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Trump is named Time magazine’s ‘Person of the Year’ and rings New York Stock Exchange opening bell: Live

The Republican also won the accolade in 2016 after winning his first presidential election

Joe Sommerlad,Ariana Baio,Gustaf Kilander
Thursday 12 December 2024 11:27 EST
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Donald Trump rings opening bell at New York Stock Exchange

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Donald Trump has been named Time magazine’s “Person of the Year” following his defeat of Democrat Kamala Harris in November’s presidental election.

The annual cover – which highlights an individual who has greatly influenced the year, for good or ill – has just been unveiled, bearing an imperious portrait of the Republican president-elect against a stark background.

Trump was also named “Person of the Year” in 2016 after beating Hillary Clinton to win election to the White House for the first time.

He celebrated this latest honor by delivering a brief speech and ringing the opening bell at the New York Stock Exchange on Thursday morning.

Trump has meanwhile been continuing to announce nominees to his new administration and gloating over the resignation of FBI Director Christopher Wray, whom he appointed to replace James Comey in 2017.

Writing on Truth Social, the president-elect called it a “great day for America” that would “end the weaponization of what has become known as the United States Department of Injustice”.

Trump went to say the bureau had “illegally raided my home, without cause, worked diligently on illegally impeaching and indicting me”.

Live: Trump visits the NYSE to ding opening bell

You can watch a livefeed of the president-elect’s adventures at the exchange below.

Joe Sommerlad12 December 2024 14:10

Trump to ring opening bell at New York Stock Exchange

Here’s the president-elect a little while ago arriving on Wall Street and signing the exchange’s guest book.

Joe Sommerlad12 December 2024 14:00

Eric Trump, Pete Hegseth cheer Trump’s Time win

Let the ring-kissing commence.

Joe Sommerlad12 December 2024 13:45

UK to mostly avoid tariff trouble with the US, say economists

Trump will impose a tariff of less than 10 percent on UK imports next year or none at all, which will have an insignificant effect on the UK economy, according to a strong majority of economists polled by Reuters.

Those expectations stand in contrast to widespread fears that the European Union, which Britain officially left in 2020, will be harder-hit, according to a similar poll last month.

Part of the reason economists are more optimistic about the country is that while one-fifth of total UK trade is with the United States only a third of Britain's exports are goods – where the proposed tariffs will be focused.

While Trump is focused on correcting US trade deficits with other countries, differing methodologies of their respective statistics agencies mean Britain and the US both report goods trade surpluses with the other.

However, the European Union remains the UK's biggest trading partner and London has a delicate challenge in both mending frayed relations with Brussels and remaining open to deals with a new government in Washington.

“Without the broader complexities of the EU trading bloc, the UK will be somewhat more flexible in reaching a negotiated settlement with President Trump. It also helps that trade in goods with the US is roughly balanced, meaning the tariffs may end up being lower,” noted James Rossiter at TD Securities.

More than 80 percent of economists, 19 of 23, expect the US to put a tariff of less than 10 percent or zero on UK imports despite talk of a blanket 10-20 percent tariff on all countries and higher tariffs on China, Canada and Mexico.

Four said zero. Only four forecast a 10-20 percent tariff.

A similar proportion of economists, 20 of 25, said the tariff will have an insignificant impact on the British economy, good news for Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer’s government which has pledged to boost growth.

Four said significant, while one said no impact.

Reuters

Joe Sommerlad12 December 2024 13:30

Trump era echoes ‘dangerous’ times before WWII, warns Mitch McConnell

The retiring Senate leader is warning that Trump’s turn towards “America First”-style isolationism is dangerous for the country and the world and recalls the dark days before the Second World War.

“We’re in a very, very dangerous world right now, reminiscent of before World War Two,” the Kentucky Republican told The Financial Times in an interview this week.

“Even the slogan is the same: ‘America First.’ That was what they said in the ’30s.”

The senator noted that “the cost of deterrence is considerably less than the cost of war” and called on Republicans to return to a more internationalist version of American leadership, like that of Ronald Reagan during the Cold War.

“To most American voters, I think the simple answer is, ‘Let’s stay out of it,’” McConnell said.

“That was the argument made in the ’30s and that just won’t work. Thanks to Reagan, we know what does work — not just saying peace through strength, but demonstrating it.”

Josh Marcus has more.

