Tag: United States Presidential Election

  • Biden administration to lower costs for 64 drugs through inflation penalties on drugmakers

    Biden administration to lower costs for 64 drugs through inflation penalties on drugmakers


    US President Joe Biden speaks during an event at the National Institutes of Health (NIH) in Bethesda, Maryland, US, on Thursday, Dec. 14 2023. 

    Chris Kleponis | Bloomberg | Getty Images

    The Biden administration on Wednesday said it will impose inflation penalties on 64 prescription drugs for the third quarter of this year, lowering costs for certain older Americans enrolled in Medicare. 

    President Joe Biden has made lowering U.S. drug prices a key pillar of his health-care agenda and reelection platform for 2024. A provision of Biden’s Inflation Reduction Act requires drugmakers to pay rebates to Medicare, the federal health program for Americans over age 65, if they hike the price of a medication faster than the rate of inflation. 

    It is separate from another provision under the law that allows Medicare to negotiate lower prescription drug prices with manufacturers. On average, Americans pay two to three times more than patients in other developed nations for prescription drugs, according to the Biden administration.

    Some patients will pay a lower coinsurance rate for the 64 drugs covered under Wednesday’s announcement, which fall under Medicare Part B, for the period from July 1 to Sept. 30 “since each drug company raised prices faster than the rate of inflation,” according to a release from the administration.

    Some Medicare Part B patients may save as much as $4,593 per day if they use those drugs during the quarter, the release added.  

    More than 750,000 Medicare patients use the drugs each year, according to the release. The medications treat conditions such as cancer, certain infections and a bone disease called osteoporosis.

    The list includes Bristol Myers Squibb’s Abecma, a cell therapy for multiple myeloma; and Pfizer’s targeted cancer treatment for certain lymphomas called Adectris. It also includes Astellas Pharma and Pfizer’s Padcev, a targeted cancer treatment for advanced bladder cancer.

    The Biden administration said Padcev’s price has increased faster than inflation every quarter since the Medicare inflation rebate program went into effect last year.

    More CNBC health coverage

    “Without the Inflation Reduction Act, seniors were completely exposed to Big Pharma’s price hikes. Not anymore,” Neera Tanden, White House domestic policy advisor, said in the release.

    The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services plans to send the first invoices to drugmakers in 2025 for the rebates owed to the program.

    In December, Biden released a list of 48 prescription drugs that would be subject to inflation penalties during the first quarter of 2024.

    Don’t miss these insights from CNBC PRO



    Source link

  • Nikki Haley gets first 2024 win in the Washington, D.C., GOP primary

    Nikki Haley gets first 2024 win in the Washington, D.C., GOP primary


    Former South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley won her first GOP presidential nominating contest Sunday, notching a victory in the Washington, D.C., primary, NBC News projects — a win her campaign hopes will spark some momentum ahead of next week’s Super Tuesday contests.

    Brandon Bell | Getty Images News | Getty Images

    Former South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley won her first GOP presidential nominating contest Sunday, notching a victory in the Washington, D.C., primary, NBC News projects — a win her campaign hopes will spark some momentum ahead of next week’s Super Tuesday contests.

    Haley, who won the district primary over former President Donald Trump, has for weeks pledged to stay in the race through Super Tuesday, when 15 states and American Samoa will hold nominating contests. Trump is dominating in nearly all of those states in most public polling and is expected to extend his commanding delegate lead. 

    Haley took 63% of the GOP primary vote to 33% for Trump. Just over 2,000 D.C. Republicans cast ballots.

    Washington’s moderate set of Republicans, many of whom work in politics or government, are seen as vastly different than those in other early states like South Carolina and Iowa, which set up a scenario where Haley had her first legitimate chance of notching a victory. Trump got just 14% of the vote in Washington’s 2016 primary.

    And expectations for turnout were also low, which opened up the door to a different scenario than every other contest so far because the margins were expected to be thin.

    “It could be anywhere between 2,000 and 6,000 voters,” district GOP chair Patrick Mara predicted in an interview with NBC News last week. “So, quite frankly there is an opportunity here for anyone to win. It just depends on voter turnout and what the campaigns are doing.”

    In 2016, the GOP primary was won by Florida Sen. Marco Rubio when roughly 2,800 votes were cast. Utah Sen. Mitt Romney, who became the party’s 2012 nominee, won the contest that year, when 5,200 votes were cast, and in 2008, roughly 6,200 votes were cast in a contest won by eventual Republican nominee John McCain. 

    Mara said the campaigns for both Haley and Trump were sending text messages and doing phone calls to inspire turnout ahead of the primary, even having some volunteers go door-to-door.

    The primary is run by the local Republican Party rather than the state, which is common in other nominating contests, with just one polling location at the Madison Hotel.

    “It’s run by the party, which is a different experience and we pay for it,” he said. “So, it means that Washington Republicans had to be motivated to come to downtown D.C to a hotel to vote.”

    He said Trump’s dominance in early primary states and the perception that the Republican nominating process also impacted low turnout.

    “The average Washington Republican is politically astute and more media-savvy, they have seen coverage telling people the race is over,” Mara said.



    Source link

  • Vice President Harris will face doubts and dysfunction at the Southeast Asian nations summit

    Vice President Harris will face doubts and dysfunction at the Southeast Asian nations summit


    Vice President Kamala Harris delivers remarks at the top of a meeting on Climate with Cabinet members and leaders at the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) as part of the U.S.-ASEAN Special Summit at the Loy Henderson International Conference Room at the U.S. Department of State on U.S. Department of State on Friday, May 13, 2022 in Washington, DC.

    Kent Nishimura | Los Angeles Times | Getty Images

    Vice President Kamala Harris will deepen her outreach to Southeast Asia this week at an international summit in Jakarta, Indonesia, where she’ll try to erase doubts about U.S. commitment to the region stirred by President Joe Biden’s absence.

    It’s Harris’ third trip to Southeast Asia and fourth to Asia overall, and she’s touched down in more countries there than any other continent. The repeat visits, in addition to meetings that she’s hosted in Washington, have positioned Harris as a key interlocutor for the Democratic administration as it tries to bolster a network of partnerships to counterbalance Chinese influence.

    This latest journey is another opportunity for Harris to burnish her foreign policy credentials as she prepares for a bruising campaign year. She’s already come under attack from Republican presidential candidates who say she’s unprepared to step up if Biden, the oldest U.S. president in history, can’t finish a second term.

    John Kirby, a White House national security spokesman, said Harris has “made our alliances and partnerships in the Indo-Pacific a key part of her agenda as vice president,” and he described her itinerary as “perfectly in keeping with the issues that she’s been focused on.”

    But Biden’s decision to skip the Association of Southeast Asian Nations, known as ASEAN, has caused some frustration, particularly because he’s already going to be in India and Vietnam around the same time. The president’s proximity makes his nonattendance “all the more more glaring than would otherwise be the case,” said Marty Natalegawa, Indonesia’s former foreign affairs minister.

    However, Natalegawa conceded that ASEAN is struggling to convince world leaders that it deserves to play a central role in the region. That’s even though the alliance represents more than 650 million people across 10 nations that collectively have the world’s fifth largest economy.

    The organization has not resolved civil strife in Myanmar, which saw a military coup two years ago and has been disinvited from meetings. A peace plan reached with the country’s top general did not lead to any progress.

    Negotiations over territorial claims in the South China Sea remain bogged down as well, and ASEAN faces internal disagreements over global competition between the United States and China. Some members, such as the Philippines and Vietnam, have sought closer ties with Washington, while Cambodia remains firmly in Beijing’s orbit.

    “We can complain all we want about other countries not respecting us or not coming to our summits,” Natalegawa said. “But ultimately, it is actually a point of reflection.”

    Unless ASEAN becomes more effective, Natalegawa said, “we may end up with less and less leaders turning up.”

    Kirby, the national security spokesman, rejected the idea that Biden was snubbing the organization or the region.

