Trump news: President's Ukraine call was part of 'illicit and corrupt scheme', released testimonies say
Follow the latest updates from Washington
Your support helps us to tell the story
From reproductive rights to climate change to Big Tech, The Independent is on the ground when the story is developing. Whether it's investigating the financials of Elon Musk's pro-Trump PAC or producing our latest documentary, 'The A Word', which shines a light on the American women fighting for reproductive rights, we know how important it is to parse out the facts from the messaging.
At such a critical moment in US history, we need reporters on the ground. Your donation allows us to keep sending journalists to speak to both sides of the story.
The Independent is trusted by Americans across the entire political spectrum. And unlike many other quality news outlets, we choose not to lock Americans out of our reporting and analysis with paywalls. We believe quality journalism should be available to everyone, paid for by those who can afford it.
Your support makes all the difference.Before public hearings begin in the impeachment investigation into Donald Trump, recently released transcripts of testimonies from two key witnesses offer a more complete picture of the president's dealings with Ukraine and the role of his attorney Rudy Giuliani.
Lt Col Alexander Vindman testified that "no doubt" the president was asking for investigations into his political rivals, and Fiona Hill warned that Mr Giuliani was peddling conspiracy theories to Mr Trump that could make US elections in 2020 vulnerable to Russian influence.
Mr Trump told reporters at the White House he is considering Vladimir Putin’s invitation to attend Moscow’s Victory Day parade and is planning to release a new transcript of an earlier call with Volodymyr Zelensky of Ukraine in an attempt to clear his name with the House impeachment inquiry ongoing.
As the president’s acting chief of staff Mick Mulvaney failed to show up for his deposition to the inquiry despite being issued with a subpoena late on Thursday, Democratic congressman Danny Heck has dismissed the significance of the White House’s refusal to co-operate, saying the panel has already amassed “a mountain of evidence” against the president.
Steve Bannon, Mr Trump's former White House chief strategist and a key figure in his campaign, testified in the trial of Roger Stone that Mr Stone was the campaign's "access point" for WikiLeaks and Julian Assange.
But Mr Bannon did not say whether the president had actually ever relied on Mr Stone to deliver information from the organisation. He believes Mr Stone knew about Hillary Clinton's campaign emails that WikiLeaks planned to release.
Mr Stone is on trial for witness tampering and lying to Congress about his role in the WikiLeaks scandal, which prosecutors argue Mr Stone had arranged to deliver information on Mr Trump's political rivals in order to protect the president.
Meanwhile, the latest excerpts from A Warning, the new book by an anonymous administration insider, has revealed Mr Trump’s senior staff once considered resigning en masse in response to the president’s behaviour, which the mystery author characterises as volatile and incompetent.
The president ended his week announcing plans to take his tax case to the Supreme Court, which will decide whether take up Mr Trump's attempt to block a subpoena from the Manhattan District Attorney seeking his tax records.
Follow along as it happened in our liveblog.
Don Jr tells wrestler Chris Jericho he receives most death threats in America behind his father
Don Jr, shilling his new book Triggered ahead of the conservative Christmas rush, has also been on wrestler Chris Jericho's podcast Talk is Jericho and has had plenty to say for himself.
My redoubtable colleague Greg Evans has been listening in, for his sins, and tells me Don Jr...
- Reflects he was at the "tip of the spear of the greatest political upset in history"
- Claims he is the number two target for political opponents after his father and gets the second highest number of death threats
- Claims that the administration asking the Russians to look into Hillary Clinton's emails was a joke
- Says he hates the #MeToo movement and "snowflake" culture and that supporters regularly say he is right about "these things"
- Claims that Trump supporters were beaten up after his father's recent rally in Minneapolis
- Claims that his followers can't like his social media posts and are effectively being "shadowbanned"
- Says Elizabeth Warren was "trolled" into taking a DNA test to prove her claim to Native American heritage
- Describes 47,000 people showing up to a MAGA rally as being like "Wrestlemania on crack"
- Says that John F Kennedy would today be written off as "alt-right scum"
Michael Bloomberg set to join 2020 Democratic field
The billionaire former mayor of New York City, Michael Bloomberg, is plotting to join the Democratic race to challenge Trump in 2020 and is expected to file his candidacy in Alabama on Friday ahead of the state's early deadline for applications to join the primary.
