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The Independent UK
The Independent UK
Politics
Joe Sommerlad, Alex Woodward

Trump news - live: President denies being briefed on Russian bounty plot as Iran issues warrant for his arrest

Donald Trump has been made the subject of an arrest warrant by Iran over the US killing of the country’s top general Qassem Soleimani on 3 January, with Tehran appealing to Interpol for help in enforcing it.

The president has meanwhile insisted he was not briefed by intelligence officials over an alleged Russian plot to pay out bounties to Taliban-linked militia in exchange for targeting American and British soldiers in Afghanistan to sow unrest, after the president was accused of sitting on the report by his domestic political rivals.

White House press secretary Kayleigh McEnany refused to say whether the president would respond, telling reporters that "there are some dissenting opinions within the intelligence community" about the veracity of the claims in the reports.

"This was not briefed up to the president because, in fact, it was not verified," she said,

But after GOP allies in the House met with the president's Chief of Staff Mark Meadows, Congressman Jim Banks – in a Twitter thread shared by the president – suggested that bounty plot was being actively investigated, and that The New York Times report about the intelligence was "the real scandal" – not the president's refusal to act on it. He suggested that "it's impossible to finish the investigation" because of media reports.

"The blood is on their hands," he said.

After an exodus of the president's supporters from the platform, Reddit has banned the popular r/The_Donald forum and Twitch temporarily suspended the president's account over crackdowns on hate speech on the platforms.

YouTube also closed the accounts of several prominent far-right personalities, as conservatives – migrating to platforms like Parler – accuse social media of censoring conservative voices, a conspiracy supported by the president.

As coronavirus cases continue to surge across the US, several states are racing to impose new lockdown restrictions after too-soon reopening efforts and a lack in comprehensive federal efforts to support Americans have caused dangerous spikes.

California joined Texas and Florida in closing bars in seven counties and the latter shut its beaches. “Caution was thrown to the wind and so we are where we are,” Republican governor Ron DeSantis commented.

Arizona also announced that all bars, clubs, movie theatres and gyms would close for at least 30 days after the state saw its largest case spike since the onset of the pandemic.

Follow live coverage as it happened

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Hello and welcome to The Independent's rolling coverage of the Donald Trump administration.
Trump denies being briefed on Russian bounty killing plot
 
Donald Trump has insisted he was not briefed by intelligence officials over an alleged Russian plot to pay out bounties to Taliban hitmen in exchange for targeting American and British soldiers in Afghanistan to sow unrest, after the president was accused of sitting on the report by his domestic political rivals.
 
“Intel just reported to me that they did not find this info credible, and therefore did not report it to me or @VP,” he tweeted over night. “Possibly another fabricated Russia Hoax, maybe by the Fake News @nytimesbooks, wanting to make Republicans look bad!!!”

I think he meant to tag in The New York Times’s main account there, not its poor book review team specifically, that message a response to the concerns of Republican senator Lindsey Graham, whom the president spent time with golfing in Sterling, Virginia, over the weekend.

The Trump administration is apparently set to brief “select members of Congress” on the matter today, according to the AP, after The NYT reported that Russia was making overtures to the Islamist militant group just as its elders were holding talks with the US to end the long-running war in Afghanistan.

While intelligence officials have indicated Trump was briefed on the matter earlier this year, he has now twice denied it.

Democratic presumptive presidential nominee Joe Biden has said reports that Trump was aware of the Russian bounties would be a "truly shocking revelation" about the commander-in-chief and his failure to protect US troops in Afghanistan and stand up to Russia.
 
The Kremlin has, predictably, called the report "nonsense."
 
"This unsophisticated plant clearly illustrates the low intellectual abilities of the propagandists of American intelligence, who instead of inventing something more plausible have to make up this nonsense," the Russian Foreign Ministry said.
 
A Taliban spokesman said the militants likewise "strongly reject this allegation" and are not "indebted to the beneficence of any intelligence organ or foreign country."
 
John Bolton, the former US national security adviser who was forced out by Trump last September and has now written a tell-all book about his time at the White House, said on Sunday that "it is pretty remarkable the president's going out of his way to say he hasn't heard anything about it. One asks, why would he do something like that?"
 
 
Bolton told NBC's Meet the Press that he thinks the answer "may be precisely because active Russian aggression like that against the American service members is a very, very serious matter and nothing's been done about it, if it's true, for these past four or five months, so it may look like he was negligent. But, of course, he can disown everything if nobody ever told him about it."
 
House speaker Nancy Pelosi, one of the few congressional leaders briefed on sensitive intelligence matters, told ABC's This Week yesterday that she had not been informed about the reported bounties and requested a report to Congress on the matter.
 
"This is as bad as it gets, and yet the president will not confront the Russians on this score, denies being briefed. Whether he is or not, his administration knows and our allies - some of our allies who work with us in Afghanistan had been briefed and accept this report," she said.

Here’s Griffin Connolly’s report.
 
