but unremarkable.

His Twitter barrage — sent between 7:09 a.m. and 10:16 a.m. — reflected a familiar gamut after nearly a year in office:

Attacks on political foes: Nearly 14 months after his election, Trump called for the jailing of Huma Abedin, “Crooked Hillary Clinton’s top aid” (his misspelling, another occasional feature of Trump tweets).

In the same tweet, he disparaged the “Deep State Justice Dept,” headed of course by his appointees, calling on it to “act” against James B. Comey, the FBI director he fired for investigating “the Russia thing.”

Diplomatic provocations: Trump again called North Korean leader Kim Jong Un “Rocket man,” ridiculed the volatile nuclear-armed foe for recent military defections and openly speculated about potential talks between North and South Korea.

“Perhaps that is good news, perhaps not — we will see!” Trump wrote.

Later Tuesday, Trump tweeted:

Also later Tuesday, Trump tweeted an attack on Pakistan, his second in as many days, and added a new one against Palestinians:

Undermining media: Trump offered “Congratulations!” to A.G. Sulzberger, who took over as publisher of the New York Times this week.

But the two-part post was really yet another slam against a perceived media foe: Trump said the paper had a “last chance” to fulfill its journalistic mission, and accused it of relying on phony sources and substandard reporters — just days after he granted another exclusive interview to the paper. As a bonus, the tweet contained a recycled falsehood, that the paper apologized after the election for reporting on him unfairly. It didn’t.

Trump later said on Twitter that he would soon announce the “most dishonest & corrupt media awards of the year…. Stay tuned!”

The president also tweeted a quote from Fox Business Network’s “Lou Dobbs Tonight,” which aired a segment praising Trump’s first-year accomplishments.

Dobbs reportedly joined Trump at Mar-a-Lago on Sunday for a gala to celebrate New Year’s Eve.

Taking credit: Trump congratulated himself for policing the border with Mexico, an area where his policies and anti-immigration rhetoric are believed to have had some effect on reducing illegal crossings.

He took credit for employee bonuses by companies after he signed Republican tax cuts into law last month.

But the jaw-dropper was Trump congratulating himself for planes not crashing.

It was the safest year on record worldwide, but the American streak without commercial jet passenger deaths goes back to 2009. Trump, who has promoted deregulation as one of his top accomplishments, has not signed off on any new airline safety regulations. The White House pointed to new security screening of passengers, to electronic devices to prevent terrorist attacks and to Trump’s support for privatizing air traffic control — a proposal that has gotten nowhere in Congress.

Falsehoods: Trump said President Obama, in brokering the 2015 nuclear arms limitation deal with Iran, “foolishly” gave money to the “brutal and corrupt Iranian regime.” He didn’t.

The nuclear deal, which included major U.S. allies as signators, released Iran’s own funds that had long been frozen.

Trump’s art of the deal: When Trump sees a big deal looming, he often blasts the other side — to gain leverage, as he’s written. This week he resumes a showdown with Democratic lawmakers over funding the government and immigration protections for so-called Dreamers, who were brought to the country illegally as children.

Trump, who in September ordered a gradual end of the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program, sought to shift blame for the resulting controversy, saying “Democrats are doing nothing for DACA” and are “just interested in politics.”

Trump has insisted that any help for Dreamers be paired with funding for a border wall and a crackdown on legal immigration. Democrats, and some Republicans, are opposed.

Read More

Advertisement

Trump tweets that Iran ‘is failing at every level’

President Trump says Iran is “failing at every level,” and he is voicing his support for the protesters there, saying it is “TIME FOR CHANGE.”

Trump tweeted Monday:

The protests began Thursday in Mashhad over economic issues and have since expanded to several cities. Hundreds of people have been arrested.

While some have shared Trump’s tweets, many in Iran distrust him, as he’s refused to re-certify the nuclear deal and because his travel bans have blocked Iranians from getting U.S. visas.

Trump sent the tweet about Iran — and a second taking aim at Pakistan — from Palm Beach, Fla., where he is spending the holidays.

The president is kicking off the new year at one of his golf clubs, where he is hosting two professional golfers: Fred Funk and his son Taylor Funk.

Trump plans to return to Washington later Monday.

The president faces a hefty legislative to-do list upon his return, with the new year, plus critical midterm elections and perilous threats abroad.

In tweet, Trump suggests U.S. will withdraw financial assistance to Pakistan

Pakistan lashed out Monday after President Trump accused its leaders of “lies & deceit” and suggested the United States would withdraw financial assistance to the nuclear-armed nation it once saw as a key ally against terrorism.

It was the president’s latest broadside against Pakistan after a speech in August in which he demanded its leaders crack down on the safe havens enjoyed by Taliban militants fighting U.S.-backed forces in neighboring Afghanistan.

U.S. Ambassador David Hale was summoned to the Foreign Ministry to discuss the president’s statement, U.S. Embassy spokesman Richard Snelsire said. Pakistan lodged a strongly worded protest and asked for clarification about Trump’s comments, according to two foreign office officials who spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to speak publicly.

Pakistan’s prime minister, Shahid Khaqan Abbasi, called a Cabinet meeting for Tuesday and a meeting of the National Security Committee on Wednesday to discuss Trump’s New Year’s Day tweet.

Read More

Advertisement

Trump tweets New Year’s Eve message to ‘supporters, enemies, haters’ and even the ‘Fake News Media’

President Trump capped 2017 on Sunday with a New Year’s Eve message addressed to his “friends, supporters, enemies, haters, and even the very dishonest Fake News Media.”

In a tweet, Trump extended wishes for a happy and healthy holiday, writing: “2018 will be a great year for America!”

Earlier Sunday, Trump tweeted a video self-tribute touching on what he sees as the high points of his achievements and rhetoric from his first year in office. He gave a plug to American exceptionalism, too.

In the video running 3½ minutes, scenes of Trump with military personnel, Border Patrol agents and other world leaders are set to a stirring soundtrack as he declares of his country: “We gave birth to the modern world, and we will shape tomorrow’s world with the strength and skill of American hands.”

Trump cited his success in placing a new justice on the Supreme Court, his efforts to cut regulations and his big win on overhauling taxes, which he falsely described as the “largest tax cut in the history of our country.”

The president sounded a similar note earlier in the morning on Twitter. He suggested that he deserves credit for the stock market’s record-setting run, writing that had Democrat Hillary Clinton been elected president, “stocks would be down 50%”:

Trump also appeared preoccupied by next year’s midterm elections. Some analysts are predicting that his widespread unpopularity will drive big Democratic gains, threatening the Republican majority in Congress.

Trump warned voters against choosing Democrats to fill congressional seats, tweeting that “their policies will totally kill the great wealth created” since he’s taken office.

The president is spending the holidays in Palm Beach, Fla., where his Mar-a-Lago club hosts an annual New Year’s Eve bash. At the event last year, hundreds of guests gathered in the club’s grand ballroom, including action star Sylvester Stallone and romance novel model Fabio.

Tickets for this year’s event cost $600 for club members and $750 for guests, according to Politico, up from last year’s prices of $525 and $575, respectively.

Trump continues to tweet in support of Iranian protesters

President Trump expressed renewed support Sunday for protesters in Iran, declaring that “people are finally getting wise as to how their money and wealth is being stolen and squandered on terrorism.”

