Trump pierde batalla ante la Corte: deberá presentar declaraciones de impuestos
WASHINGTON, DC. * 7 de octubre de 2019.
] AP.
Un juez federal estadounidense en Nueva York desestimó el lunes los esfuerzos del presidente Donald Trump para bloquear el acceso a sus declaraciones de impuestos personales y corporativas, diciendo que los presidentes en ejercicio no son inmunes a las investigaciones penales. En un fallo de 75 páginas, el juez Victor Marrero rechazó el argumento de Trump sobre la inmunidad presidencial amplia, diciendo que no considerar los asuntos personales y profesionales del presidente podría ir en contra de la administración de justicia.
“Este tribunal no puede respaldar una afirmación tan categórica e ilimitada de la inmunidad presidencial del proceso judicial”, escribió Marrero.
El mandatario presentó una demanda contra el fiscal de distrito de Manhattan, Cyrus Vance Jr, quien había emitido una citación a la firma de contabilidad Mazars USA para obtener acceso a las declaraciones de impuestos del presidente que se remontan a 2011. Vance está investigando los pagos realizados por Michael Cohen, el exabogado personal de Trump, a Stormy Daniels, una actriz porno que afirmó haber tenido una aventura con Trump antes de que éste se presentara a la presidencia.
Se espera que apele el fallo del juez Marrero. El mandatario republicano se ha negado a publicar sus declaraciones de impuestos, que ya han sido solicitadas incluso por la Cámara de Representantes, controlada por los demócratas.
- Published in Noticias Generales
Con rata con cara de Trump reciben en Baltimore a Donald Trump
BALTIMORE, Maryland. * 12 de septiembre de 2019.
] Newsweek México.
Los residentes de Baltimore protestaron contra la visita del presidente de Estados Unidos, Donald Trump con un globo con la cara del magnate, pero con cuerpo de rata. Trump visitó la tarde de este jueves la ciudad de Baltimore para hablar en el Baltimore Waterfront Marriott ante los miembros de la Cámara Republicana, pero los manifestantes lo recibieron con un globo de poco más de 4 metros de altura y un cartel en la calle en el honor al expresidente Barack Obama en President Street.
Claude Taylor, ex miembro del personal de la Casa Blanca de Clinton y fundador de Mad Dog PAC, un grupo que aboga por la destitución de Trump de su cargo, compartió videos e imágenes del globo en Twitter horas antes de la llegada del presidente. “El #TrumpRat le da la bienvenida al Caucus de la Casa del Partido Republicano a Baltimore”, escribió, junto con un clip del globo de la rata.
Las protestas son en respuesta a los insultos que el presidente lanzó contra los residentes de la ciudad en julio pasado cuando atacó en su cuenta de Twitter al al congresista demócrata Elijah Cummings y llamó a su distrito de Baltimore un “desastre repugnante, infestado de ratas y roedores”. Trump luego duplicó sus comentarios sobre la ciudad al declarar que Baltimore es “un distrito muy peligroso y muy mal administrado”.
Sobre esos comentarios, Taylor dijo a al Baltimore Sun que “Las cosas que dijo sobre Baltimore son despreciables y divisivas”. Y añadió que el globo del #TrumpRat “Lo usamos para ilustrar qué es una rata Trump”. La rata inflable estaba estacionada en la calle President, cerca del letrero de la calle Obama, junto con algunos globos más pequeños que representan a Trump como un bebé.
Grupos de manifestantes que protestaban por la visita de Trump se reunieron en varias partes de la ciudad, incluido el vecindario Little Italy de Baltimore, durante todo el día en previsión de la llegada del presidente.
- Published in World News
Trump despide a John Bolton, su asesor de seguridad nacional
WASHINGTON, DC. * 10 de septiembre de 2019.
] AFP.
Adiós a John Bolton en la Casa Blanca: el presidente de Estados Unidos, Donald Trump, anunció el martes el despido de su asesor de seguridad nacional, polémico por sus duras posturas desde Irán y Corea del Norte pasando por Venezuela y Cuba.
Washington se sorprendió con la noticia, conocida 48 horas después de que Trump revelara la cancelación de conversaciones secretas con los talibanes de Afganistán y cuando Washington y Teherán viven momentos de tensión, signados por la extrema firmeza y el ánimo de negociar del mandatario.
Irán reaccionó asegurando que la destitución es una «clara señal» de que la campaña de sanciones estadounidenses en su contra es un fracaso.
