Tag: Biden

  • House Democrat Schiff predicts Harris could win, if Biden drops out

    House Democrat Schiff predicts Harris could win, if Biden drops out

    A house Democrat who is likely to become California’s next senator in the November election, Adam Schiff, said he thought Kamala Harris could win the election, if Joe Biden drops out.
    “The interview didn’t put concerns to rest. No single interview is going to do that,” Schiff said on NBC News. “And what I do think the president needs to decide is: can he put those concerns aside? Can he demonstrate the American people that what happened on the debate stage was an aberration?”

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    Referring to the vice-president, Schiff said: “I think she very well could win overwhelmingly, but before we get into a decision about who else it should be, the president needs to make a decision about whether it’s him.”
    He added: “Either he has to win overwhelmingly, or he has to pass the torch to someone who can.”

  • Remain in White House race, family urges Biden

    Remain in White House race, family urges Biden

    Democratic’s family has urged him to ignore calls to step aside following his disastrous debate against Republican Donald Trump.

    He spent Sunday with relatives at a presidential retreat where they encouraged him to keep fighting, according to the BBC’s US partner CBS News.

    Anxiety has gripped sections of his party following a rambling and at times incoherent performance in Atlanta.

    Polls since then suggest concerns about his age – he is 81 – have increased.

    A CBS News/YouGov poll released on Sunday indicated that 72% of registered Democratic voters believe the president does not have the mental and cognitive health to serve as president. Nearly half said he should step aside.

    But the message from his campaign team and his family is that he remains the party’s best hope to defeat Trump.

    The family gathering at Camp David in Maryland had been previously scheduled as a photoshoot by celebrity photographer Annie Leibovitz. Biden’s wife Jill, his children and grandchildren were among those present.

    Jill Biden told Vogue magazine in a phone call from Camp David that they “will not let those 90 minutes define the four years he’s been president”.

    Read Also: Biden acknowledges age, bad debate performance, but vows Trump’s defeat

    They would continue fighting, she said, adding that her husband “will always do what’s best for the country”.

    The encouragement of the family to stay the course was first reported by the New York Times and later confirmed by CBS News.

    Some relatives have reportedly blamed his poor performance on over-preparation by his aides. A person close to Jill Biden told CBS she was not among those criticising his team.

    Concerns about the age of both candidates – Biden is only three years older than Trump who is 78 – were present before Thursday’s debate.

    But Biden’s weak voice and muddled answers renewed concerns about his candidacy and left some calling for him to step aside.

  • Biden unravelling

    Biden unravelling

    Millions across the world joined millions of Americans to watch the country’s presidential debate last Thursday and the apparent outcome was humbling as it was unnerving: old man Joe Biden is in age-related meltdown. The verdict from the debate for the 81-year-old president who is seeking another term in the United States’ November elections seemed all too clear to many. It was a disaster!

    Before viewers’ very eyes, the octogenarian who is the oldest in US history to be seeking the world’s most powerful office stuttered and doddered in the face of taunts by not-too-young former President Donald Trump, who is seeking a return to the White House despite a first term so chaotic that many – even outside of American shores – wish an encore is evitable. Trump himself is 78 years of age, but he staged a relatively forceful performance that made his three-year age difference from Biden, who displaced him in the 2020 US election, seem like a generation.

    Biden, for Democrats, and Trump, for Republicans, locked horns in the Atlanta studios of frontline news network, CNN. The debate was aired live across the world, though there was no studio audience on hand. Immediate feedback from American voters was that respective performance by both oldies was underwhelming. But the performance by President Biden took ‘underwhelming’ to a new high. CNN’s analysis described the president as having posted the weakest performance since John F. Kennedy and Richard Nixon started the tradition of televised debates in 1960 – then, as on Thursday, in a television studio with no audience.