    “It’s just impossible to look at the record that this administration has put forward and say that we are somehow walking away,” Kirby said, noting that Biden already hosted the first Washington summit with ASEAN leaders last year.

    Phil Gordon, a national security adviser to Harris, said “every country wants the president of the United States to show up” when it holds an event, but “there’s a great amount of enthusiasm” for the vice president’s stop in Jakarta as well.

    He also said the summit was a valuable opportunity to engage with countries in the region.

    “There are differences among them, but there’s also a lot of common ground,” Gordon said. “And there’s common ground with us.”

    Ja-Ian Chong, an associate professor of political science at the National University of Singapore, said Harris’ presence helps the U.S. cover its bases at an event that may not prove productive on key issues.

    “You want to show that you’re paying attention, you send the vice president,” he said.

    Harris departed Monday morning and is scheduled to spend two days enmeshed in meetings in Jakarta. Her office has not yet detailed her schedule, but she’s expected to attend summit events and hold individual talks with some foreign leaders.

    ASEAN is the 'single largest' destination for U.S. investment in Asia: U.S.-ASEAN Business Council

    Soon after Harris returns from Indonesia, Biden is headed to India for the annual Group of 20 summit, which pulls together many of the world’s richest countries and is a staple of any president’s calendar. Then he plans to stop in Vietnam, where he’s focused on strengthening ties with a country that is an emerging economic power.

    “I don’t fault the administration for the choice that they made. It’s just unfortunate that they had to make that choice,” said Gregory B. Poling, who directs the Southeast Asia program at the Center for Strategic and International Studies.

    Leaders are gathering in Jakarta amid heightened tension over the South China Sea after Beijing released a new official map that emphasizes its territorial claims there.

    The map has angered other nations that consider the waters to be part of their own territory or international byways. The South China Sea is a critical crossroads for global trade.

    U.S. officials and analysts believe Beijing’s aggressive approach to the region has created an opening for Washington to forge stronger partnerships.

    “In many ways, the PRC is doing its work for us,” said David Stilwell, using the acronym for the People’s Republic of China. Stilwell served as the assistant secretary of state for the Bureau of East Asian and Pacific Affairs under President Donald Trump.

    ASEAN doesn't want to choose between U.S., China and Europe: Indonesian business organization

    Although much of Biden’s recent attention has been on the Russian invasion of Ukraine, he’s left no doubt that he considers China to be the top foreign policy challenge for the U.S. He’s described much of his agenda, both domestic and overseas, as an effort to deter Beijing from supplanting Washington as the most powerful worldwide force.

    Sometimes his warnings take a darker turn. During a recent fundraiser for his reelection campaign in Park City, Utah, Biden described China as a “ticking time bomb” because of its economic and demographic challenges.

    “That’s not good because when bad folks have problems, they do bad things,” he said.

    Harris has previously visited Singapore and Vietnam, Japan and South Korea, and the Philippines and Thailand.

    Many of her travels have been geared toward the global rivalry with China.

    Speaking from the deck of a U.S. Navy destroyer docked near Tokyo last year, Harris said China has “challenged freedom of the seas” and “flexed its military and economic might to coerce and intimidate its neighbors.”

    Harris also became the highest-ranking U.S. official to visit Palawan, a Filipino island adjacent to the South China Sea that has been a front line for the territorial disputes. She said that Washington would support the Philippines “in the face of intimidation and coercion.”



    Source link

  • Trump lawyer who quit classified documents case withdraws from $475 million CNN defamation suit

    Trump lawyer who quit classified documents case withdraws from $475 million CNN defamation suit


    James Trusty, attorney for Donald Trump, appears on “Meet the Press” in Washington, D.C., April 9, 2023.

    NBCUniversal | Getty Images

    An attorney who quit the team defending Donald Trump in the criminal classified documents case said Friday he would no longer represent the former president in a separate defamation lawsuit against CNN.

    The lawyer, Jim Trusty, said in a court filing that his request to withdraw from the $475 million civil suit “is based upon irreconcilable differences” with Trump.