«La marginalización de Bolton y su despido no son un accidente, sino una clara señal de la derrota de la estrategia de presión máxima de Estados Unidos» contra Irán, tuiteó Hesamedin Ashena, consejero del presidente iraní, Hasan Rohani
Si bien es demasiado pronto para decir si la partida de Bolton marcará un punto de inflexión en la política exterior del 45° presidente de Estados Unidos, la salida de este exembajador de célebre bigote blanco y reputación guerrerista, el mismo que reunió a Venezuela, Cuba y Nicaragua en «la troika de la tiranía», indudablemente cambiará la dinámica dentro del «Ala Oeste».
«Anoche informé a John Bolton que sus servicios ya no son necesarios en la Casa Blanca. Estaba fuertemente en desacuerdo con muchas de sus sugerencias, al igual que otros en el gobierno, y por lo tanto le pedí a John su renuncia, que me fue dada esta mañana», escribió Trump en Twitter.
El mandatario dijo que nombrará la próxima semana el reemplazo de Bolton al frente del Consejo de Seguridad Nacional (NSC en inglés) de la Casa Blanca.
En un lacónico tuit, Bolton, de 70 años, presentó una versión diferente de las últimas 24 horas, diciendo que había ofrecido su renuncia al presidente el lunes por la noche y éste le había dicho: «Hablemos de eso mañana».
Trump tuiteó sobre el despido menos de dos horas antes de una conferencia de prensa anunciada por la Casa Blanca y en la que tenía que participar Bolton junto a los secretarios de Estado, Mike Pompeo, y del Tesoro, Steven Mnuchin.
Pompeo, cerca de Trump
El jefe de la diplomacia estadounidense aprovechó la oportunidad para señalar que solía estar en desacuerdo con Bolton e insistió en su cercanía con Trump. «Estamos trabajando muy de cerca con el presidente de Estados Unidos», dijo Pompeo.
En la misma rueda de prensa, Mnuchin aseguró que Trump mantendrá una «campaña de máxima presión sobre Teherán» a pesar de su disposición a reunirse con Rohani.
La salida de Bolton se conoce luego de que el fin de semana Trump cancelara una reunión secreta programada en Camp David con los talibanes, con quienes Washington negoció durante varios meses un acuerdo de paz para Afganistán.
Bolton, exembajador de Estados Unidos en las Naciones Unidas, fue notoriamente hostil a la mano extendida de Trump al líder norcoreano Kim Jong Un. Pyongyang aludió a esto en 2018: «Ya hemos evocado, en el pasado, la personalidad de Bolton y no ocultamos el asco que nos inspira», dijo el ministerio de Relaciones Exteriores.
A principios de la década de 2000, la extrema firmeza de Bolton en este tema le había valido ser tratado como «basura humana» en la prensa norcoreana.
Poco antes de su llegada a la Casa Blanca, Bolton estimó que era «perfectamente legítimo» que Estados Unidos respondiera a la amenaza planteada por una Corea del Norte nuclear, «atacando primero».
«Gobierno por el caos»
El líder de la oposición demócrata en el Senado, Chuck Schumer, dijo que la decisión de Trump de echar a Bolton «es solo el último ejemplo de su enfoque de gobierno por el caos».
El senador republicano Rand Paul saludó a viva voz la noticia. «El presidente tiene excelentes conocimientos sobre política exterior y la necesidad de poner fin a nuestras guerras interminables», tuiteó. «Debería ser aconsejado por quienes comparten su visión».
A modo de resumen, Robert Malley, presidente de la organización International Crisis Group, recordó que desde la llegada de Trump a la Casa Blanca en 2017 dos voces le susurraban al oído: una que le recomendaba diplomacia y no quería conflictos y otra que presionaba por la beligerancia y advertía sobre el riesgo de parecer débil.
«Con la partida de Bolton, la segunda voz sin duda perdió a su principal defensor. Esto podría crear nuevas oportunidades diplomáticas en Irán, Afganistán, Corea del Norte y Venezuela. Espero que el presidente las aproveche», destacó.
- Published in World News
House condemns Trump over racist comments to congresswomen
WASHINGTON, USA. * 16 de julio de 2019.
] Reuters.
The U.S. House of Representatives voted on Tuesday to condemn President Donald Trump for “racist comments” against four minority Democratic congresswomen, a symbolic measure aimed at shaming Trump and his fellow Republicans who stood by him.
