Tag: US President

  • When does US president-elect Donald Trump take office?

    When does US president-elect Donald Trump take office?

    Donald Trump said it was a “magnificent victory for the American people” as he declared victory as the 47th President of the United States.

    Mr Trump declared his victory after winning Pennsylvania, putting him just four electoral votes shy of defeating Kamala Harris to retake the White House. The Republican’s election win was later confirmed when the swing state of Wisconsin was called for Trump, giving him the 270 electoral votes he needed.

    Ms Harris, 60, would have been the first woman, black woman and person of South Asian descent to serve as president. She also would have been the first sitting vice president to win the White House in 36 years.

    Mr Trump, 78, will be the oldest president ever elected and the first defeated president in 132 years to win another term in the White House. He is also the first person convicted of a felony to take over the Oval Office.

    British Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer said the UK-US special relationship will “continue to prosper” following Mr Trump’s “historic election victory”.

    Read Also: Between Donald Trump and Kamala Harris

    “As the closest of allies, we stand shoulder to shoulder in defence of our shared values of freedom, democracy and enterprise,” he added.

    When will Trump be sworn in as president?

    While the 2024 US presidential election took place on 5 November – the winner will not be sworn into office until Inauguration Day on 20 January, 2025 – an 11-week wait. In contrast, in the UK, the winner of the general election is inaugurated the next day.

    The longer wait in the US can in part be explained by the complex inauguration process.

    NEWSNOW

  • Former U.S. President Bush’s body leaves for Washington

    Family and former staff of former U.S. President George H.W. Bush will hold a brief ceremony on Monday morning at a Texas Air National Guard base outside Houston, putting his casket onto Air Force One for a final trip to Washington.

    Two of his sons, former President George W. Bush and Neil Bush, will accompany the body of the 41st president on the presidential jet, called “Special Air Mission 41,” for the flight to Joint Base Andrews outside of Washington.

    Bush will lie in state at the U.S. Capitol Rotunda from Monday through Wednesday, when a state funeral is scheduled at the National Cathedral.

    A contingent of former Bush staff members now living in Texas will join the mourners leaving Houston on Monday morning, former Ambassador Chase Untermeyer told Houston Public Media.

    The 41st president of the United States died at his Houston home on Friday night, seven months after his wife Barbara died.

    After services in Washington, there will be another funeral in Houston on Thursday followed by burial at the Bush Presidential Library in College Station, Texas.

    Bush served two terms as vice president under fellow Republican President Ronald Reagan before his own stint in the Oval Office from 1989 to 1993.

    Read Also: Former U.S President George H.W. Bush dies at 94

    That was a time that saw the end of the Cold War as well as the United States’ routing of Iraqi President Saddam Hussein’s army in the 1991 Gulf War.

    He failed to win a second term after breaking a no-new-taxes pledge.

    Trump has ordered the federal government to close on Wednesday and both the New York Stock Exchange and Nasdaq will be closed on Wednesday in observance.

    Remembrances to George and Barbara Bush sprang up in the neighborhood where he made his home, at a memorial to President Bush at a city park and at the airport named in his honor.

    Christy Smith paused over the weekend to pay her respects to President Bush at a bronze statue of him at a Houston park.

    “He set a good example for all of us,” said Smith, 39. “He always was caring and treated people equally.

  • North Korea accuses Trump of declaring war

    North Korea accuses Trump of declaring war

    In a reaction to a tweet over the weekend by the President Donald Trump of the United States, North Korea’s Foreign Minister Ri Yong Ho accused Trump of declaring war on his country by saying North Korea “won’t be around much longer”.

    According to an official translation of his remarks to reporters in New York, Ri said: “Last weekend Trump claimed that our leadership wouldn’t be around much longer and declared a war on our country.”

    “Since the United States declared war on our country, we will have every right to make all self-defensive counter-measures, including the right to shoot down the United States strategic bombers at any time even when they are not yet inside the aerospace border of our country,” Ri said.