    “Counsel can no longer effectively and properly represent Plaintiff,” Trusty wrote in the filing in U.S. District Court in Fort Lauderdale, Florida.

    Neither Trusty nor lawyers for CNN immediately responded to requests for comment on Trusty’s move to withdraw as Trump’s counsel.

    Lindsey Halligan, Trump’s remaining attorney in the defamation case, referred CNBC to the former president’s spokesman Steven Cheung, who said the defamation suit is “entering a new phase as more irrefutable facts are revealed.”

    “We thank Mr. Trusty for his work on this case and wish him all the best,” Cheung said.

    A week earlier, Trusty and another lawyer, John Rowley, tendered their resignations as Trump’s counsel in the federal criminal case that had just resulted in his indictment on charges related to his post-presidency efforts to keep a raft of classified documents at his resort home Mar-a-Lago.

    “Now that the case has been filed in Miami, this is a logical moment for us to step aside and let others carry the cases through to completion,” Trusty and Rowley said in that statement.

    Four days later, Trump pleaded not guilty to 37 counts including retaining national defense records, concealing documents and conspiracy to obstruct justice.

    The attorneys’ statement also noted they would no longer defend Trump in another ongoing federal criminal investigation into the events surrounding the Jan. 6, 2021, Capitol riot. U.S. Department of Justice special counsel Jack Smith oversaw both probes.

    They bear little resemblance to Trump’s civil defamation suit against CNN, which was filed in October.

    Trump, who has a long track record of attacking media outlets and specific reporters over coverage he dislikes, accused CNN of running a “smear campaign” against him, including by comparing him to Adolf Hitler.

    The lawsuit homed in on CNN’s frequent invocation of the Big Lie, a term used to refer to a variety of false claims of election fraud Trump and his allies have peddled as they claim President Joe Biden‘s 2020 election victory was rigged.

    “The ‘Big Lie’ is a direct reference to a tactic employed by Adolf Hitler and appearing in Hitler’s Mein Kampf,” asserted the complaint from Trump’s legal team, which at the time included Trusty.

    CNN in November asked the court to dismiss the case, calling Trump’s claims “untenable and repugnant to a free press and open political debate.”

    The outlet noted Trump’s lawsuit hinges on just five CNN pieces. It argued that none of them suggest he “has the character of Hitler.”

    Trump’s complaint suggested CNN was defaming him to undermine his potential candidacy in the next presidential election. Trump launched his 2024 campaign the next month, and he has consistently led the Republican primary field in the polls.

    Trump seeks $475 million in punitive damages and more than $75,000 in compensatory damages.



    Source link

  • Trump pushes false election claims, mocks Carroll sex abuse verdict during CNN town hall

    Trump pushes false election claims, mocks Carroll sex abuse verdict during CNN town hall


    Former US President Donald Trump speaks at a campaign event in Manchester, New Hampshire, US, on Thursday, April 27, 2023. 

    Adam Glanzman | Bloomberg | Getty Images

    Former President Donald Trump on Wednesday again pushed false claims that his 2020 election loss to President Joe Biden was “rigged” in a live town hall on CNN.

    Trump also lashed out repeatedly at the woman who in a civil lawsuit accused him of rape, one day after a jury in that case found him liable for sexual abuse and defamation.

    The event in New Hampshire marked Trump’s first appearance on the network since the 2016 presidential campaign, according to CNN. It was moderated by “CNN This Morning” anchor Kaitlan Collins, who attempted to fact-check Trump in real time. It featured a live audience of Republicans and undeclared voters.

    Much of the crowd was highly favorable to Trump, frequently applauding and laughing in support of his remarks.

    Trump, who for years has falsely claimed he beat Biden in 2020, told Collins that “unless you’re a very stupid person you see what happened” in that contest. When asked if he would publicly acknowledge his loss, Trump referred to claims from a group that promotes election conspiracy theories.

    Trump also defended his supporters who stormed the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021, when asked if he regretted his actions on that day. Trump said the people who came to hear him deliver a speech near the Capitol — some of whom would then storm the Capitol and disrupt the transfer of power from Trump to Biden — were “there with love in their heart.”