The 240-187 vote, which split mainly along party lines, was the culmination of three days of outrage sparked by a Trump tweetstorm that diverted attention from other business in Washington but had little impact on the president’s overall approval rating, according to a new Reuters/Ipsos poll. Trump is seeking re-election next year.
Trump had told the group of congresswomen on Sunday to “go back and help fix the totally broken and crime infested places from which they came.”
All four lawmakers – Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez of New York, Ilhan Omar of Minnesota, Ayanna Pressley of Massachusetts and Rashida Tlaib of Michigan – are U.S. citizens. Three were born in the United States.
Democrats, who have a majority in the House, passed the resolution on Tuesday evening, which said the House “strongly condemns President Donald Trump’s racist comments that have legitimized and increased fear and hatred of new Americans and people of color.”
Four Republicans and one independent joined the Democrats to support the measure.
The White House did not immediately comment.
In a late night Tweet, Trump said: “So great to see how unified the Republican Party was on today’s vote concerning statements I made about four Democrat Congresswomen. If you really want to see statements, look at the horrible things they said about our Country, Israel, and much more.”
Trump’s attacks on the four progressive congresswomen – known as “the squad” – have been viewed as an effort to divide Democrats, who won control of the House in 2018 and have the power to thwart his legislative agenda.
House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, who has struggled at times to work with the progressive newcomers in her caucus, staunchly defended them in the debate. After the vote, Omar held a long, animated conversation with Pelosi on the House floor and put her arm around the speaker, the top elected U.S. Democrat.
“These comments from the White House are disgraceful and disgusting and these comments are racist,” Pelosi said. “Every single member of this institution, Democratic and Republican, should join us in condemning the president’s racist tweets.”
Pelosi’s comments put the House into a two-hour limbo after Republicans argued she went too far in her comments and broke debate rules.
House Republican leader Kevin McCarthy criticized Democrats for remarks that upset the “order and decency” of the chamber, saying: “Today is the day that historians will write about.”
Some Republicans defended Trump’s tweets, like Tom McClintock of California, who said the president was commenting on the patriotism of the congresswomen, not their race.
“I wish the president were more temperate in the words he sometimes uses and I agree that the tone of his recent remarks was unnecessarily provocative. But his central point is irrefutable,” McClintock said.
Republican Representative Doug Collins of Georgia said lawmakers should be pursuing reconciliation rather than escalating attacks against Trump, condemning the “breathtaking partisanship of today’s exercise.”
Republican Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell told reporters that he thought “everybody ought to tone down their rhetoric.”
“The president is not a racist and I think the tone of all of this is not good for the country, but it’s coming from all different ideological points of view,” McConnell said.
Trump has a history of what critics consider race-baiting. He led a movement that falsely claimed Barack Obama – America’s first black president – was not born in the United States, and said after a deadly, white supremacist-led rally in Charlottesville, Virginia, in 2017 that there were “very fine people on both sides” of the incident.
Trump’s approval rating plunged after the 2017 comments. But a Reuters/Ipsos poll this week showed little immediate political damage from his latest tweetstorm.
Support among Republicans increased slightly, the poll showed, while he lost support with Democrats and independents after the comments. His overall approval rating was unchanged.
At his rallies, Trump has often talked about proposals from the progressive wing of the Democratic Party, which he calls extreme, as he seeks to energize his political base ahead of the November 2020 presidential election.
Trump had warned Republican lawmakers against voting against him, and only four defied him: Will Hurd of Texas, Fred Upton of Michigan, Brian Fitzpatrick of Pennsylvania and Susan Brooks of Indiana. Independent Justin Amash of Michigan, who quit the Republican Party last week, also voted for the resolution.
“If we’re going to bring civility back to the center of our politics, we must speak out against … inflammatory rhetoric from anyone in any party anytime it happens,” Upton said on Twitter after the vote.
Democrats have targeted the seats held by Hurd, Upton and Fitzpatrick as ones they want to “flip” in congressional elections in November 2020. Brooks said recently she would retire from Congress next year.
- Published in World News
Lawmakers blast Trump’s ‘racist’ attacks
WASHINGTON, USA. * 15 de julio de 2019.
] Reuters.
President Donald Trump doubled down on his attacks against four minority U.S. congresswomen on Monday and dismissed concerns that his comments were racist, prompting outrage from Democrats, who moved to condemn him in the House of Representatives.
