FBI finds another classified document at home of former VP Mike Pence

Mike Pence FBI

The FBI discovered sensitive documents at the property of former vice president Mike Pence. The search was prompted by Pence’s assertion last month. Pence has directed his legal team to continue its cooperation with authorities. Two weeks after the Republican confessed to having a “limited number” of official files at his house, the FBI discovered … Read more

Queen cracks hilarious joke about Donald Trump after awkward moment at Buckingham Palace

Queen cracks

The late Queen was known for her wisecracks and wicked sense of humour. Buckingham Palace with Sir David Attenborough as they filmed the documentary. The Queen joked that climate change will affect the trees presented to her over the next 50 years. The amount of times that the late Queen expressed a personal opinion can … Read more

Donald Trump is back on Facebook and Instagram after two years

Donald Trump Instagram

The suspension of Facebook and Instagram of Donald Trump has been lifted. He was banned after praising those who were “involved in violence at the Capitol”. He has almost 23 million Instagram followers and 34 million Facebook fans. The suspension of the Facebook and Instagram profiles of Donald Trump for more than two years has … Read more

Ban on marijuana users owning guns is unconstitutional, U.S. judge rules

marijuana
  • Oklahoma federal judge said federal statute preventing marijuana users from possessing firearms is illegal.
  • The US Department of Justice did not respond to a request for comment.
  • New York State Rifle & Pistol Association v. Bruen, announced a new test for assessing firearms laws.

A federal statute preventing marijuana users from possessing firearms is illegal, according to an Oklahoma federal judge, citing a U.S. Supreme Court decision last year that greatly enlarged gun rights.

U.S. District Judge Patrick Wyrick, an appointee of former Republican President Donald Trump in Oklahoma City, dropped an indictment against a man charged in August with breaking that restriction, claiming it violated his right to possess guns under the Second Amendment to the United States Constitution.

Wyrick said that while the government can protect the public from dangerous people possessing guns, it could not argue Jared Harrison’s “mere status as a user of marijuana justifies stripping him of his fundamental right to possess a firearm.”

He said using marijuana was “not in and of itself a violent, forceful, or threatening act,” and noted that Oklahoma is one of a number of states where the drug, still illegal under federal law, can be legally bought for medical uses.

“The mere use of marijuana carries none of the characteristics that the Nation’s history and tradition of firearms regulation support,” Wyrick wrote.

Marijuana, the most common drug

Laura Deskin, a public defender representing Harrison, said the ruling was a “step in the right direction for a large number of Americans who deserve the right to bear arms and protect their homes just like any other American.” She called marijuana the most commonly used drug illegal at the federal level.

The US Department of Justice did not respond to a request for comment, but it is expected to file an appeal.

After the U.S. Supreme Court’s 6-3 conservative majority concluded in June that the Second Amendment protects a person’s right to carry a firearm in public for self-defense, the decision marked the latest instance of a court ruling a gun ban unlawful.

That ruling, New York State Rifle & Pistol Association v. Bruen, announced a new test for assessing firearms laws, saying restrictions must be “consistent with this nation’s historical tradition of firearm regulation.”

The 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in New Orleans referenced that ruling on Thursday in declaring illegal a federal law prohibiting those under domestic violence restraining orders from owning firearms.

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Ex-Brazilian president Jair Bolsonaro applied for six-month US visa

Jair Bolsonaro

Jair Bolsonaro has applied for a six-month tourist visa to the US. His attorney says he wants to “clear his head and enjoy being a tourist in the United States”. He is the subject of an inquiry in Brazil after violent protests earlier this month. Jair Bolsonaro, the former president of Brazil, has applied for … Read more

Trump’s 2024 campaign currently has a new appearance

Trump's
  • Donald Trump announces he’s running for US president in 2024.
  • He made his first campaign stops in New Hampshire and South Carolina on Saturday.
  • In both stops, he touted what he said was his record of success during his presidency.

