August 27, 2020

17-year-old charged with homicide after shooting during Kenosha protests, authorities say

 

WASHINGTON POST

Authorities on Wednesday said a 17-year-old had been charged with homicide after two people were killed and another seriously wounded by gunfire amid a chaotic night of demonstrations and destruction in Kenosha unleashed by the weekend police shooting of Jacob Blake.

Police in Antioch, Ill., about 20 miles southwest of Kenosha, said they had arrested Kyle Rittenhouse in the killings. The Antioch resident was charged with first-degree intentional homicide in Wisconsin, authorities said, but they did not specify whether he was being charged in one fatal shooting or both.

The shooting came as self-declared militia members and armed counterprotesters have appeared in the city, which is reeling from days of unrest. Authorities have not said whether Rittenhouse is a member of any of the groups.

His social media feeds contained messages supporting the police and photos of himself with assault rifles. He had been a member of cadet programs for local police and fire departments, according to department newsletters and statements.

This lakeside Wisconsin city became the latest locus of anger over police brutality after Blake, a father of five, was shot by police on Sunday, a recorded incident that quickly went viral and prompted a nationwide outcry.

The Wisconsin Department of Justice said Kenosha police were attempting to arrest Blake when Rusten Sheskey, a seven-year veteran of the department, fired his weapon seven times into the Black man’s back, the first time officials had identified the officer who shot him.

The shooting left Blake paralyzed from the waist down, and it has become a flash point in the presidential campaign. On Wednesday, it also touched the world of professional sports, with the Milwaukee Bucks — normally playing basketball less than an hour from Kenosha — declining to take the court for a scheduled playoff game in protest of police violence. Baseball and women’s basketball games were also postponed as players said they would boycott.

The streets of Kenosha have been filled with peaceful mass demonstrations in recent days, but also damaging riots by night in which businesses have been looted and burned. Armed civilians — many wielding AR-15-style rifles — took position near stores and businesses saying they intended to fill a vacuum left by a law enforcement. Some had stood near the gas station where Tuesday night’s shooting began with a confrontation just before midnight.

Cellphone video from before Tuesday night’s shooting showed police officers thanking armed civilians for being on the streets after curfew and handing them bottles of water. Officials said Wednesday that they could not comment in detail on the video.

A complaint filed in Lake County, Ill., by the Antioch police described Rittenhouse as a fugitive, saying that he had been charged with homicide in Wisconsin and fled “with the intent to avoid prosecution for that offense.” According to minutes from a hearing on Wednesday, he was held without bond and a hearing on Friday will address his potential extradition to Wisconsin.

Kenosha District Attorney Michael D. Graveley said Wednesday evening that decisions about charging Rittenhouse would be finalized on Thursday.

Authorities did not release the names of the shooting victims, but Wisconsin Gov. Tony Evers (D) expressed his condolences.

“My heart breaks for the families and loved ones of the two individuals who lost their lives and the individual who was injured last night in Kenosha,” Evers said in a statement. “We as a state are mourning this tragedy.”

The Village of Antioch Police Department stationed vehicles on Wednesday afternoon inside the Anita Terrace apartment complex where Kyle Rittenhouse has a listed home address, allowing only residents to enter the buildings and walk through the parking lot. Some residents at the complex lingered outside of the two-story, brick apartment buildings.

The village instituted a curfew Wednesday from 8 p.m. through 7 a.m. because of the potential for civil unrest, asking residents to stay in their homes and businesses to close.

A protester lies injured during clashes with police outside the Kenosha County Courthouse late Tuesday in Kenosha, Wis.

Local law enforcement overwhelmed

News of the arrest came as Kenosha was bracing for a potential fourth night of violence and unrest on Wednesday. Evers, the governor, had declared an emergency Tuesday, and authorities made it harder for people to enter Kenosha, with seven consecutive exit ramps closed on Interstate 94 and the city’s sprawling outlet mall boarded up.

But in downtown Kenosha on Tuesday night, the only visible law enforcement presence was around the Kenosha County Courthouse, where an 8-foot-high fence was erected around the building, with about 1,000 protesters gathered outside the barrier.

After some protesters began vigorously shaking the fence and setting off fireworks aimed at officers on the other side, Kenosha County police officers atop the courthouse shot tear gas pellets and rubber bullets into the crowd. Around 9:20 p.m., a military vehicle entered the park, dispersing more tear gas.