In a tweet from his Florida estate, Mar-a-Lago, the president said the nationwide economic protests that began on Thursday — and have taken on wider political overtones as they have grown in size — were a signal that Iranians “will not take it any longer.”

Trump has tweeted about the protests for three days straight as Iranians took to the streets despite a heavy police presence, tear gas and scores of arrests. The defiance gained urgency after two people were reported shot to death in the city of Dorud, about 200 miles southwest of Tehran.

As the conflict escalated, Iranian authorities on Sunday slapped a temporary ban on Instagram and the messaging app Telegram, which were widely used to fan protest fervor.

Iran’s leaders already are casting Trump’s increasingly effusive expressions of support for the demonstrators as opportunistic meddling and are painting the demonstrators as foreign pawns, adopting a strategy that some analysts say could jeopardize the legitimacy of the nascent antigovernment protests.

Read More

Advertisement

Trump tweets condolences after Colorado deputies are shot in ambush, one fatally

A man fired more than 100 rounds at sheriff’s deputies in Colorado early Sunday, killing one and injuring four others, before being fatally shot himself in what authorities called an ambush. Two civilians were also injured.

President Trump expressed sorrow, writing on Twitter:

Douglas County Sheriff Tony Spurlock said deputies came under fire almost immediately after entering a suburban Denver apartment and trying to talk with the suspect, who was holed up inside a bedroom.

“I do know that all of them were shot very, very quickly. They all went down almost within seconds of each other, so it was more of an ambush-type of attack on our officers,” Spurlock said. “He knew we were coming and we obviously let him know that we were there.”

Read More

Trump defends social media use in tweet

President Trump defended his use of Twitter on Saturday in a tweet.

Trump tweeted that he uses social media “because it is the only way to fight a VERY dishonest and unfair ‘press.’ ”

“Many stories & reports a pure fiction!” he wrote.

Trump often refers to news coverage that is critical, or with which he disagrees, as “fake news.”

His latest tweet on the topic came a little more than an hour after he quoted from a Wall Street Journal report to make his case for the GOP tax overhaul:

Trump continued to boast about the economy later in the afternoon and evening:

The president has sought to turn attention toward his achievements as 2017 comes to a close.

Near the top of the list is the stock market, which just finished its strongest year since 2013. Some analysts have credited Trump’s economic policies, including deregulation and the promise of corporate tax cuts, with stoking investor optimism.

Read More

Advertisement

Trump ups show of support for protesters in Iran

President Trump again offered support Saturday for anti-government protesters in Iran, where a third day of demonstrations, the largest in years, spilled across the country amid fears of a crackdown.

“Oppressive regimes cannot endure forever, and the day will come when the Iranian people will face a choice. The world is watching!” Trump wrote on Twitter.

Trump took a break from playing golf near his Mar-a-Lago resort in Florida to tweet clips from his speech to the United Nations General Assembly in September when he called for Iranian democratic reforms.

Iranian authorities warned of potential violence as the street demonstrations, which began over economic conditions, swelled into frustrations with the theocratic rule of Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei.

Trump has maintained a hawkish stance toward Iran, sharply criticizing the landmark nuclear disarmament accord that Tehran reached with then-President Obama and five other nations in 2015.

Read More

Trump tweets support for Iran protests

Iranians protesting the country’s strained economy gathered in Tehran and another major city Friday for the second day of spontaneous, unsanctioned demonstrations placing pressure on President Hassan Rouhani’s government.

President Trump expressed support for the protesters Friday night in a tweet calling on the Iranian government to “respect their people’s rights”:

The semi-official Fars news agency reported that officials said around 300 protesters gathered Friday in the western city of Kermanshah, the scene of a devastating earthquake in November that killed more than 600 residents. In Tehran, fewer than 50 people protested at a public square.

Such mass protests without police permission are unusual in Iran, and those taking part face arrest.

Fars reported that protesters in Kermanshah chanted anti-government slogans such as “never mind Palestine, think about us,” “death or freedom” and “political prisoners should be freed.” They damaged some public property before police dispersed them.

Police also arrested a small number of demonstrators in Tehran protesting price hikes and the president’s economic policy.

The U.S. State Department condemned the arrests earlier Friday.

“Iran’s leaders have turned a wealthy country with a rich history and culture into an economically depleted rogue state whose chief exports are violence, bloodshed, and chaos,” State Department spokeswoman Heather Nauert said in a statement. “As President Trump has said, the longest-suffering victims of Iran’s leaders are Iran’s own people.”

Advertisement

Trump tweets that his approval rating is the same as Obama’s. It’s not

President Trump claimed in a tweet Friday morning that he is “approximately” as popular as his predecessor. Most polls indicate that is not accurate.

Citing a “Fox & Friends” report, Trump boasted that his job approval rating on Dec. 28 was about the same as that enjoyed by former President Obama on Dec. 28, 2009.

Trump was referring to the Rasmussen Reports daily presidential tracking poll, which on Thursday put his approval rating at 46%. The poll had shown Obama’s approval rating to be 47% on the same date in 2009.

But Rasmussen surveys tend to show more favorable results for conservative candidates. The tracking poll has consistently shown Trump’s approval rating to be higher than most other polls, and during Obama’s presidency, it consistently showed his approval rating to be lower.

According to data from all the major national polls aggregated by Real Clear Politics, Trump’s approval rating averaged 39.3%, as of Thursday. Obama’s approval average was 49.9% on the same date in 2009.

Trump fired off a nearly identical tweet in mid-June, when Rasmussen Reports put his approval rating at 50%. At that time, his approval average, per Real Clear Politics, was a full 10 points lower.

Trump: No protection for ‘Dreamers’ without wall

President Trump says there won’t be protection for young immigrants brought into the country illegally unless he gets funding for a border wall and other items.

Trump tweeted Friday:

The battle over immigration has been delayed until next year. Democrats want protections for the young immigrants, who are referred to as “Dreamers.” But GOP demands for Trump’s border wall and for an increase in immigration agents have proved difficult to resolve.

Read More

Advertisement

Trump tweets call for postage rate increase as Amazon gets ‘richer’

President Trump took aim at the United States Postal Service on Friday, admonishing the agency for its financial losses and for failing to charge more.

“Why is the United States Post Office, which is losing many billions of dollars a year, while charging Amazon and others so little to deliver their packages, making Amazon richer and the Post Office dumber and poorer? Should be charging MUCH MORE!” the president wrote on Twitter:

Amazon stock fell 6.1% in the hours following the tweet. A representative of the postal service did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

It is unclear why the president chose Friday to lash out at the postal service. The agency, which is completely self-funded through the sale of postal products and services, last reported its earnings on Nov. 17. During its 2017 fiscal year, spanning Oct. 1, 2016, to Sept. 30, the USPS recorded $69.6 billion in revenue, a decrease of $1.8 billion from the previous year. The postal service reported a net loss of $2.7 billion, a decrease in net loss of $2.8 billion compared with 2016.

In 2017, mail volumes also declined by approximately 5 billion pieces, or 3.6%, while package volumes grew by 589 million pieces, or 11.4%. This increase could be attributed to Amazon orders — the e-commerce giant announced this week that holiday shoppers broke spending records on its platform.

