MAGA Radio Host Tells Trump: โNobody Caresโ About Your โGrievancesโ
Scott EisenMAGA-boosting radio host John Fredericks has turned on Donald Trump, telling the former president in no uncertain terms on Tuesday that โnobody caresโ about his petty media feuds and โgrievancesโ anymore.Fredericks, a longtime supporter of the twice-impeached ex-president, largely took issue with Trump has seemingly ignored political issues while focusing his attention on far-fetched lawsuits and complaints about โfake news.โ Additionally, Fredericks grumbled about Trump privately bac
news.yahoo.comTrump Sues Journalist Bob Woodward for Releasing Interview Recordings
(Bloomberg) -- Former President Donald Trump is suing journalist Bob Woodward for releasing recordings of interviews that he gave to the journalist in 2019 and 2020, claiming he never agreed to those tapes being shared with the public.Most Read from BloombergAdani Rout Hits $68 Billion as Fight With Hindenburg IntensifiesWall Street Is Losing Out to Amateur Buyers in the Housing SlumpAdani Tries to Calm Investors With 413-Page Hindenburg RebuttalHistoric Crash for Memory Chips Threatens to Wipe
news.yahoo.comListen to the audio of Bob Woodward's interviews with Trump that made him think of the former president as an 'unparalleled danger' rather than simply incompetent
"When you listen to him on the range of issues from foreign policy to the virus to racial injustice, it's clear he did not know what to do," Woodward wrote in the Washington Post.
news.yahoo.comWoodward pushes 25th Amendment, says a 'crazy' president could trigger nuclear war
The U.S. government faced a potential nuclear crisis in the fall of 2020 when Joint Chiefs of Staff Gen. Mark Milley, fearing that then President Trump would order the U.S. military to strike China, plotted to thwart such a directive with a scheme one prominent Republican lawyer likened to โThe Caine Mutiny with plutonium.โ
news.yahoo.comDenmark's 'freetown' Christiania celebrates 50 years of eccentricity
A refuge for anarchists, hippies and artists, Denmark's 'freetown' Christiania turns 50, and though it hasn't completely avoided the encroachment of modernity and capitalism, its free-wheeling soul remains intact. Nestled in the heart of Copenhagen, Christiania is seen by some as a progressive social experiment, while others simply see it as a den of drugs.
news.yahoo.comSparks fly and adrenaline surges in South Africa car 'spinning'
Hundreds gather to watch a car spinning tournament near Johannesburg in South Africa. Now recognised as a motor sport, "spinning" was born in South African townships during the late 1980s, when gangsters would spin stolen cars to show off their spoils. Tournaments have resumed after a nearly two-year pandemic hiatus.
news.yahoo.comNYT editor Bill Hamilton joining publisher Celadon Books
New York Times editor Bill Hamilton appears in this April 18, 2012 photo. Hamilton is joining Celadon Books as executive editor. Bill Hamilton will begin his new job April 5 and will focus on acquiring books about politics and history. (Earl Wilson/The New York Times via AP)NEW YORK โ The Washington editor for The New York Times is joining Celadon Books as executive editor. Bill Hamilton will begin his new job April 5 and focus on acquiring books about politics and history.
Biden mourns 500,000 dead, balancing nation's grief and hope
I know what itโs like to not be there when it happens," said Biden, who has long addressed grief more powerfully than perhaps any other American public figure. "I know what itโs like when you are there, holding their hands, as they look in your eye and they slip away. In one of his many symbolic breaks with his predecessor, Biden has not shied away from offering remembrances for the lives lost to the virus. The COVID-19 death total in the United States had just crossed 400,000 when Biden took the oath of office. Outside of perfunctory tweets marking the milestones of 100,000 and 200,000 deaths, Trump oversaw no moment of national mourning, no memorial service.
Hal Holbrook, prolific actor who played Twain, dies at 95
FILE - Actor Hal Holbrook appears during an interview in his New York apartment on Feb. 8, 1973. Holbrook died on Jan. 23 in Beverly Hills, California, his representative, Steve Rohr, told The Associated Press Tuesday. Holbrook died on Jan. 23 in Beverly Hills, California, his representative, Steve Rohr, told The Associated Press on Tuesday. Holbrookโs material is uproarious, his ability to hold an audience by acting is brilliant,โ said The New York Times. AdWhen he wasnโt portraying Twain, Holbrook showed impressive versatility.