Authorities pledged a more robust law enforcement response on Wednesday, with local officials conceding that they had been overwhelmed after this modest city of 100,000 became the latest focal point of a national uprising against systemic racism in law enforcement.

“In Kenosha, we’re not accustomed to riots,” said Sheriff David Beth, who took responsibility for a delay in requesting National Guard assistance that led to confusion over who was protecting which sites on Monday.

Mayor John Antaramian acknowledged they had struggled to respond to the unrest and communicate a clear message, saying “I’m not good at this. … This isn’t what I’m used to.”

Antaramian said local leaders are learning from their mistakes and asked civilians not to take it upon themselves to police the streets.

“I don’t need more guns on the streets in this city when we are trying to keep people safe,” he said.

Self-declared militia members had arrived in town before the gunfire, though Beth said he did not know for sure whether Rittenhouse was part of such a group.

The sheriff said he had been approached by members of a militia to deputize citizens with guns to patrol Kenosha, and he pointed to what happened on Tuesday as “probably the perfect reason why I wouldn’t” do so.

The police shooting of Blake has drawn dramatically different responses from across the American political divide. Three days after the incident, President Trump still had not addressed the shooting directly, though his surrogates at this week’s Republican National Convention have repeatedly expressed their support for police officers while trying to link their Democratic rivals to destruction and mayhem.

Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden, meanwhile, has condemned the rioting while signaling solidarity with the demands of protesters for an end to systemic racism in law enforcement.

On Wednesday, Biden and his running mate, Sen. Kamala D. Harris of California, spoke by phone with members of Blake’s family, who have called for calm as Blake remains hospitalized with injuries to his spine and internal organs.

“All [Biden] did was offer his support,” said Jacob Blake Sr., the 29-year-old’s father, according to the Chicago Sun-Times. “He was 100 percent real.”

Authorities report knife in Blake’s car

Authorities have released little information about the Blake shooting, which was captured on video and is being investigated by the Wisconsin Department of Justice.

That pattern continued Wednesday even as local law enforcement faced the news media for the first time since the incident.

Daniel Miskinis, the Kenosha police chief, said three officers who were at the scene had been placed on leave during the investigation, but he declined further comment, saying it would be “unfair to everybody involved” to speak about an active investigation.

The Wisconsin Department of Justice on Wednesday said that a knife was found in Blake’s car after he was shot Sunday. The 29-year-old told investigators after the shooting about the knife he had in his possession, the department said. The agency did not say if any of the officers at the scene saw the knife or knew it was there.

The department said officers were called by a woman who said her boyfriend was there but not supposed to be, but the department did not specify if Blake was the boyfriend or the subject of the call.

Officers tried to arrest Blake, the department said, using a Taser to stun him, which they said was unsuccessful.

“Jacob did nothing to provoke police,” attorneys for Blake’s family said in a statement. “He was a great father and was only intending to get his children out of a volatile situation. Witnesses confirm that he was not in possession of a knife and didn’t threaten officers in any way.”

The Justice Department on Wednesday said it had opened a federal civil rights probe into Blake’s shooting.

Miskinis offered little new information about the gunfire on Tuesday night. But he appeared to hold those who were shot Tuesday at least partly responsible, noting they were among those who were out in public despite citywide orders to stay in.

“Everybody involved was out after the curfew,” he said. “The curfew’s in place to protect. Had persons involved not been in violation of that, perhaps the situation that unfolded would not have happened.”

Evers said Wednesday that he is increasing the Wisconsin National Guard contingent in Kenosha to 500 members. Trump posted on Twitter that he would “be sending federal law enforcement and the National Guard to Kenosha,” though there were no specifics.

‘There was no pulse’

The shooting began at the gas station around 11:45 p.m. Tuesday, police said. After the first shots, a young White man carrying a rifle began running north on Sheridan Road, away from a crowd of protesters.

A Washington Post journalist who observed the scene saw the man with the rifle run by with several protesters in pursuit. He rolled into a sitting position, raised his gun and opened fire at his pursuers.

Two people fell to the ground, one shot in the arm and the other in the chest.

Carol Badoni from Burlington, Wis., started CPR on one wounded man.