    White House press secretary Sarah Sanders said Monday that the US has not declared war on North Korea, adding, “Frankly, the suggestion of that is absurd.”

    Related: Trump, North Korean leader in hot exchange

    Sanders said it is “never appropriate” to shoot down another nation’s aircraft in international waters and the administration plans to continue to protect the area.

    Earlier on Monday, State Department spokesperson Katina Adams told CNN the US seeks a “peaceful denuclearization of the Korean Peninsula.”

    But the US military “will take all options to make sure that we safeguard our allies and our partners and our homeland so if North Korea does not stop their provocative actions we’ll make sure we provide options to the President to deal with North Korea,” according to Col. Rob Manning, a Pentagon spokesman.

    Also: Iran defies Trump, tests missile

    Asked about Ri’s charge that Trump’s comments were a declaration of war, Manning, said: “Our job as the Department of Defense is as you know is to make sure that the President is provided military options, we’ll continue to do that, and we have a deep arsenal of military options to provide the President so then he can decide how he wants to deal with North Korea and the regime.”

    “We are postured and we are ready to fight tonight,” he added.

    The US Navy will also continue to maintain its presence near the Korean peninsula despite the latest round of harsh rhetoric and threats of a military strike from Pyongyang.

  • Trump’s communication director Dubke resigns

    Trump’s communication director Dubke resigns

    The Communication Director to U.S. President Donald Trump, Mike Dubke, has resigned.

    Dubke, a communications firm owner who was brought into the Trump administration in March, has not set the last day on the job but is leaving on good terms, according to Axios News, which first reported his departure and cited a senior administration official.

    Dubke reportedly put in his resignation on May 18 and the president accepted it immediately. Dubke, who served the capacity of communications director for three months, had offered to stay on through Trump’s first trip abroad, an offer the president accepted.

    Dubke “has expressed his desire to leave the White House and made very clear that he would see through the president’s international trip,” White House adviser Kellyanne Conway later told Fox News. Trump’s first overseas trip to the Middle East and Europe that ended on Saturday.

    The Washington Post said that Dubke’s last day on the job has not been determined yet, but cited an unnamed official as saying that it could be Tuesday when he was scheduled to meet with his staff.

    Dubke has been working closely with White House Press Secretary Sean Spicer. Trump’s team handling of the press has come under fire during recent scandals.

  • Impersonators of world leaders gather in Hong Kong

    Impersonators of world leaders gather in Hong Kong

    Three men impersonating US President Donald Trump, former president Barack Obama and North Korean leader Kim Jong-un caused laughter and chaos in central Hong Kong on Friday.

    Traffic stopped as people swarmed around the trio to take pictures.

    Barack Obama impersonator, Reggie Brown, sporting custom-made prosthetic ears, said he was happy for all the love.

    Australian, Howard X, impersonated Kim Jong Un and 66-year-old musician Dennis Allen from Chicago impersonated President Trump.

    The professional look-alikes had been hired for the Rugby Sevens.

    See Video below:

  • Police disperse protesters with pepper spray as US President takes oath

    Police disperse protesters with pepper spray as US President takes oath

    Police deployed pepper spray in a chaotic confrontation as anti-Donald Trump protesters registered their rage against the incoming American president yesterday.

    Spirited demonstrations unfolded peacefully at various security checkpoints near the Capitol as police helped ticket-holders get through to the inaugural ceremony.

    Signs read, “Resist Trump Climate Justice Now,” ‘’Let Freedom Ring,” ‘’Free Palestine.”

    But at one point, police gave chase to a group of about 100 protesters who smashed the windows of downtown businesses as they denounced capitalism and Trump.

    Police in riot gear used pepper spray from large canisters and eventually cordoned off the protesters, who shouted, “Hands up, don’t shoot,” as a helicopter hovered overhead.

    The confrontation happened about an hour before Trump’s swearing-in at the Capitol.

    Closer to that scene, lines for ticket holders entering two gates stretched for blocks at one point as protesters clogged entrances.