Joe Sommerlad12 December 2024 13:10

Donald Trump officially named Time’s ‘Person of the Year’

Here’s the confirmation of the president-elect’s latest accolade.

And here’s the magazine’s editor Sam Jacobs to explain their thinking.

Here’s a full report from Kelly Rissman.

Donald Trump named Time’s ‘Person of the Year’ for second time

Trump was previously bestowed the honor in 2016.

Joe Sommerlad12 December 2024 12:50

Ex-FBI Director James Comey issues warning to former colleagues ahead of Trump second term

In a statement posted to Instagram a day before his successor Christopher Wray announced he’d be stepping down, Comey wrote: “I realize there is a great deal of anxiety in the Bureau now — produced by the rhetoric of those who have reason to fear honest investigators.

“But please know you will be ok in the long run.”

The former bureau director’s tenure at the department abruptly ended in 2017 when then-president Donald Trump fired him and Wray appears to be jumping before he is pushed in favor of Kash Patel.

Here’s more on Comey from Michelle Del Rey.

Ex-FBI Director James Comey issues warning to former colleagues

‘There is always accountability even if it seems years away,’ the former FBI director wrote on instagram

Joe Sommerlad12 December 2024 12:40

Trump seeks to dismiss Central Park Five defamation lawsuit

The president-elect yesterday filed a petition with a federal judge seeking the dismissal of the lawsuit brought against him in October by the so-called Central Park Five – Yusef Salaam, Raymond Santana, Kevin Richardson, Antron Brown and Korey Wise – five Black New Yorkers who were falsely accused of the rape of a jogger in 1989 and who were exonerated in 2002.

Trump, then a New York City real estate kingpin with no particular political pull, took out full-page adverts in Big Apple newspapers calling for the reinstatement of the death penalty in the Empire State to execute the men.

He never apologized (see below), even after the real culprit was caught and the Five were vindicated thanks to the emergence of DNA evidence.

Then, at a September presidential debate against Vice President Kamala Harris, Trump stated that the men had killed someone and pleaded guilty to the crime, prompting the lawsuit that alleged Trump’s comments intentionally inflicted emotional distress and painted the men in a false light.

In court filings, Trump’s lawyers argued that his statements were protected under the First Amendment as expressions of opinion on public matters.

“The president-elect’s speech about matters of public concern is safeguarded by the Constitution,” his attorneys wrote.

Joe Sommerlad12 December 2024 12:20

Trump says he had ‘great conversation’ with the ‘very nice’ Jill Biden

Days after using this shot of the first lady to shill his new line of “Fight, Fight, Fight” Christmas cologne, the president-elect is now back trying to be a bit more gallant about their meeting in Paris over the weekend for the reopening of Notre Dame Cathedral.

The same picture inspired Fox host and former Trump economist Larry Kudlow to suggest, absurdly, that Dr Biden had been “flirting” with the new president because she “gravitates towards power”, on which Justin Baragona has more.

Fox News hosts suggest Jill Biden ‘flirted’ with Trump

“That was almost heavy-duty petting,” Larry Kudlow said at one point about the friendly conversation Trump and Jill Biden engaged in, adding that he’s certain that she voted for the president-elect.

Joe Sommerlad12 December 2024 12:00

Biden commutes 1,500 sentences and issues 39 pardons in biggest single-day act of clemency in history

Joe Biden has issued the single largest act of clemency in modern history, commuting the sentences of roughly 1,500 people and issuing 39 presidential pardons.

With just 40 days left in the White House, the president announced on Thursday that he is lessening the sentences of thousands of prisoners who were released and placed on home confinement for at least one year during the Covid-19 pandemic.

Biden, who faced backlash after pardoning his own son Hunter from his federal crimes earlier this month, also issued pardons for US citizens convicted of non-violent crimes such as drug offenses, who have shown “successful rehabilitation”.

The president said his administration will continue reviewing clemency petitions to “advance equal justice” and “provide meaningful second chances,” before Donald Trump is inaugurated as his successor on January 20 .

“America was built on the promise of possibility and second chances,” Biden said.

James Liddell and Colleen Long have the full story.

Biden announces biggest single-day act of clemency in modern US history

‘America was built on the promise of possibility and second chances,’ Biden said in a statement

Joe Sommerlad12 December 2024 11:40

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