As some have suspected, Donald Trump’s announcement that he will run for president of the United States in 2024 was not a prank or a scheme to evade prison. He is traveling and creating the kind of foundation required for a real effort to retake the White House.

The former president made his first campaign appearance outside of Florida on Saturday, nearly three months after announcing his bid.

He addressed a Republican Party gathering in New Hampshire and declared the departing state party chair would serve as a key campaign adviser. He also earned the support of Senator Lindsey Graham and South Carolina Governor Henry McMaster at the statehouse in Columbia.

The latter, a Trump ally who showed some disenchantment following the violence at the Capitol on January 6, 2021, is now firmly back in the fold.

How often have you heard the statement, “We like Trump’s policies, but we want someone new?” Mr. Graham questioned the audience. “Without Donald Trump, there would be no Trump policies. I was present.”

Once more, Mr. Trump disputed his loss in the 2020 election and assured his followers that he would be the most successful contender for the Republican Party in 2024, unlike any potential rivals.

He declared from the main hall of the state capitol, “To alter the whole system, you need a president who can take on the whole system and a president who can win.

In both appearances, Mr. Trump bragged about his accomplishments as president and criticized President Joe Biden’s record on crime, immigration, and the economy.

Trump will be permitted to return on Facebook and Instagram
Watch: Ron DeSantis: Five things you should know
The four biggest legal issues facing Trump

Todd Gerhardt, a Charleston-area Republican district executive committee member, was selling honey in plastic bottles styled like Donald Trump across the street.

Mr. Gerhardt organized a 2016 rally for Mr. Trump on opulent Kiawah Island in South Carolina and most recently paid a visit to the former president’s Mar-a-Lago estate for a fundraiser and to donate his honey for the campaign’s goodie bags. Mr. Gerhardt was an early supporter of Mr. Trump’s first presidential campaign.

He downplayed worries that Republican voters in South Carolina and elsewhere in the country would be seeking for a new nominee this time around, claiming that Mar-a-Lago had a joyful environment as the Trump team prepared for the next fight.

According to Gerhardt, “Trump has actually done it when people talk about other candidates running and they say I’m going to do this or I’m going to do that. He is using all of the oxygen in the space.

 

However, earlier in the day, at a street market a few streets from the capital, Mr. Trump’s visit to Columbia didn’t seem to make much of an impression. A customer at a nearby coffee shop complained that it was improper for the former president to host a campaign rally on state property, but the majority of people there were unaware that he was in town.

Another local remarked, “There doesn’t seem to be the same enthusiasm for Trump this time around.”

It’s no accident that South Carolina and New Hampshire were the first two destinations on Mr. Trump’s third presidential campaign tour. The two states may end up being crucial to Mr. Trump’s plan to win back the White House.

Although Mr. Trump placed third there in 2016, the evangelical Christians who control the state’s Republican electorate may be considering other candidates, such as former Vice President Mike Pence and former Secretary of State Mike Pompeo. Iowa is the first state to hold a Republican presidential nomination contest in 2024.

But Mr. Trump received a one-two punch from New Hampshire and South Carolina in 2016 that propelled him to the lead, which he never gave up.

The same thing is possible in 2024. In reality, South Carolina is distinct among the conventional early voting states in that every Republican presidential contender since 1980 has won the state’s primary.

But this time, South Carolina might present Mr. Trump with a special challenge. Senator Tim Scott and former governor Nikki Haley of the state could both run against him.

If this is a turning point for Mr. Trump, it comes as polls are beginning to stabilize in his favor following the Republican Party’s poor performance in the November midterm congressional elections.

A recent Emerson Poll revealed that 55% of Republican voters supported Mr. Trump, far more than the 29% who supported Florida Governor Ron DeSantis, who has not declared his candidacy but is seen as the former president’s most competitive opponent. In a December Monmouth poll, Mr. DeSantis was in the lead.

