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As it happenedended1573594296

Trump news: President attacks impeachment inquiry witnesses as ‘Never Trumpers’ in baseless smear and stalls new Ukraine transcript release

President attacks apparent enemies on the day before impeachment hearings are set to go public

Joe Sommerlad
New York
,Chris Riotta
Tuesday 12 November 2019 22:26 GMT
Comments
Donald Trump speaks at the Veterans Day Parade

Donald Trump has attacked House impeachment inquiry witnesses as “Never Trumpers” without basis and delayed the release of a transcript of his first call with his Ukrainian counterpart Volodymyr Zelensky, a gesture his supporters had hoped would prove the president’s intentions towards the country were entirely innocent.

Kiev was reportedly alarmed by the hold-up of $400m (£312m) in American military aid this summer and reached out to Washington for answers, according to the latest records of witness testimony released by the inquiry from senior officials Laura Cooper, Catherine Croft and Christopher Anderson.

A federal judge has meanwhile ruled that the president cannot sue to stop his home state of New York from acquiring his tax returns while Mr Trump has unexpectedly come under fire from Fox host Andrew Napolitano, who took him to task for his “often tasteless banter” and disrespect for the US Constitution.

One man who also won’t be suing: Mick Mulvaney. The president’s acting chief of staff said Tuesday that he no longer plans to sue over the House impeachment proceedings and will instead follow Mr Trump’s directions and decline to cooperate.

In a court filing Tuesday, one day before the impeachment inquiry enters a critical phase of public hearings, Mr Mulvaney said he no longer planned to ask a judge for guidance on whether he must cooperate with the House.

He said he would rely on Mr Trump’s instructions “as supported by an opinion of the Office of Legal Counsel of the US Department of Justice, in not appearing for the relevant deposition.”

Mr Mulvaney had been subpoenaed to appear last week for a closed-door deposition before House impeachment investigators but did not show up.

House Democrats had seen him as a potentially important witness, in part because he has publicly confirmed the contours of a quid pro quo arrangement in which the Trump administration would release military aid to Ukraine in exchange for the country announcing an investigation into Democratic rival Joe Biden.

His name has also repeatedly surfaced in the testimony of other witnesses who have cooperated.

The Justice Department legal opinion that Mr Mulvaney references says close advisers to the president are immune from having to testify to Congress because “preparing for such examinations would force them to divert time and attention from their duties to the President at the whim of congressional committees.”

Additional reporting by the Associated Press. Please allow a moment for our live blog to load

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Trump to address Economic Club of New York on trade

The markets are likely to hang on Trump's every word when he does speak in New York later today.

The president's lunchtime address at the club, which has hosted US presidents including Woodrow Wilson and John F. Kennedy, as well as foreign leaders like former Soviet president Mikhail Gorbachev and Chinese premier Li Keqiang, will be closely watched by investors anxious for any positive news about his administration's long-running trade war with China.

"You can expect the president to highlight how his policies of lower taxes, deregulation, and fair and reciprocal trade have supported the longest economic recovery in US history with record low unemployment, rising wages, and soaring consumer confidence," White House spokesman Judd Deere said.

US stock markets have hit record highs in recent weeks on hopes the White House and Beijing are close to a trade deal that could go a long way toward dispelling the uncertainty dogging the global economy. Last week, officials from both sides said they had a deal to roll back tariffs, only to have Trump deny any deal was agreed on.

A positive speech on US-China trade would likely satisfy market participants even without specific details of the "Phase 1" agreement under negotiation, said Jim Paulsen, chief investment officer at The Leuthold Group in Minneapolis. "It still feels like we're pretty close to having something done," Paulsen said on Monday. "Even if it's meaningless, it will be meaningful."

More than 1,350 people are expected to attend the speech, according to the club's spokeswoman, Erin Klem. But not everyone thought Trump's speech to the 112-year-old club, which has served as a venue for major economic policy addresses, would be seen as constructive by investors. Randy Frederick, vice president of trading and derivatives for Charles Schwab in Austin, Texas, had little hope Trump's speech would mark an end to uncertainty. It remains notoriously hard to predict whether Trump will take a positive or negative tone on trade. "Whatever uncertainty exists today will exist tomorrow also," he said, adding that if Trump were to say he is not rolling back any tariffs, the market would react negatively.

Gregory Daco, chief US economist at Oxford Economics, estimated the trade war had chopped about eight-tenths of a percentage point off US growth. After starting the year with growth running at 3.1 per cent, output throttled back to 1.9 per cent in the third quarter, with weak business investment factoring heavily in the slowdown. Daco questioned whether a limited trade deal with China would be enough to draw businesses back off the sidelines.

"Do you as a business make a decision that now the environment is clearer, there are less tariffs, so now you're more likely to invest? Or, if after the last three years, you're still more cautious and say 'let's wait this one out,'" Daco said. "I'd favour the latter."