    Earlier, the DisruptJ20 coalition, named after the date of the inauguration, had promised that people participating in its actions in Washington would attempt to shut down the celebrations, risking arrest when necessary.

    Trump supporter Brett Ecker said the protesters were frustrating but weren’t going to put a damper on his day.

    “They’re just here to stir up trouble,” said the 36-year-old public school teacher.

    “It upsets me a little bit that people choose to do this, but yet again it’s one of the things I love about this country.”

    At one checkpoint, protesters wore orange jumpsuits with black hoods over their faces to represent prisoners in U.S. detention at Guantanamo Bay.

    Eleanor Goldfield, who helped organize the Disrupt J20 protest, said protesters wanted to show Trump and his “misguided, misinformed or just plain dangerous” supporters that they won’t be silent.

    Black Lives Matter and feminist groups also made their voices heard.

    Most Trump supporters walking to the inauguration past Union Station ignored protesters outside the train station, but not Doug Rahm, who engaged in a lengthy and sometimes profane yelling match with them.

    “Get a job,” said Rahm, a Bikers for Trump member from Philadelphia. “Stop crying snowflakes, Trump won.”

    Outside the International Spy Museum, protesters in Russian hats ridiculed Trump’s praise of President Vladimir Putin, marching with signs calling Trump “Putin’s Puppet” and “Kremlin employee of the month.”

    More demonstrations were planned for later in the day. For one DisruptJ20 event, a march beginning at Columbus Circle outside Union Station, participants were asked to gather at noon, the same time as Trump’s swearing-in as the 45th president.

    The route for the march, which organizers called a “Festival of Resistance,” ran about 1.5 miles to McPherson Square, a park about three blocks from the White House, where a rally featuring the filmmaker and liberal activist Michael Moore was planned.

    “We’re going to throw a party in the streets for our side,” organizer David Thurston told reporters last week, adding that drummers, musicians and a float of dancers were planned for the march.

    Along the parade route, the ANSWER Coalition anti-war group planned demonstrations at two locations.

    Protesters and supporters of Trump clashed Thursday evening outside a pro-Trump event in Washington. Police used chemical spray on some protesters in an effort to control the unruly crowd. Hundreds gathered outside the National Press Club in downtown Washington, where the “DeploraBall” was being held. The name is a play on a campaign remark by Hillary Clinton, who once referred to many of Trump’s supporters as a “basket of deplorables.”

    The demonstrations won’t end when Trump takes up residence in the White House. A massive Women’s March on Washington is planned for Saturday. Christopher Geldart, the District of Columbia’s homeland security director, has said 1,800 buses have registered to park in the city Saturday, which could mean nearly 100,000 people coming in just by bus.

    Protesters block security checkpoints

    A group of protesters blocked security checkpoints entrance at 19th and E streets in downtown Washington D.C. on Friday to protest against Trump’s inauguration as the 45th President of the U.S.

    The correspondent of the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that some women tied themselves together with purple yarn and sat on the ground, blocking access to those trying to get through the security line at the inauguration venue at Capitol Hill, according to reports.

    “Hey, hey, ho, ho! Donald Trump has to go!”

    “End white supremacy!” the group of protesters chanted.

    With signs, brass instruments and large wooden crosses, some of them danced, blew whistles and sang.

    Police in the area kept at least one lane open to allow a few people to get through the checkpoint.

    Those who made it past the protesters appeared unfazed.

    Some demonstrators covered their faces with bandannas and told those going through, “you don’t want to go in there”.

    Several anti-Trump protests were also popping up on Friday morning throughout the city.

    At 14th and I streets NW, several anti-Trump marchers chanted, “Whose streets? Our streets!”

    One man carried a bundle of American flags over his shoulder.

    “It’s not enough to continue shouting into the echo chamber of social media.

    “We’re here to actually put our bodies on the line in support of our friends who are going to be targeted by this regime,” said Clara Mystif, 31, a writer from Florida.