After his followers attacked the US Capitol building earlier this week, Meta suspended Mr. Trump’s accounts. This week, Meta declared that it was lifting the suspension. Even if the former president hasn’t started posting again, his reappearance might present another another chance for voter outreach and funding as his still-sparsely staffed campaign prepares for its 2024 bid.

If Mr. Trump’s previous presidential campaigns were fueled by rallies and Facebook donations, his stop in South Carolina was a different kind of operation.

It was a much more low-key affair than his usual arena gatherings with their carnival vibe, with barely 300 announced guests. It was more common to see sport jackets and gowns than “Make America Great Again” clothing.

However, Mr. Trump will need the backing of both his rally-goers and the political rank-and-file in places like New Hampshire and South Carolina to win a third Republican presidential nomination. While Mr. Trump continues to perform well in national surveys, nearly half of Republican voters in a recent South Carolina poll said they would choose “someone else” over Mr. Trump.

However, the name “someone else” won’t be on the primary ballot. And since he is still the only declared contender with just over a year until voting begins, Donald Trump is experimenting with various approaches to make his case.

In New Hampshire, Mr. Trump added, “They say he’s not holding rallies and he’s not campaigning, maybe he’s lost his stride.” I’m angrier now,

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Meta to reinstate Trump’s account on its platforms

Meta
  • President Trump is one of the country’s leading political figures.
  • The ACLU has filed over 400 legal actions against Trump.
  • He was barred for two years  from using the platforms due to the 2021 US Capitol insurgency.

SAN FRANCISCO: Meta, the social networking giant, announced Tuesday that it would soon reinstate former President Donald Trump‘s accounts on Facebook and Instagram with “new guardrails,” two years after he was barred from using the platforms due to the 2021 US Capitol insurgency.

“We will be reinstating Mr. Trump’s Facebook and Instagram accounts in the coming weeks,” Nick Clegg, Meta’s president of global affairs, said in a statement, adding that the move would come with “new guardrails in place to deter repeat offenses.”

Clegg stated that the Republican leader, who has already declared himself a presidential candidate for 2024, could be suspended for up to two years for each violation of platform policies in the future.

It was unclear when or if Trump would return to the platforms, and his representatives did not respond to a request for comment immediately.

However, the 76-year-old tycoon responded in typically bullish fashion, claiming that Facebook had lost “billions of dollars in value” while he was gone.

“Such a thing should never happen again to a sitting President, or anyone else who is undeserving of retribution!” he declared on his Truth Social platform.

Facebook banned Trump a day after a mob of his supporters stormed the US Capitol in Washington on January 6, 2021, seeking to prevent the certification of his election defeat to Joe Biden.

The former reality television star had spent weeks falsely claiming that the presidential election had been stolen from him, and he was later impeached for inciting the riot.

Trump’s lawyer Scott Gast said last week in a letter asking for the ban to be lifted that Meta had “dramatically distorted and inhibited public discourse.”

He requested a meeting to discuss Trump’s “immediate reinstatement to the platform” of Facebook, where he had 34 million followers, arguing that his position as the Republican nominee in 2024 justified it.

Anthony Romero, executive director of the American Civil Liberties Union, said Meta was making “the right decision” by reintroducing Trump to the social network.

“Whether you like it or not, President Trump is one of the country’s leading political figures, and the public is eager to hear his speech,” Romero said in a statement.

“In fact, some of Trump’s most inflammatory social media posts were used as critical evidence in lawsuits filed against him and his administration.”

According to Romero, the ACLU has filed over 400 legal actions against Trump.

Extremism engine?

However, advocacy groups such as Media Matters for America are vehemently opposed to Trump using Facebook’s social networking reach.

“Make no mistake: by reintroducing Donald Trump to its platforms, Meta is refueling Trump’s misinformation and extremism engine,” Media Matters president Angelo Carusone said.

“Not only will this affect Instagram and Facebook users, but it also poses increased threats to civil society and an existential threat to US democracy as a whole.”

