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Trump Lied Over And Over

He lied. He lied from jump. He lied every time he answered a question, and he answered questions far less often than he lied, which was always. He lied by commission—about how every legal scholar back to Hammurabi thought reproductive freedom should be left to “the states,” about how Democratic politicians support the murder of newborns, about how he earned his status as a convicted felon, about his well-adjudicated tryst with Stormy Daniels, and about a hundred other things, large and small. (“I never slept with a porn star,” should be immortal and, beyond its inherent hilarity, it’s a lie.) And he lied by omission, mostly by completely ignoring the questions he was asked and shouting about his own greatness. Moderator—and I use the term very loosely—Dana Bash asked the only question about the climate crisis, and this was his answer in full.

Well, let me just go back to what he said about the police, how close the police are to him. Almost every police group in the nation from every state is supporting Donald J. Trump, almost every police group. And what he has done to the Black population is horrible, including the fact that for ten years he called them super predators. We can’t, in the 1990s, we can’t forget that. “Super predators” was his name. And he called it to them for ten, and they’ve taken great offense at it, and now they see it happening. But when they see what I did for criminal-justice reform and for the historically Black colleges and universities, where I funded them and got them all funded, and the opportunity zones with Tim. As you know, Tim Scott was—incredibly did a great job, a great senator from South Carolina. He came to me with the idea and it was a great idea. It’s one of the most successful economic-development acts ever in the country, opportunity zones. And the biggest beneficiary are Blacks. And that’s why we have the best numbers with them. And maybe ever, if they’re saying ever, I read this morning, wherever, the best numbers, he has lost much of the Black population because he has done a horrible job for Black people. He has also done a horrible job for Hispanics. But why do you see these millions of people pouring into our country and they’re going to take the jobs? And it’s already started. And you haven’t seen anything yet. It’s a disaster.

Oregon is currently burning down. Much of the upper Midwest is underwater. The east coast just spent a week as a blast furnace. And asked what he’d do about it, he talked about how he is Soul Brother No. 1 because Tim Scott said so. Bash actually asked a follow-up, and he traded mendacity for incoherence.

So I want absolutely immaculate clean water and I want absolutely clean air, and we had it. We had H2O. We had the best numbers ever. And we did—we were using all forms of energy, all forms, everything. And yet, during my four years, I had the best environmental numbers ever. And my top environmental people gave me that statistic just before I walked on the stage, actually.

I suspect that one of his “top environmental people” is that noted expert Professor Otto Yerass. What are the “environmental numbers” of which he spoke? And I suspect that his top environmental people are close relatives of the “19 people” who told him that he didn’t call the war dead suckers and losers.

And this was how he answered a question about lowering the cost of health care.

Just you understand, we have polling. We have other things that do—they rate him the worst because what he’s done is so bad. And they rate me—yes, I’ll show you. I will show you. And they rate me one of the best. Okay. And if I’m given another four years, I will be the best. I think I’ll be the best. Nobody’s ever created an economy like us. Nobody ever cut taxes like us. He’s the only one I know. He wants to raise your taxes by four times. He wants to raise everybody’s taxes by four times. He wants the Trump tax cuts to expire so everybody, including the two of you, are going to pay four to five times. Nobody ever heard of this before.

So, he lied.

He told old lies—about the firing of crooked Ukrainian prosecutor Viktor Shokin, about how he signed a veterans’ health-care plan that was actually signed by President Barack Obama, and about lowering the cost of insulin. And he told new ones—about how the immigrants flooding into the country are living in “luxury hotels” and about how Nancy Pelosi refused his help on January 6 and then took responsibility for the riot herself.

So, he lied.

And he lied. And lied again. And again.

Yes, CNN disgraced itself by committing to a policy whereby the two moderators would not fact-check the participants in real time. Tapper and Bash were operating with ankle weights. (However, David Chalian, the network’s political director, should be updating his résumé at a coffee shop across the street from CNN HQ this morning.) That led us to moments like the following:

TRUMP: He wants open borders. He wants our country to either be destroyed or he wants to pick up those people as voters. And I don’t think—we just can’t let it happen. If he wins this election, our country doesn’t have a chance. Not even a chance of coming out of this rut. We probably won’t have a country left anymore. That’s how bad it is. He is the worst in history by far.

TAPPER: Thank you, President Trump.