Read More

Trump mocks ‘Global Warming’ in tweet responding to East Coast cold snap

President Trump says the East Coast “could use a little bit of that good old Global Warming” as bitter cold temperatures are expected to freeze large swaths of the country this holiday weekend.

In a Thursday-evening tweet, Trump wrote:

The president has repeatedly expressed skepticism about climate change science, calling global warming a “hoax” created by the Chinese to damage American industry.

He announced this year his intention to pull out of the landmark Paris climate agreement aimed at curbing greenhouse gas production.

Meanwhile, the United Nations’ climate and weather agency says 2017 is on track to be the hottest year on record, aside from those affected by the El Nino phenomenon.

Advertisement

Trump tweets 46% approval rating

President Trump promoted via Twitter a poll that put his job approval rating at 46% on Thursday:

The Rasmussen Reports daily presidential tracking poll, which has been consistently more favorable to the president than most other major surveys, also shows that 53% of likely U.S. voters disapprove of Trump’s job performance.

Even that is somewhat of an outlier, with several other recent polls showing the proportion of Americans who disapprove of Trump’s performance to be pushing 60%.

Real Clear Politics’ average of national polls put Trump’s job approval rating at 39.3%, as of Thursday, and his disapproval rating at 56.2%.

In tweet, Trump accuses China of allowing oil to reach North Korea

President Trump isn’t taking a holiday vacation from Twitter. In one of three tweets early Thursday from his West Palm Beach golf club, he charged that China was “caught RED HANDED” allowing oil shipments to reach North Korean ports.

Pronouncing himself “very disappointed,” Trump in effect was acknowledging the failure of his months-long effort to convince China to clamp down further on energy shipments going to the isolated country, which relies heavily on Beijing, as a way to pressure North Korea to abandon its nuclear weapons program.

Also Thursday, Trump sought to remind the world that he’s long warned about the dangers posed by North Korea’s nukes by tweeting a compilation video that included edited footage of an interview he did with NBC’s “Meet the Press” nearly two decades ago.

In the interview, Trump said he’d be willing to launch a preemptive strike against North Korea if negotiating “like crazy” didn’t work. And he described the country as “sort of wacko.”

The compilation video juxtaposed Trump’s interview with a 1994 clip of then-President Clinton announcing a deal to stop North Korea’s nuclear program.

Trump’s tweets came after a South Korean newspaper published what it said were U.S. spy satellite images of Chinese ships selling oil to North Korean ships.

The United Nations Security Council, which includes China, has voted repeatedly to restrict fuel shipments to North Korea. Trump asked Chinese President Xi Jinping in November to cut off North Korea’s oil supply entirely, the American ambassador to the U.N., Nikki R. Haley, said at the time.

It is unclear if Trump’s admonishment of China was based on news reports or classified information he received from U.S. intelligence officials. There was no daily intelligence briefing on Trump’s public schedule Thursday.

Read MoreThis post contains reporting from Times staff writer Brian Bennett and the Associated Press.

Advertisement

Trump boasts about economy in tweet touting retail sales figures

President Trump touted a report that says shoppers set a new record for holiday spending this year.

In a tweet Thursday morning, Trump boasted that the economy is “going better than anyone ever dreamt” and told supporters: “you haven’t seen anything yet!”

Retail sales were up 4.9% this holiday season, the largest year-over-year gain since 2011, according to Mastercard’s SpendingPulse Report, which tracked sales activity across all payment types from Nov. 1 to Dec. 24.

The report said the increase represents a “new record for dollars spent” but did not give a dollar amount. Another research firm, Customer Growth Partners, said that from the start of the holiday season to Christmas Eve, shoppers spent $598 billion, up from $565 billion for the same period last year.

Trump’s tweet in the final days of 2017 comes as the major stock indexes are closing in on double-digit gains for the year, led by Apple, Facebook and other technology stocks.

Several factors have kept the market on an upward grind. The global economy rebounded, while the U.S. economy and job market continued to strengthen, which helped drive strong corporate earnings growth.

Investors also drew encouragement from the Trump administration’s and Republican-led Congress’ push to slash corporate taxes, roll back regulations and enact other pro-business policies. Congress passed the $1.5-trillion tax overhaul bill, which reduces the corporate tax rate from 35% to 21%, last week.

With the tax cuts, U.S. economic growth may get an extra short-term boost. But analysts warn that extra fiscal stimulus, coming at a time when the economy already is perking, could quickly lead to overheating.

Read More This post contains reporting from the Associated Press and Times staff writers Tracey Lien, David Pierson and Don Lee.

Trump lashes out at Vanity Fair over Clinton video

President Trump is lashing out at Vanity Fair after the magazine said an online video mocking Hillary Clinton “missed the mark.”

Trump tweeted Thursday that the magazine was “bending over backwards in apologizing for the minor hit.”

The video posted over the weekend shows editors of Vanity Fair’s Hive website offering toasts and New Year’s resolutions for Clinton, including that she vow to take up knitting, volunteer work or any hobby that would keep her from running again for president.

The backlash was swift. Among those to respond was actress Patricia Arquette, who tweeted her own proposal:

In a statement Wednesday, the magazine said the video was an attempt at humor that regrettably “missed the mark.”

Trump added that Anna Wintour “is beside herself in grief & begging for forgiveness!”

Wintour is the editor in chief of Vogue, not Vanity Fair. She is also the artistic director of parent company Conde Nast, which publishes both titles.

As Trump mentioned in his tweet, Wintour was a staunch supporter of Clinton’s failed presidential bid last year. She also raised tens of thousands of dollars for the 2012 reelection campaign of former President Obama, who was at one point rumored to be considering Wintour for the post of U.S. ambassador to the United Kingdom — correctly known as ambassador to the Court of St. James’s.

Advertisement

Trump touts reports on gains against Islamic State and MS-13

President Trump touted a pair of reports on gains made by his administration against Islamic State and Mara Salvatrucha, or MS-13.

Trump quoted from a Washington Examiner report on the amount of territory lost by Islamic State fighters in Iraq and Syria since he took office, which the conservative outlet compared favorably with the amount of territory lost under President Obama:

Trump also shared via Twitter a Daily Signal report on his Dec. 15 remarks at the FBI Academy graduation ceremony, where he said that there has been an 83% increase in arrests of MS-13 members during his presidency:

As 2017 winds down, Trump has increasingly sought to highlight his accomplishments during his first year in office.

Those include a series of victories in the U.S. military campaign against Islamic State, as well as a crackdown on illegal immigration, which Trump has blamed for fostering the growth of MS-13. The president has repeatedly cited the primarily Salvadoran gang, which started in Los Angeles in the 1980s, as an example of the dangers of lax immigration enforcement.

Trump praises rescue workers after visit to West Palm Beach firehouse

After another morning at his Florida golf club, President Trump visited firefighters and paramedics at a West Palm Beach firehouse on Wednesday. He later praised the rescue workers in a tweet:

During the visit, Trump also praised his own performance as president, including with a false boast.

Trump touted his administration’s work to roll back government regulations and cut taxes and claimed credit for the stock market hitting record highs. He also said he’s signed more bills into law than any other president, which isn’t true.

Read MoreThis post contains reporting from Times staff writer Brian Bennett.

Advertisement

Trump predicts ‘great year’ for business in tweets

President Trump says tax cuts he signed into law last week will make 2018 a “great year” for companies and jobs.