“He definitely was not breathing,” said Badoni, 50. “His eyes were rolled back in his head. There was no pulse.”

Badoni added, “I never run toward trouble, but it’s worth getting shot for somebody else.”

Police soon took the wounded man to a hospital. Kenosha police did not immediately identify any of the shooting victims. Immediately after the shooting, video showed a gunman appearing to attempt to surrender — his hands up — but police failing to take him into custody. Officials declined to provide an explanation on Wednesday.

The confrontation near the gas station late Tuesday unfolded after police dispersed protesters outside the Kenosha County Courthouse, where demonstrators had been lobbing fireworks at the building and the officers trying to protect it.

Police set off tear gas and drove protesters in the direction of the gas station, where they were met by the armed men — members of what police described as vigilante militia groups.

One of the armed men near the gas station told The Post he was there to stop people from breaking into local businesses, noting that he had seen comments online about pipe bombs being used.

“If the cops aren’t going to stop them from throwing pipe bombs on innocent civilians, somebody has to,” said a man who declined to give his name. (There is no indication that pipe bombs were part of Tuesday’s protest.)

Other cities also saw demonstrations Tuesday night with some damage, though none reaching the levels seen in Kenosha.

Police in Madison, the Wisconsin capital, reported that they had arrested four people after a march near the Capitol gave way to property damage and some fires.

In Portland, Ore., police said a group damaged windows and entered the city hall and lit a fire nearby. There were 23 arrests, police said.

‘Call to arms'

In Portland and other cities in recent days and weeks, members of far-right, self-declared militias armed with paintball guns, bats and pepper spray, as well as lethal weapons, have battled leftist and Black Lives Matter activists in the name of backing police in their confrontations with protesters.

From the start of Tuesday’s protests, armed civilians were a prominent presence in Kenosha, with handguns, rifles, knives and military flak jackets.

“Ain’t nothing being done. We’re the only ones,” said Joe, 29, who described himself as a Marine Corps veteran and declined to give his last name. He noted that others like him were around Kenosha on Tuesday night, “armed and ready.”

Another man, brandishing a handgun, said he showed up after a call on Facebook to protect the city.

On Wednesday Facebook confirmed that it had taken down an event page from a 3,000-member group calling itself the Kenosha Guard, which had encouraged citizens to take up arms to defend the city. The “Call to Arms” event page was taken down for violating the platform’s “dangerous individuals and organizations” policy, Facebook said, which was expanded to include militia groups calling for violence last week. Civil rights groups called Facebook’s efforts “tragically late.”

Facebook said that so far it has not found evidence of Kyle Rittenhouse as a member of the Kenosha Guard militia group.

Rep. Bryan Steil (R-Wis.) said the situation in Kenosha “went from bad to worse” overnight Tuesday and called the National Guard deployment at that point “woefully insufficient.”

Flares go off in front of a Kenosha Country Sheriff vehicle on Tuesday as demonstrators protest after the police shooting of Jacob Blake in Kenosha, Wis.

On Wednesday, evidence of Tuesday night’s violence could be found in bloodstains on the asphalt where one of the shootings occurred. Nearly every car in a nearby lot had its windows smashed, and at least one had been torched.

“I honestly feel like it’s going to get worse — the shootings, the violence, the riots,” said Kilian Kray, 31, who lives nearby. “The cops shouldn’t be the judge, juror and executioner.”

Another round of destruction began Wednesday night in Minneapolis, where the Memorial Day death of George Floyd, who lost consciousness after pleading for air with his neck under the knee of an officer. Police clashed with scores of protesters, who broke store windows and threw bottles and trash cans at officers along a pedestrian mall downtown after reports that police had shot and killed a Black man suspected in an earlier shooting.

Police said the suspect, who was wanted for the fatal shooting of another man in a downtown parking garage Wednesday afternoon, fatally shot himself as officers approached him.

A police spokesman said the incident was caught on surveillance video and witnessed by several bystanders. Clips were shown to several local reporters, who said the video confirmed the police account, and police said the footage would be soon released more widely. But at least 100 protesters flooded the streets, questioning the story and clashing with police.

“Show us the tapes!” one protester shouted.

Officers, including some clad in riot gear, were seen shoving and spraying pepper spray at the crowd.