In December, a US congressional committee recommended that Trump be prosecuted for his role in the US Capitol attack.

After the riot, his Twitter account, which has 88 million followers, was also blocked, forcing him to communicate through Truth Social, which has fewer than five million followers.

Trump’s unexpected victory in 2016 was attributed in part to his use of social media and his vast digital reach.

According to Andrew Selepak, a social media professor at the University of Florida, Facebook does not want to go to war with Trump’s congressional supporters, who are likely to protest if he is barred from using the platform.

“Trump needs the platform for fundraising, and Facebook doesn’t want to testify in front of Congress,” Selepak wrote on Twitter.

Conservative republican leaders have raged against Trump being booted from Facebook, while a group of Democrats in Congress last month urged Meta to extend the ban to keep “dangerous and unfounded election denial content off its platform.”

New Twitter owner Elon Musk reinstated Trump’s account last November, days after Trump announced a fresh White House run. He has yet to post.

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At Biden’s house, six more secret documents gets seized

secret documents

  The US Department of Justice (DoJ) searched Joe Biden’s Delaware home. Secret documents spanning both his time as a senator and as Barack Obama’s vice president were found. DoJ also took away “personally handwritten notes,” Mr. Biden’s lawyer said. On Friday, documents spanning both his time as a senator and his time as as … Read more

US judge fines Trump nearly $1m for Clinton lawsuit

Clinton lawsuit

Trump and one of his attorneys ordered to pay $1m in fines for ‘frivolous’ lawsuit. Judge called Mr. Trump a ‘serial litigant’ who ‘seeks revenge’. Mr. Trump hasn’t answered right away. Donald Trump and one of his attorneys have been ordered by a US judge to pay over $1 million (£809,190) in fines for a … Read more

Donald Trump ordered to pay $1 million in the Hillary Clinton lawsuit

Donald Trump
  • Donald Trump was penalized with a roughly $1 million fine for suing Hillary Clinton.
  • A US district court judge rejected Trump’s complaint in September of last year.
  • Judge John Middlebrooks said Trump had a history of abusing the legal system.

Donald Trump and his legal team were penalized with a roughly $1 million fine for suing Hillary Clinton over alleged election fraud in 2016.

Sanctions were required, according to a US district court judge who rejected Trump’s complaint in September of last year because Trump “exhibited a record of manipulating the courts to achieve his political goal.”

According to US district judge John Middlebrooks, the former president had a history of abusing the legal system to achieve his political goals.

“This case ought never to have been filed. Its unsuitability as a legal claim was clear from the beginning.”

President Bill Clinton named Middlebrooks to the court in 1997. In September, Middlebrooks rejected the case, describing it as “a two-hundred-page political diatribe articulating his complaints against those that have opposed him.”

WHOSE CASE IS THIS?

Hillary Clinton, his opponent in the 2016 presidential election, was named in a lawsuit filed by Donald Trump, who claimed that she and other Democrats tried to rig the election by falsely accusing the Trump campaign of having ties to Russia.

Republican candidate Donald Trump ran for reelection in 2020 but lost to Democrat Joe Biden. As a result, Trump made numerous false statements and blamed his loss on rampant voter fraud.

He announced his candidacy for president in 2024, perhaps setting up a rematch with Joe Biden.

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Brazilian President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva dismisses 13 more military personnel after riots

Lula da Silva

Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva has fired 13 more military personnel. 40 military personnel were expelled from the Alvorada presidential house. Lula had criticized the military for failing to intervene during riots. On Wednesday, Brazilian President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva fired 13 more military personnel from the National Protection Advisor’s office, which is in … Read more

Donald Trump lashes out at evangelicals for showing ‘sign of disloyality’

Donald Trump

Former President Donald Trump lashed out at evangelicals for not supporting his presidential campaign. The religious voting bloc that was crucial to his victory in 2016 has yet to publicly endorse him. Trump called the lack of support a “sign of disloyalty,” during an interview with Real America’s Voice. After appointing three conservative Supreme Court … Read more