In a tweet on Tuesday, he predicted that the stock market would have another successful year, too:

Trump notched a major legislative achievement last Friday when he signed a bill enacting big tax cuts for corporations and wealthy Americans and more modest reductions for other families.

The stock market also has soared since Trump took office.

When it comes to the policy missteps of Trump’s first year, the failure of the GOP push to repeal and replace the 2010 healthcare law commonly known as Obamacare is near the top of the list.

But in a tweet sent earlier Tuesday, Trump predicted that Democrats and Republicans would “eventually come together” on a new healthcare plan:

Trump based his assessment on a provision in the tax bill to end the penalty on Americans who don’t get health insurance, which the president has sought to market as a repeal of Obamacare.

Still, much of the healthcare law remains intact, and the sign-up period for the various options was carried out as normal this year.

Trump lashes out at FBI in tweet inspired by ‘Fox & Friends’

President Trump used the airing of a “Fox & Friends” report on a dossier of salacious allegations about his ties to Russia as an opportunity to attack the credibility of the FBI.

Trump tweeted Tuesday:

The 35-page dossier compiled by a former British spy was funded first by anti-Trump Republicans and subsequently by the Democratic National Committee and Hillary Clinton’s presidential campaign.

Trump’s allies and attorneys have repeatedly floated the suggestion that the FBI used its contents as a basis to obtain highly classified foreign intelligence surveillance warrants that may have intercepted communications involving some of Trump’s campaign aides. They’ve sought to link the dossier to special counsel Robert Mueller’s investigation into Russian election meddling and possible collusion with the Trump campaign team amid an intensifying push to discredit the probe.

The “Fox & Friends” co-hosts did not independently verify the rumor that the FBI based its investigation on the dossier, nor did they cite a source for the claim. But they did discuss it Tuesday morning during a segment rehashing a Washington Times report that the FBI has been unable to verify the dossier’s core claims.

“If in fact this unverified dossier — this opposition research piece, honestly — if this was used to obtain a FISA warrant, what does that mean for the credibility of this investigation?” co-host Lisa Boothe asked guest Rep. Ron DeSantis.

“Well, I think it would undermine the legitimacy of the genesis of the investigation and all the way to the present,” DeSantis said. “The Russia collusion was always more of a narrative than anything based on any type of factual basis.”

The Florida Republican, who sits on one of the congressional panels that is also looking into whether Trump’s campaign colluded with Russia, pledged to keep “digging for the answers” on the nature of the FBI’s possible use of the dossier.

DeSantis has been an outspoken critic of Mueller’s investigation. In August, he proposed a time limit on funding for the probe.

Trump endorsed DeSantis for Florida governor last week, though the 39-year-old congressman has yet to officially enter the race.

Advertisement

Trump tweets Christmas greetings from Mar-a-lago

President Trump will celebrate Christmas the way millions of Americans do: surrounded by family, the White House said.

But unlike most Americans, he released a brief video in which his wife, Melania, joined him to “wish America and the entire world a very Merry Christmas.”

The first lady said that at this time of year “we see the best of America and the soul of the American people” in children packing boxes to help brighten Christmas for service members and communities coming together to help one another.

“In this season of joy, we spend time with our families, we renew our bonds of love and goodwill between our citizens and, most importantly, we celebrate the miracle of Christmas,” the president said, noting the story of Jesus’ birth.

“This good news is the greatest Christmas gift of all, the reason for our joy and the true source of our hope,” he said.

Trump planned to spend his first Christmas as president at his estate and private club in Palm Beach, Fla. The White House did not say which family members would be with him at Mar-a-Lago, but the first lady and their son, Barron, arrived days before the president joined them last Friday.

In a tweet sent later on Christmas, Trump assured the public he’d be back to work on Wednesday:

Trump is expected to remain at his Palm Beach estate through the new year.

Trump tweets that people are ‘saying Merry Christmas again,’ credits himself

President Trump says he’s pleased that people are “saying Merry Christmas again.”

“I am proud to have led the charge against the assault of our cherished and beautiful phrase,” Trump wrote in a Christmas Eve tweet:

Trump had promised that this year would be different after what he saw as a trend toward giving the Christian celebration short shrift in favor of a more generic and inclusive “happy holidays” message.

“Well, guess what? We’re saying ‘Merry Christmas’ again,” he announced in October at a Values Voter Summit of conservatives.

The president made a similar statement last month during a ceremony to light the national Christmas tree. On Sunday, he shared a video clip of his remarks:

Conservative angst over a perceived shift away from “Merry Christmas” has long percolated. Former Fox News host Bill O’Reilly talked about the “war on Christmas” on his show for years, highlighting businesses that opted to say “happy holidays.”

Trump’s emphasis on the phrase has been welcomed by evangelical Christians, who see it as evidence of his commitment to religious liberty.

His efforts also became a punch line on NBC’s “Saturday Night Live” recently, as Alec Baldwin portrayed a festive Trump wishing people a “Merry Christmas.”

He added: “You can finally say that again, because the war on Christmas is over. It will soon be replaced by the war on North Korea.”

The president tweeted Sunday night after wrapping up Christmas Eve dinner with his family at his Mar-a-Lago resort in Florida, where he is spending the holidays.

Earlier in the day, he played golf, sent Christmas greetings to U.S. troops stationed overseas and chatted by phone with children about Santa visiting their homes. He also launched fresh Twitter attacks on the FBI’s deputy director and the news media.

Advertisement

Trump launches new attacks on FBI official and ‘Fake News’ in Christmas Eve tweets

President Trump launched a Christmas Eve attack on FBI Deputy Director Andrew McCabe, whom he accuses of favoritism toward his former opponent, Hillary Clinton, and also returned to a longtime favored theme, excoriating the news media for failing to sufficiently extol his accomplishments.

Trump, spending the holidays at his Florida resort, Mar-a-Lago, also sent Christmas greetings to deployed military personnel, praising them for success in the fight against terrorism.

The early-morning swipe at McCabe followed a flurry of tweets attacking the deputy FBI chief on Saturday. McCabe, who has been a lightning rod for Republican attacks on the FBI, is expected to retire early in the new year.

Critics say the president and his allies are in the midst of a systematic campaign to denigrate the FBI and special counsel Robert S. Mueller III, who is looking into potential collusion by the Trump campaign in Russia’s attempts to sway the 2016 presidential election.

In a pair of statements on Twitter, Trump again expressed scorn regarding news coverage of his administration.

For months, the president has been particularly critical of reports regarding the Russia investigation and more recently has repeatedly complained he does not receive enough credit for a booming stock market.

Read More

In tweets, Trump praises his accomplishments and predicts that ‘good’ GOP candidates ‘will win BIG’ in 2018

President Trump complained anew Saturday that he’s not given credit by the news media for his accomplishments.

Trump tweeted that in his first year he’s achieved “perhaps more than any other president” in the same timeframe, citing as examples a surging stock market and low unemployment rate:

After a year of legislative fits and starts, the Trump administration and Republican-led Congress can claim victory on an agenda of tax cuts, judicial confirmations and a substantial regulatory rollback.

The successes, however, have come at a steep political price. Polls show voters unenthusiastic about the tax overhaul — the GOP’s signature accomplishment — and preferring Democrats over Republicans in Congress by historically wide margins. Republican strategists concede that their majority in the House — and perhaps in the Senate, as well — is at serious risk in next year’s midterm election.