“You started this,” one man yelled in return. “Now we’re going to burn the city down again.”

An officer, visibly frustrated, shouted, “It was suicide!”





8/27 An "unsurvivable" storm, Hurricane Laura, surge heads for the Gulf Coast

  


VOX

  • As Hurricane Laura bears down on the Gulf Coast, the US National Hurricane Center is now warning that “little time remains to protect life and property before water levels begin to rise and winds increase in the warning areas.” [Twitter / National Hurricane Center]
  • Laura was elevated to a Category 4 hurricane early Wednesday afternoon and is expected to make landfall along the Texas and Louisiana coasts on Wednesday night with sustained winds of up to 140 miles per hour. [NPR / Samantha Raphelson]
  • When it does, the result will be what the National Hurricane Center is calling an “unsurvivable” storm surge reaching as far as 30 miles inland. At least 1.5 million people in Texas and Louisiana are currently under evacuation orders. [CNBC / Emma Newburger]
  • Evacuating has been made more difficult by the coronavirus, however. Large-scale shelters like gyms present obvious difficulties in the midst of a pandemic, though Texas Gov. Greg Abbott says the state is taking steps to provide PPE and maintain social distancing. [New York Times]
  • In addition to a storm surge, Hurricane Laura is expected to bring tornadoes and as much as 10 inches of rain when it hits. Forecasts suggest it could even intensify further before making landfall. [Vox / Umair Irfan]

8/27 The coronavirus pandemic is still happening

 VOX

Christina Animashaun/Vox
  • As of this Wednesday, more than 175,000 people have died of Covid-19 in the US. On Tuesday alone, more than 1,100 died. [Washington Post]
  • Even worse, those numbers could be an undercount. Earlier this month, a New York Times analysis of “excess death” figures in the US calculated that as many as 200,000 Americans had already died of Covid-19 or other pandemic-linked causes. [NYT / Denise Lu]
  • The ongoing US death toll stands in sharp contrast to the narrative coming out of the Republican National Convention this week: On Tuesday, multiple speakers framed the coronavirus as a past crisis, not an ongoing reality that has at last count afflicted some 5.8 million Americans since it began. [Vox / Aaron Rupar]
  • Daily new cases have been trending down since last month, when they peaked at more than 77,000 new infections in a single day. But as recently as this week, the US was still reporting nearly 47,000 daily cases. [COVID Tracking Project]
  • Testing capacity remains a problem point too: According to the Atlantic’s Robinson Meyer, tests in some parts of the US, like Arizona, take anywhere from one to two weeks to come back — so long that they’re effectively useless. [Slate / Ray Suarez]
  • On Wednesday, CNN reported that new Centers for Disease Control and Prevention testing guidelines, which narrow recommendations for who should get tested, were implemented after pressure "from the top down," according to a federal health official. Trump has long suggested lowering US testing levels to make reported case numbers look better. [CNN / Nick Valencia, Sara Murray, and Kristen Holmes]
  • While pandemic responses are obviously vastly complex, the US remains a substantial outlier in its mismanagement of the coronavirus. Experts say there’s a reason for that: Trump has downplayed the threat and undercut the US response at virtually every turn. [Vox / German Lopez]
  • This week, researchers in Hong Kong also confirmed for the first time a case of Covid-19 reinfection in a patient who had the virus in March. It’s a sign that immunity after a first infection may only last so long. [NBC News / Denise Chow]
  • Others, many months after they were first infected, are still experiencing the virus’s effects. Covid “long-haulers,” whose plight is often little understood by medical professionals, continue to grapple with symptoms like severe fatigue and difficulty breathing. [Atlantic / Ed Yong]
  • Because US cases — and thus the burden on the US health care system — remain high, experts are worried about what could happen when flu season this fall converges with the pandemic. One thing you can do: Get a flu shot. It might be “your most important flu shot ever.” [Vox / Katherin

August 26, 2020

Trump granting a pardon during Republican convention typifies a norm-busting presidency


This probably was not exactly what James Madison had in mind when he helped draft Article II, Section 2 of the Constitution.

Less than 15 minutes into Tuesday night's telecast of the Republican National Convention, President Trump appeared onscreen to sign a surprise pardon for Jon Ponder, a convicted bank robber who turned his life around with help from the FBI agent who had arrested him. The two men, and Ponder’s wife, appeared alongside Trump at the White House.

