A Donald Trump press conference in India descended into a bitter row with CNN reporter Jim Acosta on Tuesday after the president criticised the journalist’s network and the latter replied: “I think our record on delivering the truth is a lot better than yours sometimes.”
Trump has meanwhile secured a lucrative arms deal with the fellow superpower’s prime minister Narendra Modi, a venture he risked putting in jeopardy by refusing to eat any of the vegetarian delicacies – notably broccoli samosas - laid out for him at the Sabarmati Ashram in Ahmedabad on Monday afternoon.
On Twitter, the president has insisted that the global coronavirus epidemic is “under control” — and was soon after undermined by the CDC, which warned that an outbreak of the virus in the US is nearly inevitable. That announcement spurred further market losses, as the potential global death toll remains uncertain.
The final Democratic debate before the South Carolina primaries is set for Tuesday night, and will feature two billionaires on stage this time with the addition of Tom Steyer to the mix.
In South Carolina, Joe Biden is fighting for staying power int he race after several losses in early states. He is facing stiff competittion from Bernie Sanders, who has won the popular vote in all three states to have voted so far.
Mr Steyer is performing well in the state as well, though it does not seem as though a third place performance in South Carolina would do much to bolster his very narrow path to a Democratic nomination.
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Donald Trump continues his tour of India on Tuesday as he pursues a lucrative defence trade deal with prime minister Narendra Modi, with the president declaring earlier that the superpower has pledged to buy more than $3bn (£2.3bn) worth of arms.
The US is working productively with Pakistan to counter terrorism on its soil, Trump said at a joint press conference with Modi in the country's capital city New Delhi.
Trump also said he discussed with Modi, whom he calls his "dear friend", the importance of a secure 5G telecoms network in India, ahead of a planned airwaves auction. Washington has banned Chinese telecoms giant Huawei, arguing the use of its kit creates the potential for espionage - a claim denied by Huawei and Beijing - but India, where telecoms companies have long used network gear from the Chinese firm, is yet to make a call. Trump failed to convince British prime minister Boris Johnson to follow his lead and reportedly barracked him by phone for the rebellion.
Today's trade talks follow the rousing reception Trump received in Ahmedabad on Monday. More than 100,000 people filled into a cricket stadium in western India for a "Namaste Trump" rally in the biggest reception to a foreign leader in years which Trump said was a "stunning display of Indian culture and kindness."
But the two countries have been arguing over a trade deal in recent years and today's talks are an attempt to try and close differences over farm goods, medical devices, digital trade and proposed new tariffs.
The US has signed a trade deal with China, and separate agreements with Canada and Mexico and has been pushing for an accord with India which Trump described as the "tariff king."
Trump told the rally in Ahmedabad that Modi was a tough negotiator but that the two countries were in the early stages of a major deal.
In New Delhi, Trump was given a formal state welcome at the redstone presidential palace with a 21-cannon gun salute and a red coated honour guard on horseback on a smoggy day.
India is one of the few big countries in the world where Trump's personal approval rating is above 50 per cent and Trump's trip has got wall-to-wall coverage with commentators saying he had hit all the right notes on his first official visit to the world's biggest democracy.
They were also effusive in their praise for Modi for pulling off a spectacular reception for Trump.
"Modi-Trump hug gets tighter," ran a headline in The Times of India.
In his speech on Monday, Trump extolled India's rise as a stable and prosperous democracy as one of the achievements of the century. "You have done it as a tolerant country. And you have done it as a great, free country," he said.
Trump planned to raise the issue of religious freedoms in India with Modi, an administration official said last week.
Delhi has also been struggling with high air pollution and on Tuesday the air quality was moderately poor at 193 on a government index that measures pollution up to a scale of 500. The World Health Organisation considers anything above 60 as unhealthy.
Trump apparently risked putting his trade talks with Modi in jeopardy by refusing to eat any of the vegetarian delicacies – notably broccoli samosas - laid on for him at the Sabarmati Ashram in Ahmedabad on Monday afternoon.
The president is notorious for his bad diet - favouring steaks slathered in ketchup, hamburgers, KFC buckets and Oreo cookies - and declined the traditional Gujarati options served at high tea yesterday as he and Melania vistied the shrine to Mahatma Gandhi.