Virus will kill many more, WH projects as briefings resume
It marked a sharp contrast to what had become the Trump show in the past administration, when public health officials were repeatedly undermined by a president who shared his unproven ideas without hesitation. The deaths projection wasn't much different from what Biden himself has said, but nonetheless served as a stark reminder of the brutal road ahead. The new briefings, beginning just a week into Bidenโs tenure, are meant as an explicit rejection of President Donald Trump's approach to the coronavirus outbreak. Dr. David Hamer, a professor of global health and medicine at Boston Universityโs School of Public Health, said having briefings from health officials that are โbased on serious scienceโ would go a long way toward improving public perceptions of the vaccine. Those messages found few champions in the former administration, as Trump openly flouted science-based guidance from his own administration.
Biden's early approach to virus: Underpromise, overdeliver
The measured approach is drawing praise in some corners for being realistic -โ but criticism from others for its caution. โI found it fascinating that yesterday the press asked the question, โIs 100 million enough?'" You canโt do 100 million in 100 days.โ Well, weโre โ God willing โ not only going to 100 million. Trump provided an overreach of his own in May 2020, when he said the nation had โprevailedโ over the virus. Trumpโs lax approach and lack of credibility contributed to poor adherence to public safety rules among the American public.
Khashoggi doc, too explosive for streaming, debuts on-demand
(Photo by Taylor Jewell/Invision/AP, File)NEW YORK โ Even before โThe Dissidentโ made its premiere at the Sundance Film Festival, director Bryan Fogel had a sense that his explosive Jamal Khashoggi documentary was going to be a tough sell. The film, available on-demand this week, was one of the most anticipated of last January's Sundance. The audience at Sundance included Hillary Clinton, Alec Baldwin and Reed Hastings, the Netflix chief executive. Mohammed denied Saudi Arabia was behind the murder, then eventually granted it was carried out by agents of the Saudi government. โUltimately, those risk assessments took the place of whether or not their couple hundred million subscribers would like to see this film,โ Fogel says.
Publishing saw upheaval in 2020, but 'books are resilient'
(AP Photo/Chris Pizzello, File)NEW YORK โ Book publishing in 2020 was a story of how much an industry can change and how much it can, or wants to, remain the same. To its benefit and to its dismay, publishing was drawn into the events of the moment. Penguin Random House, among other initiatives, asked all employees to read Ibram X. Kendiโs โHow To Be an Anti-Racist.โ Kendi later presided over a company town hall. Macmillan CEO Don Weisberg, who cited a wide range of diversity programs at the publishing house that began before โAmerican Dirt,โ said he โunderstands the skepticism." The CEO of Penguin Random House U.S., Madeline McIntosh, noted how well book publishing could meet the public's needs during the pandemic and other events of 2020.
Bob Woodward to take on final days of Trump's presidency
Woodward is teaming with Costa on a book about the waning days of Donald Trumps administration and on the initial phase of Joe Bidens presidency. The book does not yet have a title or release date. (AP Photo)NEW YORK โ Bob Woodward's next book finds him in the familiar world of documenting a presidency's ending. Woodward is teaming with Washington Post colleague Robert Costa on a book about the waning days of Donald Trump's administration and on the initial phase of Joe Biden's presidency. Woodward already has written two best-sellers on Trump, โFearโ and โRage.โFor the new book, Woodward and Costa will have competition, from other Post reporters.
Carl Bernstein says 21 GOP senators contemptuous of Trump
NEW YORK โ Former Watergate sleuth Carl Bernstein took to Twitter to list the names of 21 Republican senators who he says have โrepeatedly expressed contemptโ for Donald Trump and his fitness to be president. Many Washington reporters have talked about lawmakers who have privately expressed reservations about Trump but rarely attached names to their stories. Bernstein said he believed several of the Republicans on his list were privately happy about Democrat Joe Biden's victory. Michael Zona, a spokesperson for Iowa Sen. Chuck Grassley, who was on Bernstein's list, said the characterization was untrue. There was no article on CNN's website about Bernstein's list on Monday.