Trump tweeted a message of reassurance Saturday afternoon, suggesting that GOP candidates will fare well — provided they’re supportive of the president and his agenda.

“Good Republican candidates will win BIG!” he wrote.

Trump sought to downplay recent Republican losses in the Virginia gubernatorial and Alabama Senate races.

He wrote that Republican Ed Gillespie lost in Virginia because “he was not a ‘Trumper.’ ” In Alabama, Trump pointed out, he initially backed Roy Moore’s opponent, Luther Strange, before Strange lost the Republican primary to Moore.

Though the president suggested he’d foreseen Moore’s subsequent general-election loss to Democrat Doug Jones, publicly Trump had predicted a Republican win in Alabama.

Also in his tweet, Trump urged supporters to remember that “the Republicans are 5-0 in Congressional races this year.”

That is incorrect. In this year’s House elections, the score is 5-1 for Republicans. Democrats held a California seat.

Add the Alabama Senate election, and the scorecard is 5-2.

Trump had boasted before the Senate race about a 5-0 scorecard this year. He chanted “Five and 0” at an Iowa rally in June — but the real tally then was 4-1.

This post contains reporting from the Associated Press and Times staff writers Lisa Mascaro and Alex Wigglesworth.

Advertisement

Trump goes after FBI officials on Twitter

President Trump is reacting to reports about the retirement of Andrew McCabe as the FBI’s deputy director by tweeting falsehoods about McCabe’s wife.

Trump tweeted Saturday:

McCabe’s wife, Jill, did not get $700,000 in donations from Hillary Clinton for a Virginia state Senate race in 2015.

The donations came from Virginia Gov. Terry McAuliffe’s political action committee and the Virginia Democratic Party before McCabe was promoted to deputy director and a supervisory role in the Clinton email investigation.

The Washington Post reported Saturday that McCabe, who became acting FBI director after Trump fired James Comey, plans to retire when he becomes fully eligible for pension benefits in early March.

Also on Saturday, Trump commented on reports that top FBI lawyer James Baker is being reassigned by new Director Christopher A. Wray:

Trump cited as his source Fox News, but the only two FoxNews.com reports that refer prominently to Baker’s reassignment attribute the information to the Washington Post.

According to the Post, Baker is being reassigned as part of Wray’s effort to assemble his own leadership team within the bureau. The Post report states that “such a move is a normal part of a new director taking charge at the bureau — not a reflection of the political controversies buffeting the FBI.”

Read More

In tweets, Trump lauds tax bill, lashes out at media and sends mixed messages on bipartisanship

President Trump on Friday morning signed a sweeping tax-cut measure — his first major legislative achievement — before heading off for a Christmas vacation at his Mar-a-Lago property in Palm Beach, Fla.

The president also privately signed a short-term spending bill to fund government operations through Jan. 19. Congress approved it Thursday, after Republican leaders were unable to bridge differences in their own party as well as with Democrats to get agreement on funding for the full fiscal year. The stopgap bill punts fights on immigration and other issues to January.

The tax bill, approved earlier this week in Congress in largely party-line votes, slashes corporate tax rates from 35% to 21% and also includes a host of other provisions for individuals, all intended to boost the economy.

It also ends fines for people who don’t carry health insurance, though that doesn’t take effect until the start of 2019, and other marquee components of President Obama’s healthcare law remain.

The tax bill’s passage marked a significant victory for a president hungry for one after chaos and legislative failures during his first year in office — including an effort to repeal the healthcare law — despite Republican control of Congress.

Trump also ended the year with his sights still trained on the way the media portray him, tweeting that the “mainstream” media “NEVER talk about our accomplishments in their end of year reviews.”

He singled out for praise conservative nonprofit Turning Point USA, whose founder praised Trump during an appearance on Fox News.

Trump’s laudatory tweet comes just days after his son, Donald Trump Jr., spoke at a Turning Point-sponsored summit in West Palm Beach, Fla. It also follows the publication of a New Yorker expose alleging racial bias within the nonprofit and possible violations of campaign finance law.

Earlier, the president touted a Fox News appearance by his daughter Ivanka, who pitched the tax bill to the co-hosts of morning talk show “Fox & Friends”:

The president said Friday that he originally planned to sign the bill early next year, but moved it up on the spur of the moment after watching morning media coverage of the legislation.

The first major overhaul of the nation’s tax laws since 1986 could add $1.5 trillion to the national debt over the next decade, according to the Congressional Budget Office. Republican leaders have said they’re willing to take that step in pursuit of a boost to the economy. But some in the GOP worry their party could face a political backlash without an aggressive public relations tour.

Trump, meanwhile, continued to send mixed messages about his desire to work across the aisle. In a tweet, he contended anew that Democrats “only want to raise your taxes.”

But that came just hours after he tweeted a pitch for bipartisanship:

Some White House aides and Republican leaders are looking warily ahead at the midterm election year, when typically a president’s party loses seats in Congress. That’s all the more true for presidents whose approval ratings dip below 50%, and Trump’s have never been that high.

Additionally, the new tax law that they see as the GOP’s top talking point is unpopular. Only about 1 in 3 voters have supported the legislation in recent days, according to several polls. About half of Americans believe the plan will hurt their personal finances. And 2 in 3 voters say the wealthy will get the most benefits, according to a USA Today/Suffolk University poll released last week.

But in yet another early morning tweet, Trump called the bill “very popular” and referred to the move by some large corporations to publicly announce pay raises or new investments after the legislation received congressional approval.

Democrats countered with a list of 32 corporations — among them Home Depot, Pfizer, T-Mobile and Mastercard — that have announced billions in stock buybacks, which, along with higher dividends and executive bonuses, are more common responses than wage increases from companies with new cash.

Read MoreThis post contains reporting from the Associated Press and Los Angeles Times staff writers Noah Bierman, Brian Bennett and Alex Wigglesworth.

Advertisement

Trump tweets praise of U.N. vote on North Korea sanctions

The U.N. Security Council unanimously approved tough new sanctions against North Korea on Friday in response to the latest launch of a ballistic missile that Pyongyang says is capable of reaching anywhere on the U.S. mainland.

President Trump tweeted about the 15-0 vote, adding: “The World wants Peace, not Death!”

The resolution adopted by the council includes sharply lower limits on North Korea’s refined oil imports, the return home of all North Koreans working overseas within 24 months, and a crackdown on ships smuggling banned items including coal and oil to and from the country.

But the resolution doesn’t include even harsher measures sought by the Trump administration that would ban all oil imports and freeze international assets of the government and its leader, Kim Jong Un.

Read More

Trump tweets endorsement of GOP Rep. DeSantis for Florida governor

President Trump jolted Florida’s still-evolving governor’s race by throwing his support Friday to Republican Rep. Ron DeSantis.

Trump tweeted:

The president made the endorsement even though DeSantis has not officially jumped into the race to replace Gov. Rick Scott. Scott leaves office in early 2019 due to term limits.

DeSantis, a U.S. Navy veteran and graduate of both Yale and Harvard, has represented a northeast Florida congressional district since 2013. He planned to run for U.S. Senate last year but dropped out of the race after Marco Rubio decided to seek reelection following his unsuccessful presidential bid.

