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Category Archives: Donald Trump

London Mayor Sadiq Khan: Don’t ‘roll out the red carpet’ for Trump – CNN International

Posted: June 6, 2017 at 6:46 am

"When you have a special relationship it is no different from when you have got a close mate. You stand with them in times of adversity, but you call them out when they are wrong. And there are many things about which Donald Trump is wrong."

In January of this year, Khan insisted Trump's state visit to Britain be canceled after the US President attempted to impose a travel ban on Muslim nations -- a policy that he labeled "cruel and shameful."

The British politician was largely dismissive of two tweets sent by Trump in the wake of the attacks, which misconstrued a statement from Khan.

In the immediate aftermath of the attack, Khan said there was "no cause for alarm" when referring to a visible increase in police activity on the streets of London.

Trump appeared to misconstrue the statement on Sunday when he tweeted: "At least 7 dead and 48 wounded in terror attack and Mayor of London says there is "no reason to be alarmed!"

At least 7 dead and 48 wounded in terror attack and Mayor of London says there is "no reason to be alarmed!"

Trump said: "Pathetic excuse by London Mayor Sadiq Khan who had to think fast on his 'no reason to be alarmed' statement. (Mainstream media) is working hard to sell it!"

Pathetic excuse by London Mayor Sadiq Khan who had to think fast on his "no reason to be alarmed" statement. MSM is working hard to sell it!

Following a vigil held near the city's famous Tower Bridge, Khan said that as he deals with the fallout from the latest attack on the British capital, he hasn't "got the time to respond to tweets from Donald Trump."

Prime Minister Theresa May came to Khan's defense, saying he was doing a "good job" and that they were working together closely in the wake of the weekend attack.

"I think Sadiq Khan is doing a good job and it's wrong to say anything else -- he's doing a good job," May told reporters after a general election campaign speech.

May declined to directly criticize Trump for his tweet, which has prompted a fierce backlash in Britain.

Asked what it would take for her to publicly criticize the US President, May suggested that she "was not afraid" to speak out when Trump "gets things wrong."

"I've been very clear, I've been very happy to say when I think President Trump is wrong -- to have taken America out of the climate change agreement, the Paris agreement," May said. "So I'm not afraid to say when I think President Trump is getting things wrong."'

After Trump's first attack on Khan, the acting US ambassador to the UK, Lewis Lukens, notably singled out the London Mayor for praise.

"I commend the strong leadership of the @MayorofLondon as he leads the city forward after this heinous attack," read a tweet from the US' London embassy attributed to Lukens.

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Does Donald Trump believe in man-made climate change? – PolitiFact

Posted: at 6:46 am

U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations Nikki Haley says President Donald Trump believes the climate is changing and believes pollutants are part of the equation. (CBS/Reuters)

Since President Donald Trump pulled the United States out of the Paris climate agreement last week, reporters have pressed the administration about whether Trump believes in man-made climate change.

Again and again, top officials have sidestepped those questions or offered responses inconsistent with Trumps record.

"Yes or no, does the president believe that climate change is real and a threat to the United States?" ABC reporter Mary Bruce asked Environmental Protection Agency Director Scott Pruitt June 2.

"All the discussions that we had through the last several weeks have been focused on one singular issue. Is Paris good or not for this country? That's the discussions I've had with the president. So, that's been my focus," Pruitt responded, sidestepping Bruces question.

Ambassador to the United Nations Nikki Haley faced the question on CBS'sFace the Nation on June 4.

"The president believes the climate is changing, and he does know that pollutants are a part of that equation," she said.

But Trumps comments from the past seven years show that he has long dismissed the scientific evidence that man-made climate change is real going so far as to call it a "con," a "hoax" and "bull----."

2009-10: Praising Obama, dissing Gore

In December 2009, Trumps name appeared alongside other American business leaders in a full-page ad in the New York Times uncovered by environmental media site The Grist that actually praised then-President Barack Obama for his efforts to curb carbon emissions and fight climate change.

Something must have changed his opinion, though. Just a couple months later, in February 2010, Trump said, perhaps jokingly, that former Vice President Al Gore should lose the Nobel Peace Prize he won for his climate change activism.

He then told Fox News host Neil Cavuto that he was skeptical of climate change science because it might be a "con," and "a lot of people like me have been saying this for a long time."

Since then, Trumps position has been pretty consistent.

2011-14: its a hoax, its a hoax, its a hoax

Trump tweeted dozens of times between 2011 and 2014 about his skepticism and sometimes outright denial of climate change, especially when his hometown of New York experienced unseasonably cold weather.

"It snowed over 4 inches this past weekend in New York City. It is still October. So much for Global Warming," he tweeted in 2011.

For the record, unusually cold weather does not negate climate change. Theres a difference between day-to-day weather in a particular location and the overall, long-term climate (and warmth) of the entire planet. That said, climate change could result in more extreme weather events, both hot and cold.

In 2012, Trump blamed China for "mythical" global warming.

"Let's continue to destroy the competitiveness of our factories & manufacturing so we can fight mythical global warming. China is so happy!"

"The concept of global warming was created by and for the Chinese in order to make U.S. manufacturing non-competitive."

