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Trump claims strict voter ID act should be ‘easy pass’ but says ‘we need Democrat votes’ – live

Trump claims strict voter ID act should be ‘easy pass’ but says ‘we need Democrat votes’ – live

Trump boasts about voter ID act, falling stock market and dismisses concerns about gas prices

As his war on Iran sends the stock market plunging and gasoline prices rising, Donald Trump paused en route to his Florida beach club to shout familiar taking points about how very well things are going, a reporters strained to hear him over the din of construction on the White House ballroom on Friday afternoon.

Speaking about the war, the president again implied, falsely, that Iran was on the verge of creating a nuclear weapons, which his director of national intelligence contradicted this week in testimony to Congress.

“We’re not giving a nuclear weapon to terrorist thugs,” Trump said, nonetheless.

He also cast doubt on the prospect of a quick end to the war, saying: “We can have dialogue, but I don’t want to do a ceasefire… You don’t do a ceasefire when you’re literally obliterating the other side.”

Asked if he was concerned about rising fuel costs for Americans, after Iran responded to the the joint US and Israeli attack by closing the strait of Hormuz, cutting off 20% of the world’s oil and natural gas supply, Trump said: “No, I expected worse. I really thought oil prices would go much higher when I did this.”

“We just set every record, every record in the book, with Dow, with the S&P,” the president continued, apparently suggesting that the US stock market was in such good shape before the attack that the sharp drops this week, with the Dow hovering around 45,500 on Friday was not a concern. “Dow at 50,000, S&P at 8,000, 7,000, at levels, at speed that nobody’s ever seen before,” the president said, with a note of instant nostalgia for the levels the stock market hit just before his attack on Iran.

Just one month ago, Trump’s attorney general, Pam Bondi, sought to deflect questions about the Epstein files by repeatedly telling lawmakers: “The Dow is over 50,000 right now. The S&P at almost 7,000, and the Nasdaq smashing records. That’s what we should be talking about.”

“But I said I have to go off that path and I have to take a little journey,” Trump said Friday. “But we had to go off on a circuitous path and take care of business, and we are in the process of doing it and I’ll tell you I think we’re weeks ahead of schedule.”

The president then went on to advocate for the voter suppression legislation, the Save America act, Republican are struggling to pass in the Senate.

“I hear it’s going- look, it should be an easy pass, but we need Democrat votes,” Trump also said, referring to the 60-vote threshold to push the legislation to make it harder for US citizens to register to vote, and restrict vote-by-mail, through the Senate.

“They don’t want to approve voter ID because they cheat,” Trump aid of Democrats who are concerned that the measure, supposedly aimed at preventing non-citizens from voting, a problem that appears not to exist, would make it much harder for citizens to cast ballots. “They want to cheat, Peter!” the president shouted at his favorite Fox News correspondent, Peter Doocy.

Despite Trump’s effort to blame Democrats for refusing to pass the legislation, Senate Republicans have voiced their opposition to killing the filibuster to force the legislation through.

On Thursday, Thom Tillis, a Republican senator from North Carolina, announced that he would not support removing the 60-vote threshold, and criticized the crackdown on vote-by-mail, which is used by several Republican-run states, including Utah, Florida, Alaska, and Montana.

“Now, speaking of something that’s more pleasant,” Trump added as he changed the subject without skipping a beat, “you hear that? It’s going to be the greatest ballroom anywhere in the world, nothing like it.”

Given the loud helicopter noise it was hard to say if anyone could hear the construction noise Trump seemed to be talking about. “They just started today one of the biggest pours of concrete that’s ever been seen in Washington.”

“I love the sound of concrete,” the president added.

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Federal judge says that Pentagon restrictions on reporters are illegal, cites Vietnam era when the public ‘was was lied to about a lot of things’

A senior federal judge has blocked the Pentagon from enforcing a new policy that bars reporters who refused to sign a pledge to only publish authorized information from the US military’s headquarters in Arlington, Virginia.

The ruling, that the new Pentagon credentialing policy violates the journalists’ constitutional First Amendment rights, came from a US district judge, Paul L. Friedman, who was appointed to the bench by Bill Clinton, but previously served as an assistant US attorney during the Nixon administration, and as an associate independent counsel for the Iran-Contra investigation during the presidency of George H W Bush.

Friedman’s 40-page ruling on Friday came in response to a New York Times lawsuit against the Pentagon and defense secretary Pete Hegseth

The current Pentagon press corps is comprised manly of correspondents for far-right outlets that agreed to the policy.

The senior judge made his position clear in the first paragraph of the opinion, which read:

double quotation markA primary purpose of the First Amendment is to enable the press to publish what it will and the public to read what it chooses, free of any official proscription. Those who drafted the First Amendment believed that the nation’s security requires a free press and an informed people and that such security is endangered by governmental suppression of political speech. That principle has preserved the nation’s security for almost 250 years. It must not be abandoned now.

Friedman, who just turned 82, said during oral argument in the case: “We’ve been through, in my lifetime… the Vietnam War, where the public, I think it’s fair to say, was lied to about a lot of things. We’ve been through 9/11. We’ve been through the Kuwait situation, Iraq, Guantanamo Bay. A lot of things need to be held tightly and secure… but openness and transparency allows members of the public to know what their government is doing in times of peace and more important, in times of war”.

That, he added, is “what the First Amendment is all about.”

“I think the public has a right to know a lot of things as [elections] approach and think about what their elected leaders in the legislative branch and the executive branch are doing,” the judge said.

At the end of his opinion, Friedman noted that there have to be limits of sharing classified information during war time, but the ongoing war in Iran makes it even more vital that the public has information about what the military is doing. The judge wrote:

double quotation markThe Court recognizes that national security must be protected, the security of our troops must be protected, and war plans must be protected. But especially in light of the country’s recent incursion into Venezuela and its ongoing war with Iran, it is more important than ever that the public have access to information from a variety of perspectives about what its government is doing—so that the public can support government policies, if it wants to support them; protest, if it wants to protest; and decide based on full, complete, and open information who they are going to vote for in the next election.

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