States race to impose new lockdown measures as Covid-19 spreads
 
Several southern states are meanwhile racing to impose new lockdown restrictions on citizens after cases of the coronavirus surged following their reopening, with California governor Gavin Newsom joining his Texas and Florida counterparts in closing bars in Los Angeles and six other counties and the latter shutting its beaches.
 
Public health officials in California and throughout the United States have identified bars as the riskiest non-essential businesses currently open. Consuming alcohol reduces inhibitions, which leads to less mask-wearing and social distancing, health officials warn. Patrons in noisy bars often shout, which also spreads droplets more widely.
 
"Covid-19 has taken a very swift and very dangerous turn in Texas over just the past few weeks," said that state’s governor Greg Abbott, who allowed businesses to start reopening in early May but on Friday shut down bars and limited restaurant dining amid a spike in cases.
 
The surge in cases has been most pronounced in southern and western states that did not follow health officials' recommendations to wait for a steady decline in cases before reopening. More than 2.5 million people have tested positive for the new coronavirus in the United States and more than 125,000 have died, the most in the world.
 
For a third consecutive day on Saturday, the number of confirmed US cases leapt by more than 40,000, one of the world's largest surges. In many states, people under 35 accounted for a large percentage of new cases. More tests are also coming back positive, up to 25 per cent in some areas.
 
“Caution was thrown to the wind and so we are where we are,” Florida’s Republican governor Ron DeSantis commented, blaming the surge on large gatherings of young people at the seaside.

Some beaches in Florida are also closing ahead of the 4 July Independence Day holiday weekend, which would have drawn large crowds.

In Arizona, cases have risen by 267 per cent this month and jumped by a record 3,857 on Sunday, the eighth record-breaking increase this month. Georgia reported a record increase of 2,225 cases on Sunday. Fifteen states, including California, Florida and Texas, saw record rises in cases last week.

Andrew Buncombe has this report on the president golfing while Rome burns.
 
Health secretary warns ‘window is closing’ to get pandemic under control

With the world now suffering 10m cases of Covid-19 and 500,000 deaths – and with the US accounting for a quarter of infections and almost a third of fatalities – health secretary Alex Azar warned on Sunday that “the window is closing” to get the pandemic back under control.

Also painting a bleak picture was Dr Tom Frieden, the former director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), who told Chris Wallace on Fox News Sunday there is “no doubt” the coronavirus “has the upper hand”.
 
“There’s no doubt we’re doing more testing, our hospitals are better prepared, but there’s also no doubt the virus has the upper hand,” he said.
 
“This virus is not going to go away on its own, we have to stop that, and only we can do that by working together. We’re all sick and tired of staying home but the virus is not tired of making us sick.”

Dr Frieden was also in no doubt that the sharp increases in cases we’ve seen were down to premature reopenings.
 
“If you open while cases are still increasing, as many states did, it’s like leaning into a left hook, you’re going to get hit hard,” he said.
 
“That’s why the three Ws are so important - wear a mask, wash your hands or use sanitiser and watch your distance.”
Mike Pence advises everyone to wear masks but attends choir performance
 
Trump's vice president - the nominal head of the White House Coronavirus Task Force - was forced to cancel events campaigning for Trump's re-election in Florida and Arizona on Saturday because of the outbreak.

On Sunday, he spoke to Face the Nation and joined DeSantis in blaming the spread of coronavirus among young people who considered themselves “invincible” to its effects.

His observation was not altogether without trace elements of hypocrisy...
 

After that, Pence travelled to Texas, where he told a news conference held with Greg Abbott and housing secretary Ben Carson that Americans should wear masks. 
 
"We encourage everyone to wear a mask in the affected areas," he said. "Where you can't maintain social distancing, wearing a mask is just a good idea, especially young people."
 
But the vice president subsequently attended a service at a church where a 100-member choir sang without masks. A video showed Pence, who has defended his boss’s refusal to ask all Americans to wear masks in public, in the audience wearing a face covering himself - but it all seemed like a case of too little, too late.
One man who has had enough of Pence's "hunky dory" outlook is Washington governor Jay Inslee, who said as much on Face the Nation.
Joe Biden says Trump has 'picked a side' after tweeting 'white power' video

The president sparked a fresh controversy (or distraction) by retweeting a video of his supporters in Florida in which one individual was heard to shout the white supremacist phrase “White power!”

Trump was subsequently forced to delete the video, with a spokesman indicating he had not carefully watched the clip before broadcasting it to his almost 83m Twitter followers.

Leading the condemnation was Biden, who had this to say:


Trump's only defender was Tim Scott, the one black Republican in the Senate, who has had a rough week, what with seeing his police reform bill quashed and now having to step out and take one for the team here.

Here’s Alex Woodward’s report.
 
Republican senator urges Trump to wear a mask

“If wearing masks is important - and all the health experts tell us that it is - in containing the disease in 2020, it would help if from time to time the president would wear one,” Tennessee's Lamar Alexander said yesterday, urging Trump to set an example.