Trump made a compelling case for why Ponder deserves a pardon. Nonetheless, the scene was a stark display of the unprecedented degree to which Trump has disregarded long-standing standards of presidential propriety and used the perquisites of his public office for political purposes.

James Madison

At Virginia’s ratifying convention in 1788, George Mason expressed deep concern about giving a president the power to pardon. Madison responded that presidents would be cautious about abusing them because they could face impeachment by the House. [We have now discovered that Madison's confidence in the impeachment power of  the House  turned out to have a shelf life of about 230 years--Esco]

Last month, Trump commuted the prison sentence of his longtime political consigliere Roger Stone, who was convicted of seven crimes, including felonies related to lying under oath to protect the president. Stone joined a long list of politically connected recipients of clemency: Joe Arpaio, Scooter Libby, Dinesh D’Souza, Conrad Black, Bernard Kerik, Rod Blagojevich, Michael Milken, Paul Pogue, David Safavian, Eddie DeBartolo Jr., and more.

The White House has taken more direct control over pardons and commutations, with Trump aiming to limit the traditional role played by the Justice Department in the clemency process. Trump has never ruled out trying to pardon himself or his children. His clemency spree undercuts Trump’s claims that he is a “law-and-order” president. 

Aaron Blake noted last month that the crimes for which he has opted to unilaterally circumvent justice include: "Lying about contacts involving a man, Julian Assange, who served as a conduit for Russia’s interference in the 2016 U.S. election and who is currently under indictment (Stone). Three war crimes, including two murders (Clint Lorance). Murder (Michael Behenna). Alleged murder (Mathew Golsteyn). Arson that burned 139 acres of federal land (Steven and Dwight Hammond). Corruptly trying to sell a U.S. Senate seat for personal gain (Blagojevich). Using his high profile after the 9/11 attacks to commit tax fraud (Kerik). Refusing a judge’s order to stop detaining people suspected of being undocumented immigrants (Arpaio).”

Previous presidents have faced intense criticism for pardons. Bill Clinton’s pardon of financier Marc Rich in 2001, during his final hours in office and at the urging of a major Democratic donor, continues to tarnish his legacy. Gerald Ford’s pardon of Richard Nixon probably cost him the 1976 election.

August 25, 2020

UPDATES

  

WASHINGTON POST

Bolsonaro’s popularity soars in Brazil amid country’s struggles with virus, unemployment

Brazil’s poor are receiving emergency financial aid, and in return, they’re giving the president their support.

Florida judge blocks order requiring in-person learning during coronavirus pandemic

In a harshly worded decision, the judge said that safety concerns had been ignored. State officials filed an appeal late Monday.

Police use tear gas on hundreds protesting shooting in Kenosha, Wis.

When an 8 p.m. curfew arrived, law enforcement unleashed tear gas in front of the city courthouse, and the crowd responded by throwing firecrackers, tearing down street signs, smashing store fronts and setting fires around the city.

As colleges struggle to bring students back to campus while preventing coronavirus outbreaks, they have suspended or barred from campus hundreds of students accused of violating rules on social distancing, mask-wearing and large gatherings.


In one of the largest crackdowns to date, Ohio State University has told 228 students they must leave campus while their disciplinary cases are pending, school spokesman Ben Johnson said Monday — and classes have not started yet. Johnson emphasized that Ohio State has an enrollment of nearly 70,000 students, many of whom are following the rules, but warned that student organizations “that host or participate in parties or gatherings that are not safe … could lose their university recognition and their university funding.”


“We are reminding students at every possible opportunity that each individual’s choices affect all of us here on campus, and so we all have to do the right thing if we are going to be able to remain here on campus,” Johnson said. “And if we don’t all do the right thing, we could have to go home.”
Other schools that have disciplined students include:


Coronavirus clusters at Central Michigan University spurred concerns about parties, causing university president Bob Davies to announce Monday the suspension of Greek organizations “in-person activities." The school tallied 57 new cases in 7 days, Davies said. To deter mass gatherings, the administration would also issue fines and suspensions and work with off-campus housing managers.
The University of Tennessee, where WBIR reports that four students face suspension or more for misconduct: Three allegedly hosted rule-breaking parties, while a fourth did not isolate while positive for the novel coronavirus.