    At Seventh Street and Independence Avenue SW, a security checkpoint there was shut down for 10 minutes because of protests but had since reopened, police said.

  • What will Nigeria, Africa benefit from next US President?

    What will Nigeria, Africa benefit from next US President?

    Today, Americans decide who leads them between President Barack Obama and former Governor Mitt Romney. The two of them have laid out their programmes. Whichever way it goes, what is in it for Nigeria and Africa,? Olukorede Yishau, in Chicago, reports

     

    In the last four years that he has been America’s president, Barack Obama, whose father hailed from Kenya, has only visited sub-Saharan Africa once. It was a stopover of less than a day in neigbouring Ghana. He has held meetings at the White House with 12 African leaders, including President Goodluck Jonathan.

    The continent has practically not featured in the U.S. presidential election campaign. Pressing domestic issues, such as lack of jobs and how to prod America’s stuttering economy into faster growth, have taken centre-stage, expectedly.

    So, the question is: what is in it for Africa? Obama’s aides said if re-elected he would focus on sub-Saharan Africa as part of the unfinished business from his first term, including anti-AIDS initiatives, food security and economic development programmes.

    The Romney campaign sees Africa as “not a problem to be contained, but an opportunity to be embraced”. It has urged much more private sector participation in U.S. trade and development initiatives in Africa, in addition to the more traditional programmes for education and HIV/AIDS.

    Chair of the Romney campaign’s Africa Policy Working Group Ambassador Tibor Nagy said: “If you say the word Africa, in most Americans’ minds what you basically come up with is the four Horsemen of the Apocalypse. Everything is negative. Famine, pestilence, degradation, war.”

    Nagy, who was ambassador to Ethiopia and Guinea, believes a Romney administration would take a fresh, more positive approach. He said: “I would say look at Africa through the windscreen and not the rearview mirror”.

    In the last four years of Obama, counter-terrorism focus has been driving U.S. policy towards Africa. Washington throws its weight behind efforts in Nigeria and elsewhere on the continent to confront the spreading presence of terrorists, such as Boko Haram and Al-Shabab.

    Director of Sub-Saharan Africa analysis at STRATFOR Global Intelligence Mark Schroeder told Reuters that this security focus would figure strongly whoever wins the election. “These concerns don’t recognise borders,” he said.

    The position of the U.S. government on Boko Haram is not likely to change. The government sees Boko Haram as a response to frustration with the country’s leadership.

    “I want to take this opportunity to stress one key point and that is that religion is not driving extremist violence either in Jos or northern Nigeria,” Assistant Secretary of State Carson said at a forum on U.S. policy towards Nigeria held at the Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS) in Washington, D.C.

    He added: “While some seek to inflame Muslim-Christian tensions, Nigeria’s ethnic and religious diversity, like our own in this country, is a source of strength, not weakness and there are many examples across Nigeria of communities working across religious lines to protect one another.”

    Carson said Boko Haram “capitalises on popular frustrations with the nation’s leaders,” and “seeks to humiliate and undermine the government and to exploit religious differences in order to create chaos and to make Nigeria ungovernable.”

    Wherever the pendulum swings, many expect a continuation of the Bill Clinton’s African Growth and Opportunity Act (AGOA), which waives import duties on thousands of goods exported to the U.S. from eligible countries, George W. Bush’s President’s Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief (PEPFAR) and the Millennium Challenge Corporation, a U.S. aid vehicle that assists countries with good governance.

    There is also the strategy for Africa launched by Obama in June. The U.S. Strategy Towards Sub-Saharan Africa reflects the core components and strategic priorities outlined in the Presidential Policy Directive. The strategy sets forth four strategic objectives for U.S. engagement in Africa: strengthen democratic institutions; spur economic growth, trade, and investment; advance peace and security; and promote opportunity and development.