Charles Yu novel, Malcolm X bio win National Book Awards
NEW YORK โ Charles Yu's โInterior Chinatown,โ a satirical, cinematic novel written in the form of a screenplay, has won the National Book Award for fiction. Tamara Payne and her father the late Les Payne's Malcolm X biography, โThe Dead Are Arising,โ was cited for nonfiction and Kacen Callender's โKing and the Dragonfliesโ for young people's literature. The traditional dinner ceremony is the nonprofit National Book Foundation's most important source of income and is usually held at Cipriani Wall Street, where publishers and other officials pay thousands of dollars for tables or individual seats. The scholar Manning Marable died right before the 2011 publication of โMalcolm X,โ which went on to win a Pulitzer Prize and receive a National Book Award nomination. This is a story you should try to tell.โWinners in each of the competitive categories receive $10,000, and other finalists $1,000, with the money divided equally between the author and translator for best translated book.
Trump books will continue after Trump leaves office
NEW YORK โ One of publishing's most thriving genres of the past four years, books about President Donald Trump, is not going to end when he leaves office. In 2021 and beyond, look for waves of releases about the Trump administration and about the president's loss to Democratic candidate Joe Biden. โBut there are tens of millions of Americans who look to the Trump presidency as an important time and are fans of his administration. Center Street, a Hachette Book Group imprint, has published Donald Trump Jr., Newt Gingrich and Judge Jeanine Pirro among others. Any publisher signing with Trump or a top administration official might face the anger not just of Trump critics among the general public, but from within the industry.
As virus surges, Trump rallies keep packing in thousands
Thousands of President Donald Trump's supporters regularly cram together at campaign rallies around the country โ masks optional and social distancing frowned upon. Trump rallies are among the nation's biggest events being held in defiance of crowd restrictions designed to stop the virus from spreading. Some states have fined venues that host Trump rallies for violating caps on crowd size. But Iโm not canceling, and weโll find out what happens.โThe Trump campaign blamed the dispute on โfree speech-stifling dictates" of Democratic Gov. He calls the Trump rallies โsuper-spreader eventsโ and says he's listening to the warnings of public health experts.
As virus surges, Trump rallies keep packing in thousands
Thousands of President Donald Trump's supporters regularly cram together at campaign rallies around the country โ masks optional and social distancing frowned upon. Trump rallies are among the nation's biggest events being held in defiance of crowd restrictions designed to stop the virus from spreading. This at a time when public health experts are advising people to think twice even about inviting many guests for Thanksgiving dinner. Some states have fined venues that host Trump rallies for violating caps on crowd size. He calls the Trump rallies โsuper-spreader eventsโ and says he's listening to the warnings of public health experts.
Worst place, worst time: Trump faces virus spike in Midwest
โPresident Trump still does not seem to be taking the pandemic seriously enough. Today, Winnebago is among the top 10 counties where new Wisconsin COVID cases are being reported, according to data collected by Johns Hopkins University and compiled by The Associated Press. Iowansโ view of Trumpโs handling of the pandemic is also more negative than positive, according to The Des Moines Registerโs Iowa Poll and Monmouth University polls. โALL THE FAKE NEWS MEDIA WANTS TO TALK ABOUT IS COVID, COVID, COVID,โ Trump tweeted Tuesday. !โDuring his debate with Biden last week, Trump insisted of the virus, despite the spike in cases: โIt will go away.
Supporters mirror Trump's rosy projection of virus infection
Women who support President Donald Trump gather at a campaign meet-up in Canton, Ohio, on Monday, Oct. 5, 2020, to rally for Trumps campaign in the bellwether state. Trumps supporters are not shocked that he caught COVID-19. Trump's โdon't be afraidโ takeaway is infuriating public health experts โ who note that basic prevention measures do work contain the spread of the deadly virus. But for many of Trump's supporters, the president was merely adopting an attitude they expect, and they themselves reflect, when it comes to the pandemic. Trump's supporters don't view these practices as irresponsible and were largely quick to dismiss the level of risk involved.