Additional reporting by Reuters

Joe Sommerlad12 November 2019 12:20
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Trump 'expected to delay European auto tariff decision'

Also on the US economy, Trump is expected to announce this week that he is delaying a decision on whether to slap tariffs on cars and auto parts imported from the European Union, likely for another six months, EU officials said. "We have a solid indication from the administration that there will not be tariffs on us this week," one EU official told Reuters on Monday.

The Trump administration has a Thursday deadline to decide whether to impose threatened "Section 232" national security tariffs of as much as 25 per cent on imported vehicles and parts under a Cold War-era trade law.

US commerce secretary Wilbur Ross, whose agency is overseeing an investigation into the effect of auto imports on US national security, said on 3 November that the United States may not need such tariffs after holding "good conversations" with automakers in the European Union, Japan and South Korea. Trump delayed a decision on the tariffs by six months last May and another delay would cause automakers across the globe to breathe a sigh of relief.

EU officials said that while a further six-month delay was likely, Trump's actions were unpredictable and he would likely keep the threat of car tariffs hanging over them as the United States and European Union pursue trade negotiations in the coming year.

(Francois Lenoir/Reuters)

"We believe that nothing will happen for now, but the threat of tariffs will be left there as leverage," said a European diplomat. US trade representative Robert Lighthizer and EU trade commission Cecilia Malmstrom have spoken more often in recent weeks and the tone had become more "positive," the diplomat added.

Politico reported on Monday that Trump would announce a six-month delay in the EU car tariff decision.

The EU diplomat said there was no specific timetable for an in-person meeting between Lighthizer and Malmstrom or any concrete sign the United States and Europe were nearing an agreement on trade issues.

The United States wants to include increased US agricultural access to Europe in the talks. But EU member states have resisted that, only authorising negotiations over industrial goods tariffs and regulatory issues.

When the United States and Japan reached a partial trade deal in September involving agriculture and industrial goods, Japanese prime minister Shinzo Abe said he won a firm commitment from Trump not to impose national security tariffs on Japanese autos.

Trump has complained loudly about the US goods trade deficits of $68bn (£53bn) with Germany and $67bn (£52bn) with Japan in 2018, most of which come from the autos sector.

Additional reporting by Reuters

Joe Sommerlad12 November 2019 12:35
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Mick Mulvaney files lawsuit asking judge to rule on subpoena compliance

White House acting chief of staff Mick Mulvaney (mentioned prominently in Laura Cooper's deposition) on Monday withdrew his request to join a lawsuit seeking a court ruling on whether witnesses must testify in the House impeachment probe, saying he would bring his own case, according to a court document.

Mulvaney had earlier sought to participate in a lawsuit filed by Charles Kupperman, a former deputy to ousted national security adviser John Bolton, seeking a court ruling on whether he should comply with a congressional subpoena or honor the Trump administration's order not to testify.

Mulvaney withdrew the request following a conference call closed to the public held by the judge assigned to Kupperman's lawsuit, US district judge Richard Leon in Washington. According to a transcript of the hearing, Leon said he was "inclined" to deny Mulvaney's request to intervene and encouraged him to instead file his own lawsuit.

(Evan Vucci/AP)

Last week, House Democrats withdrew their subpoena to Kupperman, saying they did not want to delay the impeachment investigation, and asked a judge to dismiss the litigation as moot. Mulvaney "can't intervene into a moot case," Todd Tatelman, a lawyer for the House, said during Monday's hearing.

House investigators issued a subpoena to Mulvaney last week, demanding he testify about his knowledge of Trump's decision to withhold military aid to Ukraine.

Mulvaney has emerged as a central figure in the impeachment inquiry, partly because of his statement at a 17 October news conference that the White House had withheld security assistance for Ukraine.

"I have news for everybody: Get over it. There is going to be political influence in foreign policy," Mulvaney said at the time, although he later contradicted himself.

Before becoming acting chief of staff, Mulvaney ran the White House Office of Management and Budget, which made the decision to block the security assistance for Ukraine last summer.

The White House has instructed current and former Trump administration officials not to cooperate with the impeachment investigation, arguing in court filings that the US Constitution allows presidential aides to defy demands by Congress for testimony.

Mulvaney's lawsuit could lead to a ruling on that argument by Leon, a conservative appointed by George W Bush, who is already assigned to Kupperman's case.

US district judge Ketanji Brown Jackson, a Barack Obama appointee, is weighing similar questions in a lawsuit the House filed to enforce a subpoena issued to former White House lawyer Don McGahn. 

Additional reporting by Reuters

Joe Sommerlad12 November 2019 12:50
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White House infighting flares amid impeachment inquiry

The White House’s disjointed response to the impeachment inquiry has been fuelled by a fierce West Wing battle between two of Trump’s top advisers, according to insiders and congressional officials.