    “It was a beautiful day,” said Trump, who went on to suggest former Democratic House Speaker Nancy Pelosi bore blame for the riot.

    He also said he would likely pardon “many of them” if he won back the White House in 2024.

    When an undeclared voter asked him about the country’s debt and the ongoing clash in Congress over the debt ceiling, Trump said the U.S. should go into default if Democrats don’t agree to major spending cuts.

    “Well you might as well do it now because you’ll do it later because we have to save this country,” Trump said when on his views on a nationwide default.

    Collins pressed Trump repeatedly on abortion, likely to be a major issue in the 2024 cycle. Trump, who has been more opaque than some of his GOP competitors, repeatedly declined to give a firm answer on whether he would sign a federal abortion ban if he was elected again.

    “I would negotiate so people are happy,” he said at one point, while touting his conservative Supreme Court picks who were critical to last year’s decision overturning Roe v. Wade. When the host continued to push for clarity, he said, “I’m looking at a solution that’s going to work.”

    Since souring on CNN years earlier, Trump has railed against the network, its ratings, its leadership and many of its on-air personalities.

    But following a change in leadership at CNN and amid a reported ratings slump, the network has apparently decided to give Trump another chance.

    “He’s the Republican frontrunner. He has to be on,” Warner Bros. Discovery CEO David Zaslav, whose company owns CNN, said of Trump on CNBC’s “Squawk Box” last week. The town hall was also seen as a test of CNN CEO Chris Licht’s rule against airing disinformation.

    The decision raised concerns from Trump’s critics, who argue giving the ex-president a live platform to spread misinformation neglects the lessons the media learned during his presidency. Some of them have also accused Licht of trying to court a more centrist audience as part of his overhaul of the network.

    E. Jean Carroll exits the Manhattan Federal Court following the verdict in the civil rape accusation case against former U.S. President Donald Trump, in New York City, May 9, 2023.

    Brendan McDermid | Reuters

    The timing has only heightened the controversy. The town hall comes one day after a New York jury found Trump liable for sexual abuse and defamation in a civil case brought by writer E. Jean Carroll.

    The jury ordered Trump to pay Carroll $5 million in compensatory and punitive damages.

    It’s far from clear whether the outcome of that trial, which Trump decried in a stream of social media posts Tuesday evening and which his lawyer has vowed to appeal, will affect his bid for the 2024 Republican presidential nomination.

    During the town hall, Trump repeatedly mocked Carroll to cheers and laughter from the crowd.

    Trump, who lost his 2020 reelection bid to Biden, still appears to be the de facto head of the Republican Party. Even his would-be primary rivals had mostly muted reactions to the jury’s damning verdict.

    Trump appeared to chide CNN ahead of the town hall, suggesting in a social media post the network booked him “because they are rightfully desperate to get these fantastic (TRUMP!) ratings once again.”

    “Could be the beginning of a New & Vibrant CNN, with no more Fake News, or it could turn into a disaster for all, including me. Let’s see what happens?” Trump wrote.



    Source link

  • Trump live updates: Grand jury finishes day without voting on an indictment, NBC News reports

    Trump live updates: Grand jury finishes day without voting on an indictment, NBC News reports


    Grand jury ends day without vote on whether to indict Trump

    New York Police Department (NYPD) patrol inside criminal court in New York, US, on Monday, March 27, 2023.

    Angus Mordant | Bloomberg | Getty Images

    The New York grand jury hearing testimony in Trump’s criminal probe ended the day without voting on whether to indict the ex-president, NBC News reported.

    Grand jurors earlier heard testimony by David Pecker, the former publisher of The National Enquirer supermarket tabloid and CEO of American Media.

    Pecker, who had been a Trump ally, has now appeared twice before the panel.

    The grand jury is next expected to meet Wednesday in lower Manhattan. It is possible that the panel that day could vote on a request by prosecutors to indict Trump.