He's right here, but if only Alexander himself had set an example in February by following through on his threat to join Mitt Romney's one-man rebellion to back Trump's impeachment, we might be looking at a much brighter world right now.
 
Speaker Pelosi meanwhile echoed Mike Pence's call for mandatory mask-wearing on This Week, describing the practice as "definitely long overdue".
Mick Jagger to Trump: 'You can't always get what you want'

The Rolling Stones have demanded that the president stop using their 1969 hit at his rallies, following hot on the heels of the Tom Petty estate and many others in issuing a cease-and-desist order and threatening to sue.

If this continues, MAGA supporters will soon be forced to listen to copyright-free elevator muzak as they await this clapped-out president taking to the stage on his regional sympathy tours.

As far as I'm concerned, Trump is welcome to "You Can't Always Get What You Want" - I never cared for that children's choir at the beginning.

But if he'd come for "Tell Me", "Play with Fire", "Paint It Black", "Brown Sugar" or "Star Star" (unlikely), we'd have serious beef.
 
Florida beaches will close for Fourth of July weekend over coronavirus concerns

Back to the growing crisis that is the vengeful resurgence of coronavirus in the south.

Here's Gino Spocchia on Florida's belated tactical retreat from reopening.
 
Texas governor says state will be ‘guided by data’ as 13 per cent of coronavirus tests come back positive

Andrew Naughtie has the latest from Texas, which - as we've seen - hosted Mike Pence yesterday and is facing an equally savage fightback from Covid-19.
 
Lincoln Project latest attacks Trump for failing to protect WWII veterans

George Conway's boys are at it again (can't believe Kellyanne hasn't murdered him yet) and this time are going after the president for failing to protect surviving members of the "Greatest Generation", who were prepared to put their lives on the line for their country in the Second World War and now find themselves in the age bracket to be most at risk from Covid-19.
Iran issues arrest warrant for Trump, asks Interpol to help

Blimey.

Tehran prosecutor Ali Alqasimehr says the international warrant issued by Iran includes Trump and more than 30 others allegedly involved in the 3 January drone strike that killed General Qassem Soleimani, commander of Iran’s clandestine overseas paramilitary force, the official Islamic Republic News Agency reported on Monday.

Here's Borzou Daragahi with the latest.
 
Trump retweets video of St Louis couple threatening Black Lives Matter protesters with guns

A day after his very dodgy "white power" tweet, the president has just retweeted a video of this absurd duo - presumably approvingly - who went viral yesterday after they were filmed threatening peaceful activists with firemarms as they passed their property.

Some commentators online have rather cruelly observed that Tim Roth and Amanda Plummer's diner stick-up artists from Pulp Fiction have not aged well.
 



Incredibly, their sudden celebrity was not the most the MAGA sight to hit the internet this weekend.

Here's Dave Maclean on the president's latest disturbing retweet.
 
Trump accused of putting lives at risk after tweeting 'wanted posters' of Black Lives Matter protesters

The president caused outrage when he did this yesterday - and, just now, he retweeted them all again for good measure.

That's about 25 retweets from Trump already today, with nothing whatosever by way of actual governance.

Here's Alex Woodward's story.
 
‘TikTok grandmother’ reveals she is working for Joe Biden

Andrew Buncombe has been speaking to Iowa's own Mary Jo Laupp, 51, who was instrumental in encouraging fake registrations to Trump's Tulsa rally last weekend, ensuring an embarrassingly poor turnout.

“I don’t know that we can handle another four years of a president who mocks everybody who’s not exactly like him - to have a president who tries to run the country like you’re trying to run a company,” she says.
 
'Incredible stupidity!'

No word from Trump yet on Iran's arrest warrant but he has been griping about political correctness gone mad again.
Mississippi legislature votes to remove Confederate emblem from state flag

Lawmakers in the delta state have agreed to remove the Confederate battle flag from the state’s banner, retiring a more than 100-year-old vestige of the Civil War and spectre of white supremacy.

Alex Woodward has the full story.
 
'Poland’s president hopes a Trump deal will help him win the election - but it may divide people more'

For Indy Voices, Pawel Latoszek examines Andrzej Duda's visit to the White House last week in the hope of shoring up support at home ahead of yesterday's election (by giving himself a platform on the world stage in exchange for armament deals).

Judging by the exit polls, hitching his wagon to Trump appears to have paid off - but the strategy could yet prove costly.
 
Trump 'imagines' five per cent of Republicans he says won't vote for him oppose his 'great' policies

Yep, probably Donald.

Also, where is he seeing this same fictional stat every week? And shouldn't he be more worried about his double-digit poll deficit to Biden?

He follows that with more unfounded and uncited bluster about his internal polling...
 

...and peaceful anti-racism protesters occupying a city block in Seattle.
Kayleigh McEnany: Trump tweeted offending video to show solidarity with 'demonised' supporters

White House press secretary has been on Fox and Friends attempting to defend the president's "white power!" video by claiming he had not noticed that portion of the clip.

This defiant note on reopening, despite the explosion of new coronavirus cases in states like Florida and Texas was also fairly alarming.
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