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The Independent UK
The Independent UK
Politics
Joe Sommerlad

Trump news - live: Congresswoman Ilhan Omar labels president 'fascist' over racist tweets row as Iran denies claim US shot down its drone

Donald Trump has attempted to distance himself from the “send her home” chants made against Somalia-born Democratic congresswoman Ilhan Omar at his rally in Greenville, North Carolina, on Wednesday night as she branded him a “fascist” upon returning to her constituency in Minnesota to a hero’s welcome.

Iran has meanwhile refuted the president’s claim that the USS Boxer, a US Navy amphibious assault ship, shot down one of its drones in the Strait of Hormuz, insisting all of its unmanned surveillance craft have returned home safely to their bases.

In Washington, Mr Trump's former director of communications, Hope Hicks, has been asked to return to the House Judiciary Committee to answer for inconsistencies between her testimony on the “hush money” payments made to porn star Stormy Daniels and Playboy model Karen McDougal and information revealed by the unsealing of court records by federal prosecutors in New York, which indicated Mr Trump had engaged in a flurry of phone calls with aides regarding the matter in 2016.

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A 2008 video of John McCain shutting down a woman who called Barack Obama an Arab has been widely shared on social media in the aftermath of Mr Trump's attacks on Ilhan Omar.
 
A digital forensics expert at the University of California has warned that 'dumbfake' videos could be a major issue in the 2020 presidential election.
 
Hany Farid said that unlike deepfakes, which require sophisticated artificial intelligence, audio manipulation and facial mapping technology, dumbfakes can be made simply by varying the speed of video or selective editing. 

One example is the slowed-down video of House Speaker Nancy Pelosi that made her appear impaired, garnering more than 2 million views on Facebook in May.
Ilhan Omar hits back at Donald Trump in a tweet, saying he wants to transform America away from being a 'welcoming nation'.
 
Some international reaction to Trump's never-ending racism scandal.
 
Canadian PM Justin Trudeau says this...
 
...While, in Britain, home secretary Sajid Javid - the son of a Pakistani Muslim immigrant to the UK - has spoken of his own experiences of being told to "go back where he came from" and called on world leaders to moderate their language to tackle extremism.
 
Here's the latest on Iran from Borzou Daraghi, where deputy foreign minister Abbas Araghchi has made the tongue-in-cheek suggestion the US Navy may have shot down its own drone.
 
A new poll finds that Senate majority leader Mitch McConnell is America’s most unpopular senator with voters in his state, with Maine Senator Susan Collins coming a close runner-up.
More Fed haranguing from the Trumpster.
 
Those first two tweets were threaded. This one wasn't.
Having said that, daughter-in-law Lara Trump's thoughts on the rally are not much better.
Republican congressman Mark Meadows here with one of the weakest defences of Trump's tweets you will see.
 
He's also been bashing the Federal Reserve again, part of his running criticism of chairman of the board Jerome Powell.
Wow he's really going after the nicknames today: first "Foul Mouthed Omar", now Thomas "the Chin" Friedman, a New York Times columnist who has annoyed him bigly.
 
The idea that Trump of all people would mock someone for spending too much time on the golf course is just staggering. By my count, he has spent 208 days in office on the links so far.
 
He'd hate it if you shared this so here's the offending column.
Here's the latest from the president on the "send her back" chants.
 
There are now only three "Radical Left Congresswomen" who hate America, it appears.
 
Here's Labour MEP Neena Gill for Indy Voices on what it's like to be an elected official told to "go home" by racists.
 
Strong words from Joe Scarborough this morning on MSNBC for Trump and his toying with the tinderbox of closed border bigotry.
Another strange celebrity intervention, this time from Saturday Night Live's Trump impersonator Alec Baldwin, who says the administration has become a "chronic condition" afflicting the nation.
 
“Among the American people, there is a level of disgust and even nausea about Trump", he tells The Guardian.
 
Kim Kardashian - who continues her reinvention as a political activist - has thanked President Trump, secretary of state Mike Pompeo and Jared Kusner for their apparent diplomatic efforts to get American rapper A$AP Rocky released from prison in Sweden, where he has been detained on suspicion of assault.
 
Here's more from AOC, striking a defiant note in Maryland.
 
Amazing how this president takes a sudden interest in literature whenever the book in question benefits him or is written by his pals.
Ilhan Omar has found herself an improbable ally in the person of conservative British TV personality Piers Morgan, ordinarily one of Trump's toadiest acolytes, having previously lavished him with Arsenal shirts and replicas of Winston Churchill's trademark Homburg hat in interviews in the hope of being accepted.
 