Here's Andrew Buncombe's report.
Jeff Sessions launches run for Alabama Senate
Trump's former attorney general Jeff Sessions has announced that he will run for his old Senate seat in Alabama and made clear his first priority is putting to rest tensions with the president in a rather odd campaign video.
Here's our report.
Roger Stone witness denies being 'back-channel' to WikiLeaks
The trial of Republican "dirty trickster" Roger Stone, accused of lying to Congress, wtiness tampering and obstructing justice, is ongoing in DC and yesterday saw radio host Randy Credico deny being Stone's connection to WikiLeaks, from whom the latter is accused of seeking to obtain hacked emails he believed to be damaging to 2016 Democratic presidential candidate Hillarly Clinton.
On Thursday, prosecutors revealed a trove of Stone’s expletive-filled messages threatening Credico to stay silent during an investigation into Russian interference in 2016 campaigning.
Alex Woodward has the latest.
Baby Trump to follow president to Alabama
Trump is due to attend a college football game between the University of Alabama and Louisiana State University in Tuscaloosa, Alabama, this weekend, risking further boos by venturing out in public after incidents at the World Series in DC and a UFC bout in Madison Square Garden.
He'll be joined by a familiar antagonist.
Diamond and Silk leave Fox and Friends audience baffled by Joe Biden, Elizabeth Warren analogy
Trump's number one fans Diamond and Silk were on Fox and Friends yesterday and made the extraordinary cliam that salt and sugar are the same.
Louis Staples assesses this curious statement for Indy100.
Senator John Kennedy refuses to apologise for Pelosi insult
Louisiana senator John Kennedy attacked House speaker Nancy Pelosi when he made a guest appearance at Trump's rally on Monroe on Wednesday, attacking the veteran Democrat as "dumb" over the impeachment inquiry.
The remark sparked outcry but he has since refused to back down when called upon to explain himself.
He also said this though, which suggests he's in the pocket of Big Chicken.
Trump wanted 'get rid of' federal judges, book claims
In a further extract from A Warning, which we've been documenting this morning after The Washington Post got its hands on an early copy, Trump is recorded asking his aides: “Can we just get rid of the judges?”
Rarely, if ever, is the answer to that question a cheery "yes".
Peter Stubley has the story.
President heading to Atlanta to launch 'Black Voices for Trump' outreach initiative
During the 2016 campaign, then-candidate Donald Trump stood in front of largely white crowds and asked black voters to consider, "What the hell do you have to lose?" Four years later, the president has a new message for black voters: "Look what I've delivered."
Trump and his campaign will be launching a new "Black Voices for Trump" outreach initiative in Atlanta, Georgia, today dedicated to "recruiting and activating Black Americans in support of President Trump," according to the campaign. Much of that effort will focus on highlighting ways that African Americans have benefited from the Trump economy, say his advisers.
"Imagine the kind of results with four more years of winning," said senior campaign adviser Katrina Pierson.
That prediction is met with scepticism from critics, however, given Trump's consistently dismal approval rating with black voters, who overwhelmingly disapprove of the job he's doing.
Trump has spent much of the last four years engaged in racially charged attacks, going after minority members of Congress, claiming "no human being" would want to live in rat "infested," majority-minority Baltimore and claiming that there were "very fine people on both sides" of the deadly Charlottesville protest against white supremacists.
"I think black Americans are not the audience for these outreach efforts," said Theodore Johnson, a senior fellow at the Brennan Center for Justice. He said the appeal appears to be more about motivating Trump's existing voter base. While Trump might be able to maintain the low level of black support he received in 2016, or perhaps expand it by one or two points, he sees little evidence the president can change many minds. "I think this is not going to move the needle at all," Johnson said.
In 2016, six per cent of black voters supported Trump, according to a Pew Research Center analysis of people who participated in its polls and were confirmed to have voted. There is no indication his support is growing. Polling shows that African Americans continue to be overwhelmingly negative in their assessments of the president's performance, with his approval hovering around one in 10 over the course of his presidency, according to Gallup.