Cavalier White House approach to COVID catches up to Trump
Crowds of people gathered shoulder to shoulder on the White House South Lawn. Instead, he flouted his own governmentโs guidelines and helped create a false sense of invulnerability in the White House, an approach that has now failed him as it did a nation where more than 200,000 people have died. And their use, while technically required, wasnโt enforced in the White House either. Even in the hours after the presidentโs diagnosis, senior White House staff, including chief of staff Mark Meadows and economic adviser Larry Kudlow, walked around the White House complex without wearing masks. The White House, even now, says the face coverings are a matter of โpersonal choiceโ for most staffers.
From Trump's taxes to virus: News moves at breakneck pace
The revelation about how much President Donald Trump pays in taxes? Then, just as quickly, they receded into memory with the revelation Friday that Trump had tested positive for COVID-19. The coronavirus story unfurled shortly after 8 p.m. Eastern on Thursday when Jennifer Jacobs, Bloomberg News White House reporter, tweeted that sources had told her that Hope Hicks, one of Trump's closest aides, had tested positive. Then, at 12:54 a.m. Eastern, the president tweeted that both of them were positive. Were reporters who attended a White House news briefing on Thursday at risk?
It's 'now or never' for ex-Trump aides weighing speaking out
โPeople need to understand how dangerous a moment we are in.โThere are plenty of others weighing the same decision. But Mattis and Coats, like former White House chief of staff John Kelly and former national security adviser H.R. The White House punched back with an aggressive attack campaign aimed at discrediting her through a barrage of statements, interviews and denunciations from the lectern in the White House briefing room. โThe White House knows if they show this is a very costly thing to do they will scare people from going forward," he said. He added that while more people are still considering coming forward, the White House tactics have worked to some extent โ dissuading one senior official who had been on the cusp of speaking out.
Woodward's 'Rage' sells 600,000 copies in first week
(AP Photo/Cliff Owen, File)NEW YORK โ Bob Woodward's โRageโ sold more than 600,000 copies in its first week of publication, continuing a yearlong wave of blockbuster books about President Donald Trump. Simon & Schuster announced Wednesday that Woodward's book will be going into its fourth printing, with total books in print to be 1.3 million copies. Featuring 18 interviews with President Trump, including one in which he acknowledges in February the potential severity of the coronavirus, โRageโ has topped Amazon.com and other bestseller lists since coming out Sept. 15. Woodward's previous Trump book, โFear,โ has sold 2 million copies since its 2018 release. The first week sales for โRageโ includes hardcovers, audiobooks and e-books.
Woodward says CNN reporter urged him to release Trump tapes
NEW YORK โ Bob Woodward says he hadn't planned on releasing audio tapes of his interviews with President Donald Trump for his book โRageโ until CNN reporter Jamie Gangel and the author's wife convinced him. โThe microphone really is a microscope.โGangel worked in tandem with Elsa Walsh, herself an accomplished reporter who helps edit her husband's books, to encourage release of the tapes. For a CNN reporter to help push a news source toward a decision that amplifies the impact of a book that is highly critical of Trump may open Gangel to some criticism. But it's an important role for journalists to advocate for public release of as much information as possible, said Kathleen Culver, director of the Center for Journalism Ethics at the University of Wisconsin. CNN chief Jeff Zucker, who was interviewing Woodward at the conference, also said that โwe're all betterโ for Gangel pressing the point.
Is 8 enough? Court vacancy could roil possible election case
Any time the justices divide 4-4 in a case, the lower court ruling remains in place. If say, the court were to split that way in a case involving the election, the tie would ratify whatever the lower court decided. In 2016, โthe court actually did a pretty good job when the court had eight justices for a while. Any case that divides the court 4-4 after arguments could be held and set for a new round of arguments when the court is back at full strength. The Supreme Court has managed at less than its full nine-member strength at three points in the past 50 years, in 1970, 1987-88 and 2016.