The same newspaper suggests Trump must have been saving himself for his hotel, the ITC Maurya in New Dehli, where, "the grand presidential suite, a 4,600-square foot space, has already been prepped for the president and first lady. Valets and a designated 'floor butler' will attend to their needs, and the room has been stocked with Diet Coke and cherry vanilla ice cream."
Here's Tim Wyatt's report.
The president's junk-heavy diet and "Rat Pack-era palate" - to quote The Post's Tim Carman - has long been a cause of concern to those around him, so much so in fact that his former chief medical examiner, Dr Ronny Jackson, has admitted his staff used to conceal cauliflower in his helpings of mash and make ice cream "less accessible" to him.
Conrad Duncan has more on this.
While the president’s visit began with a warm reception and took in such splendid sights as the Taj Mahal, locals have been quick to criticise Modi’s efforts to shield him from the reality of everyday poverty and hardship in the country, with the outbreak of an anti-Muslim riot in New Dehli on Monday that left seven dead tragically underlining the point.
A police officer was among the dead and an estimated 50 more people were injured in clashes between hundreds of supporters and opponents of a new citizenship law in India that provides fast-track naturalisation for some foreign-born religious minorities but not Muslims, police said on Tuesday.
The clashes occurred in New Delhi on Monday just before Trump arrived in the capital. The violence took place as the US president was being feted by Modi in the western Indian city of Ahmedabad.
During the incident, police fired tear gas and used canes as they charged at the protesters in several districts of New Delhi. The rival groups hurled rocks at each other in the area and set some houses, shops, vehicles and a gasoline pump on fire. Police closed access to two metro stations in the area.
Also on Monday, Hindu nationalist and communist groups held pro- and anti-US street demonstrations in the capital.
India has been rocked by violence since parliament approved a new citizenship law in December that provides fast-track naturalisation for some foreign-born religious minorities but not Muslims.
Critics say the country is moving toward a religious citizenship test. At a massive rally in Ahmedabad after Trump's arrival on Monday, the president praised India's history of religious tolerance, saying many faiths "worship side by side in harmony."
On Twitter last night, Trump found time to hammer out the usual slew of retweets from his hotel room, rather than take even a moment to reflect on the day's events and the majesty of India.
In amongst the usual obsessive attacks on Adam Schiff and endorsements for Jim Jordan was a response to a Laura Ingraham segment on Fox in which he suggested veteran US Supreme Court justices Sonia Sotomayor and Ruth Bader Ginsburg should recuse themselves from cases involving him or his administration.
He also sought to reassure the American public that the coronavirus was "very much under control".
Here's John T Bennett on the White House's request for $2.5bn (£1.9bn) in additional funding to tackle the contagion, which somewhat undermines his confidence.
Another line in the president's coronavirus tweet has also been raising eyebrows.
Here's Andrew Naughtie on his blithe dismissal of the significance of plummeting stocks.
The president is giving a press conference in India just now ahead of a state dinner that will reunite him with Modi.
He says he and his team have had a "fabulous two days" and that he won't answer controversial questions before laying into Schiff and Bernie over Russian election hacking and talking tough on Islamist terror.
The president's pledge to avoid awkward questions is going well.
Here's a picture of them together because of course.
The president has otherwise claimed that "Nobody has done what I've done" in combating terrorism, said American soldiers are "taking the oil" in Syria (a war crime - no?) and has otherwise held court on his comments about the Supreme Court justices, H1B visas, the Ebola virus and his alleged "loyalty lists" ahead of the rumoured purge of his administration.
The president has reacted angrily to questions about Russian election interference at his Q&A in India.
"I want no help from any country and I haven't been given help by any country," he said before getting into a spat with Jim Acosta of CNN, saying his network has the "worst record in broadcasting", only for the journalist to fire back that "our record on truth-telling is a lot better than yours sir".
While Trump may be downplaying panic over the coronavirus, at least he's taking it at face value.
The Magaverse is whipping itself up into a frenzy over the epidemic, with the president's pal Rush Limabugh dismissing it as the "common cold" and saying it is being used as a means of discrediting Trump.
"It looks like the coronavirus is being weaponised as yet another element to bring down Donald Trump,” Limbaugh told listeners to his syndicated talk radio show.
