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Showing posts with label Donald Trump. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Donald Trump. Show all posts

Thursday, 27 April 2017

Restrictive: Trump says he believed being president would be less demanding than his previous lifestyle

He misses driving, feels as though he is in a cover, and is amazed how hard his new occupation is.

"I adored my past life. I had such a large number of things going," Trump told Reuters in a meeting. "This is more work than in my past life. I thought it would be less demanding."

An affluent businessperson from New York, Trump expected open office surprisingly when he went into the White House on Jan. 20 after he vanquished previous Secretary of State Hillary Clinton in a surprise.

Over five months after his triumph and two days short of the 100-day characteristic of his administration, the decision is still at the forefront of Trump's thoughts. Halfway through a dialog about Chinese President Xi Jinping, the president stopped to give out duplicates of what he said were the most recent figures from the 2016 discretionary guide.

"Here, you can take that, that is the last guide of the numbers," the Republican president said from his work area in the Oval Office, passing out maps of the United States with territories he won set apart in red. "It's truly great, isn't that so? The red is clearly us."

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Tuesday, 25 April 2017

Canada to Trump on exchange: 'Not a mischance that hockey is our national game'



Canada's remote clergyman on Tuesday said her country would battle levies from President Trump's organization that it finds uncalled for.

"We're pleasant folks: Politeness is something we accept is a national ideals, yet it's not a mischance that hockey is our national game."

Trump prior Tuesday made light of worries of an exchange war with Canada after his organization slapped taxes on Canadian softwood amble.

"No," he told columnists when inquired as to whether he fears that situation.

Trump's choice to force duties of as much as 24 percent on Canadian softwood imports touched off a long-stewing question between the two close exchanging accomplices.

Trump has additionally centered feedback around the dairy showcase and the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA), starting worries of a more extensive exchange strife.

Canada is America's second biggest exchanging accomplice, with $575 billion in two-way merchandise traded in 2015.

The U.S. had a $15 billion exchange deficiency with Canada in 2015, as indicated by figures aggregated by the Office of the U.S. Exchange Representative. 

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Monday, 24 April 2017

Latest News

Donald Trump says Mexico ""in the long run"" will pay for fringe divider

Washington: President Donald Trump said on Sunday he anticipated that Mexico would pay for the divider he has guaranteed to work along the southern fringe, reviving a crusade guarantee that bothered US. relations with Mexico in the primary week of his administration.

Trump came back to his Mexico request on a morning in which he at the same time attempted to weight congressional Democrats to incorporate financing for the outskirt divider in must-pass spending enactment expected to keep the US government open past Friday.

A representative for the Mexican president`s office said President Enrique Pena Nieto has rehashed that Mexico won't pay for the divider.

The Republican president`s request that Mexico pay for the outskirt divider set off a conciliatory emergency with the southern US neighbor amid the principal week of his administration. Pena Nieto on Jan. 26 rejected an arranged trek to meet with Trump and the White House drifted the possibility of a 20 percent assess on merchandise from Mexico to pay for the divider.

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Sunday, 2 April 2017

President’s Growing Trade Gap: A Gulf Between Talk and Action

WASHINGTON — Increasingly, with regards to outside exchange, the Trump organization is talking boisterously and wielding a little stick.

The enlarging hole between President Trump's contentious talk and the humble activities of his organization was again in plain view Friday evening as he managed at the stately marking of two official requests. They would, he stated, "set the phase for an incredible recovery of American assembling."

"Under my organization, the burglary of American flourishing will end," he said.

Be that as it may, the new requests, approving an extensive research think about and reinforced authorization of a current law, are probably not going to impact a noteworthy change in the country's fortunes. Rather, the service highlighted a rising example on exchange.

Mr. Trump impacted the Trans-Pacific Partnership as a "potential catastrophe" and made an extraordinary show of expelling the United States from the sanction procedure. On Friday, one of Mr. Trump's top counsels on exchange said the Trump organization wanted to utilize the hated assention as a "beginning stage" for its own particular arrangements. Mobile Number database provider

Mr. Trump depicted the North American Free Trade Agreement with Mexico and Canada as history's most noticeably bad exchange arrangement, and pledged to upgrade or supplant it. The White House is presently wanting to look for generally unobtrusive changes in the assention, as per a draft archive gave to key individuals from Congress.

Source:-Nytimes

Sunday, 22 January 2017

Trump turns to routine matters after day of bashing media

WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump, who spent his first full day in office berating the media over their coverage of his inauguration, will spend Sunday engaged in more routine matters, like overseeing the swearing in of high-level staffers.

On the second full day of his administration, Trump will see the “assistants to the president” sworn in, according to his press secretary, Sean Spicer. He’ll also hold a reception for law enforcement officers and first responders who helped with his inauguration as he celebrates his 12th wedding anniversary.

White House staff are scheduled to have a briefing on ethics and another on the proper use and handling of classified information as they begin to make themselves comfortable in their new White House offices.

