Connect with us

Politics and Current

Harris pushes for joy. Trump paints a darker picture. Will the mismatched moods matter?

Published

on

Kamala Harris, Donald Trump, AP

WASHINGTON (AP) — Early in his first speech as vice presidential candidate, Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz turned to Vice President Kamala Harris and declared, “Thank you for bringing back the joy.” The next day, Harris took the theme a step further, calling the Democratic nominee “joyful warriors.”

Contrast that with former President Donald Trump, who opened a news conference at his Mar-a-Lago club in Florida a few days later by saying, “A lot of bad things are coming our way” and predicting that the United States could fall into an economic depression not seen since the dark days of 1929, and even one other world war.

Advertisement

“I think our country is in the most dangerous situation in its history right now, both economically and security-wise,” Trump said on Thursday.

Democrats are playing up their sunnier perspective, pushing the concept that voters might be inspired to support someone slightly than simply vote against the other side. Trump’s campaign says its candidate reflects the country’s somber mood and rejects the concept that a growing contrast in tone and optimism will determine the presidency.

Two-thirds of Americans said they felt very or somewhat pessimistic about the state of politics, in response to a poll by The Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research last month. About 7 in 10 said things in the country were headed in the unsuitable direction.

Jason Miller, a senior adviser to the former president, said people don’t care about “vibration control.”

Advertisement

“It won’t make gas, food or housing cheaper,” Miller said.

Walz promotes a positive attitude

Still, Harris’s determination to take the opposite approach is obvious in her decision to pick out Walz, whose personal experience includes coaching a highschool football team that had gone winless just a few years earlier and won the state championship in 1999.

The Minnesota governor’s continued positive performance is anticipated to offer supporters a boost and maintain the momentum Harris built after President Joe Biden — facing mounting pressure from inside his own party and increasingly pessimistic views about his probabilities in November — stepped right down to endorse his vp.

Walz spent his first week as Harris’ deputy traveling with Harris to undecided states and emphasized the issue at a rally in Eau Claire, Wisconsin, praising what he said was her “ability to talk about what can be good.”

Advertisement

“That idea of ​​caring for your neighbor and being kind and lending a helping hand when someone needs it. And just feeling like people are going through things and being there when they need it, that’s who we are,” he said. “It’s not a mockery. It’s not a name-calling.”

Biden has often ended his speeches by saying he has never been more optimistic. But he has built his now-closed-in reelection campaign around characterizing Trump as an existential threat to democracy. The president has offered dire predictions about the former president, suggesting he would dismantle the nation’s founding principles if he reclaims the White House.

Harris’ campaign continues to depend on a lot of the same themes, criticizing Trump as a threat to democracy, warning that he’ll impose draconian restrictions on abortion and voting and pursuing Project 2025, a plan promoted by leading conservatives to overhaul large parts of the federal government.

Even though Walz insists that smiles are more practical than insults, he and Harris have continued to criticize, denouncing Trump’s conviction in New York on 34 felony counts in a silence case, in addition to finding him liable for unfair business practices and sexual abuse in civil court.

Advertisement

Even before she announced Walz as her vice presidential candidate, Harris suggested she could make politics fun again.

Featured Stories

“We love our country. And I believe it’s the highest form of patriotism to fight for the ideals of our country,” Harris said in her campaign speeches before Walz was elected. Now she’s telling crowds that she and her vice presidential candidate “both believe in lifting people up, not bringing them down.”

Paula Montagna, who visited Harris and Walz at a rally outside Detroit last week, noted the shift in messaging since Harris took over from Biden.

“Kamala is a very positive person and it’s nice to hear something positive rather than negative,” Montagna said.

Advertisement

Trump’s team says their candidate reflects reality

Senior Trump campaign advisers say the mood in the country is bad immediately due to the economy, the state of the U.S.-Mexico border and unrest in the Middle East and beyond. They see their candidate as reflecting that reality, not what they see as a passing enthusiasm firing up the Democratic base after months of discouragement with their ticket.

Trump has tried to capitalize on this by repeating predictions of a stock market crash and war. His campaign speeches included a long list of other warnings that leaned toward the apocalyptic, saying that if he weren’t elected, “we will no longer have a country,” that “the only thing standing between you and its destruction is me,” and that under Harris, “Social Security will buckle and collapse” and “the suburbs will be flooded with violent crime and savage foreign gangs.”

During a speech at the Republican National Convention last month, during which his aides said Trump would appear modified and more personal after surviving the assassination attempt, the former president did indeed strike a different tone — no less than at first.

At the outset, he said that he had “a message of confidence, strength and hope” and that he desired to “usher in a new era of security, prosperity and freedom for citizens of every race, religion, color and creed.”

Advertisement

Towards the end, nevertheless, Trump returned to doomsday predictions, twice warning: “Bad things are going to happen.”

Ohio Sen. J.D. Vance, Trump’s vice presidential candidate, has drawn sharp contrasts with Walz. Vance has been praised on the right for being an aggressive fighter on behalf of the former president, particularly with reporters.