Republicans accuse US President Joe Biden of hypocrisy

Republicans accuse US President Joe Biden

At least 20 documents from Mr. Biden’s time serving as vice president. Documents have been discovered at his Washington, D.C. residence. The contents of the documents are unknown, although some were called “Top Secret”. Republicans have accused US President Joe Biden of hypocrisy, following the discovery of additional sensitive documents at his Delaware residence. “If … Read more

Republicans want house visitor logs for Biden, but not for Trump

BIDEN
  • Republicans have sought to compare the Biden records issue.
  • Sensitive materials were discovered in his office and garage.
  • Trump has announced that he will run for president again in 2024.

The Republican chairman of the House Oversight Committee on Sunday demanded visitor logs for President Joe Biden‘s house in Wilmington, Delaware, after classified documents were found in his office and garage.

“Without a list of individuals who have visited his residence, the American people will never know who had access to these highly sensitive documents,” Representative James Comer said in a letter to White House Chief of Staff Ron Klain dated Sunday.

Republicans have sought to compare the Biden records issue, which covers data from his tenure as vice president, with that of former President Donald Trump, who is facing a federal criminal investigation into how he handled secret documents after leaving the White House in 2021.

Comer said he would not seek visitor logs for Trump’s Mar-a-Lago estate, where an FBI search turned up more than 100 classified documents, some of them labeled top secret.

“I don’t feel we need to spend a lot of time on it because the Democrats have done it for the past six years,” he said in an interview.

Trump has announced that he will run for president again in 2024, with Biden set to be his Democratic opponent.

The Biden revelations came to light last week when his legal team announced that they had discovered secret documents relating to his stint as vice president in the Obama administration at his Delaware home. His lawyers on Saturday claimed to uncover five extra pages at his residence.

Some of the ten or so documents discovered at the Penn Biden Center think tank contained top secret information, CBS said on Sunday, citing an unidentified law enforcement source. The White House did not respond to the report. Bob Bauer, Biden’s lawyer, did not respond to a request for comment.

TRUMP VS. BIDEN DOCUMENT ISSUES

Republicans initiated a probe into the Justice Department’s handling of inappropriately held secret papers belonging to Biden on Friday. Comer’s committee is also looking into the matter.

In the Biden case, the president’s lawyers notified the National Archives and the Justice Department of the discovery of a small number of documents at a Washington think tank and later at Biden’s Wilmington home.

In Trump‘s case, the National Archives unsuccessfully attempted to retrieve all of the data he maintained after leaving the office for more than a year. When Trump ultimately surrendered 15 cartons of records in January 2022, authorities at the National Archives realized they included secret information.

After the case was brought to the Justice Department, Trump’s lawyers turned over further evidence from Trump’s Mar-a-Lago estate and stated that there were no more records on the property.

That turned out to be incorrect. In the end, the FBI found an additional 13,000 documents from the estate, approximately 100 of which were marked classified.

House Democrats introduced the “Mar-a-Lago Act” in 2017 that would require Trump to regularly disclose visitors to his Florida home, but it was never voted on in the chamber or full Congress.

The outgoing head of the House Intelligence Committee, Democratic Representative Adam Schiff, said Congress should request an assessment from the US intelligence agency on whether any materials from Trump or Biden risked national security.

“I don’t think we can rule anything out without knowing additional details,” Schiff said.

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Why do Indian politics appear to be so devoid of issues?

Politics
  • People are too preoccupied with making a living to care about complex policy concerns.
  • India’s population is not literate or educated enough to engage in complex policy concerns.
  • People have determined that we, the people, are uninterested.

Climate change is one of the reasons for water scarcity in India’s hill states: the amount of rainfall and snowfall in the hills has decreased. This is a lived reality, not a fantasy.

However, no one appears to care. In Himachal Pradesh or Uttarakhand, climate change was not an election topic. Parties were not competing to see who had the greatest strategy to tackle climate change.