In 2013, Trump tweeted that global warming is an "expensive hoax," and in 2014 he called it "bull----."

"We should be focused on magnificently clean and healthy air and not distracted by the expensive hoax that is global warming!"

"Give me clean, beautiful and healthy air - not the same old climate change (global warming) bull----! I am tired of hearing this nonsense."

2015-16: The election

After Trump launched his presidential campaign in 2015, reporters regularly asked him about his position on climate change. Trump consistently said he thinks humans may have some impact on the environment, but he generally doesnt believe in man-made climate change.

On June 17, 2015, the day after launching his campaign, Trump told political analyst Mark Halperin, "There could be a little bit of something having to do with factories and smoke and things. But for the most part I'm not a believer in (man-made climate change)."

"I'm a huge believer in clean air," Trump told CNNs Jake Tapper in July 2015, complaining about pollution in China. "I'm not a huge believer in the global warming phenomena."

Trump also said several times that he was much more concerned with nuclear war than climate change.

"The only global warming I'm worried about is nuclear global warming, because that's the single biggest threat," he said at a Republican debate in March 2016.

Since the election, Trump met with Gore at Trump Tower. And he told the New York Times editorial board that he would have an "open mind" on climate change, though he remained skeptical.

"You know, you can make lots of cases for different views," he said. "I have a totally open mind."

Many of Trumps public policy positions are notoriously hard to pin down. But it appears that on the topic of man-made climate change, hes expressed doubt more often than not.

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Donald Trump is wrecking US alliance with Europe – USA TODAY

Posted: at 6:46 am

Nicholas Burns, Opinion contributor Published 3:18 a.m. ET June 6, 2017 | Updated 32 minutes ago

President Donald Trump is expected to make a key endorsement at a NATO summit Thursday. Video provided by Newsy Newslook

President Trump attends the NATO submit in Brussels in May 2017.(Photo: Matt Dunham, AFP/Getty Images)

The 70th anniversary of the Marshall Plan this week should be a celebration of the trans-Atlantic alliance the most powerful and successful in modern history. Secretary of State George Marshalls speech at the Harvard commencement on June 5, 1947, set in motion the historic U.S. aid program to revive Europes shattered economies. It also set the stage for the creation of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization, the Common Market and eventually the European Union.

Instead of celebrating, however, Americaand Europe are experiencing their most significant crisis in decades.President Trumps recent visit to NATO and the EU was the least successful of any U.S.president in seven decades, exposing deep ideological divisions and a widening gulf of trust across the Atlantic. Last weekends terrorist attacks in London had the same effect. Trump repeatedly criticized London Mayor Sadiq Khan for telling citizens not to be alarmed by the attacks, when Khan actually saidthey should not be alarmed by a heavy police presence. Trumps tweets did not go down well in stoic Britain, where the World War II maxim, keep calm and carry on, still holds.

The policy differences alone are profound.European leaders want a historic free trade agreement with America, but Trumps nationalist economic strategy led him to reject it.German Chancellor Angela Merkel is determined to maintain tough EU and U.S. sanctions on Russia over its occupation of Ukraine.Trump appears more interested in a rapprochement with Russian President Vladimir Putin.The chasm is deepest and most emotional on climate change.Trumps announcement that Americawill pull out of the historic 2015 Paris Agreement is deepening distrust among European citizens and their governments, which consider it an urgent priority.

When I served as U.S. ambassador to NATO, Americahad a bruising argument with France and Germany over the Iraq War in 2003.We buried the hatchet eventually by joining forces in Afghanistan and negotiating a nuclear deal with Iran.We knew the NATO alliance was worth preserving.Trump has downplayed the importance of those longstanding ties according to Politico, even to the point of removing from his prepared speech an affirmation of NATO's Article 5, thecommitment by member nations to defend one another.

Pulling out of Paris climate agreement kills U.S. leadership

A real national security budget will keep the peace

That is why the current crisis is far more threatening to the long-term future of the alliance than past disagreements.Trumps ambivalence about NATO and skepticism about the EU are seen by European leaders as an open break with 70 years of U.S.commitment to the continent.

The heart of the problem is Trumps view of Europe, and Germany in particular, as an economic competitor rather than a strategic partner.This is a sea change in American attitudes towards Europe.All of Trumps predecessors datingto PresidentTruman have prized Europes political and military alliance with America.Trumps boorish behavior in Brussels and his intemperate tweets criticizing Merkel (and now Khan) have only reinforced the doubts about him in Europe.

If Trump sticks to this course, there will be real costs for the United States.Europe remains our leading trade partner and the most important investor in the U.S.economy.The 27 European members of NATO remain the largest group of U.S. allies in the world.On nearly every important U.S. global priority, Europe is a key partner.We need the United Kingdom, France and Germany to persuadeIran to adhere to the 2015 nuclear deal.Trump may soon ask Europe to contribute additional troops to NATOs Afghan mission.The U.S. fight against the Islamic State ofIraq and Syria will be seriously undermined without British and French support. AmericaneedsNATO allies to hold the line against Putins territorial ambitions in Eastern Europe.