Purdue University in Indiana, which last week suspended a cooperative house and 36 students who went to a party, according to the Indianapolis Star. The university president has banned attendance at parties that do not meet its requirements on mask-wearing and social distancing.


The University of Connecticut, where students have also been kicked out of campus housing for gathering without masks and proper distancing, WBUR reported.


Drake University in Iowa, which told 14 students to leave campus for two weeks, citing broken rules on gatherings, according to local news station KCCI.


More than 530 University of Alabama students, faculty and staff members tested positive for the coronavirus since classes started Aug. 19, according to data released by the school Monday. As on-campus cases have climbed, the city of Tuscaloosa announced Monday it would close bars and shut down bar service in restaurants.


Syracuse University, which published a blistering letter Aug. 20 saying a “large group of first-year students” would face discipline for an evening quad event that “selfishly jeopardized” the residential experience. The letter warned that they “may have done damage enough to shut down campus, including residence halls and in-person learning, before the academic semester even begins.”

 


Protests continue in Wisconsin

 

Credit...Alyssa Schukar for The New York Times

  • On Tuesday, Wisconsin Gov. Tony Evers declared a state of emergency in response to continuing protests after the police shooting of Jacob Blake, who is Black, this Sunday. [Twitter / Jessie Opoien]
  • The declaration clears the way for a substantially larger National Guard presence — from 100 to 250 soldiers — in the city of Kenosha, Wisconsin, where the shooting took place. [Reuters / Stephen Maturen]
  • National Guard troops were already deployed in the city Monday, and a curfew has been in place the past two nights. Several buildings in Kenosha were lit on fire Monday when protests in a small area turned destructive. [NYT / Julie Bosman]
  • Since the protests began on Sunday, police have unleashed tear gas and rubber bullets on protesters. Some protesters responded by throwing water bottles. [CNN / Eliott C. McLaughlin and Christina Maxouris]
  • Police officers shot Blake, 29, eight times in the back on Sunday while three of his children — ages 3, 5, and 8 — looked on. According to his father, the shooting has left Blake paralyzed from the waist down. [AP / Mike Householder and Scott Bauer]
  • According to the state attorney general, the officers who shot Blake have been placed on administrative leave and the incident is now under investigation by the Wisconsin Department of Justice. [WSJ / Erin Ailworth and Julie Wernau]
  • Protests in response to the shooting have spread to other cities around the US, including New York, LA, and Portland. Some have seen sustained anti-racist and anti-police brutality activism since the killing of George Floyd in Minneapolis this May. [Vox / Fabiola Cineas]

3 takeaways from the first night of the Republican National Convention

 Sounds Like Donald Trump Jr.'s Hamptons Home Leans Into Cottagecore |  Vanity Fair

WASHINGTON POST

The Republican National Convention began Monday, with a slate full of future leaders of the GOP speaking in favor of President Trump.

Below, some takeaways.

1. A promise of optimism, quickly abandoned

The GOP claimed that this convention would be significantly more optimistic than Democrats’ last week. Most of what we got Monday was decidedly not that.

“The big contrast you’ll see between the Democrats’ doom-and-gloom, Donald Trump-obsessed convention will be a convention focused on real people, their stories, how the policies of the Trump administration have lifted their lives, and then an aspirational vision toward the next four years,” Republican National Committee Chairwoman Ronna McDaniel said over the weekend.

McDaniel got things rolling Monday by saying that “ ‘nice’ guys like Joe [Biden] cared more about countries like Iran and China than the United States of America.”

A medical professional warned that some Democrats’ proposal for government-run health care would mean “we’d be lucky if we could see any doctor.” (Biden doesn’t support single-payer health care, as some Democrats do.)

Former Fox News host Kimberly Guilfoyle, the partner of Donald Trump Jr., offered a particularly bleak picture, saying Democrats “want to destroy this country and everything that we have fought for and hold dear. They want to steal your liberty, your freedom.”

Trump Jr. said, “Biden also wants to bring in more illegal immigrants to take jobs from American citizens,” as if that were Biden’s goal. He added that Democrats are “attacking the very principles on which our nation was founded: freedom of thought, freedom of speech, freedom of religion, the rule of law.”