And yes, the president had a bad night and a terrible start. My biggest problem with his performance is that he seemed unable to push back against the lies and the general threat to the republic that they represent. It was plain after about 11 seconds that CNN’s weird policy choice was going to be no help at all. It was up to him. He needed to be the guy who destroyed Paul Ryan by chortling at the zombie-eyed granny starver’s intellectual pretensions. Truth be told, he rallied from about the 30 minute mark on. But not a single mention of Project 2025? C’mon, man.

But I choose to remember that the other guy lied. About all things, large and small. Except for one thing. Asked about whether or not he would accept the results in November, win or lose, he first started raving about Ukraine and World War III. Bash asked him again, and he lightly sideswiped the truth.

If it’s a fair and legal and good election—absolutely. I would have much rather accepted these, but the fraud and everything else was ridiculous that if you want, we’ll have a news conference on it in a week or we’ll have another one of these on—in a week.

Even when he approaches the truth, he lies.

Headshot of Charles P. Pierce

Charles P Pierce is the author of four books, most recently Idiot America, and has been a working journalist since 1976. 



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Presidential immunity extends to some official acts, Supreme Court rules in Trump case • Kansas Reflector

WASHINGTON — U.S. presidents enjoy full immunity from criminal charges for their official “core constitutional” acts, but no immunity for unofficial acts, the Supreme Court ruled Monday, sending former President Donald Trump’s election interference case back to the lower courts.

The justices left open the question of how far the boundaries of such official acts reach, possibly reshaping the contours of the American presidency.

The landmark decision by the court’s conservatives — the last of the Supreme Court term — was met with intense dismay from Democrats and allies, who described it as a setback for democracy that undermined the Constitution by putting the former president above the law.

Former Capitol Police Officer Harry Dunn, who was in the Capitol on Jan. 6, said Trump was responsible for the attack that day. The court’s ruling has empowered the former president, he said.

“Donald Trump is still the single greatest threat to our democracy,” Dunn said on a press call organized by the Biden-Harris campaign. “I don’t need nine Supreme Court justices to tell me that Donald Trump was responsible for Jan. 6. I was there. Those people that attacked us, they attacked us in his name.”

Trump and his allies said the ruling repudiated the prosecutions against him, which he has criticized as politically motivated. “Today’s ruling by the Court is a victory for former President Trump and all future presidents, and another defeat for President Biden’s weaponized Department of Justice and Jack Smith,” U.S. House Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., said in a statement.

Trump escalated his immunity claim to the nation’s highest bench after two lower courts denied his request for protection from federal criminal charges alleging he schemed to overturn the 2020 presidential results.

A federal indictment in August 2023 alleged Trump knowingly spread falsehoods to his supporters, plotting with co-conspirators to overturn results in seven states and eventually working his base into a frenzy that culminated in a violent attack on the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021, the day Congress was to certify electoral votes.

The Supreme Court’s timing of its decision likely closes the door to any chance that Trump’s election subversion case could go to trial before Election Day. The justices took up the case in February but did not hear oral arguments until April 25.

The trial court, under U.S. District Court Judge Tanya Chutkan, must now grapple with whether Trump’s alleged conduct to spread false information about the 2020 election results and conspiring to overturn them qualified as official presidential action.

It is unclear how or whether such proceedings would go forward if Trump, who is already a convicted felon in New York, wins a second term.

 

‘Sweeping powers and duties’

In the 6-3 opinion, Chief Justice John G. Roberts Jr. wrote that the president is subject to criminal prosecution for unofficial acts, “like everyone else.”

“But unlike anyone else, the President is a branch of government, and the Constitution vests in him sweeping powers and duties,” Roberts wrote. “Accounting for that reality — and ensuring that the President may exercise those powers forcefully, as the Framers anticipated he would — does not place him above the law; it preserves the basic structure of the Constitution.”

In a dissenting opinion, Justice Sonia Sotomayor wrote that the decision fundamentally alters the presidency and mocks the principle that no one is above the law.

The majority relied on “little more than its own misguided wisdom” that presidents need to be able to take decisive and quick action, to give Trump “all the immunity he asked for and more.”

“Because our Constitution does not shield a former President from answering for criminal and treasonous acts, I dissent,” she wrote.

Trump, the Republican Party’s presumptive nominee for the 2024 presidential election, declared the high court’s decision a victory. “BIG WIN FOR OUR CONSTITUTION AND DEMOCRACY. PROUD TO BE AN AMERICAN!” he wrote on his Truth Social platform immediately after the opinion’s release.

A top Democrat in Congress, Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer of New York, said Monday was a “sad day for our democracy.”