Speaking at the White House, Trump said people he described as critical of the United States should leave the country.
Those remarks followed his Twitter messages on Sunday that said the four left-wing lawmakers, known in Congress as “the squad,” should go back to “the totally broken and crime infested places from which they came.”
All four of the first-term House members are U.S. citizens and all but one were born in the United States.
“If you’re not happy in the U.S., if you’re complaining all the time, very simply: You can leave,” he said, drawing scattered applause from a crowd of businesspeople.
Asked if he was concerned that some viewed his remarks as racist and that white supremacists found common cause with him, Trump said he was not. “It doesn’t concern me because many people agree with me,” Trump said.
The president’s remarks were widely derided and some, though not many, of his fellow Republicans spoke out against them.
Trump did not identify the lawmakers by name in his Sunday tweets, but he appeared to refer to representatives Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez of New York, Ilhan Omar of Minnesota, Ayanna Pressley of Massachusetts and Rashida Tlaib of Michigan.
All four have been critical of Trump, as well as of the current Democratic leaders of the House, straining party unity in that chamber.
At a press conference on Capitol Hill, the four lawmakers said Trump was trying to sow division and distract attention from what they characterized as failed policies on immigration, healthcare and taxation.
“Weak minds and leaders challenge loyalty to our country in order to avoid challenging and debating the policy,” Ocasio-Cortez said.
Tlaib and Omar repeated their calls for Trump to be impeached.
House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, who has been criticized by members of “the squad,” said her party would introduce a resolution condemning Trump’s “xenophobic tweets.”
A draft of the resolution, seen by Reuters late on Monday, said the House “strongly condemns President Donald Trump’s racist comments that have legitimized and increased fear and hatred of new Americans and people of color …”
Representative Steny Hoyer, the No. 2 Democrat in the House, told reporters the resolution could be on the House floor for debate as soon as Tuesday.
Such a resolution could put Trump’s fellow Republicans in Congress in an awkward position, forcing them either to vote against their party’s leader, who has strong support among conservatives, or effectively to defend his statements.
Trump’s attacks elevated the profiles of the four progressive Democrats, who have helped push the party’s agenda to the left, causing concern among Democratic moderates who are eager to hold onto their seats in the 2020 election.
A FEW REPUBLICANS SPEAK OUT
Trump has a history of what critics consider race-baiting. He led a movement that falsely claimed former President Barack Obama was not born in the United States, and he said after a deadly, white supremacist-led rally in Charlottesville, Virginia, that “both sides” were to blame for violence there.
“This is the agenda of white nationalists, whether it is happening in chat rooms, or it’s happening on national TV, and now it’s reached the White House garden,” Omar said.
Although most Republicans stayed silent on Trump’s divisive rhetoric, several began expressing concern late on Monday.
Texas Representative Will Hurd, the only African-American Republican in the House, called the attacks “racist” on CNN.
Tim Scott, the Senate’s only black Republican, called them “racially offensive” on Twitter.
Others did not go that far. Senator Mitt Romney, the party’s 2012 presidential nominee, and Senator Marco Rubio, who ran in 2016, both condemned the remarks but declined to characterize them as racist.
House Republican Leader Kevin McCarthy said the four lawmakers belonged in the United States, but did not criticize Trump. “The president is not a racist,” he told reporters.
Senate Republican Leader Mitch McConnell did not comment on the controversy.
Trump regularly used racially charged language during his campaign and continued in his presidency. His latest remarks came as some of his efforts to deal with immigration – a major issue for his conservative base – have faltered.
Trump promised as a candidate to build a wall along the U.S.-Mexico border and that Mexico would pay for it. As president, very little has happened on wall construction and Mexico has resolutely refused to pay for a wall.
‘RACISM, DIVISION’
In his Sunday tweets, Trump said of the four congresswomen, “Why don’t they go back and help fix the totally broken and crime infested places from which they came … Then come back and show us how … it is done.”
Ocasio-Cortez, Pressley and Tlaib were born in the United States while Omar, a Somali refugee, arrived in 1992.
Republican Senator Lindsey Graham, a sometime Trump golf partner and adviser, called the four congresswomen “communist” and “anti-Semitic” on Fox News on Monday, but he also called on Trump to stop making such personal attacks.
“Aim higher … Take on their policies. The bottom line here is this is a diverse country,” he said, adding that he had spoken to Trump.
