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As it happenedended1592520900

Trump news - live: Top state department official resigns over president's 'actions surrounding racial injustice' as Facebook takes down his ads

Social media platform says campaign used 'banned hate group's symbol to identify political prisoners without the context that condemns or discusses the symbol'

Alex Woodward,Chris Riotta,Joe Sommerlad
Thursday 18 June 2020 23:00 BST
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Rayshard Brooks death: Trump says 'you can't resist a police officer' and claims officer 'heard a shot'

Facebook has removed dozens of ads from Donald Trump's re-election campaign invoking Nazi imagery against political opponents while he has publicly sparred with the US Supreme Court and his ex-national security adviser John Bolton over allegations in a new book.

The social media platform said its decision to pull dozens of Trump campaign ads that invoked Nazi symbols to mark political opponents was based on the company's policy against "using a banned hate group's symbol to identify political prisoners without the context that condemns or discusses the symbol."

Bolton say the “stunningly uninformed” president begged Chinese premier Xi Jinping for help with his re-election, said invading Venezuela would be “cool”, believed Finland was in Russia and did not realise the UK was a nuclear power.

Several newspapers published extracts from The Room Where it Happened, which hits shelves next week and paints a damning portrait of the Trump White House and a blustering president willing to do “personal favours for dictators he likes”, ignorant of foreign policy and motivated predominantly by “re-election calculations”.

Trump wasted no time in angrily hitting back at Bolton, disparaging him as “a washed up guy” on Fox News and taking to Twitter to label him: “A disgruntled boring fool who only wanted to go to war.”

A senior State Department official meanwhile has resigned over the president's poor handling of racial tensions in the wake of the police killings of black Americans, as the president lashed out over the Supreme Court's ruling that halts the administration's bid to end DACA, an Obama-era programme that provided a legal path for migrants who entered the US without legal permission to stay in the country.

The president, who has two of his own appointees on the high court, threatened the possibility of more nominees, underscoring the future of SCOTUS as a larger campaign issue in November.

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Trump tells Hannity cops being ‘treated unfairly’ over Rayshard Brooks killing and says no second US lockdown despite rising coronavirus cases

On any other day, Trump’s interview with Sean Hannity on Fox would have been bigger news, especially his siding with Atlanta police over the killing of Rayshard Brooks in a Wendy’s car park last Friday, commenting that the incident is “a terrible thing… but you can’t resist a police officer” and suggesting the cops at the centre of the storm are being “treated unfairly”.

On officer Garrett Rolfe's lawyer claiming that his client heard a sound like a gunshot and saw a flash in front of him before he shot Brooks, Trump said: "I don't know that I would have necessarily believed that, but I will tell you, that's a very interesting thing and maybe that's so.

"They are going to have to find out. It's up to justice right now. It's going to be up to justice.

"I hope he gets a fair shake because police have not been treated fairly in our country. They have not been treated fairly," he added.

Trump also said there was no question the US would enter into a second lockdown despite rising coronavirus cases in states that reopened early like Texas, Florida and Arizona.

"We won't be closing the country again. We won't have to do that," Trump said, again insisting the disease would just “fade away” with no apology for the 119,000 dead and counting.

The president also found time to joke that the left-wing activists in Seattle occupying an autonomous zone are “obviously very good at real estate”, scaremonger about Black Lives Matter protesters and claim his under-construction border wall meant the coronavirus spread wasn’t as bad in California as it might have been (it’s still pretty bad there).

 

Here’s Gino Spocchia on his comments on Rayshard Brooks.

Joe Sommerlad18 June 2020 12:05
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Bruce Springsteen to Trump: 'Put on a f***ing mask’

The Boss, leading by example with understandable exasperation, tells the president to follow his own administration's advice in no uncertain terms.

  “With 100,000-plus Americans dying over the last few months and the empty, shamed response from our leaders, I’ve been simply p***ed off,” he said on his SiriusXM radio show. “Those lives deserve better than being simply inconvenient statistics for our president’s re-election efforts. It’s a national disgrace.”

Louis Chilton has this report.

Joe Sommerlad18 June 2020 12:25
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Kellyanne Conway says indoor Tulsa rally is safe because outside George Floyd protests were as Covid concerns loom large

Team Trump is showing no signs of cancelling or delaying the president's planned Saturday return to the campaign rallies he so cherishes, even as Covid-19 cases climb in Tulsa, because outside protests show an indoor rally can be safe, according to Kellyanne Conway.

The president is slated to address supporters for the first time since March inside the Oklahoma city's BOK Center, a multipurpose arena that seats around 19,000 people. The president and his campaign team say they have received between 800,000 and 1m requests for tickets – even though the respiratory disease that has claimed at least 119,000 lives inside the United States is spreading in Tulsa County.

Conway, one of Trump’s most senior and durable aides, told reporters on Wednesday that if anyone with a ticket feels worried about getting sick at the event, they should stay home. But she also contended the Trump campaign, which is requiring rally-goers to sign waivers absolving it of liability for those that might get sick, has taken every precaution possible to keep people healthy.

More suprisingly, she equated attending the indoor rally to protesting the police killings of black people outside. "We also know that people don't want to be locked down forever. We see them peacefully protesting. We see folks doing many things," she said.

Her message of personal responsibility was echoed yesterday by White House press secretary Kayleigh McEnany, who said attendees in Tulsa were doing so at their own “personal risk” and should not blame the president if they get ill.

Here’s John T Bennett with more.