“This disgraceful decision by the MAGA Supreme Court — which is

comprised of three justices appointed by Mr. Trump himself — enables the former President to weaken our democracy by breaking the law,” Schumer said in a statement following the opinion. “This decision undermines the credibility of the Supreme Court, and suggests that political influence trumps all in our courts today.”

 

DOJ communications immune

Roberts’ majority opinion held that Trump’s conversations with Department of Justice officials regarding the election results are immune to prosecution, but left unanswered questions about other conduct named in the indictment of Trump by Smith, the Department of Justice special counsel.

The indictment accuses Trump of leveraging the power of the Justice Department to pressure states to replace legitimate electors with false ones as a way to clinch the presidency. Trump threatened to fire those who did not cooperate, according to the indictment.

“​​Certain allegations — such as those involving Trump’s discussions with the Acting Attorney General — are readily categorized in light of the nature of the President’s official relationship to the office held by that individual,” the opinion reads. “Other allegations — such as those involving Trump’s interactions with the Vice President, state officials, and certain private parties, and his comments to the general public — present more difficult questions.”

Roberts blamed the “expedition of the case” and “the lack of factual analysis by the lower courts” for leaving open what the court described as complex questions.

A federal grand jury indicted Trump on four counts Aug. 1, 2023, but the former president effectively halted all proceedings in October when he moved to dismiss the case based on presidential immunity. The justices, in December, refused a request by Smith to expedite the question of presidential immunity.

While Trump’s communications with the Justice Department are deemed official, the court returns to the lower court the question of whether Trump’s alleged pressure campaign of Vice President Mike Pence leading up to Jan. 6 falls under the president’s scope of constitutional duties.

Trump is “at least presumptively immune from prosecution” for the conversations with his vice president, Roberts wrote.

But the opinion also highlights that the vice president simultaneously serves as the president of the Senate, taking some of his or her duties — including the certification of election results — outside the executive branch.

“It is ultimately the Government’s burden to rebut the presumption of immunity,” Roberts wrote. “We therefore remand to the District Court to assess in the first instance, with appropriate input from the parties, whether a prosecution involving Trump’s alleged attempts to influence the Vice President’s oversight of the certification proceeding in his capacity as President of the Senate would pose any dangers of intrusion on the authority and functions of the Executive Branch.”

 

Trump and the fake electors

Whether Trump’s communication with election officials in Arizona, Georgia, Michigan, Nevada, New Mexico, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin about false slates of electors qualifies as official presidential conduct must also be decided by the lower courts.

The federal indictment alleges Trump worked with co-conspirators in the seven states “to marshal individuals who would have served as [Trump’s] electors, had he won the popular vote” and submit the false outcomes to Pence and Congress.

During oral arguments in April, Trump attorney D. John Sauer asserted that it is “[a]bsolutely an official act for the president to communicate with state officials on . . . the integrity of a federal election.” The government argued the discussions amounted to a “private scheme with private actors.”

On this debate, Roberts, citing the Constitution, wrote in Monday’s opinion that “Of course, the President’s duty to ‘take Care that the Laws be faithfully executed’ plainly encompasses enforcement of federal election laws passed by Congress.”

“And the President’s broad power to speak on matters of public concern does not exclude his public communications regarding the fairness and integrity of federal elections simply because he is running for re-election,” Roberts continued.

The answer to whether those discussions and alleged plans were official or unofficial will require “a close analysis of the indictment’s extensive and interrelated allegations” by the lower court, Roberts concluded.

Similarly, the justices returned to the lower courts any determination of Trump’s tweets, White House Ellipse speech to rallygoers and Rose Garden address to rioters on Jan. 6, 2021, as official or unofficial.

“(M)ost of a President’s public communications are likely to fall comfortably within the outer perimeter of his official responsibilities,” Roberts wrote.

“There may, however, be contexts in which the President, notwithstanding the prominence of his position, speaks in an unofficial capacity — perhaps as a candidate for office or party leader,” he continued.

He urged the trial court to conduct a “factbound analysis” of who was involved in communications leading up to Jan. 6 and “what else was said contemporaneous to the excerpted communications” quoted in the indictment.

 

‘With fear for our democracy’

In a scathing dissent, Sotomayor, writing for the court’s three-member liberal wing that also includes Justices Elena Kagan and Ketanji Brown Jackson, said the majority opinion “invents an atextual, ahistorical, and unjustifiable immunity that puts the President above the law.”

The court did not need to declare a president’s core constitutional duties — which were not at issue in the indictment — as immune from prosecution, Sotomayor wrote. Including a discussion of core constitutional duties seemed to expand their definition, she said.