In August, the 39-year-old congressman proposed a time limit on funding for special counsel Robert Mueller’s investigation into potential collusion between Russia and Trump or his associates. DeSantis’ House website has a link to a column he wrote for FoxNews.com.

DeSantis also joined Trump during a campaign-style event that the president held in Pensacola, Fla., just before the recent Senate election in Alabama. At that rally, Trump urged voters in the neighboring state to vote for Roy Moore, who had been dogged by allegations of sexual misconduct.

In a statement, DeSantis said he was “grateful to have the president’s support” and that he appreciated Trump’s push for tax cuts and for recognizing Jerusalem as Israel’s capital and other efforts to “get our country back on track.”

Brad Herold, an advisor to DeSantis, said in an email that the congressman will make a final decision on whether to enter the governor’s race sometime next year.

Advertisement

In tweet, Trump suggests that only Democrats oppose tax bill. That’s not true

President Trump defended the GOP tax plan, which received final approval from Congress on Wednesday and now awaits Trump’s signature to become law.

In a tweet Thursday morning, Trump cast opposition to the legislation as coming from Democrats and media outlets controlled by Democrats.

He contended that the tax cuts contained in the package “will soon be kicking in and will speak for themselves.”

“Companies are already making big payments to workers,” he wrote.

Trump later shared via Twitter a video clip of his triumphant White House gathering with Republican lawmakers to celebrate the tax bill’s passage Wednesday:

Despite the president’s suggestion that opposition to the plan has come primarily from Democrats, an NBC-Wall Street Journal poll conducted this week found that 41% of Americans believe the tax plan is a bad idea, while 24% say it is good. Of those polled, just 53% of Republicans said they approve of the plan.

A Quinnipiac University poll this month showed that registered voters, convinced that the benefits will flow mainly to corporations and the wealthy, oppose the plan 55% to 26%. In that poll, 67% of Republicans said they approve of the plan.

A survey this month by CBS News found that 53% of Americans say they pay about the right amount in taxes, while 40% say they pay more than their fair share. That same survey found 52% said corporations pay less than their fair share. The plan will cut the corporate tax rate to from 35% to 21%.

Several large corporations publicly announced pay raises or new investments immediately after the final House vote in an apparent public relations offensive to boost the popularity of the tax bill.

They included AT&T Inc., Boeing Co., Comcast Corp., Fifth Third Bank and Wells Fargo & Co.

In the case of Wells Fargo, about 36,000 employees are expected to get a pay raise as a result of the company’s response to the corporate tax cut, which, according to one estimate, will boost earnings for the average U.S. bank by 18%.

Read MoreThis post contains reporting from Times staff writers Jim Puzzanghera, James Rufus Koren and Alex Wigglesworth.

Trump accuses Democrats of seeking shutdown in tweet

President Trump tweeted Thursday that “House Democrats want a SHUTDOWN for the holidays in order to distract from the very popular, just passed, Tax Cuts.”

That came as House Republicans early Thursday unveiled a new, stripped-down spending bill to prevent a government shutdown this weekend and allow quarreling lawmakers to punt most of their unfinished business into the new year.

GOP leaders are scrambling to rally some frustrated Republicans behind the measure, particularly defense hawks who had hoped to enact record budget increases for the Pentagon this year.

In his tweet, Trump referred to the GOP tax bill, which received final congressional approval on Wednesday, as “very popular.” He also suggested in an earlier tweet that only Democrats oppose the measure. That contradicts a number of recent polls that have showed a majority of registered voters opposing the bill, including a sizable portion of Republicans.

Read More

Advertisement

Trump applauds strong home sales in tweet

President Trump applauded the release of data showing that Americans purchased homes at the fastest pace in nearly 11 years, as sales climbed 5.6% in November.

Trump tweeted Thursday morning:

The National Assn. of Realtors said Wednesday that sales of existing homes rose last month to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 5.81 million units. Home sales were last this strong in December 2006, when properties sold at annual pace of 6.42 million.

The strong demand for buying homes is a sign of an increasingly vibrant economy after a steady, eight-year expansion. The unemployment rate has fallen to a 17-year low, while more people in the millennial generation appear to be forming their own households and looking for places to buy. Yet the demand has done little to resolve an increasing vulnerability of the U.S. real estate market as the number of listings has been declining on a yearly basis for two and a half years.

The shortage is a concern, but not necessarily enough to derail the sales momentum.

Read More

Trump praises ‘Fox & Friends’ for topping ‘most influential’ list

President Trump praised the co-hosts of morning talk show “Fox & Friends” for topping an online list of 2017’s most influential figures in media.

“You deserve it — three great people!” Trump tweeted Thursday morning.

The list, compiled by Mediaite, specifically recognized “Fox & Friends” co-hosts Steve Doocy, Ainsley Earhardt and Brian Kilmeade as “three of the most influential media people not just in the United States, but in the entire world.”

They won the distinction solely because of Trump’s devoted viewership, with Mediaite noting that the president “regularly starts his day watching ‘Fox & Friends’ and then tweets about whatever they cover, and however, they cover it.”

Everything President Trump has tweeted about Fox News>>

“Since they have captured the president’s attention – which often then gets tweeted and covered by the media – the topics they cover essentially set the national agenda for the rest of the day,” Mediaite said in its ranking.

Advertisement

Trump celebrates win on tax bill in series of tweets

After 11 months in office, President Trump on Wednesday got to celebrate one of the things he’s coveted most — a major legislative achievement — and on his party’s signature issue, tax cuts.

For a president who loves to tally wins and loathes losses, Congress’ final approval of the tax bill hours earlier was an essential capstone to a year in which Trump rolled back scores of regulations, sharply limited a refugee program, seated a conservative Supreme Court justice and opened vast new areas for oil exploration.

Despite a Congress controlled by Republicans, however, Trump had signed none of his major legislative promises into law this year and suffered one spectacular failure, on repealing President Obama’s health insurance law. Now he ends the year on a high note, though one that comes with a big caveat.

“We’re bringing the entrepreneur back into this country,” Trump declared at a triumphant White House gathering with Republican lawmakers, several of whom praised him effusively. “Ultimately what does it mean? It means jobs — jobs, jobs, jobs.”

The tax bill, which Trump will sign in coming days, comes with potential political costs. The legislation overwhelmingly benefits corporations and wealthy Americans like himself, undermining his promises to govern as a populist, and all but rules out his pledge to wipe out the national debt, adding at least $1 trillion in debt in its first 10 years.

A separate provision repeals a core part of Obamacare, eliminating the requirement that individuals buy insurance or pay a tax penalty, but the bill offers no plan to fulfill Trump’s promise to see that all Americans have health coverage. Instead, nonpartisan analyses say millions will lose or give up insurance as a consequence of ending the individual mandate.

Trump ceded drafting of many of the details to congressional Republicans, and the result was a plan that largely hews to GOP tax-cutting orthodoxy: It mostly benefits corporations and high-income individuals, on the bet that economic growth will mean more jobs and higher wages for lower-income Americans.

When Trump did weigh in, it was often with advice on the kind of branding for which he’s well known. He told staff and GOP lawmakers to use phrases like “tax cuts for Christmas,” “middle-class miracle,” and “rocket fuel for economy.”