    Pecker is a key witness in the investigation of a $130,000 hush money payment that Trump’s then-lawyer and fixer Michael Cohen made to porn star Stormy Daniels right before the 2016 presidential election to buy her silence about an alleged tryst with Trump.

    Federal prosecutors have said Pecker and Dylan Howard, the Enquirer’s editor at the time, warned Cohen in October 2016 that Daniels was prepared to go public with her account.

    Cohen ended up paying Daniels, whose real name is Stephanie Clifford, after Pecker and Howard contacted him a second time and said they had been told that Cohen had not finalized the payoff deal.

    American Media, in a cooperation agreement with the Department of Justice, admitted that Pecker in August 2015 — more than a year before Daniels was paid off — met with Cohen and at least one other member of Trump’s campaign.

    “At the meeting, Pecker offered to help deal with negative stories about that presidential candidate’s relationships with women by, among other things, assisting the campaign in identifying such stories so they could be purchased and their publican avoided,” the company admitted.

    — Dan Mangan

    Most Americans think Trump has done something illegal or unethical, poll shows

    Former US President Donald Trump speaks at a campaign event in Waco, Texas, US, on Saturday, March 25, 2023. 

    Brandon Bell | Getty Images

    Three in four U.S. adults believe Trump has done something either illegal or unethical when asked about the numerous investigations he’s facing, a new poll found.

    Most Americans also think the probes of Trump — which are ongoing at the local, state and federal levels — are fair, according to the latest NPR/PBS NewsHour/Marist poll released Monday.

    The survey of 1,327 adults was conducted from March 20 through March 23. The survey of national adults has a margin of error of 3.5 percentage points. The surveys were taken after Trump wrongly declared on social media that he expected to be arrested within the week in connection with an investigation by the Manhattan district attorney’s office.

    Forty-six percent of national adults in the poll said that they think Trump has done something illegal. That includes 78% of Democratic respondents and 41% of independents, as well as 10% of Republicans. Another 29% of those surveyed said they believe Trump has done something unethical, but not illegal, leaving just 23% of Americans who said they think he has done nothing wrong.

    Meanwhile, more than half of respondents, 56%, said they think the probes of Trump are fair, versus 41% who viewed them as a “witch hunt.” Eighty percent Republicans shared that view of the Trump-focused investigations, according to the poll.

    Kevin Breuninger

    National Enquirer’s former publisher makes second appearance at Trump grand jury

    David Pecker

    Francois Durand | Getty Images

    Former National Enquirer publisher David Pecker testified before the Trump grand jury, his second appearance at that panel, NBC News reported.

    Pecker, who previously served as CEO of American Media, was involved in a 2016 deal in which that company paid $150,000 to former Playboy model Karen McDougal to buy her silence about an alleged affair with Trump that she said began a decade earlier.

    Trump’s then-lawyer Michael Cohen separately in 2016 paid porn star Stormy Daniels $130,000 to keep her quiet about an alleged sexual tryst with Trump.

    Both payments were done to avoid the women’s claims from damaging Trump’s chances of winning the presidential election that year.

    Trump has denied having sex with either woman.

    Pecker, who had been a friend of Trump’s first visited the grand jury in late January.

    In 2018, federal prosecutors in New York gave American Media immunity in its criminal investigation of Cohen for facilitating the payments to McDougal and Daniels, whose real name is Stephanie Clifford.

    Both Pecker and American Media’s former chief content officer Dylan Howard reportedly also received immunity from prosecutors in connection with the McDougal payment.

    Such immunity deals are typically granted to people and entities that provide useful information or testimony in a criminal probe with the understanding that that information will be true.

    — Dan Mangan

    Meet the DA who could bring the first criminal charges against a former president

    Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg speaks during the National Action Network National Convention in New York City, April 7, 2022.

    Eduardo Munoz | Reuters

    Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg has been thrust into the national spotlight as the grand jury hearing evidence in his hush money case appears poised to make a decision on whether to indict Trump.

    If they do, Trump will become the first former U.S. president in history to face criminal charges. But the 49-year-old Bragg, who was sworn in as DA just last year, has already achieved other firsts.