Biden would push for less US reliance on nukes for defense
And although he has not fully detailed his nuclear policy priorities, Biden says he would push for less reliance on the worlds deadliest weapons. (AP Photo/Patrick Semansky)WASHINGTON โ Democrat Joe Biden leaves little doubt that if elected he would try to scale back President Donald Trump's buildup in nuclear weapons spending. James Acton, a nuclear expert at the Carnegie Endowment, says Biden's instincts on nuclear weapons are more liberal than those of much of the Democratic Party's defense establishment. Biden embraces the notion that nuclear weapons should play a smaller role in defense strategy and that the ultimate goal should be a nuclear-free world. โThis outcome will result partly from the fact that Joe Biden is a common-sense centrist who respects the views of experts,โ Thompson wrote recently.
Ex-Pence adviser says Trump bungled virus; she's for Biden
In a video released Thursday by the group Republican Voters Against Trump, Troye says working for Trump was โterrifyingโ and says he was more concerned about his reelection chances than about protecting the nation from the virus. Troye alleges that, during one task force meeting she attended, the president said: โ'Maybe this COVID thing is a good thing. She was on the task force as some kind of a lower-level person. 'โThe vice president's office released a copy of Troye's departure email, dated July 23 and addressed โDear Task Force Members.โ Pence chairs the task force. The White House adamantly denied the exchange Troye described, with White House spokesperson Judd Deere saying โher assertions have no basis in reality and are flat out inaccurate."
Takeaways: Trump's town hall offered preview of debates
President Donald Trumpโs town hall in front of undecided Pennsylvania voters offered an intriguing preview of how he may approach his first debate against Democratic nominee Joe Biden in two weeks. LONG-PROMISED POLICY PLANSโWeโre signing a health care plan within two weeks,โ Trump said on July 19. MODERATORS MATTERABC News anchor George Stephanopoulos pushed back against some of Trumpโs comments but didnโt always challenge the presidentโs misstatements. But, facing a moderator and not an opponent, Trump was able to often set the tone for the discussion. A debate in which Trump is face-to-face with Biden and has a strict time limit will be a different challenge entirely.
Trump denies downplaying virus, casts doubt on mask usage
โThere are people that donโt think masks are good,โ Trump said, though his own Centers for Disease Control and Prevention strongly urges their use. Taped at the National Constitution Center in Philadelphia, it featured Trump taking questions from an audience of just 21 voters to comply with state and local coronavirus regulations. Trump has been unusually mum on his debate preparations ahead of the first debate, set to take place in Cleveland. โWell, I sort of prepare every day by just doing what Iโm doing,โ Trump said. Biden is to have his own opportunity to hone his skills taking questions from voters on Thursday, when he participates in a televised town hall hosted by CNN.
2020 Watch: How much more damage can Woodward do?
FILE - In this April 29, 2017, file photo journalist Bob Woodward sits at the head table during the White House Correspondents' Dinner in Washington. ___THE BIG QUESTIONSHow much more damage can Woodward do? There is no more expensive swing state on the 2020 map and there is no state more important to Trump's reelection than Florida. See it here: https://interactives.ap.org/advance-voting-2020/Every state allows voters to cast ballots before Nov. 3, either in person or by mail. ___2020 Watch runs every Monday and provides a look at the week ahead in the 2020 election.
As Trump played down virus, health experts' alarm grew
โThis is just good commonsense public health." Sandra Crouse Quinn, a University of Maryland professor who researches crisis communications during public health emergencies, said itโs critical not to overreassure people in a pandemic. Dr. Howard Koh of Harvardโs school of public health said unflinchingly communicating whatโs known as soon as possible helps build trust that will be necessary as the pandemic progresses. Koh said the role of the White House in a pandemic is to galvanize national attention for public health officials and then step out of the way. As the fallout played out last week, Trump got some backup from Fauci, who told Fox News that he didn't get the sense that Trump had distorted anything.