Trump is banking on his salesmanship to overcome the bill’s dismal poll numbers. In an NBC-Wall Street Journal survey, 63% of respondents said they believed the plan was designed primarily to help corporations and the wealthy. Just 7% agreed it was intended “mostly to help middle-class Americans” — as Trump and congressional Republicans contend.

Read More

Trump congratulates legislators for voting to pass tax bill

The House and Senate passed the sweeping GOP tax plan on near-party-line votes as congressional Republicans moved to give President Trump his most significant legislative victory of the year — one that has come at a steep political cost.

Senate approval shortly after midnight Wednesday fell along party lines, 51 to 48, with only Republicans voting yes. Republican Sen. John McCain, who returned home to Arizona as he fights brain cancer, did not vote.

Trump tweeted about the development minutes later:

Starting in 2019, the legislation will in effect repeal the Affordable Care Act’s mandate that all Americans carry health insurance, by doing away with a tax on those who fail to have coverage. Other provisions of the healthcare law will remain in place.

Republicans have been rushing the tax bill to passage — Trump also tweeted congratulations after the House vote for what he has called a Christmas gift for Americans — but it ran into a last-minute problem in the Senate.

Some small provisions, including one pushed by Sen. Ted Cruz (R-Texas) that would have expanded college savings plans to allow use for home-schooling, were ruled to violate the chamber’s procedures and some of the language had to be stripped from the bill.

Fixing that glitch will require an unusual additional vote in the House, which was quickly scheduled for Wednesday, before the bill can be sent to Trump for his signature.

Republican leaders say the overhaul, which is centered on a huge cut in corporate taxes, will spur economic growth and become more popular once it takes effect, a point also made by Trump in a pair of early-morning tweets:

The arguments sounded much like those made by Rep. Nancy Pelosi (D-San Francisco), who insisted in 2010 that the Affordable Care Act, passed with only Democratic votes, would become more popular once Americans experienced it. It didn’t — at least not right away — and instead contributed heavily to the Democrats losing their House majority that year.

Polling indicates the $1.5-trillion tax package remains broadly unpopular, contributing to a political environment in which surveys, including some by Republican groups, show the party in serious danger of losing control of Congress in next year’s midterm elections.

Read MoreThis post contains reporting from Times staff writer Lisa Mascaro.

Advertisement

Trump disputes Washington Post report that he considered rescinding Gorsuch’s nomination

President Trump disputed a Washington Post report that he had discussed rescinding the Supreme Court nomination of Neil Gorsuch earlier in the year.

Trump branded the article “FAKE NEWS” on Tuesday morning in a tweet:

According to the Post report, Trump became enraged in February, when Gorsuch reportedly told Sen. Richard Blumenthal (D-Conn.) during a private meeting that he was “disheartened” by disparaging statements Trump had made about judges.

Upon learning of the criticism, Trump vented to aides, telling them that he was tempted to pull Gorsuch’s nomination, according to the report. The article states that the account of the president’s “explosion” is based on interviews with 11 people “familiar with the episode,” some of whom spoke on the condition of anonymity.

One of the Post reporters who authored the article later defended the team’s work during an appearance on CNN’s “Anderson Cooper 360.”

“We stand by our reporting 100%,” said Josh Dawsey, a White House reporter for the Post. “The president obviously has a right to his opinion, and we have a right to publish what our facts lead us to believe.”

Trump tweets clips of speech laying out national security strategy

President Trump, a commander in chief who occasionally directs foreign policy from his Twitter account, on Monday sought to define his overarching plan for keeping the country secure, releasing a lengthy national security strategy paper in advance of a speech distilling its “America first” theme.

Trump described his approach to national security as one that “puts America first” and relies on a “clear-eyed” assessment of U.S. interests, reflecting that he sees the United States locked in a global competition in which America’s economic prosperity and national security are closely linked.

Trump later shared via Twitter video clips of his speech at the Ronald Reagan Building and International Trade Center, where he laid out the strategy.

The strategy, which White House officials have spent months drafting and Trump wanted to roll out personally, is based on four pillars: Protecting the homeland by restricting immigration, pressuring trading partners, building up the military and otherwise increasing U.S. influence globally.

It describes the major threats facing the U.S. as the nuclear weapons programs in North Korea and Iran, the proliferation of radical Islamist terror groups, “porous borders and unenforced immigration laws” and unfair trade practices that Trump says have weakened the economy and sent American jobs overseas.

In his remarks Monday, Trump also took time to praise the Republican tax bill, which GOP leaders are rushing to pass this week.

Trump’s national security strategy overview reflects a break from the approach of both his Democratic and Republican predecessors.

In contrast to President Obama, who emphasized global cooperation and alliances, Trump sees the U.S. protecting its own sovereignty and facing off with “revisionist” world powers such as China and Russia. Those countries are seen as being antagonistic, trying to tip the global status quo in their favor by expanding their spheres of influence beyond those set after the end of the Cold War.

Read MoreThis post contains reporting from Times staff writer Brian Bennett.

Advertisement

Trump rejoices on Twitter after Dow notches new record

President Trump celebrated another record day for the U.S. stock market Monday afternoon via Twitter.

The Dow Jones industrial average advanced 140.46 points, or 0.6%, to 24,792.20, as investors felt more sure that Republicans will pass their tax plan this week. It was the stock index’s 70th record-high close of 2017.

“We have NEVER had 70 Dow Records in a one year period,” Trump tweeted. “Wow!”

The previous record for the number of all-time-high closes in a single calendar year was set in 1995, when the Dow notched 69.

Trump also thanked Fox Business Network’s Maria Bartiromo for a Wall Street Journal op-ed in which she praised the economy’s performance under Trump and called for the passage of tax reform to keep the “Trump boom” going.

Stocks have made hefty gains as the GOP appeared to shore up enough support to pass the tax bill; congressional Republicans are scheduled to start voting on the legislation Tuesday. The biggest gains have gone to companies that pay relatively higher tax rates, including banks, retailers and smaller, U.S.-focused firms.

Read MoreThis post contains reporting from the Associated Press and Times staff writer Alex Wigglesworth.

Trump tweets that he knew Republicans Moore and Gillespie would lose

President Trump says he knew that Republicans Roy Moore and Ed Gillespie would lose their elections, but that he still believes the GOP will “do well in 2018,” when the control of Congress is at stake.

In an early-morning tweet, Trump wrote:

Trump initially had endorsed Luther Strange for Alabama’s Senate seat. But after Strange lost the GOP primary to Moore, Trump swung behind Moore. On election day, Trump wrongly predicted that voters would reject Moore’s Democratic rival, tweeting: “The people of Alabama will do the right thing.”

Democrat Ralph Northam defeated Gillespie in the Virginia gubernatorial race this fall.

Trump included in his tweet the Twitter handle for Fox News’ “Fox & Friends.” It wasn’t immediately clear whether his message was prompted by a segment on the morning talk show, which has provided inspiration for past tweets from Trump.

Minutes later, the president promoted an upcoming “Fox & Friends” appearance by his daughter, Ivanka, who was slated to discuss the Republican tax bill:

Later, after Ivanka tweeted that “small businesses and working families will thrive like never before” under the bill, Trump replied:

The exchange came as fresh questions about the tax bill raised by Sen. Bob Corker threw Tuesday’s voting in doubt after critics said he and other lawmakers — and Trump — would personally benefit from a provision giving breaks for real estate holdings.