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    Biden’s performance reportedly left his party into panic mode over his chances, with barely five months before the US heads to the polls. “Biden has rooted his reelection in the idea that he is the last thing standing between America and a second Trump presidency that would destroy democracy and usher in an unprecedented era of American autocracy. Voters who take him at his word could not help but be alarmed at his abject debate showing,” CNN wrote in one of its analyses. “Biden’s voice was weak, at times reduced to a whisper. Early on, the president’s answers drifted into incoherence. He missed openings to jab Trump on abortion – the top Democratic talking point – and meandered into highlighting his own biggest political liability, immigration. ‘We finally beat Medicare,’ Biden said at one point, lapsing into confused silence. It was the kind of debate gaffe that Democrats had hoped to avoid. Worse, while Trump spoke, Biden often watched, his mouth gaping open, exacerbating an impression of a president cruelly diminished. His bravura battering of Trump in a debate four years ago was a distant memory,” the news site added.

    It may well be the world is witnessing an involuntary winding out of the Biden era.

  • Biden acknowledges age, bad debate performance, but vows Trump’s defeat

    Biden acknowledges age, bad debate performance, but vows Trump’s defeat

    President Joe Biden said on Friday he intended to defeat Republican rival Donald Trump in the November presidential election, giving no sign he would consider dropping out of the race.

    Biden was speaking after a feeble debate performance that dismayed his fellow Democrats.

    “I know I’m not a young man, to state the obvious,” an ebullient Biden said at a rally one day after the head-to-head showdown with his Republican rival – a showdown widely viewed as a defeat for the 81-year-old president.

    “I don’t walk as easy as I used to; I don’t speak as smoothly as I used to; I don’t debate as well as I used to,” he said, as the crowd chanted “four more years.”

    “I would not be running again if I didn’t believe with all my heart and soul that I could do this job. The stakes are too high,” Biden said.

    Biden’s verbal mumbles and occasionally meandering responses in the debate heightened voter concerns that he might not be fit to serve another four-year term.

    This prompted some of his fellow Democrats to wonder whether they could replace him as their candidate for the Nov. 5 U.S. election.

    Campaign spokesperson Michael Tyler said no conversations were taking place about that possibility.

    “We’d rather have one bad night than a candidate with a bad vision for where he wants to take the country,” he told reporters aboard Air Force One.

    The campaign handlers held an “all-hands-on-deck” meeting on Friday afternoon to reassure staffers that Biden was not dropping out of the race, according to two people familiar with the meeting.

    Though Trump, 78, put forward a series of falsehoods throughout the debate, the focus afterward was squarely on Biden, especially among Democrats.

    Hakeem Jeffries, the Democratic Party leader in the U.S. House of Representatives, avoided answering directly when asked whether he still had faith in Biden’s candidacy.

    “I support the ticket. I support the Senate Democratic majority. We’re going to do everything possible to take back the House in November. Thank you, everyone,” he told reporters.

    Some other Democrats likewise demurred when asked if Biden should stay in the race.

    “That’s the president’s decision,” Democratic Senator Jack Reed told a local TV station in Rhode Island.

    But several of the party’s most senior figures, including former presidents Bill Clinton and Barack Obama, said they were sticking with Biden.

    “Bad debate nights happen. Trust me, I know. But this election is still a choice between someone who has fought for ordinary folks his entire life and somebody who only cares about himself,” former Democratic president, Obama wrote on X.

    The New York Times editorial board that endorsed Biden in 2020, called on him to drop out of the race to give the Democratic Party a better chance of beating Trump by picking another candidate.

    “The greatest public service Mr Biden can now perform is to announce that he will not continue to run for re-election,” the editorial said.

    The Biden campaign said it raised 14 million dollars on Thursday and Friday and posted its single best hour of fundraising immediately after the Thursday night debate.

    The Trump campaign said it raised 8 million dollars on the night of the debate.

    One possible bright spot for Biden: preliminary viewership data indicated that only 48 million Americans watched the debate, far short of the 73 million who watched the candidates’ last face-off in 2020.

    Biden, already the oldest American president in history, faced only token opposition during the party’s months-long nominating contest, and he has secured enough support to guarantee his spot as the Democratic nominee.

    Trump likewise overcame his intra-party challengers early in the year, setting the stage for a long and bitter general election fight.

    If Biden were to step aside, the party would have less than two months to pick another nominee at its national convention, which starts on Aug. 19 – a potentially messy process that could pit Kamala Harris, the nation’s first Black female vice president, against governors and other officeholders whose names have been floated as possible replacements.