"Now, I want to tell you the truth about the coronavirus... I’m dead right on this. The coronavirus is the common cold, folks.
"The drive-by media hype of this thing as a pandemic, as the Andromeda strain, as, ‘Oh, my God. If you get it, you’re dead...’ I think the survival rate is 98 per cent. Ninety-eight percent of people who get the coronavirus survive. It’s a respiratory system virus."
That figure is entirely made up, incidentally, as the World Health Organisation has not yet established a mortality rate.
Limbaugh went on to completely contradict himself by pushing a favourite and entirely unsubstantiated alt-right conspiracy theory that the virus is really a "bioweapon" cooked up in a lab in Wuhan, China. “It didn’t escape from an American research lab," he said. "It hasn’t been spread by Americans. It starts out in a communist country. Its tentacles spread all across the world in numbers that are not big and not huge, but they’re being reported as just the opposite.”
Why would that be in China's interest? Because Beijing believes "Trump and capitalism are destroying America and destroying the world”, says Rush.
Limbaugh is not the only one trying to cancel the virus.
On Fox, Tucker Carlson was equally unhinged.
"For weeks the media told you it was wrong to worry about the coronavirus, a mysterious, highly communicable lethal disease spreading rapidly around the world," Carlson said. "If that concerns you in any way, if you think maybe we ought to take some steps to protect ourselves from it, then you're a bigot."
"Countless publications wagged their fingers in the face of readers, and told them it was irrational, probably immoral in fact to worry about the coronavirus than the annual flu," he continued, apparently alluding to articles in Slate and The Seattle Times.
"Identity politics trumped public health and not for the first time. Wokeness is a cult. They would let you die before they admitted that diversity is not our strength."
Steve Bannon has also been at it on his podcast War Room, telling Chinese billionaire fugitive Guo Wengui that the virus is "man-made" and it is "ridiculous" to claim otherwise.
Check out John Q Public over here!
Here's Greg Evans for Indy100 on the president's eldest son, a true man of the people prepared to make real sacrifices for the greater good.
An FBI official has warned that Russia wants to watch Americans “tear ourselves apart” in the run-up to the US elections.
David Porter, an assistant section chief with the FBI's Foreign Influence Task Force accused Russia of conducting operations aimed at spreading disinformation.
Porter suggested that this was in an attempt to exploit lines of division in society and sow doubt about the integrity of US elections and the ability of its leaders to govern effectively.
Here's Louise Hall's report.
Among the 2020 Democrats, the gaffe-prone former vice-president has again put his foot in his mouth ahead of this evening's South Carolina debate.
Kate Ng has the details.
The ex-New York mayor's staff are attempting to win support for their man following his wretched debate performance in Nevada by posting a Twitter thread of graffiti daubed on their offices across the country branding the candidate a "racist oligarch" and a "corporate pig".
While such acts are not to condoned, you can't help feeling their real problem is Bloomberg's near total lack of personal appeal.
A little more on Trump's refusal to eat his greens from Indy100, featuring some absolutely stellar Photoshop work.
In the last hour, Trump has posted several rather gushing tweets about his time in India...
No wonder he's annoyed at Schumer, the New Yorker said this on the Senate floor yesterday:
"Emboldened by the refusal of Senate Republicans to hold him accountable in his impeachment trial, President Trump has been interfering with the Justice Department and retaliating against officials in his administration who dared to testify truthfully before Congress.
"With each of these actions - I hate to say it, but it is true - any objective person will know President Trump brings our nation closer and closer and closer to a banana republic, a government not of laws but of one man."
Here's Conrad Duncan on the angry reaction to Trump's call overnight for US Supreme Court justices Sonia Sotomayor and Ruth Bader Ginsburg to recuse themselves from cases concerning his affairs over bias.
The president's beloved daughter and her husband served little obvious purpose in Ahmedabad and it did not go unnoticed.
Another member of the administration being given a hard time on Twitter is Ken Cuccinelli, Trump's acting director of Citizenship and Immigration Services, who asked the social network for help getting information on the coronavirus after struggling to access Johns Hopkins University's live map of the outbreak.
This response was fairly typical and spoke for a worried nation.