- Published in World News
Trump llama a Darroch «chiflado, estúpido e imbécil «
WASHINGTON, USA. * 9 de julio de 2019.
] Efe.
El presidente estadounidense, Donald Trump, elevó este martes sus críticas al embajador británico en Washington, Kim Darroch, a quien calificó de «chiflado, estúpido e imbécil pomposo», en medio de la polémica por la filtración de cables críticos con su Administración.
«El chiflado embajador que el Reino Unido ha endosado sobre EE.UU. no es alguien con quien estemos encantados, un tipo muy estúpido. Debería hablar a su país, y a la primera ministra Theresa May sobre su fallida negociación del brexit, y no estar molesto por mis críticas por lo mal que se gestionó», afirmó Trump en su cuenta de Twitter.
«No conozco al embajador, pero me han contado que es un imbécil pomposo», agregó.
El ministro de Comercio Internacional del Reino Unido, Liam Fox, que se encuentra de visita en la capital estadounidense tenía previsto reunirse este martes con Ivanka Trump, hija del presidente y asesora de la Casa Blanca.
No está claro si Darroch acompañará al ministro británico en sus encuentros con funcionarios estadounidenses, como es habitual entre los jefes de la legaciones diplomáticas.
Este lunes, el mandatario anunció que no tratará más con el embajador británico en Washington.
Las réplicas de Trump se producen después de la polémica surgida este fin de semana al filtrarse unos documentos redactados desde 2017 en los que Darroch criticaba a la Administración estadounidense.
En esos textos, revelados por el dominical británico Mail on Sunday, el embajador llegó a decir que para comunicarse con Trump es «necesario presentar argumentos simples, incluso rudos» a la vez que calificó a su Gobierno de «disfuncional» e «inepto».
May, que dejará el cargo a finales de mes, aseguró tener «completa fe» en Darroch, a través de un portavoz gubernamental británico, y consideró «totalmente inaceptables» los cables diplomáticos filtrados.
Pese a la histórica «especial relación» entre Londres y Washington, Trump ha tensado los vínculos con continuos ataques a May y varios políticos de gran relieve del Reino Unido, entre ellos el alcalde londinense, Sadiq Khan.
- Published in DESTACADAS
EU anuncia nuevos aranceles al acero mexicano
WASHINGTON, USA. * 8 de julio de 2019.
] Efe / Vanguardia.
Esta tarde el Departamento de Comercio de Estados Unidos determinó que existen motivos suficientes para imponer aranceles al acero estructural fabricado en México y en China.
«En las investigaciones de China y México, Comercio hizo determinaciones afirmativas, encontrando que los exportadores recibían subsidios sujetos a derechos compensatorios. (…) En la de Canadá, hizo una determinación negativa al encontrar que los exportadores recibían subsidios sujetos a derechos compensatorios a niveles mínimos», señala la dependencia estadounidense en un comunicado.
El Gobierno de Estados Unidos descartó autorizar gravámenes para el mismo material hecho en Canadá.
Estados Unidos descubrió que empresas chinas recibían ayudas de entre el 30.30 y 177.43 %, mientras las mexicanas de 0.01 y 74.01 %
Donald Trump, en reiteradas ocasiones, ha acusado a México de competencia desleal en la parte comercial.
El Departamento de Comercio ordenará a las Aduanas y Protección Fronteriza de EU que recauden depósitos en efectivo de los importadores de acero estructural fabricado de China y México, aunque no detalló ni el importe ni desde cuándo.
- Published in DESTACADAS
North Korea has no intention to completely denuclearize
PYONGYANG, North Korea. * 2 de julio de 2019.
] UPI
An outspoken defector who fled Pyongyang’s embassy in London said the U.S.-North Korea nuclear negotiations can be best understood as negotiations between two nuclear weapon states.
Thae Yong-ho, who defected to South Korea in 2016, added North Korea has no intention to completely denuclearize, Japan’s Mainichi Shimbun reported.
The former North Korean diplomat also suggested the brief summit at the border village of Panmunjom between U.S. President Donald Trump and North Korean leader Kim Jong Un on Sunday was not a breakthrough.
«The same pattern of dialogue has been going on for the last 30 years,» Thae said, according to the report. After dialogue starts and «principle agreements» are reached, North Korea has historically not reached «next steps» because administrations in electoral democracies like the United States and South Korea change over time.