Trump's virus debate: Project strength or level with public
(AP Photo/Andrew Harnik, File)WASHINGTON โ โThe only thing we have to fear is fear itselfโ โ President Franklin D. Roosevelt. ___In times of crisis โ wars, hurricanes, pandemics โ effective leaders strike a balance between inspirational rhetoric and leveling with the public about the tough times ahead. โIn Trumpโs case, he was saying it was not a dire situation, he was putting people off their guard,โ Beschloss added. She cited public skepticism even after schools, sports, entertainment and other industries shut down to keep the virus at bay. Still, โyou want people to be informed and to make decisions that are for individual safety and for public safety.
Trump's talk of secret new weapon fits a pattern of puzzles
And now, a secret nuclear weapon. Some think he may have been talking about a nuclear warhead that was modified to reduce its explosive power. Known as the W76-2, this weapon certainly is unknown to the general public โ not because of secrecy or mystery but because of its obscurity. It cannot be ruled out that the U.S. is developing a new nuclear weapon in complete secrecy. A hypersonic weapon is one that flies at speeds in excess of Mach 5, or five times the speed of sound.
Trump, Biden commemorating 9/11 at Flight 93 memorial
President Donald Trump and his Democratic opponent, Joe Biden, will both be traveling to rural Shanksville, Pennsylvania, Friday, where the hijacked Flight 93 crashed in a field, killing everyone on board. While Trump will speak at the site's annual memorial ceremony held Friday morning, Biden will visit later, in the afternoon, after attending the 9/11 Memorial & Museumโs annual commemoration at Ground Zero in New York, along with Vice President Mike Pence. Still, Biden insisted that he would steer clear of politics on a national day of mourning. In 2016, the 9/11 memorial events became a flashpoint in the campaign after then-Democratic nominee Hillary Clinton abruptly left the Ground Zero 9/11 ceremony and was caught on tape stumbling and then falling as she tried to get into a van. The 2,200-acre Flight 93 National Memorial marks the spot in rural Pennsylvania where the hijacked flight crashed, killing all 40 people on board.
Trump, struggling to define Biden, steps up Harris attacks
But four years later, the president has plenty to say about Kamala Harris. โKamala Harris and her voting record helps make the case against Joe Biden,โ Murtaugh said. Like Biden, Harris has staked out relatively moderate stances over the course of her career on issues such as health care and law enforcement. Kamala,โ Trump said, mispronouncing and stretching out each syllable of her name each time he said it in North Carolina. By elevating and trying to define Harris, the Trump campaign is trying to change how voters view Biden.
Virginia lawmakers react to President Trumpโs comments to journalist Bob Woodward
ROANOKE, Va. โ Virginia lawmakers are reacting after released audio recordings of President Trump speaking about the COVID-19 pandemic. In taped interviews for a new book by journalist Bob Woodward, President Trump admitted back in February he was purposely playing down just how serious the virus was. โItโs a hard pill to swallow - the President of the United States knowingly misled the American people to believe we were safer than we were, and 180,000 Americans died,โ said Senator Mark Warner, (D) Virginia. Senator Tim Kaine also weighed in. Some Republican lawmakers, see it differently.
Collins won't say in debate who she'll vote for in November
PORTLAND, Maine โ Democrat Sara Gideon sought to link Republican Sen. Susan Collins, of Maine, with President Donald Trump during their first debate Friday night, and she demanded several times that Collins say whether sheโll vote for him โ a dare Collins wouldn't take. โLet me say this: I donโt think the people of Maine need my advice on whom to support for president,โ Collins said. Gideon already has raised more than $24 million, compared with more than $16 million for Collins, according to the latest campaign finance reports. That doesnโt include $3.8 million for Gideon that was crowdsourced by critics of Collins during the debate over Kavanaugh. Gideon had suggested five debates, while Collins proposed debating in each of Maineโs 16 counties.
Maddow beneficiary of scramble for attention by authors
NEW YORK โ It's high season for books that pick apart Donald Trump's presidency, and Rachel Maddow is a big beneficiary. With less than two months before the election, authors are elbowing each other for space on the best-seller lists. Conservative authors have also sought attention for new books during the political season. That was the case with Schmidt's book. Maddow gave more attention to Schmidt's discussion about why Trump's personal and business dealings with Russia have not been investigated.