    The Obama administration said: “In Fiscal Year 2011, the United States provided $262 million in assistance to improve the overall professionalisation of African militaries and to enhance their ability to better respond to challenges such as peace-keeping, maritime security, and counterterrorism. Additionally, the United States provided, and continues to provide, significant support to peace-keeping operations across the continent, including the United Nations Organisation Stabilisation Mission in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (MONUSCO), the United Nations Mission in South Sudan (UNMISS), the African Union Mission in Somalia (AMISOM). Through the U.S. National Action Plan on Women, Peace, and Security, we continue to advance efforts to strengthen women’s participation in peacebuilding and protect women from sexual and gender-based violence in conflict.

    “In 2012, the U.S. led the G-8 to launch the New Alliance for Food Security and Nutrition, a partnership between the G-8, African governments, the African Union, international partners, private investors, and civil society to substantially accelerate agricultural growth across the continent and help more than 50 million people emerge from poverty over the next ten years.

    “The Export-Import Bank of the United States (Ex-Im Bank), for the first time in its history, approved projects totaling more than $1 billion in 2011 to support the exports of U.S. companies to sub-Saharan Africa. Two of the nine countries in the world selected by Ex-Im Bank as priority strategic markets for U.S. exports – South Africa and Nigeria – are in sub-Saharan Africa. In fiscal year 2011, the Overseas Private Investment Corporation (OPIC) supported over $1 billion in private-sector investments in Sub-Saharan Africa, representing over one-third of its total commitments for the year. This is in addition to OPIC approving $367 million for four private equity funds that could mobilise an additional $1 billion for investments made in the health, agricultural, and small and medium enterprise sectors.“

    But, no matter what America under Obama feels it has done for Africa, many on the continent believe it lags behind other emerging players such as China, Brazil, India and South Korea. Since 2009, China has become Africa’s largest trading partner. Chinese President Hu Jintao has visited at least 17 countries.

    Mwangi Kimenyi, a senior fellow at the Brookings Institution said: “We would have expected to see more American involvement instead of a retreat. If you go to many countries and ask them about who is doing more, they will tell you China.”

    The U.S. government said exports to sub-Saharan Africa increased 40 percent from 2009 to 2011 and are on track to double by 2013/14. Significantly though, trade between the United States and sub-Saharan African countries totaled $94.3 billion in 2011, China’s Africa trade totaled $127.3 billion, eclipsing the U.S.-Africa trade record of $104.1 billion in 2008.

    All African eyes are on the next American president.

     

    Short takes

     

    Obama

     

    “We know what the future requires. We don’t need a big-government agenda or a small-government agenda. We need a middle-class agenda that rewards hard work and responsibility. We know what change looks like, and what the governor (Mitt Romney) is offering sure isn’t it.”

    Mitt Romney

     

    “The same course we have been on will not lead to a better destination. The same path we are on means $20 trillion in debt at the end of a second term – that he won’t have. It means crippling unemployment. It means stagnant take-home pay, depressed home values, a devastated military. And by the way, unless we change course, we may be looking at another recession. So the question of this election comes down to this: do you want more of the same or do you want real change? President Obama promised change but he could not deliver change. Now, I promise change and I have a record of achieving real change.”

     

    Paul Ryan

     

    “In 2008, President Obama made lots of grandiose promises. You remember hope and change? Remember how he would bring everybody together? He hasn’t met with our party leaders since last July. Remember when he said he would cut the deficit in half? It has doubled. Remember when he said he would create all of these jobs? Look, we just got the latest employment report. And the unemployment rate is higher than the day he took office. You have got 23 million Americans struggling to find work in this country today. 15per cent of our fellow citizens are living in poverty today. It is the highest rate in a generation. We are nine million jobs shy of what he said we would achieve if only he could borrow all that stimulus money and spend it on all of these interest groups. Look, this isn’t working. We have a jobs crisis. Wouldn’t it be nice to have an actual job creator in the White House during a jobs crisis? We need leadership.”