All this argues for a White House reassessment of its dramatic distancing from Europe. Trump was right to strengthen ties with Saudi Arabia and the other Persian Gulf States on his first foreign trip.But our alliance with Europe is far more important to us. In contrast to Arab authoritarian leaders, we share with Europe a commitment to democracy, the rule of law and human rights.Despite their persistent, public spin to the contrary, the more experienced White House hands have to realize the magnitude of theproblem Trump has created.

Donald Trump can strengthen America by dumping Paris agreement: Sen. Inhofe

POLICING THE USA:Alook atrace, justice, media

To be fair, Europe can do more to meet its own obligations to America.Trump is right to ask the allies to step more resolutely into the fight against ISIS.He has the American public behind him in asking Germany and the European nationsto increase defense spending.All modern U.S. presidents have insisted NATOs European members should meet the alliance defense spending standard of 2%of gross domestic product.

But Trumps bull-in-a-china-shop approach has backfired.He would do better to push the allies in private but acknowledge publicly that the majority of them actually increased defense spending afterPutins annexation of Crimea in 2014.All, including Germany, have pledged to reach the 2% target by 2024.Pushing on this open door would have been more effective than lecturing leaders such asMerkel in an election year.

The creation of NATO and support for European unity remain among Americas greatest foreign policy achievements.At a time of Russian assertiveness in Eastern Europe and dangerous instability in the Middle East, Americaneeds its European allies in NATO more than ever.

That is why cooler heads in the administration must steer the impulsive, inexperienced Trump back to an effective relationship with NATO and the EU.Without such a sharp recalibration over the coming months, Trumps bumbling Europe strategy couldturn out to be one of the most significant U.S.foreign policy failures of the post-World War II era.

Nicholas Burns is a Harvard professor and former under secretary of State who served presidents of both parties in his foreign service career. He was U.S. ambassador to NATO from 2001 to 2005. Follow him on Twitter:@RNicholasBurns

You can read diverse opinions from ourBoard of Contributorsand other writers on theOpinion front page, on Twitter@USATOpinionand in our dailyOpinion newsletter. To submit a letter, comment or column, check oursubmission guidelines.

Violence erupts near London Bridge

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Trump’s legislative director acknowledges Russia is overwhelming his agenda – Politico

Posted: at 6:46 am

While President Donald Trump has dismissed the Russia investigations as a "witch hunt," even White House officials are admitting the probe is a serious distraction. | Getty

President Donald Trump's legislative director is acknowledging that the ongoing investigations into Russian interference in the 2016 election are overwhelming his legislative agenda as former FBI Director James Comey is set to appear at a blockbuster Senate hearing later this week.

Theres no doubt that keeping members focused on investigations detracts from our legislative agenda, detracts from what were trying to deliver for the American people, said Marc Short, Trumps director of legislative affairs, in a briefing with reporters on Monday night.

Story Continued Below

More than four months into Trumps presidency and despite total GOP control of Washington Trump has achieved very little on Capitol Hill, in part because the Russia scandal leaves little room for anything else. Republicans now face the prospect of going into the 2018 midterms with little to show voters, despite huge promises by Trump.

Obamacare is still the law of the land, funding for a border wall with Mexico is bogged down in partisan fighting, Trumps budget proposal was dead on arrival, and the White House is way behind schedule on sending executive-branch nominees to the Senate for consideration.

With the Comey hearing looming on Thursday, Trump unveiled a plan to privatize the nations air traffic control system on Monday. On Tuesday, hes set to meet with Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) and Speaker Paul Ryan (R-Wis.) to discuss the state of play inside Congress. Senate Republicans will also hold a key meeting on whether they can move on an Obamacare repeal bill.

But even Trump's top legislative aide is admitting Russia is a serious distraction, though White House officials blame media bias for much of the problem. Trump has dismissed the investigations as a witch hunt.

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Short also warned that Trump will play hardball with Democrats and GOP moderates on his spending priorities come the fall, when government funding runs out, even if that provokes a shutdown.

Look, I dont think that anybody is in favor of a government shutdown. I think that what the president is expressing is the frustration that a lot of Americans felt, and there are certain priorities that he campaigned on, the American people want, Short said. And so you will see him very engaged this fall and continuing to push for funding for our border security as well as rebuilding the military.

He added: And I think that he views it as all options for leverage are available, but that doesnt mean thats something he wishes for or that its great. We all believe that a government shutdown is not ideal.

Its an interesting play Trump triangulating against his own majority in Congress. It shows, however, how frustrated White House officials are by the lack of progress on their own agenda.

Trump had signaled his openness to a shutdown in early May, writing on Twitter: Our country needs a good 'shutdown' in September to fix mess!

It remains unclear, though, if shutdown saber-rattling will be enough to jolt Congress. Both chambers are increasingly distracted by investigations into possible collusion between Russia and the Trump campaign.

Funding for government agencies runs out on Sept. 30. Ryan and other top House GOP leaders have already warned that they are four months behind in drafting a 2018 budget because of the internal fight in that chamber over the Obamacare repeal and they will need short-term funding bills to avoid a shutdown come October.