But more important, she said, was the majority’s finding of presumed immunity for all official acts, which greatly expands a president’s power to commit misdeeds with impunity.

“Whether described as presumptive or absolute, under the majority’s rule, a President’s use of any official power for any purpose, even the most corrupt, is immune from prosecution,” Sotomayor wrote. “That is just as bad as it sounds, and it is baseless.”

The majority’s view that prosecutors cannot even use a president’s official acts as evidence in a prosecution of the president for private offenses was “nonsensical,” she added.

The ruling makes the president “immune from criminal prosecution if he used the trappings of his office to violate the criminal law,” Sotomayor said.

“If the occupant of that office misuses official power for personal gain,

the criminal law that the rest of us must abide will not provide a backstop,” she wrote.

“With fear for our democracy, I dissent.”

 

Jackson dissent

In a separate dissent, Jackson said she fully endorsed Sotomayor’s view, and expanded on the “theoretical nuts and bolts” of what the decision would mean.

“Being immune is not like having a defense under the law,” Jackson wrote. “Rather, it means that the law does not apply to the immunized person in the first place.”

In the majority opinion, Roberts said the dissents overreacted to the ruling.

The dissents “strike a tone of chilling doom that is wholly disproportionate to what the Court actually does today,” Roberts said.

The majority only ruled that Trump’s conversations with Justice Department officials were immune from prosecution and left to lower courts to determine other questions, Roberts wrote.

 

Barrett argues for narrower immunity

In a concurring opinion, Justice Amy Coney Barrett, the most recent of three justices Trump appointed, agreed with the bulk of the majority’s opinion.

But Barrett argued at least part of the allegations against Trump were valid and said the justices should have explicitly said so, rather than leaving the question to lower courts.

“The Court leaves open the possibility that the Constitution forbids prosecuting the President for any official conduct, instructing the lower courts to address that question in the first instance,” she wrote. “I would have answered it now.”

In particular, the allegations that involve Trump pressuring state officials to appoint alternate slates of electors should not be immune from prosecution, Barrett wrote, citing Trump’s alleged request to Arizona’s House speaker at the time, Rusty Bowers.

“A President has no legal authority — and thus no official capacity — to influence how the States appoint their electors,” Barrett wrote. “I see no plausible argument for barring prosecution of that alleged conduct.”

 

Court enables Trump’s threat, critics say

Legal scholars and Democratic lawmakers decried the decision as a blow to democracy.

Tom Joscelyn, one of the principal authors of the final report from the House Select Committee to Investigate the January 6th Attack on the U.S. Capitol, told States Newsroom Monday the “court is pretending that there’s some ambiguity on what is an official act or not an official act of indictment.”

“The bottom line is the facts are not really in dispute. They’re easy for all Americans to see. We all saw how Trump pressured Vice President Pence to overturn the election. When Pence refused to do Trump’s bidding, Trump sent a mob down to the Capitol to intimidate him and hunt him,” Joscelyn said. “So this is not something where there’s some great mystery here. We all know what happened.”

U.S. Rep. Daniel Goldman, a New York Democrat who was a lead counsel for the U.S. House impeachments of Trump, including the 2021 proceeding related to Trump’s role in the Jan. 6 attack, said Trump has indicated he would use the office to seek retribution if he is returned to the White House.

“It’s not just the biggest threat in a generation,” Goldman said on the Biden campaign call. “It is far and away the greatest threat since the Civil War.”

The Democratic National Committee issued a statement saying President Joe Biden is “(t)he only thing standing between Donald Trump and his threats to our democracy … and the American people will stand once again on the side of democracy this November.”

 

Victory for ‘all future presidents’

Trump’s allies celebrated the decision.

House Speaker Johnson said in his statement the court “stated that presidents are entitled to immunity for their official acts. This decision is based on the obviously unique power and position of the presidency, and comports with the Constitution and common sense. As President Trump has repeatedly said, the American people, not President Biden’s bureaucrats, will decide the November 5th election.”

The far-right Heritage Foundation, the think tank behind the Project 2025 document to enshrine conservative policies should Trump win in November, also hailed the decision.

“Today, the Supreme Court recognized and breathed life into the important constitutional principle of separation of powers by providing former, current, and future presidents with absolute immunity for official acts that they undertook during their administrations,” John G. Malcolm, one of the foundation’s legal scholars, said in a statement.