    At an afternoon rally in Chesapeake, Virginia, Trump told supporters that he had a “big victory against a man looking to destroy our country.”

    “Joe Biden’s problem is not his age. It’s his competence,” Trump said.

    Trump advisers said they thought the debate would bolster their chances in Democratic-leaning states like Virginia, which has not backed a Republican presidential candidate since 2004.

    Beforehand, some Trump supporters said they were struck by Biden’s poor performance. “I’m scared they are going to replace him and put up somebody more competitive,” said Mike Boatman, who added that he had attended more than 90 Trump rallies.

    Read Also: Biden, Trump set for high-stakes in U.S. election debate

    Trump fundraisers said they were fielding enthusiastic calls from donors.

    “Anyone who raises money knows there’s a time to go to donors, and this is one of those watershed moments,” said Ed McMullen, who served as ambassador to Switzerland during Trump’s presidency.

    Questions about Trump’s fitness for office have also arisen over his conviction last month in New York for covering up a hush money payment to a porn star, his efforts to overturn the 2020 election, and his chaotic term in office.

    He is scheduled to be sentenced on July 11, just days before his party convenes to nominate him formally.

    He still faces three other criminal indictments, though none appears likely to reach trial before November.

    Biden’s shaky performance in the debate drew stunned global reactions on Friday, prompting public calls for him to step aside thus giving some of America’s closest allies a hefty encouragement to steel up for Trump’s return.

    (Reuters/NAN)

  • Biden, Trump set for high-stakes in U.S. election debate

    Biden, Trump set for high-stakes in U.S. election debate

    President Joe Biden and former President Donald Trump are preparing for the biggest moment so far in the United States election — the first of two high-stakes debates that could upend the race.

    Today’s showdown will raise the campaigning to boiling point, with both camps recently escalating their increasingly personal attacks.

    “I think I have been preparing for it for my whole life…We’ll do very well,” Trump told right-wing network Newsmax in an interview on his debate preparation.

    The 2024 election looks close, with Trump enjoying a slight polling advantage in the all-important swing states in an election likely to be decided by a few hundred thousand votes across a handful of battlegrounds.

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    The rivals will both step onstage for the 90-minute clash, to be hosted by CNN in the southern city of Atlanta, seeking to allay fears about serious political liabilities.

    Biden, 81, faces the most concern about his mental sharpness, with voters much more likely to bring up his age than Trump’s, despite the Republican being just three years younger.

    Both have faltered and appeared muddled during public events, although Trump in particular has raised eyebrows over his rambling and occasionally bizarre campaign speeches.

    Trump is also engulfed in controversy over his inflammatory rhetoric and a glut of criminal cases he faces, as well as fears that he would weaponise the presidency to settle personal scores.

    Biden spent the week off the radar at the mountainside retreat of Camp David near Washington, preparing with mock debates.

    Trump’s preparation has been more relaxed, eschewing dress rehearsals in favour of informal policy roundtables and workshopping debate strategy with rally crowds.

  • Biden to pardon US military veterans convicted of homosexuality

    Biden to pardon US military veterans convicted of homosexuality

    President Joe Biden is expected to pardon US veterans who were convicted by the military over a 60-year period under a military law that banned gay sex, three US officials told CNN.

    The pardon proclamation is expected to be announced on Wednesday and one official said it is set to affect roughly 2,000 people. The granting of pardons won’t automatically change convicted veterans’ records but allows those impacted to apply for a certificate of pardon that will help them receive withheld benefits.

    The pardon, which CNN is first to report on, specifically grants clemency to service members who were convicted under former Uniform Code of Military Justice Article 125 — which criminalized sodomy, including between consenting adults — between 1951 and 2013 when it was rewritten by Congress. It also applies to those who were convicted of attempting to commit those offenses.

    Anyone who was convicted of a non-consensual act such as rape will not be pardoned.

    The White House did not respond to a request for comment.

    Separately, the law known as “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell” was repealed by Congress in 2011, but not before thousands of service members had been discharged from the military.