Even Trump Jr.’s more aspirational messages were repeatedly punctuated by warnings about what Democrats would do.

Cuban American immigrant Maximo Alvarez, in an impassioned speech, suggested Democrats and possibly even Biden are secretly putting the country on a path to communism.

RNC 2020: Nikki Haley touts 'we did what Obama and Biden refused to'

2. A focus: Combating allegations of racism

One of the focal points — both in the choice of speakers and what some of them said — was the perception that Trump is a racist and that there is a racism problem in the GOP and the country.

The bluntest comments on the former front came from former National Football League running back Herschel Walker, who spoke of his decades-long close relationship with Trump.

“It hurt my soul to hear the terrible names that people called Donald: The worst one is ‘racist,’ ” said Walker, who is Black. “I take it as a personal insult that people would think I’ve had a 37-year friendship with a racist. People who think that don’t know what they’re talking about. Growing up in the Deep South, I’ve seen racism up close. I know what it is. And it isn’t Donald Trump.”

Walker was joined by other Black Trump supporters, including White House staffer Ja’Ron Smith, Georgia state Rep. Vernon Jones (D), Maryland congressional candidate Kim Klacik (R) and Scott (R-S.C.).

Nikki Haley, the first Indian American female governor in the country, took a broader pass at the issue, denouncing the idea of systemic racism.

“Here is one more important area where our president is right: He knows that political correctness and cancel culture are dangerous and just plain wrong,” Haley said. “In much of the Democratic Party, it’s now fashionable to say that America is racist. That is a lie. America is not a racist country.”

Polls have shown half of Americans or more believe Trump is a racist. Trump has suggested that minority congresswomen should “go back” to their countries (despite most of them having been born here) and called a judge of Mexican descent biased against him, which then-House Speaker Paul D. Ryan (R-Wis.) called “the textbook definition of a racist comment.” He also recently retweeted a video that included a supporter saying “White power,” later deleting it but declining to disavow it.

Bramhall's World: Coronavirus pandemic

3. Rewriting history on the coronavirus

The novel coronavirus is the issue Trump would rather not have looming over him. Polls show his approval rating on the pandemic dropping into the low to mid-30s, as the death toll climbs ever closer to the upper bound of what Trump himself would constitute a successful response.

But the convention began its prime hours Monday night by focusing on the unavoidable topic — and in one major way attempting to rewrite history. The convention played a video featuring Democrats and others who, at one point or another, downplayed the severity of the outbreak.

“From the very beginning, Democrats, the media and the World Health Organization got coronavirus wrong,” the narrator said. “The World Health Organization said authorities have found no clear evidence of human-to-human transmission.”

The video then played the following clips:

  • NBC News medical expert John Torres: “Overall, most people should not be terribly concerned about it.”
  • House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.): “Everything’s fine here. We do want to say to people, come to Chinatown. Here we are. Come join us.”
  • New York Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo (D): “We don’t even think it’s going to be as bad as it was in other countries.”
  • New York Mayor Bill de Blasio (D): “Go about your lives. Go about your business.”

The narrator then compared this with Trump: “One leader took decisive action to save lives.”

Left unsaid: All of these comments downplaying the threat came as Trump was doing precisely the same thing — often more forcefully and weeks before he would stop doing so. 

In fact, Trump would continue to downplay the coronavirus threat for weeks after the latest of those clips — comparing it to the flu, saying on several occasions that it would “go away” and even saying on March 15 that “it’s something that we have tremendous control over.”

‘My son matters’: Jacob Blake’s family calls for officer’s arrest, peaceful protest

 

WASHINGTON POST

Anger-fueled protests radiated across the nation Tuesday as the family of a 29-year-old Black man shot in the back by police in this lakeside city demanded swift action to bring officers to justice.

In a highly emotional appearance two days after the shooting, Jacob Blake Jr.’s parents and siblings called for healing and peace following consecutive nights of violence. Julia Jackson, Blake’s mother, asked for Americans to show “how humans are supposed to treat each other.”

Jacob Blake: Mother gives emotional speech as son is paralysed in shooting  | US News | Sky News

But the family also pinned responsibility for Blake’s grievous injuries on what they called a racist law enforcement system that brutalizes Black people, and they expressed dismay that his shooter had not yet been fired or charged.