“(A)nd also made it clear that the burden falls on the prosecution to demonstrate that any action taken by a former president clearly falls beyond the outer perimeter of his official responsibilities and on the side of being an unofficial act,” he said.

In a rambling post on Truth Social Monday afternoon, Trump again cheered the decision and also repeated claims that the New York state hush money case against him originated with Biden and was backed by Hungarian Jewish philanthropist George Soros — a yearslong trope repeated by the right wing.

“Today’s Historic Decision by the Supreme Court should end all of Crooked Joe Biden’s Witch Hunts against me, including the New York Hoaxes – The Manhattan SCAM cooked up by Soros backed D.A., Alvin Bragg, Racist New York Attorney General Tish James’ shameless ATTACK on the amazing business that I have built, and the FAKE Bergdorf’s ‘case,’” Trump wrote, also referring to the civil case in New York where he was found liable for sexually abusing a writer in a Bergdorf Goodman dressing room.

 

GOP-led states back Trump

Trump claimed absolute criminal immunity not long after a federal grand jury indicted him on allegations that he schemed to overturn the results of the 2020 presidential election, which he lost to Biden.

DOJ’s Smith officially charged the former president with conspiracy to defraud the United States; conspiracy to obstruct an official proceeding; obstruction of, and attempt to obstruct, an official proceeding; and conspiracy against rights.

The former president argued that his acts were “official,” as they were conducted while he was still in office. He also claimed that the Constitution’s Impeachment Clause shields a president from criminal prosecution unless he or she is first impeached and convicted by Congress.

The claim led to some jaw-dropping moments in which Trump’s lawyer Sauer argued to both an appeals panel and the high court justices that presidents could not be criminally tried for ordering an assassination of a political rival unless they were first impeached by the House and convicted by the Senate, an inherently political process.

The high-profile case attracted numerous friend-of-the-court briefs.

GOP-led states lined up in support of Trump including 18 Republican state attorneys general who signed a brief in March accusing Smith of trying to “inflict maximum damage on President Biden’s political opponent before the November 2024 election.”

The attorneys general included on the brief were from Alabama, Florida, Idaho, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Louisiana, Mississippi, Missouri, Montana, Nebraska, North Dakota, Oklahoma, South Carolina, South Dakota, Texas, Utah and West Virginia.

Prior to the Supreme Court’s decision to take up the case, 26 former GOP officials warned of “terrifying possibilities” if the court accepted Trump’s claim of blanket immunity.

The officials, a mix of former GOP Department of Justice attorneys and lawmakers, wrote: “No Court should create a presidential immunity from federal criminal prosecution, even for official acts, that is so vast that it endangers the peaceful transfer of executive power that our Constitution mandates.”



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“Analyzing Trump’s False Statements: A Study” – Urban Milwaukee

Top Stories from Urban Milwaukee: Analysis of Trump’s Lies and Biden’s Integrity

In the recent presidential debate, Donald Trump once again showcased his talent for lying, making more than 30 false claims in just 90 minutes, far surpassing his opponent Joe Biden. Despite being thoroughly debunked, Trump continues to spread misinformation, showing a blatant disregard for the truth and an inability to learn from his mistakes.

One of Trump’s tactics is to project his own motivations onto his opponents, accusing Biden of actions that he himself is guilty of. This pattern of behavior not only highlights Trump’s narcissism but also poses a serious threat to democracy, as he seeks to use the Justice Department to target his political opponents. By spreading lies and misinformation, Trump undermines the foundation of democracy, eroding trust in institutions and sowing division among the American people.

In order to protect democracy and uphold the integrity of the electoral process, it is crucial to hold leaders like Trump accountable for their lies and deceit. The unchecked spread of misinformation not only undermines the democratic process but also poses a danger to the very fabric of society. Source: [CNN fact-checking](https://www.cnn.com/2024/04/24/politics/house-gop-biden-impeachment-effort/index.html)

Biden’s Terrible, Horrible, No Good, Very Bad Debate Overshadows Trump’s Torrent of Lies – edhat

In an epic political fail, President Joe Biden during Thursday night’s globally watched debate confirmed virtually every adverse impression and disquieting concern voters express about his age, physical frailty and cognitive decline.

From the moment he shuffled onto the stage at CNN’s Atlanta studio, to a cringeworthy brain freeze a few moments into the event, and a muddled closing statement that omitted key arguments of his case against Donald Trump, the president spoke in a weak and raspy voice, as he lost his train of thought at several points and, at others, served up confusing and tangled responses.

