Donald Trump has lashed out at Canadian prime minister Justin Trudeau and French president Emmanuel Macron and their “delinquent countries” on Twitter, still reeling a week on from his sharp exit from a Nato summit in London at which the duo and others were filmed laughing behind his back at Buckingham Palace.
The president was also busy attacking his domestic political enemies in his latest 2020 campaign rally in Hershey, Pennsylvania, last night, branding House Intelligence Committee chairman Adam Schiff “a crooked bastard” and the FBI “scum” just hours after House Democrats moved to charge him with two articles of impeachment: abuse of power and obstruction of Congress.
The Judiciary Committee is due to meet today to debate the articles ahead of a vote to send the matter on to the full House of Representatives as a devastating new Quinnipiac poll projects Mr Trump losing comfortably to all of the leading Democratic presidential nominees in 2020.
Meanwhile, Mr Trump officiall signed an executive order on Wednesday to designate Judaism as a nationality in the US — allowing the Trump administration better leverage over universities across the country.
The House is expecting a vote on impeachment sometime next week.
Preliminary word is that the Senate will take up the impeachment next month, with a short trial that will likely exonerate the president in the end.
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Donald Trump lashed out at his political rivals in his latest 2020 campaign rally in Hershey, Pennsylvania, last night, also claiming the world is no longer laughing at the US a week after Canadian PM Justin Trudeau was filmed doing exactly that.
"They announced the impeachment and then an hour later she announced that she is going to do USMCA. You know why, it's a huge deal and it plays down the impeachment because they're embarrassed by the impeachment," Trump told the cheering crowd.
The president is seeking to shore up support in swing states like Pennsylvania, which he won by less than one percentage point in 2016, visiting the state often ahead of the November 2020 election.
One of three "Rust Belt" states Trump won with votes from white, blue-collar voters who had previously supported Democrats, Pennsylvania is seen as key to keeping control of the White House, along with Michigan and Wisconsin.
"We're gonna win Pennsylvania," Trump said at the rally, before attacking local voters over their choice of district attorney: "What the hell. How did you let that happen?"
He went on to call the impeachment probe a hoax and disparaged rival Joe Biden for forgetting the names of states in which he was campaigning.
Justice David Briones of El Paso issued a permanent injunction that prevents the administration from using money previously set aside for a string of military construction projects.
It is a major setback for Trump, who has made building a barrier along the US-Mexico border a signature issue and even told his aides he would pardon them if they broke the law to get it done in time for November 2020. The Justice Department says it will appeal the decision.
The gesture has already been criticised by free speech advocates though, who raised concerns a broader definition of antisemitism could be used to limit criticism of Israel’s government.
Samuel Osborne has more.
In a settlement reached on 7 November, Trump admitted to "persistent" violations of federal and state campaign finance laws by abusing the tax-exempt status of his Donald J Trump Foundation and using it as "little more than a chequebook" to support his campaign and his business. He was ordered to make donations to Army Emergency Relief, the Children's Aid Society, Citymeals-on-Wheels, Give an Hour, Martha's Table, the United Negro College Fund, the United Way of National Capital Area and the US Holocaust Memorial Museum.
Trump also agreed to distribute $1.8m (£1.4m) remaining in his foundation's coffers among the same charities. In total, each of the eight received just over $476,000 (£362,000).
Lavrov arrived at the White House at about 2.15pm on Tuesday afternoon, entering the West Wing after telling reporters he was there to "say good afternoon to the president". The pair met behind closed doors and Lavrov left after about an hour.
The meeting is his second Oval Office audience with Trump. The first took place in 2017, only a few months after Trump assumed office under the cloud of a federal investigation into whether members of his 2016 presidential campaign coordinated their actions with the effort mounted by Russia's intelligence services to boost his candidacy.
The lawsuit follows just a day after the release of a Justice Department inspector general report, which found that investigation into Donald Trump's 2016 campaign was not started out of political animus towards the then-candidate - as he has claimed, using Page's text messages to former FBI agent Peter Strzok trashing him as evidence of the conspiracy.
We can no doubt expect a dignified and measured response from a president absolutely, definitely above bullying a 16-year-old.
Kate Ng has the details.
The study published in Nature Human Behaviour found that black respondents and Democrats "perceived that black people face much more discrimination than white people" while "white respondents and Republicans perceived a smaller discrimination gap between black and white people, relative to reported discrimination experiences".
We can though hear from another president on impeachment:












