From the capital of Edinburgh to seaside golf resorts, thousands in Scotland staged protests against President Trump on Saturday.
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Latest Updates: Thousands Protest President Trump In Scotland
From the capital of Edinburgh to seaside golf resorts, thousands in Scotland staged protests against President Trump on Saturday.
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Latest Updates: Thousands Protest President Trump In Scotland
From the capital of Edinburgh to seaside golf resorts, thousands in Scotland staged protests against President Trump on Saturday.
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Latest Updates: Thousands Protest President Trump In Scotland
WASHINGTON (CBSNewYork/AP) – Yelling and chaos erupted at a House Judiciary Committee hearing Thursday as Republican lawmakers challenged FBI agent Peter Strzok over his text message saying “we’ll stop” the election of Donald Trump. Strzok testified publicly for the first time since being removed from special counsel Robert Mueller ‘s team, telling lawmakers that texts he traded with FBI lawyer Lisa Page in the run-up to the 2016 presidential election reflected personal views that he never once acted on. The interaction with Page fueled GOP suspicions of partisan bias over the course of the 2016 election and Hillary Clinton email investigatio n. “At no time, in any of those texts, did those personal beliefs ever enter into the realm of any action I took,” Strzok said. Strzok also said he had been advised not to answer specific questions about the on-going investigation into Russian election interference . That set off a testy back and forth between Democratic Rep. Jerrold Nadler of New York and Republican Chairman Bob Goodlatte of Virginia: Goodlatte: “Mr. Strzok, please be advised that you can either comply with the committee’s directive to answer the question, or refuse to do so. The latter of which will place you at risk of a contempt citation and potential criminal liability. Do you understand that?” Nadler: “Point of order Mr. Chairman.” Goodlatte: “The question is directed at the witness.” Nadler: “I have a point of order before he answers the question.” Goodlatte: “The point of order is not well taken.” Nadler: “You don’t know what the point of order is, you can’t say it’s not well taken.” Goodlatte: “The point of order, the witness will answer the question.” Nadler: “Mr. Chairman, I raise my point of order and I insist on it.” The Justice Department’s inspector general has criticized Strzok and Page for creating the appearance of impropriety through the texts. But the report said it found no evidence of political bias in the FBI’s decision not to pursue criminal charges against Clinton. Page, who has also been subpoenaed, is expected to speak to lawmakers at a private meeting Friday. (© Copyright 2018 CBS Broadcasting Inc. All Rights Reserved. The Associated Press contributed to this report.)
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FBI Agent Defends Anti-Trump Texts At Fiery House Hearing
BRUSSELS (CBSNewYork) — President Donald Trump praised other nations paying more to support the NATO alliance as he wrapped up an often contentious summit in Europe. On Thursday, Trump continued his push against Germany’s natural gas pipeline deal with Russia. “Presidents have been trying unsuccessfully for years to get Germany and other rich NATO Nations to pay more toward their protection from Russia,” posted Trump. “They pay only a fraction of their cost. The U.S. pays tens of Billions of Dollars too much to subsidize Europe, and loses Big on Trade!” “On top of it all, Germany just started paying Russia, the country they want protection from, Billions of Dollars for their Energy needs coming out of a new pipeline from Russia,” he said. “Not acceptable! All NATO Nations must meet their 2% commitment, and that must ultimately go to 4%!” ….On top of it all, Germany just started paying Russia, the country they want protection from, Billions of Dollars for their Energy needs coming out of a new pipeline from Russia. Not acceptable! All NATO Nations must meet their 2% commitment, and that must ultimately go to 4%! — Donald J. Trump (@realDonaldTrump) July 12, 2018 Presidents have been trying unsuccessfully for years to get Germany and other rich NATO Nations to pay more toward their protection from Russia. They pay only a fraction of their cost. The U.S. pays tens of Billions of Dollars too much to subsidize Europe, and loses Big on Trade! — Donald J. Trump (@realDonaldTrump) July 12, 2018 Trump took a more conciliatory tone during a talk Thursday, saying great progress had been made with the United States’ allies. German officials deny that the controversial Nord Stream pipeline will allow Russia to exert undue influence over their country. NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg tried to keep the peace. “We are stronger together than apart,” Stoltenberg said. “How can you be together when a country is getting its energy from the person you want protection against?” Trump responded. “Because we understand that when we stand together, also in dealing with Russia, we are stronger,” Stoltenberg said.
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Trump Praises Making Other Nations Pay More For NATO
(CNN) — Paul Manafort’s complaints about his life in jail backfired spectacularly Wednesday. After weeks of him saying he couldn’t prepare for his late July trial behind bars, a federal judge ordered the former Donald Trump campaign chairman to be transferred to an Alexandria , Virginia, detention facility minutes from DC. For almost a month, he has lived in a VIP unit at a rural Virginia regional jail two hours from Washington, where he’s retained some conveniences of the outside world. “It is surprising and confusing when counsel identifies a problem and then opposes the most logical solution to that problem,” Judge T.S. Ellis wrote about Manafort’s requests in his order to move him out of Northern Neck Regional Jail in Warsaw, Virginia. Prosecutors described in their own court filing Wednesday how Manafort had told people in phone calls from the jail that he is “being treated like a ‘VIP’” and has reviewed all the documents needed for his bank fraud trial. The prosecutors’ descriptions of his jail conditions imply that Manafort has had a far easier living situation than other inmates. He does not stay in a cell, but rather has a separate workroom and private bathroom and shower in his holding area. He has a telephone and laptop with an extension cord and doesn’t have to wear a prison jumpsuit. Manafort has had hundreds of phone calls with his lawyers and even more with others and has sent emails through his lawyers to outside contacts, the special counsel’s office wrote in the filing. Regarding how he’s prepared for trial, prosecutors heard him say on a taped call that he’s reviewed all the evidence, met with his lawyers every day and has “all my files like I would at home,” the filing says. Manafort has even used a workaround, prosecutors allege, to send more emails to outsiders: He “reads and composes emails on a second laptop that is shuttled in and out of the facility by his team. When the team takes the laptop from the jail, it reconnects to the internet and Manafort’s emails are transmitted,” the prosecutors said. Manafort’s attorneys criticized the prosecutors’ descriptions of the jail conditions and his emailing tactics, saying the idea of being a VIP is exaggerated. “The Special Counsel does not pause to consider the reasons a detained defendant might have to make his situation sound better when speaking with concerned friends and family,” Manafort’s attorneys said in a filing later Wednesday. They wrote that prosecutors’ “cavalier dismissal of the challenges of preparing for back-to-back complex white collar criminal trials while the defendant is in custody shows a lack of concern with fairness or due process.” Previously, they had described him as being kept in “solitary confinement” almost 24 hours a day for his own safety. Manafort’s life inside the Alexandria facility will be just as secure — but likely not in as expansive a suite. “The professionals at the Alexandria Detention Center are very familiar with housing high-profile defendants including foreign and domestic terrorists, spies and traitors,” Ellis wrote. “All of those defendants were housed safely in Alexandria pending their respective trials and defendant’s experience at the Alexandria Detention Center will presumably be no different.” Manafort’s three-week jury trial on 18 counts of alleged financial crimes is set to begin July 25 at the federal courthouse in Alexandria. Next week, both sides will discuss with the judge the possibility of delaying the trial or moving it to Roanoke, in the southwest part of Virginia, to avoid the political culture of DC. Prosecutors oppose changing the trial plans. More Manafort setbacks Ellis delivered another piece of bad news for Manafort in a second court order Wednesday. He denied Manafort’s request to throw out from the trial evidence investigators had obtained from his apartment in Alexandria last July. The search was not too broad, as Manafort had alleged, and did not violate his constitutional rights, Ellis said. “These facts, taken together, lend ample support to the common-sense conclusion reached by the magistrate judge here, namely that probable cause existed,” Ellis wrote about the search warrant that investigators obtained and some of the evidence seized in the search. A day earlier, Ellis had denied Manafort’s attempt to throw out the evidence from boxes of business files investigators found in a storage unit. Separately, in Washington federal court, prosecutors building a second criminal case against Manafort disclosed their allegation that the longtime lobbyist’s foreign lobbying violations date to the 1980s. Prosecutors would like to use in his fall criminal trial the accusation that Manafort broke foreign lobbying laws three decades ago to show that he knew the extent of the law. In 1986, prosecutors wrote, the Justice Department investigated foreign lobbying work by Manafort and his two companies at the time. Though Manafort registered to lobby for Saudi Arabia, they say he didn’t disclose to the government lobbying and public relations work he did for the Bahamas and Saint Lucia. In addition, prosecutors say he was involved in 18 foreign lobbying activities that went unreported to the Department of Justice. Manafort at the time was both registered as a foreign lobbyist and leading a federal agency, the Overseas Private Investment Corp. The Reagan White House didn’t grant him a waiver to serve as both a public official and a foreign lobbyist, so instead of registering with the Justice Department or resigning from the federal agency, Manafort avoided the disclosures, prosecutors say. He was not charged with a crime then. “Manafort contended only his firms — and not he — needed to register,” prosecutors wrote in Wednesday’s court filing. In May 1987, the Justice Department warned Manafort that he hadn’t correctly made full disclosures and asked him to explain $350,000 he had earned in fees above the revenue he had reported. Prosecutors’ filing Wednesday also alleges that the two political consulting companies Manafort worked with, Black Manafort Stone & Kelly and Black, Manafort & Stone, had received warnings about their foreign lobbying disclosures. (The “Stone” in his organizations’ titles referred to Roger Stone, an adviser to Trump who’s also facing inquiries from the Robert Mueller probe. Stone does not face criminal charges.) Prosecutors are seeking the court’s approval to use the details about Manafort’s work 30 years ago as it presents the case against Manafort to a jury in September. That trial, in DC federal court, tackles allegations that Manafort broke foreign lobbying laws and conspired to launder his proceeds. — Katelyn Polantz The-CNN-Wire ( & © 2018 Cable News Network, Inc., a Time Warner Company. All rights reserved.)
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Paul Manafort Thinks He’s Being Treated Like A ‘VIP’ In Jail, Special Counsel Says
(CBS News) — President Trump took a confrontational stance with America’s allies at the North Atlantic Treaty Organization summit Wednesday in Belgium, demanding allies double their upcoming commitment to defense spending and slamming Germany for getting gas from Russia. The criticisms of America’s allies come days before Mr. Trump is slated to meet with Russia’s Vladimir Putin — whom he often says he wants to get along with — in Helsinki, Finland. Mr. Trump on Wednesday said he wants ally nations to spend 4 percent of GDP on defense, double the 2 percent NATO members have committed to paying by 2025. Not even the U.S. pays that much, according to NATO, which says the U.S. paid 3.57 percent of GDP towards defense in 2017 . It will spend 3.5 percent of GDP in 2018. Germany spends 1.24 percent of GDP on defense. “What good is NATO if Germany is paying Russia billions of dollars for gas and energy?” Mr. Trump tweeted Wednesday. “Why are there only 5 out of 29 countries that have met their commitment? The U.S. is paying for Europe’s protection, then loses billions on Trade. Must pay 2% of GDP IMMEDIATELY, not by 2025.” What good is NATO if Germany is paying Russia billions of dollars for gas and energy? Why are there only 5 out of 29 countries that have met their commitment? The U.S. is paying for Europe’s protection, then loses billions on Trade. Must pay 2% of GDP IMMEDIATELY, not by 2025. — Donald J. Trump (@realDonaldTrump) July 11, 2018 The president’s tweet about Germany came after he had what he described as a “great meeting” with German Chancellor Angela Merkel. Mr. Trump has long blasted Germany over its defense spending levels and a Russian oil pipeline. Ahead of the meeting, Mr. Trump claimed the pipeline project has made Germany “controlled” by and “captive to Russia.” The president reiterated his sentiment in the early hours of Thursday morning in Brussels. Billions of additional dollars are being spent by NATO countries since my visit last year, at my request, but it isn’t nearly enough. U.S. spends too much. Europe’s borders are