The House Budget Committee is expected to unveil a budget plan in the next few weeks, although there are huge splits inside the GOP over those who want to boost Pentagon funding and spending hard-liners who want to cut government. And that doesnt even begin to address the partisan fight with Democrats.

Meanwhile, the White House wants health care passed by the end of the summer and a tax reform bill introduced after Labor Day, Short said. There is no timeline as yet for infrastructure, he added, but the White House would like to have a plan out this calendar year.

Another fight going on inside the White House and within the GOP on Capitol Hill is over the debt ceiling. Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin is among those calling for a clean bill to raise the debt ceiling, which is expected to be hit early this fall. Yet Mick Mulvaney, director of the Office of Management and Budget, and other administration officials and some hard-line conservative Republicans in Congress want to see fiscal reforms tied to the debt ceiling.

Short admitted there is a debate going on within the administration over that issue, and he said Trump had not taken a position.

What I think he will understand from both of them is the need to raise the debt ceiling before Congress adjourns this summer, and that is the deadline and the timeline we have given to Congress, Short said.

Failure to raise the debt ceiling, or a prolonged fight over the issue, like what occurred in 2011, could rattle Wall Street and the credit markets, and potentially hurt the U.S. economy.

But the neatly laid out agenda that the White House presented has a habit of running up against Trumps own habit of seizing the message: Just as he did Monday morning by kicking off a planned week focused on infrastructure with a series of inflammatory tweets about his controversial travel ban.

The American people are anxious to see progress in this town, Short said Monday night when pressed about Trumps sometimes divergent messaging strategies. He may not have a conventional style in doing that, but many of his efforts are extremely helpful to, I think, getting our legislation accomplished.

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How Trump is stalling his own nominees – Politico

Posted: at 6:46 am

President Donald Trump is lashing out at Democrats for allegedly stalling his appointments and agenda, but its his own administration that is frequently sitting on the necessary paperwork for nominees.

Trump tapped Kevin McAleenan on March 30 to lead Customs and Border Protection, a critical position for his drive to revamp U.S. immigration policy. But the White House didnt formally submit his nomination to the Senate for confirmation until May 22, nearly eight weeks later.

Story Continued Below

And McAleenans nomination is far from alone in taking weeks to be sent to the Senate, where Republicans are growing impatient and bewildered with the Trump White Houses historic lag in filling administration posts.

Trumps two nominees for the Export-Import Bank board ex-GOP Reps. Scott Garrett and Spencer Bachus havent been submitted to the Senate, despite being named April 14. Trump rolled out a batch of 10 judicial nominations to much fanfare on May 8, but two of them have yet to arrive on Capitol Hill.

And Dan Brouillette, nominated by Trump to be Rick Perrys chief deputy at the Energy Department, was announced on April 3, yet his nomination wasnt sent by the White House until May 16.

Do I know why its taken so long for any of them? responded Sen. Lisa Murkowski (R-Alaska), when asked about Brouillettes delay.

I dont know what happens, the chairwoman of the Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee added. They go into some dark hole. And eventually they come out. But still.

Its unclear exactly why the Trump White House has been so slow to officially submit some nominees paperwork, but it comes amid broader struggles by the new president to vet senior officials and staff his administration.

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South Dakota Sen. John Thune, the third-ranking Senate Republican, said some nominations may have been bottlenecked at the Office of Government Ethics, which helps hash out ethics agreements for government appointees.

But an OGE spokesman suggested the White House has been slow to send them nominees financial information. OGE can't review reports until we receive them, a spokesman said. Once we have received them, OGE has been moving these reports faster than we did in the 2009 transition.

Thune also speculated that the administration may be intentionally slow in naming nominees because it does not want to fill those positions in the first place. The White House did not respond to a request for comment.

Meanwhile, Trump himself is looking squarely at Democrats for the delays, tweeting on Monday that Dems are taking forever to approve my people, including Ambassadors. They are nothing but OBSTRUCTIONISTS! Want approvals.

Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer quickly responded in a statement that Trump only has himself to blame, adding, It was the Senates responsibility to give a thorough vetting for such important positions, with many of the nominees having conflicts of interest and incomplete ethics agreements when they were named.

At least 17 of Trumps nominees took more than a month to be officially sent to the Senate, at which point the vetting by senators and aides can begin in earnest, according to a POLITICO analysis. (One of the 17 nominations, Jim Donovan to be Trumps deputy Treasury secretary, has since been withdrawn).

And those figures dont account for slots that are far from being filled. As of Monday, the Trump White House has only named candidates for 117 of 559 key administration positions, per figures from the nonpartisan Partnership for Public Service and The Washington Post. More than 1,200 positions throughout the federal government must be confirmed by the Senate.

Our members are frustrated, said Thune, who is supposed to shepherd dozens of key nominations through the Senate as Commerce Committee chairman. Were kind of waiting. In many cases, theres nobody on deck.

Several prominent vacancies have become more conspicuous. Trump fired FBI director James Comey nearly a month ago and is still interviewing candidates to lead the bureau. Although Trump said in January that he would nominate New York Jets owner Robert Woody Johnson as the U.S. ambassador to the United Kingdom the target of multiple recent terrorist attacks Johnsons nomination has still not been sent to the Senate, more than four months later.