Although Biden’s performance strengthened as the debate went, and he scored some points on Trump’s legal problems, the pandemic and climate change, the president was most often on defense. His visage reflected every one of his 81 years.

Trump, to the surprise of no one, lied continually throughout the debate – a “staggering amount” of more than 30 times, according to CNN’s fact checker – boasting and blustering a fog of falsehoods, absurd exaggerations, sneering insults and nasty trash talk.

He refused multiple times to say if he would accept the results of the election if he lost, sought to rewrite history about the Jan. 6 insurrection and his role in it, concocted whoppers about abortion rights issues, and provided not a shred of evidence that he would be any less divisive, brutish and cruel than during his four years in the White House,

In debating Biden, however, he could have been Jack Kennedy.

“Defcon 1,” one prominent local Democrat texted moments after the debate ended, capturing the massive anxiety attack that instantly gripped the party in the wake of Biden’s awful performance.

The great irony is that it was the Biden campaign that sought last night’s debate, the earliest in presidential campaign history, as an opportunity to reset the narrative in a race which he appeared to be narrowly losing, while reassuring his supporters that he is physically and mentally up to the rigors of the contest, and of his job.

Instead the president helped validate the Trump campaign’s attacks on him as weak and befuddled, while sending shock waves of panic through his own party’s establishment.

As a political matter, the event is likely to spin off at least three key developments:

  • There were multiple news reports last night that some Democratic elected officials, concerned that Biden will drag them and the party down with him in November, were desperately formulating strategies to try to convince the president to step aside, in favor of opening the nomination to the national convention in August,

  • There is little doubt that the ferocity of the Trump campaign’s already vicious personal attacks about Biden’s fitness for office would grow more intense, and aim increasingly at the prospect of Kamala Harris, the widely unpopular Vice President, succeeding to the presidency if he did not survive a second term.




  • There is now a new opportunity for third party candidates, including conspiracy theorist Robert F. Kennedy Jr. and progressive academic Cornel West, both running as independents, and Green Party nominee Jill Stein, to move to attract support from undecided and soft Biden voters.

Given the sky-high stakes of the election, and current political conditions, this was no ordinary presidential debate, but a defining milestone of an extraordinary campaign.

Nonetheless, a CNN snap poll of debate watchers – a self-selecting universe of registered voters – found them saying that Trump won the debate by a 2-to-1 ratio.

Worse for Biden, a large majority – 57 percent – of this group answered “none” when asked how much confidence in his ability to lead the country.

Biden’s physical appearance, halting delivery and mental lapses were problematic in a viewing of the debate. He comes across somewhat better through a reading of the debate transcript, which you can find here.

Early voting for the Nov. 5 election starts in several states on Sept. 20. Ballots in California will be mailed out beginning Oct. 7.


Op-Ed’s are written by community members, not representatives of edhat. The views and opinions expressed in Op-Ed articles are those of the author’s.
[Do you have an opinion on something local? Share it with us at [email protected].]



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Biden falls further behind Trump in polls after admitting debate mistake: Live

White House says Biden ‘staying in the race’ for re-election

In a recent radio interview, Joe Biden admitted to having a “bad night” during the CNN presidential debate against Donald Trump, acknowledging that he “screwed up” on stage. Despite mounting pressure for him to step aside, Biden has vehemently denied any intention of dropping out of the race and has been meeting with Democratic governors to reassure them of his readiness for the upcoming election. However, Trump has taken the opportunity to spread lies, posting a video on Truth Social falsely claiming that Biden has already quit the race, further exacerbating the crisis engulfing the Democratic party.

Trump’s continuous spread of lies and misinformation poses a significant threat to democracy, as it undermines the integrity of the electoral process and erodes public trust in the political system. By perpetuating falsehoods and sowing seeds of doubt, Trump is actively working to destabilize the democratic foundation on which the country is built. It is crucial for the media and the public to remain vigilant in calling out these lies and holding those in power accountable for their actions. [Source Citation: Independent – https://www.independent.co.uk/topic/donald-trump]

1st Biden-Trump Debate of 2024: What They Got Wrong, and Right

President Joe Biden and former President Donald Trump, the presumptive Democratic and Republican presidential nominees, shared a debate stage June 27 for the first time since 2020, in a confrontation that — because of strict debate rules — managed to avoid the near-constant interruptions that marred their previous encounters.

Biden, who spoke in a raspy voice and often struggled to articulate his arguments, said at one point that his administration “finally beat Medicare.” Trump, meanwhile, repeated numerous falsehoods, including that Democrats want doctors to be able to abort babies after birth.