    Born in Harlem, Bragg attended New York City’s elite private Trinity School and went on to obtain a degree in government from Harvard and a JD from Harvard Law School.

    When he won his race for DA in November 2021, the Democrat became the first Black person elected to that office. He succeeded Cyrus Vance Jr., inheriting a grand jury investigation into Trump and his businesses that had already resulted in charges against the Trump Organization and its then-top financial officer, Allen Weisselberg.

    But Bragg seemed to show reservations about pursuing charges against Trump himself in that probe of the former president’s business and financial practices, according to one of two prosecutors who resigned from the DA’s office in protest of that view.

    Bragg’s office replied at the time that the probe was ongoing. The prosecutor clinched guilty verdicts against subsidiaries of the Trump Organization in December; Weisselberg pleaded guilty to multiple tax crimes and in January was sentenced to five months in jail.

    That same month, news outlets reported Bragg had convened a new grand jury to hear evidence about a 2016 hush money payment to a porn star who alleges she had an affair with Trump years earlier. The $130,000 payment was made shortly before that year’s presidential election, which Trump won.

    Bragg has come under intensifying fire from Trump and his allies, who have accused the DA of being closely tied to, or controlled by, George Soros. The billionaire donor has become a regular target of some antisemitic conspiracy theories.

    Those accusations, which apparently stem from Soros’ donation to a nonprofit that backed Bragg’s campaign for DA, have been decried as bigoted by Bragg’s defenders. “This disgraceful attack is not a dog-whistle but a bullhorn of incendiary racist and anti-semitic bile,” a group of New York leaders said after Trump called Bragg a “Soros-backed animal.”

    Kevin Breuninger

    NYC officials rally against ‘vile racist attacks’ on DA Bragg amid Trump probe

    An officer from the New York City Police Department (NYPD) Canine Unit checks outside the Manhattan Criminal Court in New York City, U.S., March 27, 2023. Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg’s office is investigating $130,000 paid in the final weeks of former U.S. President Donald Trump’s 2016 election campaign to Stormy Daniels, a porn star who said she had a sexual encounter with Trump in 2006 when he was married to his current wife Melania. REUTERS/Andrew Kelly

    Andrew Kelly | Reuters

    A group of political officials in New York City came out swinging against Trump at a press conference in defense of Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg, who has become the former president’s primary target as his hush money probe heats up.

    “We stand strong! No racism!” one speaker said at the press conference in Harlem led by Rep. Adriano Espaillat, D-N.Y. “We will not have it. We stand strong with Alvin Bragg,” that speaker said.

    “Now everyone in the country knows how it feels to be in an abusive relationship,” said another speaker, who identified herself as a leader of an anti-domestic violence organization.

    Espaillat and other New York leaders previously accused Trump of racism after he attacked Bragg as an “animal” in one of numerous social media posts attacking the DA.

    The Monday morning press conference was billed as a chance for Bragg’s supporters to “speak out against the Republican-backed racist and hate-based rhetoric” against the DA.

    “We are here as a community to show support for him and the process,” Espaillat said. He added that he expected developments from the grand jury hearing evidence in the probe “hopefully this week.”

    Kevin Breuninger

    Witness expected to testify before Trump grand jury

    Former President Donald Trump listens as he speaks with reporters while in flight on his plane after a campaign rally at Waco Regional Airport, in Waco, Texas, Saturday, March 25, 2023, while en route to West Palm Beach, Fla.

    Evan Vucci | AP

    A witness is expected to testify to the grand jury today in connection with the investigation into Trump, NBC reported.

    That scheduled appearance, which is subject to change, would come a week after the last witness testified about the probe. The identity of the expected witness is not known.

    Grand jury proceedings are secret.

    The prior witness, ex-federal prosecutor Robert Costello, had told the grand jury about his interactions with Trump’s former personal lawyer Michael Cohen. Costello had acted as a legal advisor to Cohen when Cohen was under federal criminal investigation in connection with a hush money payment to a porn star for Trump’s benefit.