“Right now, I’m angry about what Kamala Harris has done to this country and to America’s southern border,” Vance said during a campaign rally in Michigan. “And I think most people in our country can sometimes be carefree, can sometimes enjoy something, and can also turn on the news and recognize that what’s happening in this country is a disgrace.”

Senate Republican leader Mitch McConnell, not exactly a sunny person himself, offered a similar assessment Friday at a conservative conference in Atlanta hosted by radio host Erick Erickson.

Advertisement

“The country is clearly in a bad mood,” McConnell said.

Trump supporters waiting for a rally in Bozeman, Montana, said they feel positive about the former president’s campaign — even when his message often doesn’t.

“Just looking at the state of the country right now, I don’t think Kamala Harris’ campaign is a campaign of joy and hope. I think it’s a Trump campaign,” said Alex Lustig, a 23-year-old from Billings, Montana.

Fred Scarlett, a 63-year-old retiree from Condon, Montana, said that “everyone understands that we have to be here and support Trump because he has never let us down.”

Advertisement

“They keep shooting at him,” Scarlett said, “and he keeps shooting back.”

This article was originally published on : thegrio.com
Advertisement

Politics and Current

HegeSeth directs 20% cut to the highest military managerial positions

Published

on

By

The Secretary of Defense Pete HegeSeth on Monday ordered the military lively service to lose 20% of 4 -star general officers, when the Trump administration moves forward with deep cuts, which he thinks will promote performance, but critics that worry may cause more politicized strength.

HegeSeth also told the National Guard to lose 20% of his highest positions and recommend the military to reduce an extra 10% of his general and flagship officers of their forces, which can include one star or official with an equivalent rank of navy.

Advertisement

The cuts are at the top of over half a dozen of the best general officers that President Donald Trump or HegeSeth released from January, including the chairman of the joint heads of the staff, Gen. CQ Brown Jr. They also released only two women serving as 4 -star officers, in addition to a disproportionate variety of other older officers.

In earlier rounds of shooting, HegeSth said that the eliminations were “a reflection of the president who wants the right people around him to perform the approach to national security that we want to take.”

As the head of the Pentagon, HegeSeth advertised his efforts to upload any programming or leadership, which support diversity in ranks, tried to end members of transgender services and commenced sweeping changes to implement a uniform fitness standard for the fight position.

In the note announcing the cuts on Monday, HegSeth said that they might remove “unnecessary forces to optimize and improve leadership.” He said that the goal was to free the army from “unnecessary bureaucratic layers.”

Advertisement

Rep. Seth Moulton, D-Mass. Marine, who served in Iraq and is now in the Armed Service Committee, said he perceived HegeSetha as trying to politicize the army.

“He creates a formal framework to slow down all generals who disagree with him – and president,” said Multon AP in Capitol.

He said that actually every organization can search for performance, but HegeSeth has been clearly clearly expressing its program. “He wrote a book about it. He wants to politicize the army,” said Multon. “So it’s hard to see these cuts in any other context.”

Multon warned against the fall of the soldiers. “It is necessary for our soldiers to understand that they receive constitutional orders, not political orders,” he said, “otherwise you have no democracy, otherwise you have an army that works well for one or another political party.”

Advertisement

Adding to the confusion in the Pentagon, HegeSeth in recent weeks I actually have released or moved many close advisersstrongly narrowing his inner circle. He also handled questions from each Democrats and Republicans about coping with sensitive information and the use of applications for sending signal messages.

There are about 800 general officers in the army, but only 44 of them are 4 -star general or flag officials. The army has the largest variety of general officers, from 219, including eight 4 -star generals.

Trump stands at Pete HegeSeth among the controversy, but called Lloyd Austin to resign - critics claims that this is a double standard

The variety of positions of the general officer in the army is set by law. Congress members didn’t receive a notification upfront, which they might normally receive in cuts, but in the afternoon they received a “very short warning”, according to a congress worker, which spoke on the condition of anonymity to provide details that weren’t made public.

The cuts were first reported by CNN.

The Pentagon is under pressure to reduce expenses and staff as a part of wider cuts of the federal government pushed by the Department of the Government of Trump and Ally Elon Musk.

Advertisement

HegeSeth last week ordered a sweeping transformation Army to “build a slim, more deadly force”, including connecting or closing the headquarters, shedding outdated vehicles and aircraft, cutting up to 1,000 employees of the headquarters in the Pentagon and transfer of staff to units in the field.

Also last week, the army confirmed that it could be Military Parade for Trump’s birthday In June, as a part of the celebration of the 250th birthday of the service. Officials say it would cost tens of tens of millions of dollars.

—-

Associated Press Writers Lisa Mascaro and Lolita C. Baldor contributed to this report.

Advertisement
Trump's Defense Cabinet Pete HegeSeth has a history of hostility towards racial justice

(Tagstranslat) troops

This article was originally published on : thegrio.com
Continue Reading

Politics and Current

Metro Atlanta City of Decatur to start the compensation task group

Published

on

By


The city of Decatur in Metro Atlanta unanimously approved the creation of a compensation task group.