BAD! Pipeline dollars to Russia are not acceptable! — Donald J. Trump (@realDonaldTrump) July 11, 2018 The president’s approach to NATO contrasts greatly with that of his own Secretary of State, Mike Pompeo. Pompeo described NATO as the “most successful alliance in history,” praising the commitment of allies. “. @ NATO is the most successful alliance in history,” he tweeted Wednesday. “All # NATO allies have committed to extending this success through increased defense spending, deterrence and defense, and fighting terrorism. Weakness provokes; strength and cohesion protects. This remains our bedrock belief.” . @NATO is the most successful alliance in history. All #NATO allies have committed to extending this success through increased defense spending, deterrence and defense, and fighting terrorism. Weakness provokes; strength and cohesion protects. This remains our bedrock belief. pic.twitter.com/zDmTVZkEgp — Secretary Pompeo (@SecPompeo) July 11, 2018 — Kathryn Watson (© 2018 CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved.)
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‘What Good Is NATO’: Trump Criticizes Germany And Other Allies At Summit
WASHINGTON, D.C. (CBSNewYork) — President Donald Trump’s pick to fill the vacant Supreme Court seat headed to Capitol Hill to meet with lawmakers on Tuesday. Federal Appeals Court Judge Brett Kavanaugh is an established conservative judge who has written roughly 300 opinions as a judge on the D.C. circuit. He’s making the rounds and meeting with Republican lawmakers, but he’s already facing a lot of opposition ahead of his confirmation hearings. Kavanaugh posed for a photo-op Tuesday morning with Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell and Vice President Mike Pence hours after his nomination . “I think the president made an outstanding nomination and we look forward to the confirmation process and it will unfold over the next few weeks,” McConnell said. “As the president said last night, Judge Brett Kavanaugh is quite simply the most qualified and most deserving nominee to the Supreme Court of the United States,” Pence added. Democratic lawmakers, promising to prevent his confirmation, gathered Tuesday morning outside the Supreme Court. “Now is the time to fight, now. Now is the time for American people to make their voices heard,” said Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer. Schumer pointed to a 2009 article, where Kavanaugh argued “… we should not burden a sitting president with civil suits, criminal investigations, or criminal prosecution.” “At a time when we have the Mueller investigation, Judge Kavanaugh is way at the extreme,” Schumer said. The president took to Twitter earlier Tuesday morning, saying the “Supreme Court pick getting GREAT REVIEWS.” Thank you to all of my great supporters, really big progress being made. Other countries wanting to fix crazy trade deals. Economy is ROARING. Supreme Court pick getting GREAT REVIEWS. New Poll says Trump, at over 90%, is the most popular Republican in history of the Party. Wow! — Donald J. Trump (@realDonaldTrump) July 10, 2018 The tweet comes hours after his primetime address announcing Kavanaugh as his choice to fill the seat of retiring Supreme Court Justice Anthony Kennedy . “There is no one in America more qualified for this position and no one more deserving,” Trump said during the announcement. “A judge must be independent and must interpret the law, not make the law,” said Kavanaugh. Kavanaugh, 53, who was joined by his wife and two young daughters, has supported conservative issues ranging from gun rights to anti-abortion cases and sided against net neutrality and many Obama-era EPA regulations. “If confirmed by the Senate, I will keep an open mind in every case,” he said. Getting confirmed will be tough, though. His nomination is expected to set off a fierce battle in the Senate, where Republicans hold a thin majority and Democrats are promising to put up a fight. Kavanaugh’s potential appointment would solidify a conservative majority on the court. “President Trump, with the nomination of Judge Kavanaugh, has fulfilled or is fulfilling two of his campaign promises,” said Schumer. “First, to undo a women’s reproductive freedom, second, to undo ACA. So I will oppose him with everything I’ve got.” Kavanaugh was also on President George W. Bush’s legal team in the 2000 election recount and the Kenneth Starr investigation that led to President Bill Clinton’s impeachment. The Senate is expected to vote on his nomination in the fall.