    Read Also: Biden to give 500,000 undocumented spouses legal status

    A service member’s discharge status can determine what kind of Veterans Affairs benefits they are eligible for. A bad-conduct discharge, for example, given under general court-martial, can make someone ineligible for services including a VA home loan military pension, and education benefits.

    The pardon is separate from the Pentagon’s ongoing review of military records for those who were discharged based on their sexual orientation, which one of the officials said did not apply to convictions under the UCMJ. The Pentagon launched a new outreach campaign last September to reach more veterans who believe they “suffered an error or injustice” to have their military records reviewed.

    “For decades, our LGBTQ+ service members were forced to hide or were prevented from serving altogether,” Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin said at the time. “Even still, they selflessly put themselves in harm’s way for the good of our country and the American people.”

    In order to get their records changed under the pardon, individuals will need to complete an online application, which will go to their military service department. The services will then review the individual’s court-martial and service record and determine if they are eligible for the pardon; that determination will then be sent to the attorney general, acting through the Department of Justice’s pardon attorney, a US official explained.

    The certificate of pardon does not automatically change someone’s discharge status. If a certificate of pardon is issued, the service member will then have to apply to their respective military department’s board of corrections to have their military records corrected.

    CNN

  • Biden to give 500,000 undocumented spouses legal status

    Biden to give 500,000 undocumented spouses legal status

    United President Joe Biden is set to announce a new policy that would protect hundreds of thousands of undocumented spouses of US citizens from deportation, according to administration officials.

    The issue of immigration has proven an election-year headache for Biden, who recently issued a sweeping executive action to curb record migrant arrivals at the U.S.-Mexico border.

    The new policy will apply to those who have been in the country for at least 10 years and will allow them to work in the U.S. legally.

    The White House believes more than 500,000 spouses will benefit.

    Biden has vowed to make the U.S. immigration system “more fair and more just”. Polls show that the issue is a primary concern for many voters ahead of the presidential poll in November.

    The White House also believes the new spouses’ policy will benefit 50,000 young people under 21 whose parent is married to an American citizen.

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    It marks the most significant relief programme for undocumented migrants already in the U.S. since the Obama administration announced the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals, or Daca, in 2012.

    The announcement comes ahead of an event yesterday marking the 12th anniversary of Daca, which shielded over 530,000 migrants who came to the U.S. as children – known as Dreamers – from deportation.

    On Monday, senior administration officials said that undocumented spouses of U.S. citizens would qualify if they had lived in the country for 10 years and been married as of 17 June.

    Those who qualify will have three years to apply for permanent residency and will be eligible for a three-year work permit.

    On average, the White House believes that those eligible for the process have been in the U.S. for 23 years. A majority will have been born in Mexico.

    They will be “paroled in place” and allowed to remain in the U.S. while their status is changed.

    NumbersUSA, an organisation that advocates for tighter immigration controls, slammed the new policy as “unconscionable”.

    The organisation’s chief executive, James Massa, said in a statement: “Rather than stopping the worst border crisis in history, President Biden has overreached his executive authority to use an unconstitutional process, circumventing voters and their elected representatives in Congress, to send a message that amnesty is available to those who enter illegally into the United States.”

    Alex Cuic, an immigration lawyer and professor at Case Western Reserve University in Ohio, told the BBC that while the action affected a “narrow group”, it marked a “start” for a segment of the US immigrant population that historically would face complications normalising their status in the country, even when eligible.

    “A good majority of them [would have] to leave the country in order to come back lawfully,” he said. “It’s like they physically enter the US, but their immigration ‘soul’ doesn’t come with them.”

  • Nigeria backs Biden’s Gaza ceasefire proposal

    Nigeria backs Biden’s Gaza ceasefire proposal

    Nigeria has thrown its weight behind the United States proposed ceasefire between Israel and Palestine.
    West Bank has been under Israeli siege since October 7 retaliation attack following the invasion of Israel by Hamas.
    Minister of Foreign Affairs Ambassador Yusuf Tuggar, who made Nigeria’s position known, also urged global leaders to de-escalate violence in the region.
    Ambassador Tuggar in a statement by his media aide, Alkasim Abdulkadir stated, “The Biden ceasefire proposal should be embraced by world leaders and the totality of the international community — to intensify efforts towards a speedy resolution of the conflict, and the immediate cessation of the attendant extreme violence in Gaza and all other innocent civilians affected by the conflict.
    “Equally important is the continuous, sufficient and unhindered provision of lifesaving humanitarian supplies and services for civilians.”