    That payment and how the Trump Organization recorded a reimbursement to Cohen for it, is the subject of a criminal investigation by the Manhattan District Attorney’s Office, which has been presenting evidence to the grand jury.

    — Dan Mangan

    In separate probe in Georgia, judge considers hearing over Trump’s bid to block prosecution

    The Fulton County court in Atlanta, Georgia, US, on Monday, Feb. 13, 2023.

    Dustin Chambers | Bloomberg | Getty Images

    A judge overseeing a grand jury probe centered on Trump’s efforts to overturn the 2020 election results in Georgia has ordered prosecutors there to respond after the former president sought to quash their case.

    The latest filing from Fulton County Superior Court Judge Robert McBurney ordered District Attorney Fani Willis to respond to Trump by May 1. That response should also include the DA’s view on whether there should be a hearing to resolve the dispute, McBurney wrote in his order Monday.

    A week earlier, Trump asked to block that grand jury’s final report and disqualify Willis’ office from continuing the case.

    The new calendar item suggests the Fulton County probe, which is separate from the Trump-focused investigation by Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg, could continue for at least several more weeks.

    Willis said in January that charging decisions in the probe “are imminent.” The forewoman of the Atlanta-area grand jury told news outlets last month that jurors had recommended charges against multiple people in the probe.

    Meanwhile, Bragg’s probe of a 2016 hush money payment to a porn star who alleges she had sex with Trump is believed to be in its final stages, following news that Trump had been offered the chance to testify before the grand jury.

    Kevin Breuninger

    Trump rails against DA Bragg as officials condemn threats

    Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg speaks to supporters in New York, Nov. 2, 2021.

    Craig Ruttle | AP

    Trump in a series of early morning social media posts attacked Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg and other prosecutors for investigating him, accusing Democrats of using those prosecutors as pawns to damage the former president politically and legally.

    “Great job by Congressman James Comer,” Trump wrote on his Truth Social site of the Kentucky lawmaker who as chairman of the House Oversight Committee has demanded Bragg testify to Congress about the criminal probe of Trump.

    “The Democrats are using Prosecutors for purposes of Election Interference. It is their new way of CHEATING on Elections!” Trump wrote.

    Fifteen minutes after that, Trump wrote that Democrats as “the lowest of the low” by using PROSECUTORS to CHEAT.”

    Shortly afterward, Trump misspelled the last name of porn star Stormy Daniels in writing, “Never had an ‘affair’ with her, and would never have wanted.” He also crowed in the same post of being awarded hundreds of thousands of dollars in legal fees from Daniels in her failed defamation lawsuit against him.

    Daniels, whose real name is Stephanie Clifford, was paid $130,000 by Trump’s then-lawyer in 2016 to buy her silence about her account of having once had sex with Trump.

    Finally, at 1:11 a.m., Trump made the false claim that the U.S. Department of Justice is “running the local Manhattan D.A.’s prosecutor.”

    “They just don’t want their ‘fingerprints’ on it,” he wrote.

    — Dan Mangan

    Grand jury set to resume work after two unexpected days off

    New York State Courts Officer sets a barricade outside the District Attorney’s offices, as Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg’s office investigates $130,000 paid in the final weeks of former U.S. President Donald Trump’s 2016 election campaign to Stormy Daniels, a porn star who said she had a sexual encounter with Trump in 2006 when he was married to his current wife Melania, in New York City, U.S. March 23, 2023.

    Andrew Kelly | Reuters

    The grand jury that has been hearing testimony for the criminal probe of Trump is scheduled to return to a lower Manhattan courthouse today after not working on the case for most of last week.

    The last time the panel heard testimony related to Trump was March 19, when Robert Costello, an attorney who acted as a legal advisor to Michael Cohen, appeared before the grand jury and blasted the former lawyer and fixer for Trump as someone who could not be trusted.

    The grand jury then was given Wednesday off unexpectedly. It returned Thursday but did not do work on the Trump case.

    Prosecutors can use grand juries to review evidence for multiple criminal investigations.

    It was not clear if the Trump grand jury will begin the week with work on his case, or another one.

    — Dan Mangan



    Source link