According to Decatur City Commission adopted a resolution On May 5, the 11-person task group will publish a report in three years, including recommendations regarding policy for black city residents.

The message appears a yr after the city leaders signed a contract with Beacon Hill Black Alliance for Human Rights to “discover the heritage of racial damage” in Decatur. The alliance managed research work in the field of compensation, organizing community meetings and listening sessions about how racial injustice has financially and systematically hurt these residents.

Advertisement

Their research described the role of decatur in slavery and segregation, in addition to red and real estate against the black community. Decatur also showed many monuments of the confederation, especially one earlier in the court of Dekalb.

The city not only recognized its oppressive tactics towards its black inhabitants, but additionally apologized for the actions that suppressed their progress.

“The city of Decatur formally recognizes its earlier role in the systemic oppression of people of African origin through enslavement, trafficking in human beings, conviction, discriminatory zones and development, underestimation in African -American communities, school segregation, racist police operation, destruction of African American estate, business and institutions and erosion and erosion and erosion and erosion, population, population population, population, population, population, population and culture – we read in resolution.

The city goals to designate 11 members, with the help of Beacon Hill Black Alliance, in the next 60 days. They will bring a various specialist knowledge group, and members consist of historians, legal experts and youth supporters. Over the next three years, the Task group will develop records regarding the loss of black land and real estate, being attentive to economic resettlement, while interviewing the descendants of those to which these oppressive tactics affected.

Advertisement

City officials added: “The city is expanding the full and public apology to the black residents of Decatur – Past and Present – and their descendants for its role in consolidating discrimination, pressure, subordination and the resulting damage, drawing on the principles rooted in the white supremacy system.”

The Compensation Task Group may even propose the commemorative projects sponsored by the city, economic tools and other investment strategies and community initiatives to treatment its racist past. This move will happen from other communities, even in the Atlanta Metro, which introduced initiatives regarding the repair of black residents. In the neighboring Fulton, his task group will resume the meeting this yr.

While the plan appears amongst the domestic shuffle of anti-dei attributable to the Trump administration, local leaders remain involved in the same efforts of the judiciary that began before taking office by Trump.

Advertisement

(Tagstranslate) compensation Task group

This article was originally published on : www.blackenterprise.com
Continue Reading

Politics and Current

Social media reacts to a series of funny faces of George W. Bush during the inauguration of Trump, when Barack Obama jokes that “he could barely behave

Published

on

By

5 Ways Barack Obama and George W. Bush Are Pretty Much The Same

Former President Barack Obama jokingly told the reporter that former President George W. Bush “barely” behaved during the inauguration of President Donald Trump on Monday.

When there have been presidents and other noteworthy VIP guests waited for the USA ceremony to sit in the US Capitol, a member of the staff asked 78-year-old Bush if he “behaved” and 63-year-old Obama at the back to answer on behalf of Bush with “No”.

5 ways of Barack Obama and George W. Bush are almost the same

A brief, viral clip shows briefly looking around the Capitol and smiling at the members of the audience during the inauguration, which the viewers considered funny.

When Obama left the American Capitol Rotunda after the ceremony, the same post reporter quickly asked Obama if Bush behaved and Obama replied: “barely” during a smile.

Advertisement

The viewers had a day in the field with many Bush faces. One person joked: “Bro was beyond his mind”

The secular behavior of former presidents was, unlike incorrect boos imposed on Obama by Trump’s supporters watching the ceremony from the rally at the Capital One Arena in the center of Washington. Bill and Hillary Clinton and former Vice President Trump Mike Pence was also not spared heavy Boos.

The first lady Michelle Obama was noticeably missing amongst the chosen group of former residents of the White House, who confirmed that she wouldn’t participate on the days before the inauguration.

About her absence, unidentified source he said People: “There is no exaggeration of her feelings about (Trump). She is not one of the plasters on a pleasant face and she pretended that the Michelle protocol does nothing, because she is expected, protocol or its tradition.”

Advertisement

The source said that Michelle “no longer feels the need to be public” and added that the verbal attacks of Trump on Obama and his offensive rhetoric addressed to colourful people could even be a factor wherein she decided to skip.

In addition to Michelle, every living former president and the first lady was present, including former President Joe Biden and his wife Dr. Jill Biden, George W. Bush and Laura Bush, in addition to Bill and Hillary Clinton.

Trump’s swearing in the US Capitol for the first time in 40 years, the presidential inauguration took place, ignoring the customary configuration outside the Capitol, wherein 1000’s normally observe from the national shopping mall.

Officials stated that the polar vortex, which brought dangerously low temperatures to the part of the eastern coast, was the most important reason why the ceremony was moved inside.

Advertisement

The last time the inauguration was moved in the room, when former President Ronald Reagan was sworn in for his second term in 1985.

(Tagstranslate) Barack Obama

This article was originally published on : atlantablackstar.com
Advertisement
Continue Reading
Advertisement

OUR NEWSLETTER

Subscribe Us To Receive Our Latest News Directly In Your Inbox!

We don’t spam! Read our privacy policy for more info.

Trending