Joe Sommerlad18 June 2020 12:45
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Black community leaders fear violence at Tulsa rally

As we've heard, tens of thousands of Trump supporters are expected in the Oklahoma city on Saturday for the first of a series of rallies across the country to rev up his re-election campaign. The gathering at the OK Center and at a 40,000-capacity convention centre nearby, would overlap a two-day local celebration of Juneteenth, which marks the end of slavery in the country.

Both events are in the city's downtown area. The Reverend Al Sharpton is among the speakers at the Juneteenth observance in the Greenwood district, where several dozen blocks of black-owned businesses were burned in a notorious 1921 massacre. A separate anti-hate rally is set for Saturday night in a Tulsa park about a 30-minute walk away.

Community leaders and organisers say all the events should be peaceful, but worry about the potential for clash involving Trump supporters, participants in several anti-Trump protests planned downtown and those attending the Juneteenth programme. Tulsa experienced several days of large protests after the death of black Minneapolis resident George Floyd on 25 May but violence and damage were limited.

"We're all terribly concerned," said Reverend Ray Owens, pastor of the Metropolitan Baptist Church, a historically black church on the city's north side. "I'm hearing rumors of people coming from both sides who may be inclined to incite some kind of physical conflict or war of words. That worries me."

On Wednesday, the QuikTrip convenience store chain announced the closing of its downtown area locations "out of possible safety concerns for our employees." Up to 250 Oklahoma Army National Guardsmen will be activated as a "force multiplier" for local, state and federal law enforcement providing security, said Tulsa police chief Wendell Franklin.

Tulsa's long history of racial tension was exacerbated in recent weeks by the arrest of two black teenagers for jaywalking. Another flashpoint was the fatal shooting of an unarmed black man, Terence Crutcher, by a Tulsa police officer in 2016.

"All of those things are the backdrop for Donald Trump's visit," said Marq Lewis, a black community organiser and founder of We The People Oklahoma. "His visit is definitely inflammatory."

Adding to the tension is fear about a recent spike in coronavirus cases in Tulsa and how it could be worsened by throngs of people cramming into downtown and indoor arenas.

Oklahoma's Republican governor Kevin Stitt had invited Trump and vice president Mike Pence to tour the city's Greenwood district during their visit, then backpedaled after being told it was a bad idea.

He said he doesn't know what Trump will do. "That is something that will ultimately be the President's decision," Stitt said.

Trump supporters started arriving from around the country as early as Monday, some camping outside the BOK Center in the 90-degree-plus heat. Several acknowledged concerns about violence between rally goers and protesters.

"That is in the back of everyone's mind down here," said 41-year-old Trump supporter Delmer Phillips. "We know that if protesters show up, it could get nasty. That's ultimately what I fear the most."

State senator Kevin Matthews, a Democrat whose district includes the Greenwood area, said Stitt didn't consult community members before extending the offer. An appearance in Greenwood by Trump would be "a slap in face," he said.

Meanwhile, Franklin said there will be a massive police presence downtown on Saturday. "The eyes of the world are on Tulsa, Oklahoma, during this event and we are ready for it," he said.

AP

Joe Sommerlad18 June 2020 13:05
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'This White House is definitely more a part of Russia than Finland is'

Here's Greg Evans for Indy100 to round up the Twitter mockery of Trump over one of the (many) eye-catching revelations from John Bolton's bombshell book.

Joe Sommerlad18 June 2020 13:25
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No US-UK trade deal before November election, says Trump trade representative

Robert Lighthizer made this admission before the House Ways and Means Committee on Wednesday, saying that such an agreement is “almost impossible” until after this year's vote.

That means that Trump, the president who loudly championed Brexit and backed Britain forging new trade deals and going it alone, could be out of office before any agreement is ever up for signing.

Perfect.

Oliver O'Connell has more details.

Joe Sommerlad18 June 2020 13:45
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Trump bashes Biden and Bolton

The president begins his day on Twitter lashing out at Joe Biden over his record on swine flu (which killed some 12,500 Americans, compared to more than 119,000 from Covid-19) in revenge for those "white flag" comments.

He's also out recommending an alternative book on politics to John Bolton's (a made-up-sounding tome called Blitz: How Trump Will Smash the Left and Win by David Horowitz) and retweeting a rabid attack on his erstwhile adviser.

He's also been laying into NBC for criticising Google and quoting Fox condemnation of the Seattle protesters.

Joe Sommerlad18 June 2020 14:05
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Trump labels tell-all memoir 'a compilation of lies and made up stories' and says Bolton 'just trying to get even'

Here we go.

He still doesn't seem to understand that you can't fire dogs and that, if Bolton really was so inept, it reflects equally badly on himself, Trump, for hiring the boob to be his national security adviser in the first place.

Joe Sommerlad18 June 2020 14:10
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Joe Scarborough accuses Facebook of ‘promoting’ extremism

The MSNBC host - recently the target of a ludicrous and upsetting murder conspiracy theory by the president - has hit out at the social networking giant over its reluctance to take responsibility for political content posted by users, citing the emergence of the right-wing Boogaloo movement as the latest disturbing consequence of the company's negligence.

James Crump has this report.

Joe Sommerlad18 June 2020 14:25
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The horror, the horror

Trump supporters are already gathering in Tulsa and these maniacs have brought out the guitar to demand four more years of... what? Insults, mendacity and division? "Personal favours for dictators"? Cold war with China? Coronavirus?

Joe Sommerlad18 June 2020 14:45

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