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    The minister also assured U.S. of Nigeria’s support to bring about a complete cessation of violence and an end to the senseless loss of human lives and manmade humanitarian crises.
    He said: “We are concerned that the ongoing carnage is setting a bad precedent for the international system of justice and are mindful that justice is antithetical to revenge. The Biden plan presents a clear path towards progress and the conditions required for peace.
    “President Joe Biden’s proposal includes a deal that will lead to a permanent ceasefire, a surge in humanitarian aid, the release of hostages, and a major reconstruction plan to rebuild homes, schools and hospitals. Nigeria believes the Biden plan is the best way forward for all parties and can prevent any repetition of the tragic deaths on June 8 of more than 200 people at the Nuseirat refugee camp.”

  • Biden to deliver speech on democracy, freedom in Normandy

    Biden to deliver speech on democracy, freedom in Normandy

    U.S. President Joe Biden is to give a keynote speech in the northern French region Normandy on Friday.

    The keynote speech in defence of freedom and democracy as part of a visit to France that includes D-Day commemorative events. According to the White House, Biden is planning a speech on the power of democracy and the fight against aggressors and autocrats against the historic backdrop of Pointe du Hoc on the northern French coast. Pointe du Hoc is a stretch of coast in Normandy where Allied troops landed 80 years ago, on June 6, 1944, now known as D-Day, which marked the beginning of the liberation of France and Western Europe from Nazi rule. The Allied forces at the time consisted mainly of U.S., British, Canadian, Polish and French troops.

    Biden had already used a D-Day commemoration at a U.S. military cemetery in Colleville-sur-Mer in northern France earlier on Thursday to call for the defence of democracy.

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    “We know the dark forces that these heroes fought against 80 years ago, they never fade,” Biden said. He cited the Russian war against Ukraine as an example.

    Biden’s speech at Pointe du Hoc is not part of the official D-Day celebrations, but is likely to be aimed at a U.S. audience in particular.

    Biden is in a tight race with Donald Trump for a second term in the White House.

    Biden is in France for a visit which will last for several days. After his stops in Normandy, he is scheduled to be received as a state guest by French President Emmanuel Macron in Paris on Saturday.

    (dpa/NAN)

  • Biden tightens asylum rules for border with Mexico

    Biden tightens asylum rules for border with Mexico

    United States President Joe Biden yesterday issued an executive order to ramp up measures to prevent asylum seekers from entering via the country’s border with Mexico.

    “I’m announcing actions to ban migrants who cross our southern border unlawfully from receiving asylum.

     “Migrants will be restricted from receiving asylum at our southern border unless they seek it after entering through an established lawful process,’’ Biden said in Washington.

    The U.S. president went on to say that asylum would still be available to those who try to enter the U.S. legally.

     “But if an individual chooses not to use our legal pathways, if they choose to come without permission and against the law, they’ll be restricted from receiving asylum and staying in the U.S

    “This ban will remain in place until the number of people trying to enter illegally is reduced to a level that our system can effectively manage,’’ Biden continued.

    The White House earlier in the day published a presidential decree according to which migrants could be denied the chance to claim asylum in certain circumstances.

    This was criticised by both human rights activists and Republicans.

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    Those affected by the decree were to be deported at short notice if they do not explicitly request asylum.

    Those who did so would be subjected to stricter checks by border officials.

    Hamas insists on permanent ceasefire, withdrawal for deal to end war

    Palestinian Islamists Hamas say they are sticking to their demands and will only agree to a deal to end the Gaza war if it includes a permanent ceasefire.

    In addition, the Israeli military would have to withdraw completely from the Gaza Strip, a representative of the Islamist organisation emphasised at a press conference in the Lebanese capital Beirut.

    If the Israeli side does not agree to these points, no agreement could be reached.

    Hamas is waiting for the Israelis’ response.

    Hamas representatives have made similar demands several times in the past.