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President Trump’s Supreme Court Pick Meets With Lawmakers
EL PASO, Texas (CBS News) — The government admitted in federal court on Monday that it will not be able to meet a judge’s deadline to reunite all kids under 5 years old who were separated from their parents at the border. “The government is planning on reuniting at most 59 of the 102 kids that they have identified for under 5-years-old,” said Lee Gelernt, an attorney with the American Civil Liberties Union suing the government on behalf of migrant families. The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) says at least 44 kids will remain in their custody past the deadline. The parents for nine children have been deported and haven’t been found. Twelve parents are facing criminal charges and nine have been released and have been lost track of. HHS says they are carefully vetting parents to protect children’s safety. The government is also facing a July 26 deadline for the rest of the 3,000 minors separated from a parent at the border. CBS News spoke to one parent named Mario who hasn’t seen his 10-year-old daughter for more than a month after they crossed the border illegally. Criminal charges were dropped against him, but his daughter remains in an El Paso shelter. “They promised me when I was set free I would see my daughter in two days,” he said. “It has been 14 days that I have been here.” (© 2018 CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved.)
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Feds Tell Judge They’ll Miss Deadline To Reunite Youngest Children Separated From Parents
MORRISTOWN, N.J. (CBSNewYork/AP) — President Donald Trump is expected to announce his decision on a replacement for Supreme Court Justice Anthony Kennedy Monday night. “I’m very close to making a final decision. And I believe this person will do a great job,” Trump said Sunday as he prepared to return to Washington from a weekend trip at his New Jersey golf club. Asked by reporters how many people were being considered, the president said: “Let’s say it’s the four people … they’re excellent, every one. You can’t go wrong.” Of the four, CBS News reports there are three final contenders including federal appeals judges Brett Kavanaugh, Raymond Kethledge, and Amy Coney Barrett. MORE FROM CBS NEWS Trump has not yet communicated a final choice, said a person familiar with his thinking who was not authorized to speak publicly. Trump has spent the weekend discussing his options with allies and will announce his pick at 9 p.m. EDT Monday from the White House. I have long heard that the most important decision a U.S. President can make is the selection of a Supreme Court Justice – Will be announced tonight at 9:00 P.M. — Donald J. Trump (@realDonaldTrump) July 9, 2018 In his conversations over the weekend, Trump expressed renewed interest in Hardiman — the runner-up when Trump nominated Gorsuch, said two people with knowledge of his thinking who were not authorized to speak publicly. But Trump’s final decision remained far from clear, and the president wants to keep the guessing game going. Republican Sens. Lindsey Graham of South Carolina and Roy Blunt of Missouri said Sunday that they believe any of the top four contenders could get confirmed by the GOP-majority Senate. “I think we can confirm any of the four names being mentioned,” Blunt said on NBC’s “Meet the Press.” ”They’re good judges. I think they’d be fine justices of the Supreme Court. I do think the president has to think about who is the easiest to get confirmed here. And I expect we will do that on sort of a normal timetable, a couple of months.” The president and White House officials involved in the process have fielded calls and messages and have been on the receiving end of public pleas and op-eds for or against specific candidates since Kennedy announced on June 27 that he would retire this summer. (© Copyright 2018 CBS Broadcasting Inc. All Rights Reserved. The Associated Press contributed to this report.)
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Trump To Announce SCOTUS Nominee Monday Night
President Trump made his first comments about Wednesday’s standoff at the Statue of Liberty to highlight the work of the rescue team.
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President Trump Praises Statue Rescue Team
Former NBA player Dennis Rodman has arrived in Singapore ahead of the summit between Donald Trump and Kim Jong Un.
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Rodman arrives in Singapore ahead of summit