Morgan writes in The Daily Mail that Wednesday night's campaign rally in North Carolina crossed the line into racism “big time”.

"The president keeps insisting he’s not a racist, and I’ve repeatedly said that in the 13 years I’ve known him, I’ve personally never witnessed him being a racist,” he says.
 
"But since running for the White House, his inflammatory language has flirted ever closer to crossing the line into overt racism, and now he’s crossed that line. Big time."
 
"Let’s be very unambiguously clear: what happened in North Carolina last night was not just racist-fueled demagoguery but bordered on fascism.
 
“Some raised fists, some were just children. All of them seemed united in racist rage,” Morgan said. 

“There was the president of the United States whipping his supporters into a hyper-animated state of rage about a political opponent because of her ethnicity,” he added. 
President Trump said on Thursday that the administration will "take a very long look" at a massive multibillion-dollar contract the Pentagon is preparing to award for a cloud computing system, citing "tremendous complaints" he's heard about the process. 

Amazon Web Services, a division of Amazon, and Microsoft are finalists for the contract estimated to be worth up to $10bn (£7.9bn) over a decade. 

Trump said during an unrelated event at the White House that companies that are no longer in the running to land the deal, known as Joint Enterprise Defense Infrastructure, or JEDI, have lodged complaints about the process. 

Republican lawmakers troubled by the Pentagon's handling of the contract also took their concerns directly to the president. 

"I'm getting tremendous complaints about the contract with the Pentagon and with Amazon," Trump said when he was asked about the matter during an Oval Office appearance with the Dutch prime minister. "They're saying it wasn't competitively bid." 

"We're looking at it very seriously," the president said. "It's a very big contract, one of the biggest ever given having to do with the cloud and having to do with a lot of other things." 
 
Trump said some of the "greatest companies in the world" were among those complaining about Amazon, and he said the administration will look "very closely" at the contract because "I have had very few things where there's been such complaining." 

Trump is a critic of Amazon, the e-commerce retailer owned by Jeff Bezos. Bezos also owns The Washington Post and Trump has criticised the paper's coverage of the administration. 

The president's comments injected new uncertainty into a project the Defense Department has said is vital to maintaining the US military's technological advantage over adversaries. Whichever company wins the contract will have the monumental task of storing and processing vast amounts of classified data. The Pentagon says it will enable troops to advance the use of artificial intelligence in warfare. 

Oracle and IBM were eliminated from an earlier round of competition, leaving Amazon and Microsoft as the two finalists. 

IBM said in a statement on Thursday that it "has long raised serious concerns about the structure of the JEDI procurement" and continues to believe the Defense Department "would be best served by a multi-cloud strategy" involving multiple cloud systems operated by different companies. 

A federal judge last week tossed out a second challenge by Oracle alleging that the bidding process was rigged in Amazon's favor, and some in Congress have expressed concerns about potential conflicts of interest.
 
Republican senator Marco Rubio of Florida sent a letter last week to White House national security adviser John Bolton asking that the Pentagon delay awarding the contract, contending that the process suffered from a "lack of competition" and the use of "arbitrary criteria and standards for bidders" that could waste taxpayer dollars and "fail to provide our warfighters with the best technology solutions." Rubio had also expressed concerns about plans to award the contract to a single vendor. 

The Pentagon has said it plans to award the contract as soon as 23 August. 

Congressman James Langevin, a Rhode Island Democrat who sits on the House Armed Services Committee, said on Thursday he has full confidence in the Defense Department's cloud strategy and that it's important that the project be allowed to move forward. 

Langevin said in an emailed statement that it would be "wholly inappropriate" for Trump or any member of Congress to interfere in the procurement process, especially since the courts and the Government Accountability Office - the watchdog for Congress - have rejected challenges to the Pentagon's plans. 

Daniel Goure, vice president of the Lexington Institute, a defence-oriented think tank based in Virginia, said it's not unusual for Trump to publicly raise concerns about a defense equipment contract, as Trump did weeks before he took office over the contract with Boeing for an updated version of Air Force One. 

But Goure said it's rare for Trump to actually reverse a Pentagon decision, especially one backed by a legal opinion. 

"I would be incredibly surprised if the president decided to unilaterally cancel this," said Goure, whose institute receives funding from Amazon. "I think once he sees the process, or the process is explained to him and the document is explained to him, I think this will all go away." 
 
AP
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