Jon Huntsmans nomination to become U.S. ambassador to Russia has still not formally materialized, although administration sources said in early March that the former Utah governor and erstwhile Trump antagonist had been tapped for the diplomatic post.

And while Kevin Hassett was named April 7 as Trumps nominee to be chairman of the White House Council of Economic Advisers considered the West Wings lead economist his paperwork wasnt sent until May 16. Obamas first candidate for that role, Christina Romer, was confirmed Jan. 28, 2009.

Some Trump nominees have run into hiccups deeper in the confirmation process. The nomination of Makan Delrahim, whos been tapped to lead the Justice Departments antitrust division, was abruptly pulled off the agenda minutes before his confirmation hearing was supposed to begin, because of issues with his ethics paperwork. His hearing was eventually rescheduled for two weeks later, and he is expected to get a vote in the Judiciary Committee this week.

We wouldnt nominate people until they were cleared by OGE and maybe theyre not doing that, said Christopher Kang, who served as deputy counsel in the Obama White House. I dont see any strategic reason or any reason, really to take this long to send up the official paperwork.

Despite the lag on some nominations early in Obamas tenure, Kang said by 2011, paperwork for judicial candidates were usually sent to the Senate on the same day they were formally announced by the White House. Executive branch nominations who require OGE signoff, while judicial nominees do not sometimes faced short delays, but rarely as long as a month.

Once the nominations hit the Senate, many face political hurdles. Although Democrats can no longer defeat nominees through the filibuster, they are still pulling all the procedural levers they can to extract key concessions from the administration. One example is the nomination of Sigal Mandelker, a top Treasury Department official, which Democrats have held up to try to obtain documents involving Russias financial dealings with Trump associates.

Using 30 hours [of floor debate] for a secretary is one thing, but using 30 hours for an under [secretary] or assistant [secretary] is, its a real point of leverage, said Sen. Brian Schatz (D-Hawaii). And we dont intend to overuse it.

That means Senate Republicans are getting squeezed from both ends of Pennsylvania Avenue when it comes to nominations: A White House that seems unwilling to name key administration personnel, and Democrats who are ready to run even obscure nominees through the procedural wringer.

We need to get more names up here so we can work on them, Senate Majority Whip John Cornyn of Texas said. We need to get Democrats to quit dragging their feet.

Despite their sporadic blockades of nominees, Senate Democrats are still urging the administration to fill key posts as soon as possible. Schatz, along with a half-dozen other Democratic senators, wrote to the White House last month noting that more than 100 critical State Department positions need to be filled, even as Secretary of State Rex Tillerson restructures the organization of personnel at Foggy Bottom.

Slow. Its very, very slow, said Missouri Sen. Claire McCaskill, the top Democrat on the Senate Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee. Theres a lot of jobs, important jobs, that have not been filled.

Her GOP counterpart, Chairman Ron Johnson of Wisconsin, had no clue why McAleenan, now serving as CBPs acting commissioner, took so long to be formally submitted: But were going to try to move nominations as quickly as possible.

Elana Schor contributed to this story.

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Donald Trump makes Ford’s Theatre gala his first Washington social outing – Washington Post

Posted: June 5, 2017 at 8:02 am

This post has been updated.

President Trump is no dewy-eyed debutante, but Sunday marked his coming-out party.

The noted homebody since coming to Washington, he has socialized only at the White House and at Trump-branded properties attended his first big outing amid the citys social and philanthropic crowd, the annual gala raising money for Fords Theatre, the historic venue where Abraham Lincoln was assassinated.

Trump and his wife, Melania, hosted a warm-up reception before a show at the downtown theater, which marked the return of a tradition that dates back to the Carter administration. (The President and Mrs. Trump request the pleasure of your attendance read the invite to the late-afternoon event). Typically, the president hosts the black-tie gathering, which draws a crowd heavy on CEOs, lawmakers and the citys professional-partying class. So important is the exclusive mingle for donors at 1600 Pennsylvania Ave., that when the Obamas werent available for last years shindig, the theater canceled the whole evening.

[No POTUS, no party: Fords Theatre cancels annual gala after White House says too busy]

I am proud to continue the tradition in honor of such a historic and cherished landmark, Melania Trump said in a statement.

The first couple she in a drapey champagne-colored Monique Lhuillier gown; he in a tux then attended a performance at the theater, in what was their first foray into the wilds of social Washington. At the gala, the president made remarks about the terrorist attack in London in which seven people were killed. Of the theater, he sounded a rare bipartisan note. Its a place where Americans of all backgrounds, from all parts, all over the world, from both parties can you believe that, from both parties; this may be one of the few times we unite; but well get there, you watch can come together and enjoy the arts in unity and in peace, Trump told the well-heeled crowd that included Vice President Mike Pence and Karen Pence, Sens.Roy Blunt (R-Mo.), Bob Corker (R-Tenn.), Richard Durbin (D-Ill.), Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.), Patrick Leahy (D-Vt.) and Ed Markey (D-Mass.), House Majority Leader Kevin McCarthy and House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi.

Though they have entertained at the White House and Mar-a-Lago, Trump has skipped the handful of premiere events that a president typically attends at least a few times during their tenure, notes Washington Life Senior EditorKevin Chaffee, a longtime observer of the citys galas-and-cocktails circuit. First, he snubbed the annual dinner put on by the Alfalfa Club, a group made up of corporate execs, military brass and senior pols. And another nope RSVP went out to the Gridiron Club, an elite group of Washington journalists and he famously turned down the White House Correspondents Dinner in April, something no president had done since Ronald Reagan (who only declined because hed been shot).

Trumps decision to attend the Fords gala was seen as a sign that perhaps the unpredictable commander-in-chief is prepared to engage in at least some of the social rites of the swamp he routinely derides.

This should certainly give hope to the folks at the Kennedy Center that he and the first lady will attend the honors gala in December, Chaffee says, mentioning another event at which the presidents attendance is a long-standing tradition.

So why this gala? Well, its not put on by the FAKE NEWS media, for one. And Trump has long expressed an affinity for Lincoln. Who could forget his praise of the Great Emancipator: Great president, Trump said at a GOP fundraising dinner in March. Most people dont even know he was a Republican, right? Well, the members of the folks who like to call themselves the party of Lincoln probably did.

He even once tweeted about the theater itself (theres a Trump tweet for everything, it seems), wondering why the 2012 biopic Lincoln didnt film there.

Perhaps, mused one longtime attendee, the often-contrarian president wanted to indicate another break with the Obamas, whose decision not to host last year was seen by some as a slight. Whatever the reason, the attendee was glad to see a glimmer of engagement: At least hes supporting the arts.

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The London terror tweets prove Donald Trump is never going to be ‘presidential’ – CNN

Posted: at 8:02 am

Did he release a statement offering condolences to the victims? Did he grant an interview with a TV network to insist that the US remains resolute in our fight against terror even in the wake of these latest attacks? Nope! He tweeted! Five times, to be exact.

On Saturday night, Trump kicked off his tweetstorm with this: "We need to be smart, vigilant and tough. We need the courts to give us back our rights. We need the Travel Ban as an extra level of safety!"

After a night's sleep, Trump woke up Sunday morning and, around 8 a.m., fired off three more tweets.

"We must stop being politically correct and get down to the business of security for our people. If we don't get smart it will only get worse," Trump started.

"At least 7 dead and 48 wounded in terror attack and Mayor of London says there is "no reason to be alarmed!," he continued.

"Do you notice we are not having a gun debate right now? That's because they used knives and a truck!," he ended.

Of those five, one is the sort of thing you can imagine a president not named Donald Trump saying in the wake of a major terrorism event like the one in London; that's the second one Saurday night in which he pledges to help London in whatever way they need it and insists America stands with them.

ISIS claims responsibility for London attack 01:59

The other four tweets are pure Trump -- and the exact opposite of what we have long considered "presidential."

In one -- the first he sends out -- he uses the just-breaking terror attacks as a way to make the case for his travel ban, which continues to be hung up in the courts.

In another, he suggests political correctness is responsible for the attack, a common Trump refrain during the campaign.

In a third, he takes on those pushing gun control -- noting that they are silent because these attacks didn't involve guns.

And, finally and most Trumpian, he attacks the mayor of London, Sadiq Khan, for allegedly insisting that the people of London have "no reason to be alarmed."

Witnesses saw bodies 'flipped into the air' 01:47

Khan is clearly referring not to the threat from terrorists but to the increased police presence when he uses the words "no reason to be alarmed." Trump chooses to misunderstand him for political purposes.

Trump tweeting things to forward his own agenda in the wake of terrorist attacks is nothing new. Following shootings in an Orlando nightclub that left 49 people dead, Trump offered this: "Appreciate the congrats for being right on radical Islamic terrorism, I don't want congrats, I want toughness & vigilance. We must be smart!" After an incident of a knife-wielding man at the Louvre Museum in Paris, Trump tweeted: "A new radical Islamic terrorist has just attacked in Louvre Museum in Paris. Tourists were locked down. France on edge again. GET SMART U.S."

In short, the tweetstorm following the London attacks isn't the exception, it's the rule for Trump. Using these attacks to prove his political point is his default position not a one-time popping off.

Trump tweets response to incidents in London 01:35

Trump's responses are the latest example of how he is radically altering the idea of what it means to be "presidential." During the 2016 campaign, Trump's attacks on John McCain's war hero status, his savaging of a Gold Star family, his wild exaggerations about his wealth and his seeming disinterest in the truth were all taken, at one point or another, as signs that he simply wasn't "presidential" enough to actually win anything. That, while voters liked his unorthodox style, they would eventually tire of him as they looked for the sort of statesman who had traditionally held the nation's top political job.

It didn't happen. And Trump has never stopped. His quintet of tweets on London are not only something that no previous American president would ever have said, they're also statements that it's hard to imagine any other leader in any other democracy around the world saying.

They are more the statements of a conservative talk radio show host than they are of what we have come to think of as a president -- bombastic, over the top and out of context. They are, by traditional standards, anti-presidential.

Which, come to think of it, is a good way to describe Trump. He is sort of an anti-president -- at least in terms of how we have always defined those terms. Trump's attitude and approach in office is closer to Jerry Springer than to Gerald Ford. He's more Limbaugh than Lincoln.