While Trump has said that he’ll consider Monday his first real day in office, he is already making clear that sparring with the press will be a defining aspect of his administration. Amaze Servers

Trump turned a bridge-building first visit to CIA headquarters on Saturday into an airing of grievances about “dishonest” journalists, while wildly overstating the size of the crowd that gathered on the National Mall as he took the oath of office. Trump said throngs “went all the way back to the Washington monument,” despite photos and live video showing the crowd stopping well short of the landmark.

Source:-Washingtonpost

Friday, 15 July 2016

Nice Attack: Islamic terror, wilful denial and rise of right-wing forces

When a terrorist attack takes place — and most are targeted against unarmed civilians in virtually every sphere of public life — the initial reaction of shock and horror is quickly replaced by anger. Grief needs a catharsis. In absence of the terrorists who have perpetrated the crime, the anger turns towards the political leaders whose job it is to provide security.

The blood has not yet been wiped off the streets of Nice that France has turned against President Francois Hollande. TV channels covering the Thursday night tragedy, showed how unmitigated anger poured out against a President largely seen as effete, ineffective and incapable of preventing waves and waves of terror attacks on French soil.

The attack in Nice was as gruesome a terror strike as any. Latest reports indicate that 84 people were killed when a large white truck, said to be driven by a French-Tunisian citizen, ploughed into a large crowd, who gathered at the beachfront Promenade des Anglais in southern city of Nice for a fireworks display on Bastille Day. Local French media reported that the driver shouted "Allahu Akbar" before taking out his gun and firing several times at the crowd before he was subsequently neutralised.

Bastille Day commemorates the Storming of the Bastille on 14 July, 1789, an important event in the French Revolution. It is marked with a military parade down Paris' most famous boulevard, a presidential address to the nation and a vast fireworks display. Founding values of French Republic, equality, liberty and fraternity, are glorified.

The significance of the day and the fact that a large number of citizens had gathered for celebration — made it a lucrative target. In one fell blow, two purposes were achieved. One, a huge number of people were killed ensuring widespread outrage and non-stop media coverage — aspects which serve as fuel for glorification of terror and draws more and more perpetrators. Two, a symbolic, cruel blow was dealt to the French ideal of syncretism, the bedrock on which the multicultural republic stands.

Source: http://www.firstpost.com

Wednesday, 18 May 2016

Trump, Clinton campaign will be nasty—and that's good news

As the presidential election looks to be featuring two of the most polarizing candidates in modern American politics, we can expect a hard sell of potential stories and ads to try and make Donald Trump and Hillary Clinton more appealing. But the real deciding factor will once again be an avalanche of negative advertising, designed to tear down the policies and besmirch the personal behavior of the other side. Already, commentators are expecting an historical use of negative campaigning. And voters should be thankful for this.

Appropriately, negative ads and campaigns get a very bad rap. They turn off voters, demonize opponents for perfectly acceptable policy disputes and coarsen the political culture — all of these are legitimate complaints. But negative campaigns are still a breath of fresh air compared to the toxic potential of positive ads.

 Positive campaigns may be loved in theory, but in reality they are not idealized "Lincoln vs Douglas" debates, with each side courteously presenting their argument. They are instead frequently issue-free, focused on the perceived personal benefits of the candidate's previous career and sunny pictures of family.

By now, with a stream of embarrassing sex scandals hitting the papers—and with a grandfatherly former Speaker of the House now serving time due to his action related to sexual assaults—we should hope that voters won't buy into the tightly controlled stories about happy political families. But those stories, and the other inspirational pieces about rising from nothing to seek high office, are all part of the same problem of positive campaigns: They are really designed to tell as little as possible about a candidate's actual policy.



Even when they do manage to deal with issues, positive policy proposals are presented in a facile manner, frequently with untruths and a complete unwillingness to face up to the likelihood of success versus failure. Donald Trump's critics have loudly proclaimed that most of his ever-changing policy proclamations are impossible to carry out.

Trump and his supporters have said the same about some of his competitors' plans, and will undoubtedly try to use the same arguments against Clinton. The only way for voters to actually judge these arguments is negative campaigns. Positive ads will not expose the elisions. Only negative ones have any hope of blasting holes and exposing the policy weaknesses of a candidate's pie-in-the-sky plans.

But that is not the biggest benefit of negative ads. They are simply more truthful and fact-based than negative ones. Vanderbilt University Professor John Geer, the author of In "Defense of Negativity: Attack Ads in Presidential Campaigns," has noted that negative ads may be unpleasant but they end up presenting vastly more factual information—60 percent more on average—than the shiny happy positive variety.

What negative ads do is present a strong policy contrast for voters, giving them a chance to draw a real distinction between the two candidates. Negative ads distort information—context is always left out and they take the absolute worst possible interpretation of any action by an opponent. But they are usually very issue-based and much more precise and detailed than the positive and glowing ads in favor of a candidate.


Source: http://www.cnbc.com