     

    Evangelist Billy Graham

     

    “The legacy we leave behind for our children, grandchildren and this great nation is crucial. As I approach my 94th birthday, I realise this election could be my last. I believe it is vitally important that we cast our ballots for candidates who base their decisions on biblical principles and support the nation of Israel. I urge you to vote for those who protect the sanctity of life and support the biblical definition of marriage between a man and a woman. Vote for biblical values this November 6, and pray with me that America will remain one nation under God.”

     

    Opinion: What’s really at stake in election 2012

     

    When no one was looking, Obama was a humble community organizer fighting for poor Americans who had lost their jobs. Four years ago, his critics mocked him for that. Today, we see a lot has changed about him … but not that. He is still fighting for those Americans who are hurting, and it gives me a measure of peace knowing that the person in charge of making tough budget cuts has a record of working with people who are hurting.

    I’m sure Mitt Romney is a decent man, and he’s given millions to his church. But I can’t shake the fact the self-proclaimed “son of Detroit” did not come around the city when it began to struggle in the 1980s. The great “job creator” did nothing for the city when it was hemorrhaging jobs in the 1990s and to this day he only seems to come around Detroit during election time.

    If this is how the “son” treats family, I can only imagine the disregard he holds for strangers. Actually I don’t have to imagine. I watched the 47per cent video. The one that was taped when he thought no one outside of the room would be listening.

    This is why he’s trailing in Michigan and Massachusetts, the two states to which he’s most closely tied. It’s not because he’s Republican. The three Massachusetts governors before Romney were Republican, while four of the past six governors in Michigan were Republicans, including his father.

    He trails because the people there know him.

     

    They know his record. His real record.

     

    Not the manicured version he presents on the campaign trail, but the unabridged version he began writing before his life in politics began. The version all future politicians script with the decisions that they make.

    I’m not wearing blinders. I know Obama is just as flawed as Romney. He’s a politician. How can he not be?

    But at the end of the day I’d rather have President Barack Obama in the White House, someone with a record of being about the work of helping others before he was in office, than Mitt Romney, someone who has a record of talking about it once he got there could also point to the death of Osama bin Laden or the currency collapse in Iran because of the sanctions that he’s led.

    But to fully understand why I voted for Obama, one only needs to look at this quote from author H. Jackson Brown Jr.: “Our character is what we do when we think no one is looking.”

     

    Romney’s vision for America

     

    The Republican charge up Capitol Hill, however, was not led by party purists. The flags of the tea party waved high over the Democratic trouncing, and created a whole new road for GOP presidential hopefuls such as Romney. The uncompromising tea partiers made it clear they would get behind only someone who paid the toll of a hard and unmistakable turn to the right, especially on fiscal matters.

    And as Kirk puts it, “A candidate (who makes that turn) stands very little chance of getting back to the center in time for the general election.”

    Was he ever ‘severely conservative’ enough?

    Romney was always an awkward fit. He had a hard time embracing the far right with enthusiasm, and the right felt the same about him. That is one reason why the nomination process dragged on so long, as the faithful tried to make it work with Rick Perry, Herman Cain, Newt Gingrich and Rick Santorum.

     

    But Romney was not just wrestling with philosophical differences.

     

    “Something else that pulls candidates away from the middle is money,” says assistant professor Georgia Kernell at Northwestern University’s Department of Political Science, where she is a fellow in The Institute for Policy Research. She notes that Romney’s now infamous “47 percent” comment was almost certainly spurred by the need to appeal to right-wing donors at that fundraiser.

    “He didn’t have to say it,” Kernell says, “but it certainly made (his message) more powerful.” The same might be said about candidate Barack Obama’s similar stumble four years ago when he privately told donors that rural voters “cling to their guns or religion.”

    Kernell believes the Republican nominee, all things considered, has walked the tightrope well. “I actually think Romney did a great job using the first debate to position himself back in the middle.”

    It all came at a price. His vacillation between the right and center has allowed Team Obama to pelt him with accusations of flip-flopping and a schizophrenic candidacy, leaving Romney unable to crawl out of the margin-of-error trench.