What we know: Trump isn't going to stop Trumping. The only question now is whether voters want an anti-president as their president.

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The London terror tweets prove Donald Trump is never going to be 'presidential' - CNN

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What Donald Trump Can Do to Help Stop Terrorism: Talk Less – The New Yorker

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As Londons police and counterterrorism forces responded to news of a deadly attack at London Bridge and Borough Market, President Donald Trump turned to Twitter.CreditPHOTOGRAPH BY CARL COURT / GETTY

In the hours after the London terrorist attack, President Trump took to his favored platform, Twitter, to deliver a stream-of-consciousness response. He repeated his call for a travel ban on visitors from six predominantly Muslim countries. And he warned against political correctness. If we dont get smart it will only get worse, he said. Do you notice we are not having a gun debate right now? he added, in a puzzling non sequitur. Thats because they used knives and a truck.

For critics of Trump, his tweets betray a buffoonish approach to national security that will only make terrorism worse. His proposed travel restrictions will only aid recruitment for the Islamic State, they say. His demand, during a speech in Saudi Arabia, two weeks ago, for Muslim heads of state to do more ignores the reality that, since the September 11th attacks, vastly more Iraqi and Afghan soldiers and policethan American service members have died battling extremists. And Trumps loosening of Pentagon rules surrounding the use of air strikes and commando raids against the Islamic State, Al Qaeda, and other terrorist groups will only lead to more civilian deaths, fuelling resentment and reprisals.

Yet several counterterrorism experts, including some who worked under President Obama, admitted to me, in private conversations recently, that new approaches to combat extremism are badly needed, and that Trump has a chance to take steps that could prove effective. The problem is that, just as in other policy areas, Trump threatens to undermine his own counterterrorism strategy with his bellicose mode of communication. His rhetoric belies a fundamental lack of understanding of the greater nuances of the issue, and in particular the root causes that have allowed ISIS to prey on the vulnerable and disaffected in our communities, a former senior counterterrorism official told me on Sunday. His immediate call for a ban on Muslims in the wake of the most recent attack and throughout his short time as President is arguably more likely to alienate Muslim Americans, and thus potentially inspire further acts of homegrown terrorism, than it is to prevent terrorists from entering the country and perpetrating terrorist acts.

Several former officials said that they generally supported Trumps cruise-missile strike on a Syrian airbase, in April, after U.S. intelligence officials said Syrian government forces carried out a chemical-weapons attack that killed scores of people, including children. The counterterrorism experts told me that the strikes showed American allies and adversaries alike that Trump would be more willing to use force than Obama, who critics said lost credibility, in 2013, when he failed to respond militarily to a chemical-weapons attack by the Syrian government that killed hundreds.

Trump also appears to be continuing to emphasize a core element of Obamas strategy, which is that countries in the region should lead the fight. The Trump Administrations recent hundred-and-ten-billion-dollar arms sale to Saudi Arabia is similar to one carried out under the Obama Administration, which worked to build up the military, intelligence, and police capabilities of allies in the region in a much less public way than Trump has thus far. Obama also embraced the use of covert drone strikes, intense vetting of visa applicants, and the stepped-up use of surveillance technologies, angering many on the left.

Trump has opportunities to make progress in areas where Obama struggled, such as developing consensus regarding new communications technologies, the officials said. Terrorists are increasingly using sophisticated encryption techniques to mask their communications, but Obama Administration officials were unable to reach an agreement with technology companies on ways to curb such uses that balanced privacy and public-safety concerns. Now Trump or his aides could try to quietly fashion some type of compromise.

Trump has yet to unveil a comprehensive strategy from his Administration to fight terrorism. As Dexter Filkins recently wrote, ina Profile of Defense Secretary James Mattis, some officials fear that Trump will bluster about terrorism in public but privately delegate strategy to the military. Some U.S. military commanders welcomed an end to what they viewed as micromanagement and risk aversion by the Obama White House, but they fear that the inexperienced Trump will become overly reliant on military force.

But where Trump has been most dangerous, former counterterrorism officials told me, is in his public statements, and the way he has publicly harangued alliesfrom Muslim leaders to NATO membersoften while citing incorrect facts. Now, in the wake of three successful attacks in Britain in three months, the worry is that attacks will occur in the United States as well, and Trump will revert to a pattern of fearmongering. The President could convince Congress to enact new surveillance standards that erode civil liberties but fail to end attacks. Or Trump could publicly vilify Islam, a step that will alienate American Muslims and aid extremist recruiting efforts domestically and internationally. You end up with the legislation that is bad for everybody, the former senior counterterrorism official told me. Bad for counterterrorism and bad for civil liberties.

Counterterrorism is one area where Trump could take advantage of the bipartisan consensus that exists regarding some anti-terror policies, the officials whom I talked to said. But if the Presidents inability to communicate with discipline, accuracy, and nuance continues, he will only alienate allies and inflame enemies.