Mulvaney and White House counsel Pat Cipollone are understood to be at odds, the former blaming the latter for not doing more to stop other government officials from participating in the inquiry after a number of State Department officials, diplomats and an aide to vice president Mike Pence all gave sworn testimony to Congress.

Joe Sommerlad12 November 2019 13:10
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Trump ridiculed for deleting tweet in support of Sean Spicer on Dancing with the Stars

The president is being mocked on Twitter this morning after going to the trouble of deleting a tweet attempting to drum up support for his former press secretary Sean Spicer on Dancing with the Stars after the latter was eliminated from the competition.

Which might sound like small beer but consider the appalling tweets he hasn't deleted.

Greg Evans has more for Indy100.

Joe Sommerlad12 November 2019 13:30
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Is Nikki Haley pitching for the presidency?

For Indy Voices, Jay Caruso considers a possible run for the presidency from Trump's ex-ambassador to the UN Nikki Haley, who currently has a tell-all book out that contains a few home truths for the administration and the Republican Party.

Joe Sommerlad12 November 2019 13:50
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Hillary Clinton blasts British government for failing to release report into Russian election hacking

Hillary Clinton has branded the British government’s delay in releasing a report into Russian influence on the 2016 referendum as “inexplicable and shameful”.

The former US presidential candidate and first lady told BBC Radio 5 Live the public “deserve to know” what is in the report before the country heads to the polls in December.

The report by the Intelligence and Security Committee (ISC) was completed in March and sent to the prime minister for approval on 17 October. However, it has not yet been released by the government, despite ISC chair Dominic Grieve saying it is “germane” to voters.

Speaking to Emma Barnett, Clinton said: “I find it inexplicable that your government will not release a government report about Russian influence. Inexplicable and shameful.

Here's Chiara Giordano's report.

Joe Sommerlad12 November 2019 14:05
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Former Massachusetts governor Deval Patrick considering 2020 presidential run

Deval Patrick, the ex-governor of Massachusetts, is reportedly planning to join Michael Bloomberg in making a late bid to join the Democratic 2020 field, according to The New York Times.

"He's taking and making calls," one of the Democrats familiar with Patrick's thinking told CNN.

The candidate would undoubtedly face an uphill task if he were to join at this late stage, having limited national profile, insufficient personal wealth to fuel a campaign and because he has already missed the Alabama filing deadline (Arknasas's passes today, New Hampshire's on Friday).

He has also been criticised in the past for a chequered corporate career that has seen him working for subprime mortgage lender Ameriquest, notorious for targeting middle class black families with sky-high loans, and working for private investment firm Bain Capital, co-founded by Utah Republican senator Pierre Delecto Mitt Romney.

Patrick was apparently considering announcing his run late last year before deciding against it after his wife Diane was diagnosed with uterine cancer, writing on Facebook: "After a lot of conversation, reflection and prayer, I've decided that a 2020 campaign for president is not for me. I've been overwhelmed by advice and encouragement from people from all over the country, known and unknown.

"But knowing that the cruelty of our elections process would ultimately splash back on people whom Diane and I love, but who hadn't signed up for the journey, was more than I could ask."

Joe Sommerlad12 November 2019 14:25
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Elizabeth Warren fires back after Biden criticism

Speaking at a town hall in New Hampshire on Monday night, Massachusetts senator and 2020 contender Elizabeth Warren was asked about how she could convince men to vote for her. The answer?

"How about we give them a tough, smart woman to vote for?"

The candidate also went on to tackle rival Joe Biden's comments in a Medium post last week in which he argued, without directly naming Warren herself, that others in the race had "an angry, unyielding viewpoint" and had been "condescending to the millions of Democrats" who do not think as they do.

Elizabeth Warren speaks at Exeter High School in New Hampshire (Joseph Prezioso/AFP)

"So I'm out here every day trying to talk to people about 'my campaign],  trying to bring more people into the fight, but if you've got more ideas... I was told what I needed to do was smile more," Warren said sarcastically, to warm laughs from her audience.

The senator also addressed Biden's comment in an email to her supporters on Friday, telling them: "I'm angry and I own it."

Joe Sommerlad12 November 2019 14:45
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Widow of Elijah Cummings to run for his old seat in the House of Representatives

Dr Maya Rockeymoore Cummings, the widow of House Oversight Committee chairman Elijah Cummings who passed away last month, appeared on Rachel Maddow's MSNBC show last night to announce she will be running in the special election to succeed him as representative for Maryland's 7th congressional district.

"We fought alongside of each other for a very long time, and now I'm looking to continue to fight. He would want me to continue to fight and so that's what I'm going to do," Rockeymoore Cummings, chairwoman of the Maryland Democratic Party, told Maddow.

Joe Sommerlad12 November 2019 15:05

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