Indeed, in 2018, 92 per cent of black women and 87 per cent of black men supported Democrats in midterm congressional races, according to AP VoteCast, a survey of more than 115,000 midterm voters nationwide.
Yet Trump's campaign dismissed the numbers, insisting the campaign has seen favorable movement and arguing the president can increase his margins with black voters by bringing new people into the fold. "The polls have never been favorable for Trump, and the only poll that matters is on Election Day," Pierson said.
The campaign has launched similar coalitions for women and Latinos.
Darrell Scott, a black Ohio pastor and a longtime supporter of the president who will be part of the new coalition and attend Friday's event, said that in 2015 and 2016, supporters trying to sell Trump to black voters could only point forward to share things they anticipated from Trump. Democrats, meanwhile, were warning that a Trump victory would be devastating for African Americans. Scott said someone once approached him at a gas station and said, not in jest, that if Trump won, "we'd all be going back to Africa."
"Now that it's 2020, we're able to point backwards and to some very definitive accomplishments that the president has done," Scott said. "He delivered on promises he didn't even make."
The campaign points to a list of achievements, including passage of bipartisan criminal justice reform legislation, which Trump signed into law last year, along with his ongoing support for opportunity zones in urban areas and new investments in historically black colleges. Advisers also point to a series of economic gains, including the fact that black unemployment hit a record low last year, with fewer blacks living in poverty. But Trump and his campaign also have a tendency to exaggerate the gains, giving Trump credit for trends that were years in the making, seizing on momentary upticks, cherry-picking favorable statistics and ignoring more troubling ones, such as black home ownership and net worth.
Congressional Black Caucus chairwoman Karen Bass, a California Democrat, said on Thursday that contrary to Trump's claims, in the three years of his presidency, African Americans have lost a lot. "He has never had support from African Americans, but what we know about the president is that he will lie and say that he has," said Bass, who noted that Trump rarely appears before black audiences. "He has to identify a handful of African Americans and take them with him wherever he goes," she said.
If he were any other Republican incumbent who inherited declining unemployment numbers and was able to sustain them, Trump would have a legitimate case to make to black voters, said Republican strategist Shermichael Singleton. But "because of some of his racial pronouncements... I think a significant percentage of African Americans are completely turned off."
A September AP-NORC poll found that only roughly three in 10 Americans say the things Trump has done as president have been good for African Americans. And just four per cent of African Americans said they think Trump's actions have had a positive impact on African Americans in general, while 81 per cent said they think they've been bad.
Yet even if he can't win over black voters, some suspect that's not the point. As long as the campaign can keep on-the-fence voters from casting their ballots for the eventual Democratic nominee, the campaign will be helping Trump inch closer to a second victory.
Some analysts have pointed to a precipitous drop in black turnout in 2016 as one of the reasons Trump beat his Democratic rival Hillary Clinton, who was far less popular - especially among black men - than former president Barack Obama, the nation's first black president.
According to the US Census Bureau, about 60 per cent of non-Hispanic blacks voted in 2016, versus about 67 per cent in 2012. And that drop was seen in cities with significant African American populations in critical swing states that helped Trump eke out a victory.
"I do think the main objective is to discourage turnout," said Johnson. "I absolutely think this is about creating doubt in black voters' minds about the Democratic nominee" so people feel like "there's almost no one worth voting for."
And he said that fears were growing it might work. "There is a pretty tangible fear among black Americans that Trump is going to win again because black turnout won't be enough to mute the white turnout," he said. "There's a sense that in 2020 he's going to win again."
AP
Trump reportedly offered grieving family of Harry Dunn a cheque
The bereaved family of British teenager Harry Dunn, killed in a road accident in Northamptonshire by the wife of an American diplomat who subsequently fled the country, were reportedly a cheque by President Trump when they visited the White House on 15 October.
Charlotte Charles, the deceased's mother, reportedly told Trump that money "is not going to bring Harry back".
Join our commenting forum
Join thought-provoking conversations, follow other Independent readers and see their replies
Comments