The Tennessee Republican had endorsed the bill last week in a crucial turnaround that provided momentum as GOP leaders try to ensure passage with their slim 52-48 majority. Their numbers narrowed as Sen. John McCain returned home to Arizona over the weekend as he battles brain cancer.

Read MoreThis post contains reporting from Times staff writers Lisa Mascaro and Alex Wigglesworth.

Advertisement

Trump pivots from politics to prayers in tweets on Washington train derailment

The first Amtrak train to carry passengers on a new rail route in Washington state derailed off a bridge and onto Interstate 5 on Monday morning, killing multiple people, according to officials and local media reports.

In his initial response to the crash, President Trump pushed for Congress to support his legislative agenda.

Trump tweeted:

A short time later, the president added:

Later Monday, during a speech laying out his national security strategy, Trump offered his “deepest sympathies” to the derailment victims but referred again to the crash as evidence of a need for transportation investment.

“It is all the more reason why we must start immediately fixing the infrastructure of the United States,” he said.

The Amtrak Cascades Train 501 was on its inaugural journey from Seattle to Portland, Ore., with almost 80 passengers and five crew members on board when it derailed on a newly opened set of tracks about 40 miles south of Seattle before 8 a.m. PST.

“Today is the first day these tracks were used,” Pierce County Sheriff’s Department spokesman Ed Troyer said during a televised news conference. “This would have been first trip, first train, first day.”

Read MoreThis post contains reporting from Times staff writers Matt Pearce, Laura J. Nelson and Alex Wigglesworth.

Trump proclaims Wright Brothers Day

President Trump shared via Twitter a proclamation declaring Wright Brothers Day.

Orville and Wilbur Wright are credited with starting the aviation industry on Dec. 17, 1903, when they launched the first manned, powered flight.

In a statement linked to his tweet, Trump called the achievement “one of the most remarkable triumphs of the 20th century.”

Advertisement

Trump plugs tax bill in tweets from Camp David

Poised to bask in the triumph of his first major legislative victory, President Trump sought Sunday to drum up excitement for the Republican tax plan, which is set to be voted on this week.

The measure would give the largest breaks to the richest Americans but Trump has attempted to sell the bill as a “Christmas present” for middle-class Americans in part because it would trigger job growth.

In a tweet from Camp David, where he is spending the weekend, Trump wrote:

A White House spokeswoman said that Trump would meet with Vice President Mike Pence and Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin at the Maryland retreat.

Trump also planned to meet with Office of Management and Budget Director Mick Mulvaney, Housing and Urban Development head Ben Carson, Agriculture Secretary Sonny Perdue and Secretary of Veterans Affairs David Shulkin before returning to the White House.

As he prepared to leave Camp David on Sunday afternoon, Trump tweeted that “a lot of very important work” had been done:

The White House and Republicans on the Hill are eager to claim a victory at the end of what has been a disappointing legislative year for the party that controls the White House and both houses of Congress. At the same time, the GOP is reckoning with a brewing intraparty war that helped cost it a Senate seat in Alabama.

Roy Moore, the former chief justice of the Alabama Supreme Court, lost a special election on Tuesday, handing Democrats their first Senate seat in Alabama in a generation and cutting Republican control of the Senate to just two, 51-49.

Moore was aggressively backed by ex-White House chief strategist Steve Bannon, who has vowed to challenge establishment Republicans.

The tax plan has also been overshadowed by speculation about the next steps from Trump and special counsel Robert Mueller, who is probing whether the president’s campaign coordinated with Russian officials during last year’s election.

Mueller has gained access to thousands of emails sent and received by Trump officials before the start of his administration, yielding attacks from transition lawyers and renewing chatter that Trump may act to end the investigation.

Trump promotes book written by former campaign officials

President Trump promoted a book written by two of his former campaign officials that purports to offer a behind-the-scenes account of his election.

In a tweet Saturday morning, Trump congratulated his former campaign manager, Corey Lewandowski, and deputy campaign manager, David Bossie, for releasing the title.

“Finally people with real knowledge are writing about our wonderful and exciting campaign!” he wrote.

Lewandowski and Bossie have remained staunch Trump supporters since departing from his campaign. Both men often defend the president during their frequent appearances on Fox News. And Trump appears to be a loyal viewer, as he’s commented on segments featuring his former employees in past tweets.

Most recently, on Wednesday, Lewandowski and Bossie appeared on “Fox & Friends” to promote their book and offer commentary on a range of topics, including a survey of evening broadcast news coverage that concluded more than 90% of the statements made about the Trump administration were negative.

A short time after the segment aired, Trump tweeted: “Wow, more than 90% of Fake News Media coverage of me is negative, with numerous forced retractions of untrue stories.”

Advertisement

Trump tweets video of his weekly address

President Trump shared a video of his weekly address Saturday via Twitter.

In his remarks, Trump called on Congress to pass a “clean funding bill” to keep the government running, rather than tying a year-end budget deal to partisan proposals. Some Democratic lawmakers have indicated they won’t vote for such legislation absent a deal to help young immigrant “Dreamers” avoid the risk of deportation, but the White House has balked at linking the immigration issue to the appropriations bill.

Trump also repeated his call to overhaul U.S. immigration law following Monday’s blast in a New York subway passageway. It was the second incident in New York that authorities have described as terrorism since late October, when a man drove a truck down a busy riverfront bike path, killing eight people.

The president noted that the suspect in October’s deadly incident came to the United States through the visa lottery program, and that the suspect in this week’s attack arrived based on a family connection to an American citizen. He called on Congress to end both immigration programs.

A full transcript of the president’s speech is here.

Trump defends tax plan, proclaims economy is set ‘to rock’

Closing in on the first major legislative achievement of his term, President Trump on Saturday defended the Republican tax cut as a good deal for the middle class while boldly suggesting it could lead to explosive economic growth.

The legislation, which the GOP aims to muscle through Congress next week, would lower taxes on the richest Americans. Benefits, if any, for most other taxpayers would be smaller, but Trump attempted to sell the bill as a “Christmas present” for middle-class Americans in part because he says it would trigger job growth.

“It’ll be fantastic for the middle-income people and for jobs, most of all,” Trump told reporters on the White House lawn before traveling to Camp David, Md., for the weekend. “And I will say that because of what we’ve done with regulation and other things our economy is doing fantastically well, but it has another big step to go, and it can’t take that step unless we do the tax bill.”

The president later summarized his remarks in a tweet:

No stranger to hyperbole, Trump also predicted the legislation would cause the economy to soar beyond its current 3% rate of growth.

“I think we could go to 4, 5 or even 6%, ultimately,” the president said. “We are back. We are really going to start to rock.”

Many economists believe that attaining consistent 4% or 5% annual growth would be challenging. The nation last topped 5% growth in 1984.

The Republican plan is the widest-ranging reshaping of the tax code in three decades and is expected to add to the nation’s $20-trillion debt. The tax cuts are projected to add $1.46 trillion over a decade.

The bill would also repeal an important part of President Obama’s Affordable Care Act — the requirement that all Americans have health insurance or face a penalty — as the GOP looks to unravel a law it failed to repeal and replace this summer.

Read More

Advertisement