The desired results are not achieved, Thae said, referring to long-term patterns of North Korea negotiations.
Before Thae defected to the South, the North Korean official was a trusted member of Pyongyang’s foreign ministry.
In 2015, he was seen escorting Kim’s brother to an Eric Clapton concert in London.
Thae told the Mainichi initially he believed Kim would be different because of his background.
«We thought if a person who had studied in Europe enters politics big changes would come,» Thae said. «Positive messages continued to be issued in the first years of [Kim’s] rule.»
Thae said he is monitoring North Korea to see whether a free market system will expand in the country.
«If you read North Korea’s [Workers’ Party] newspaper Rodong Sinmun daily, you can evaluate how North Korea is changing,» he said. But he added there is no significant change at present.
Thae’s observations about the recent Panmunjom summit comes at a time when South Korean President Moon Jae-in says the meeting was a significant development.
Yonhap reported Tuesday Moon said the quick meeting marks the start of a new era of U.S.-North Korea relations.
South Korea has said the end of hostilities can serve as an «entry point to denuclearization» in previous statements.
- Published in World News
Trump not boosted by strong American economy
WASHINGTON, D.C. * 1 de julio de 2019.
] AP
The solid economy is doing little to bolster support for President Donald Trump.
Americans give Trump mixed reviews for his economic stewardship despite the growth achieved during this presidency, according to a new survey by The Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research.
Nearly two-thirds describe as “good” an economy that appears to have set a record for the longest expansion in U.S. history, with decade-long growth that began under Barack Obama. More people consider the economy to be good today than did at the start of the year.
But significantly fewer approve of Trump’s handling of the economy, even as it remains a relative strength compared with other issues. The survey indicates that most Americans do not believe they’re personally benefiting from his trade policies. And only 17% said they received a tax cut, despite government and private sector figures showing that a clear majority of taxpayers owed less after the president’s tax overhaul passed in 2017.
These doubts create a possible vulnerability as Trump highlights the economy’s solid performance in his campaign for re-election in 2020. During two nights of debates last week, almost every Democratic presidential candidate found ways to criticize the president by decrying the wealth gap .
Massachusetts Sen. Elizabeth Warren said it was evidence of “corruption.” Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders railed against the concentration of wealth in the three richest Americans, while former Vice President Joe Biden said Trump thinks Wall Street, not the middle class, built America.
Christel Bastida, 39, a neuroscience researcher, was active in Democratic politics last year during the Senate race in Texas and plans to run for Houston City Council.
“I personally don’t feel more secure financially and I think that’s the case for a lot of people who are middle class,” she said. “A lot of working-class people are not comfortable now. I know there were tax breaks that were supposed to be helpful to people, but it turns out they’re helpful to billionaires and corporations and I’m neither.”
Nearly half of Americans, 47%, approve of Trump’s handling of the economy, but his overall approval rating — 38% — is low compared with what past presidents have enjoyed in strong economic conditions. Only about 4 in 10 Americans approve of his handling of taxes and trade negotiations.
The public skepticism has persisted even as the president routinely congratulates himself on the economy, including the 3.6% unemployment rate and stock market gains.
He tweeted last week: “The Stock Market went up massively from the day after I won the Election, all the way up to the day that I took office, because of the enthusiasm for the fact that I was going to be President. That big Stock Market increase must be credited to me.”
The 2017 tax overhaul was sold by the administration as a way to return more income to everyday Americans. But the poll shows nearly half say they think their taxes stayed the same or are unsure; 33% said they increased. This suggests the tax cuts may have been too modest to notice or were eaten up by daily expenses, or that people were disappointed with their refunds.
That feeling of being left behind has energized Democrats seeking to turn out the vote next year. The tax overhaul disproportionately favored corporations and the wealthy, allowing Democrats to say the tax cuts were fundamentally unfair.
Democrats are more likely than Republicans to say the amount they paid in taxes increased in the last year, 42% versus 25%, while more Republicans say their taxes decreased, 25% versus 10%.
Nor are tariffs popular.
Trump has imposed a tax on roughly $250 billion worth of Chinese imports, part of an effort to force the world’s second-largest economy to trade on more favorable terms with the United States. China retaliated with their own tariffs that hit the U.S. agricultural sector, causing the Trump administration to provide aid to farmers with lost profits.
The president has also threatened tariffs on Mexico in order to get that country to reduce the border-crossings into the United States and has mused about hitting European autos with import taxes as well.