They spoke as Blake — who was shot at least seven times, the bullets piercing his spinal column, shattering vertebrae and shredding vital organs — underwent emergency surgery. The shooting left the father of five young children, three of whom witnessed the incident, paralyzed from the waist down.

“It is going to take a miracle for Jacob Blake Jr. to ever walk again,” said the family’s lawyer, Benjamin Crump.

New York Democrat blasts Biden for meeting with 'Farrakhan follower' Jacob  Blake Sr: 'Beyond comprehension' | Fox News

“They shot my son seven times,” said Jacob Blake Sr., his father, at a news briefing on Tuesday afternoon, growing emotional as he spoke. “Seven times. Like he didn’t matter. But my son matters. He’s a human being, and he matters.”

An American summer ushered in with a mix of peaceful mass demonstrations and destructive riots in response to the Memorial Day killing of George Floyd appeared poised in the waning days of August to close with a similarly potent blend.

“I want them to stop killing us. Period,” said Tarcia Parker, a 36-year-old Black woman who works in health care and who was protesting late Tuesday afternoon in Louisville, a city that has its own high-profile shooting victim at the hands of police, Breonna Taylor.

The outrage over Blake’s shooting has been injected into the home stretch of a presidential campaign in which President Trump has sought to use fears of urban violence, portraying it as an existential threat to placid suburban living.

More than 48 hours after Blake was shot, Trump had yet to address the incident directly. But speakers at the Republican National Convention this week have repeatedly invoked burning cities, blaming Democratic leaders for allegedly letting mobs run rampant.

“It’s almost like this election is shaping up to be church, work and school versus rioting, looting and vandalism,” the president’s eldest child, Donald Trump Jr., said in his prime-time speech Monday night.

Democratic nominee Joe Biden, by contrast, called for a thorough, independent investigation of Blake’s shooting while sympathizing with the “grief and outrage that yet another Black American is a victim of excessive force.”

August 24, 2020

Kellyanne Conway will leave the White House

 

WASHINGTON POST

Counselor to the president Kellyanne Conway, who will speak at the Republican convention on Wednesday, told Trump in the Oval Office last night that she will leave the White House at the end of the month. 

Her husband, the conservative lawyer and Trump critic George Conway, announced that he will step back from his role on the Lincoln Project, the outside group devoted to attacking Trump from the right, and take a hiatus from Twitter. “We disagree about plenty, but we are united on what matters most: the kids,” she said in a statement. “This is completely my choice and my voice. In time, I will announce future plans. For now, and for my beloved children, it will be less drama, more mama.”

“Conway’s high school daughter had drawn attention for tweets about her parents and politics,” ClaudiaConwayVideo

 INSIDER

  • The teenager first went viral in June for her political TikToks in which she voiced her support for the Black Lives Matter movement, distanced herself from her mother's politics, and expressed her dislike of President Donald Trump.

  • As Conway continued to post TikToks and acquire hundreds of thousands of followers, she began to publicly spar with her parents on Twitter.

  • As her social media posts escalated, she made explosive allegations against her high-profile parents that included abuse
  • .
  •  Conway also posted on Twitter about "pursuing emancipation,"
  • Claudia Conway Tweet

Ashley Parker reports. “On Sunday, however, she also tweeted that social media was ‘becoming way too much,’ so she had decided to take ‘a mental health break.’ … [Kellyanne] has been intimately involved in the convention planning. … She spent Saturday at the campaign headquarters … George Conway has written, among other things, that Trump is not mentally fit to be president. The president has voiced anger at times about George Conway’s comments, calling him ‘a stone cold LOSER & husband from hell.’”

Conway was a frequent guest on television programs, known for her defense of the president and sharp put downs aimed at his opponents.

She drew criticism for an appearance early in the Trump administration when she defended then-press secretary Sean Spicer after he falsely stated that Trump’s swearing-in ceremony drew “the largest audience to ever witness an inauguration.”

She told NBC News’s “Meet the Press” host Chuck Todd that Spicer was using “alternative facts,” a phrase that critics of the administration have continued to highlight as evidence of Trump and his White House not being honest with the public.

Conway, a veteran GOP pollster and strategist, joined the Trump campaign in July 2016 after working for a super PAC that supported Sen. Ted Cruz (R-Tex.) and was highly critical of Trump.