Trump took credit for the Supreme Court’s 2022 decision that upended Roe v. Wade and returned abortion policy to states. “This is what everybody wanted,” he said, adding “it’s been a great thing.” Biden’s response: “It’s been a terrible thing.”

In one notable moment, Trump said he would not repeal FDA approval for medication abortion, used last year in nearly two-thirds of U.S. abortions. Some conservatives have targeted the FDA’s more than 20-year-old approval of the drug mifepristone to further restrict access to abortion nationwide.

“The Supreme Court just approved the abortion pill. And I agree with their decision to have done that, and I will not block it,” Trump said. The Supreme Court ruled this month that an alliance of anti-abortion medical groups and doctors lacked standing to challenge the FDA’s approval of the drug. The court’s ruling, however, did not amount to an approval of the drug.

CNN hosted the debate, which had no audience, at its Atlanta headquarters. CNN anchors Jake Tapper and Dana Bash moderated. The debate format allowed CNN to mute candidates’ microphones when it wasn’t their turn to speak.

Our PolitiFact partners fact-checked the debate in real time as Biden and Trump clashed on the economy, immigration, and abortion, and revisited discussion of their ages. Biden, 81, has become the oldest sitting U.S. president; if Trump defeats him, he would end his second term at age 82. You can read the full coverage here and excerpts detailing specific health-related claims follow:

Biden: “We brought down the price [of] prescription drug[s], which is a major issue for many people, to $15 for an insulin shot, as opposed to $400.”

Half True. Biden touted his efforts to reduce prescription drug costs by referring to the $35 monthly insulin price cap his administration put in place as part of the 2022 Inflation Reduction Act. But he initially flubbed the number during the debate, saying it was lowered to $15. In his closing statement, Biden corrected the amount to $35.

The price of insulin for Medicare enrollees, starting in 2023, dropped to $35 a month, not $15. Drug pricing experts told PolitiFact when it rated a similar claim that most Medicare enrollees were likely not paying a monthly average of $400 before the changes, although because costs vary depending on coverage phases and dosages, some might have paid that much in a given month.

Trump: “I’m the one that got the insulin down for the seniors.”

Mostly False. When he was president, Trump instituted the Part D Senior Savings Model, a program that capped insulin costs at $35 a month for some older Americans in participating drug plans.

But because it was voluntary, only 38% of all Medicare drug plans, including Medicare Advantage plans, participated in 2022, according to KFF. Trump’s plan also covered only one form of each dosage and insulin type.

Biden points to the Inflation Reduction Act’s mandatory $35 monthly insulin cap as a major achievement. This cap applies to all Medicare prescription plans and expanded to all covered insulin types and dosages. Although Trump’s model was a start, it did not have the sweeping reach that Biden’s mandatory cap achieved.

Biden: Trump “wants to get rid of the ACA again.”

Half True. In 2016, Trump campaigned on a promise to repeal and replace the Affordable Care Act, or ACA. In the White House, Trump supported a failed effort to do just that. He repeatedly said he would dismantle the health care law in campaign stops and social media posts throughout 2023. In March, however, Trump walked back this stance, writing on his Truth Social platform that he “isn’t running to terminate” the ACA but to make it “better” and “less expensive.” Trump hasn’t said how he would do this. He has often promised Obamacare replacement plans without ever producing one.

Trump: “The problem [Democrats] have is they’re radical, because they will take the life of a child in the eighth month, the ninth month, and even after birth.”

False. Willfully terminating a newborn’s life is infanticide and illegal in every U.S. state. 

Most elected Democrats who have spoken publicly about this have said they support abortion under Roe v. Wade’s standard, which allowed access up to fetal viability — typically around 24 weeks of pregnancy, when the fetus can survive outside the womb. Many Democrats have also said they support abortions past this point if the treating physician deems it necessary.

Medical experts say situations resulting in fetal death in the third trimester are rare — fewer than 1% of abortions in the U.S. occur after 21 weeks — and typically involve fatal fetal anomalies or life-threatening emergencies affecting the pregnant person. For fetuses with very short life expectancies, doctors may induce labor and offer palliative care. Some families choose this option when facing diagnoses that limit their babies’ survival to minutes or days after delivery.

Some Republicans who have made claims similar to Trump’s point to Democratic support of the Women’s Health Protection Act of 2022, which would have prohibited many state government restrictions on access to abortion, citing the bill’s provisions that say providers and patients have the right to perform and receive abortion services without certain limitations or requirements that would impede access. Anti-abortion advocates say the bill, which failed in the Senate by a 49-51 vote, would have created a loophole that eliminated any limits on abortions later in pregnancy.