A mere 15% of Americans said the tariffs will help them and their family.
With regards to the national economy, just 26% said the tariffs will help, a sharp decline from 40% who said that last August. About half said the tariffs will be harmful.
Republicans, in particular, are less optimistic: Half think Trump’s tariffs will help the economy, down from 7 in 10 in August.
Ryan Brueggemann, 37, of New Berlin, Wisconsin, runs a dairy farm with his brother. He supports Trump but dislikes the tariffs, though he understands why the president has deployed them so frequently.
“I don’t believe it’s a great business practice to use them,” Brueggemann said. “But it came down to the point where our country is being taken advantage of unfairly and that the only way other nations were going to listen to what we wanted to renegotiate and even get them to the table to think about it was to get their attention by putting some tariffs on products.”
Paul Miller, 81, a retired shoe factory foreman from Carlisle, Pennsylvania, said he still intends to vote for Trump, since he hasn’t seen anyone better yet in the Democratic field.
Living off his pension and Social Security, Miller said the tax cuts were basically irrelevant for him. And he doesn’t agree with the president’s claim that China is paying for the tariffs, rather than U.S. consumers and companies.
“I sort of have mixed feelings about the tariffs,” he said. “Of course, I don’t believe it when Trump says we won’t have to pay them. We will.”
- Published in World News
Grandes desafíos esperan a Trump en cumbre del G20
OSAKA, Japón. * 26 de junio de 2019.
] Reuters
El presidente estadounidense Donald Trump inició su viaje a Japón con una amistosa cena con el primer ministro de Australia, poco antes de enfrentar una cumbre del Grupo de los 20 en que se debatirán acuciantes temas internacionales.
El mandatario aterrizó el jueves en Osaka para la reunión anual del G20 en medio de un ciclón que amenaza con convertirse en tifón, augurio portentoso de los cuatro días de diplomacia intensa que le esperan. Con la mira en las elecciones del próximo año, Trump ansía triunfos en áreas como el conflicto con Irán, la guerra comercial con China, la amenaza de nuevas intromisiones electorales de Rusia y el impasse sobre el programa nuclear norcoreano.
En su cena con el líder australiano Scott Morrison, los dos líderes intercambiaron elogios y Trump aseguró que le “gustaría” ir a Australia este año para el torneo de golf Copa de Presidentes. Cuando se le preguntó si su retórica nacionalista está distanciando a sus aliados, Trump insistió en que los dos países “cooperan estrechamente” en temas comerciales.
“Puedo decir con mucha facilidad que hemos sido muy buenos con nuestros aliados, que trabajamos con nuestros aliados, que cuidamos a nuestros aliados”, declaró Trump. “Yo heredé déficits comerciales masivos con respecto a nuestros aliados e incluso ayudamos militarmente a nuestros aliados. Así que nos vemos de la manera más positiva que nunca, pero también examinamos a nuestros aliados”.
La agenda para los cuatro días está sembrada de riesgos para el presidente, pues no contará con la extravagante pompa que caracterizó sus recientes viajes a Japón e Inglaterra.
Sin embargo los funcionarios de la Casa Blanca trataron de atemperar las expectativas sobre la posibilidad de logros específicos aun cuando el mandatario se refirió a sus “competidores” en el extranjero: “Todo está bien, vamos de maravilla, vamos mucho mejor que cualquiera de ellos”.
La semana se perfila como una de dos narrativas paralelas en la política estadounidense: por un lado estará el viaje de Trump a Asia y por el otro los demócratas se preparan para las elecciones con sus primeros debates de cara a las primarias para escoger al candidato que se enfrentará con el presidente. Mientras el avión presidencial surcaba los cielos rumbo a Japón, Trump recurrió a Twitter para ofrecer su escueta opinión del primer debate demócrata: “¡ABURRIDO!”.
Poco después el mandatario criticó a NBC por un desperfecto en el audio que por breves instantes perturbó la transmisión.
En la cumbre en Osaka Trump se reunirá con el presidente ruso Vladimir Putin, con el presidente chino Xi Jinping, con el líder turco Recep Tayyip Erdogan y el príncipe saudí Mohammed bin Salman, todos de tendencia autoritaria. También se encontrará con aliados inquietos por las políticas de Trump como la canciller alemana Angela Merkel, y con líderes más plácidos como el primer ministro japonés Shinzo Abe.
- Published in World News