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What Donald Trump Can Do to Help Stop Terrorism: Talk Less - The New Yorker

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Vladimir Putin Denies Having Compromising Information on Donald Trump – Newsweek

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Russian President Vladimir Putin strongly denied he had any compromising material about U.S. President Donald Trump in a sometimes combative televised interview broadcast on Sunday.

"Well, this is just another load of nonsense," Putin said on NBC News' Sunday Night with Megyn Kelly,when asked whether he had any damaging information on the Republican president.

The remarks were the latest in a series of denials from Moscow that have had little impact so far on a political crisis in the United States over potential links between Russia and Trump's inner circle.

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The issue will be front and center this week in Washington, where former FBI Director James Comey is due to testify on whether Trump tried to get him to back off an investigation into alleged ties between Trump's election campaign and Moscow.

Putin was interviewed by NBC News's Megyn Kelly Sunday, and denied having compromising information on President Trump. screenshot

Comey, who was leading the Federal Bureau of Investigation's probe into alleged Russian meddling in last year's U.S. presidential election, was fired by Trump last month, four years into his 10-year term.

Putin also told NBC that regardless of Trump's previous travel to Russia as a businessman, he had had no relationship with him and had never met him. Putin noted that executives from perhaps 100 American companies were currently in Russia.

"Do you think we're gathering compromising information on all of them right now or something?" Putin asked, before saying: "Have you all lost your senses?"

Trump has offered contradictory accounts of his relationship with Putin over time but has also said the two never met. They have spoken several times by phone since Trump's election.

Trump has called an FBI investigation into alleged ties between his campaign and Russia a "witch hunt" designed to undermine the legitimacy of his 2016 election win.

Trump has also disparaged a dossier of unsubstantiated allegations that purported to show Russian intelligence operatives had compromising information about him, but which he has described as a "hoax."

U.S. intelligence agencies concluded in January that Moscow tried to tilt the election campaign in Trump's favor, including by hacking into the emails of senior Democrats, a charge the Kremlin denies.

"They have been misled," Putin told NBC, in an interview NBC said was recorded on Friday. "And they aren't analyzing the information in its entirety. I haven't seen, even once, any direct proof of Russian interference in the (U.S.) presidential election."

Trump has denied any collusion but the FBI and congressional probes into the Russia matter have dogged the early months of his presidency.

Former CIA director John Brennan said last month he had noticed contacts between Trump's campaign associates and Russia during the 2016 election and grew concerned Moscow had sought to lure Americans down "a treasonous path."

After Comey's dismissal, news reports emerged that Trump asked Comey to end the probe into former national security adviser Michael Flynn during a February meeting in the Oval Office, the day after Flynn was fired for misrepresenting his contacts with the Russian ambassador, Sergei Kislyak.

Flynn has declined to testify to the U.S. Senate Intelligence Committee about his Russian ties, invoking his constitutional right to avoid self-incrimination.

Putin downplayed Flynn's appearance with him at a December 2015 gala dinner in honor of the Russian television network Russia Today (RT), which U.S. officials consider a state-run propaganda outlet.

"I made my speech. Then we talked about some other stuff. And I got up and left. And then afterwards I was told, 'You know there was an American gentleman, he was involved in some things. He used to be in the security services'," Putin said.

"That's it. I didn't even really talk to him. That's the extent of my acquaintance with Mr Flynn," he added.

Reuters has reported that Flynn and Trump's son-in-law and close adviser, Jared Kushner, discussed with Kislyak the idea of creating a back channel between Trump and Putin that could have bypassed diplomats and intelligence agencies.

Putin said he was unaware of any such discussion and criticized NBC for asking about contacts between the ambassador and the Trump administration.

"You created a sensation out of nothing. And out of this sensation, you turned it into a weapon of war against the current (U.S.) president," Putin said.

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Peyton Manning Reportedly Joins Donald Trump at Golf Course – Bleacher Report

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BRENDAN SMIALOWSKI/Getty Images

Al Drago, a photographer for the New York Times, shared a photo of former NFL quarterback Peyton Manning at the White House on Sunday.

According to Drago, Manning was with Sen. Bob Corker (R-Tenn.). President Donald Trump was returning from Trump National Golf Club in Potomac Falls, Virginia:

CNN's Allie Malloy posted photos of Manning and Corker at the White House, as well as Trump National:

The Daily Beast'sKelly Weillreported in January that Manning had been active with regard to political donations. In addition to giving money to George W. Bush's 2004 re-election campaign, he supported Mitt Romney in the 2012 presidential elections. Manning also donated to Corker's campaigns in 2006 and 2009.

While Manning supported the presidential bid of Jeb Bush, he has since shifted his support to Trump. Politico'sJake Sherman, Anna Palmer and Daniel Lippmanreported the 14-time Pro Bowler was slated to speak at a January GOP retreat, with Trump and Vice President Mike Pence among the other speakers.

During media day for Super Bowl 50 in February 2016, Manning told reporters he had golfed with Trump before.

"I played a round of golf with him in Tahoe," Manning said, per theHouston Chronicle'sAl Saracevic. "I didn't play real well, so I was kind of focused on trying to find my ball. ... The times I've been around him, he's been extremely nice to me."

Amid rumors he had aspirations of his own political career, Manning said in March hedoesn't plan on runningfor elected office.

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