Some argue that issues such as climate change and air pollution do not become political issues because most people are preoccupied with economic concerns. People are too preoccupied with making a living to care about complex policy concerns. In such circumstances, unemployment and inflation should be significant concerns. However, they are hardly mentioned in contemporary political discourse.

Is there no concern about air pollution? They would not be purchasing air purifiers if they were not. Many people cannot afford an air purifier but would like to have one. Why don’t people put enough pressure on politicians to push them to propose competing solutions for combating air pollution? This was not an issue in the recently held municipal elections in Delhi, which were held amid the peak of the smog season.

Politicians claim that people aren’t concerned enough about these concerns to influence elections. Voters believe politicians are unconcerned about these concerns. It’s a case of chicken and egg.

The Identity Politics Trap

So, what do politicians believe voters care about? Caste, religion, freebies, and power. When asked voters about this during my electoral travels, they blamed politicians.

Why do you vote based on caste? “Because that’s how politicians see us.”

As a result, the most pressing concerns of our time are relegated to the pages of manifestos that no one reads. The fact that these manifestos are presented a day or two before election day demonstrates how important our politicians believe issues are.

Even the worst populist, such as Donald Trump, will go from state to state, making boasts about how many jobs his programs helped create in that state. Climate change has recently been the most contentious subject in Australian elections, aiding in the fall of the incumbent party. People in the United Kingdom care about whether or not the National Health Service is appropriately funded when they vote.

The traditional explanation was that India’s population is not literate or educated enough to engage in complex policy concerns. That is nonsense: there is a big critical mass of Indians who are educated, engaged, and capable of participating in public policy issues.

Public opinion crystallisation

The answer is that no one is taking the initiative in establishing the agenda. A weakened civic society is unable to capture the attention of the media. Our opposition parties are befuddled in an era of BJP dominance, frequently depressed that the public does not respond to them.

If someone had told you in 2010 that India would see a large anti-corruption campaign demanding a new ombudsman, you would have laughed. Lawmaking is not the material of popular uprisings. But that is exactly what happened in 2011. Similarly, in 2011, you could have been disappointed that women’s safety is not a political issue in India. However, it became one in 2012, so much so that women’s safety became an election issue in 2013-14.

Climate change, air pollution, educational quality, the need to boost public investment in health, the necessity for a data privacy law, and even a re-examination of the misuse of special laws can all become major public problems. All they need is a spark. A party, a leader, a non-profit, or the media could be the catalyst.

Who will bell the cat?

Unfortunately, no one appears to want to attempt. People have determined that we, the people, are uninterested. Nobody likes to ring the bell.

Walking from Kanyakumari to Kashmir, from the southern to the northern tip of the Indian peninsula, Rahul Gandhi has wasted his effort in abstraction. He has gone from the philosophical to the transcendental.

Instead of gaining attention on the topics that matter to the public, he’s creating headlines for training students in martial arts and alleging that ‘Rahul Gandhi has killed Rahul Gandhi’. A typical civilian on the route would have no idea what the Bharat Jodo Yatra was about.

The word “leader” means someone who leads. Indian politicians will have to have faith in the people to start setting the agenda, start talking about things that really matter, and make them the center of our politics.

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Second batch of classified Biden documents discovered

classified Biden documents

Secret documents discovered by aides to US Vice President at second location. The first cache was discovered at his post vice presidential private office. US Dept of Justice is investigating how the secret documents ended up with Biden’s staff. A new set of secret federal documents have been discovered by the aides to US Vice … Read more

The Queen asked Meghan Markle about Donald Trump in first meeting: Spare

Queen asked Meghan Markle

The Queen asked Meghan Markle about Donald Trump the first time they met. The pair met at the Duke of York’s Berkshire home ahead of the 2016 US election. The Duke of Sussex said the meeting was “pleasant” and the Queen looked “pleased”. The Queen asked Meghan Markle about her thoughts on Donald Trump the … Read more