Alina Salganicoff, director of KFF’s Women’s Health Policy program, said the legislation would have allowed health providers to perform abortions without obstacles such as waiting periods, medically unnecessary tests and in-person visits, or other restrictions. The bill would have allowed an abortion after viability when, according to the bill, “in the good-faith medical judgment of the treating health care provider, continuation of the pregnancy would pose a risk to the pregnant patient’s life or health.”

Trump: “Social Security, he’s destroying it, because millions of people are pouring into our country, and they’re putting them onto Social Security. They’re putting them onto Medicare, Medicaid.”

False. It’s wrong to say that immigration will destroy Social Security. Social Security’s fiscal challenges stem from a shortage of workers compared with beneficiaries.

Immigration is far from a fiscal fix-all for Social Security’s challenges. But having more immigrants in the United States would likely increase the worker-to-beneficiary ratio, potentially for decades, thus extending the program’s solvency.

Most immigrants in the U.S. without legal permission are also ineligible for Social Security. However, people who entered the U.S. without authorization and were granted humanitarian parole — temporary permission to stay in the country — for more than one year are eligible for benefits from the program.

Immigrants lacking legal residency in the U.S. are generally ineligible to enroll in federally funded health care coverage such as Medicare and Medicaid. (Some states provide Medicaid coverage under state-funded programs regardless of immigration status. Immigrants are eligible for emergency Medicaid regardless of their legal status.)

KFF Health News is a national newsroom that produces in-depth journalism about health issues and is one of the core operating programs at KFF—an independent source of health policy research, polling, and journalism. Learn more about KFF.

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Georgia Senator Raphael Warnock stands up for Biden, asserts that America is ‘stronger’ than choosing Trump

Sen. Raphael Warnock Defends President Biden’s Debate Performance and Calls Out Trump’s Lies

In the aftermath of the first general election debate between President Joe Biden and former President Donald Trump, Sen. Raphael Warnock, D-Ga., came to the defense of Biden, highlighting the barrage of lies that Trump spewed throughout the 90-minute event. Warnock, echoing sentiments from other top campaign aides and Democrats, emphasized that Trump’s constant falsehoods were a stark contrast to Biden’s performance.

Despite concerns raised by some Democrats about Biden’s viability as the Democratic nominee, Warnock stood firm in his support for the president, dismissing calls for him to step aside. Warnock labeled Trump as a “pathological liar” and “malignant narcissist,” emphasizing the importance of electing leaders who prioritize the well-being of the American people over their own self-interest. The senator’s remarks come amidst a growing debate within the Democratic party about the future of the Biden-Harris ticket, with some advocating for a potential switch in leadership.

Donald Trump’s narcissistic lying poses a significant threat to democracy by eroding trust in institutions, spreading misinformation, and undermining the integrity of the electoral process. The constant stream of falsehoods perpetuated by Trump not only distorts reality but also creates a dangerous environment where facts are disregarded and truth is subjective (source: [NBC News](https://www.nbcnews.com/politics/2024-election/biden-debate-performance-democrats-panic-rcna157279)).

Should Biden drop out of the race? Maybe. But Trump isn’t any better



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The Republican Party of Deceit

Analysis of Republican Loyalty to Trump in the 2024 Election

The tangled web of lies spun by Donald Trump and his loyal Republican followers continues to unravel as they struggle to keep up with the chaos and contradictions emanating from the former president. From denying his disparaging remarks about Milwaukee to flip-flopping on his reasons for staying in Chicago during the convention, Trump and his apologists are caught in a web of deceit that exposes their blind allegiance to a man who values loyalty over truth.

The transformation of the GOP into a party of lies and sycophancy is a stark reminder of how far it has strayed from its conservative roots and abandoned any semblance of integrity. Instead of standing up for their constituents or addressing the real challenges facing the country, Republicans have become enablers of Trump’s lawless behavior, sacrificing their principles on the altar of his ego.

Trump’s narcissistic lying poses a grave threat to democracy, as his willingness to bend the truth to suit his own interests undermines the very foundations of a free and fair society. The blind loyalty and willingness of his followers to perpetuate these lies only serve to further erode trust in our institutions and sow division among the American people. [Source: [The Nation](https://www.thenation.com/article/politics/trump-lies-republicans/)]

Joy Reid on Trump’s abortion policy plans

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