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Serious When Trump calls....

gatehousethetinkertailor

Alfrescian
Loyal
https://www.washingtonpost.com/worl...0e57e57e05d_story.html?utm_term=.b798a3068dbe


No ‘G’day, mate’: On call with Australian prime minister, Trump badgers and brags


It should have been one of the most congenial calls for the new commander in chief — a conversation with the leader of Australia, one of America’s staunchest allies, at the end of a triumphant week.

Instead, President Trump blasted Australian Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull over a refugee agreement and boasted about the magnitude of his electoral college win, according to senior U.S. officials briefed on the Saturday exchange. Then, 25 minutes into what was expected to be an hour-long call, Trump abruptly ended it.

At one point Trump informed Turnbull that he had spoken with four other world leaders that day — including Russian President Vladi*mir Putin — and that “This was the worst call by far.”

Trump’s behavior suggests that he is capable of subjecting world leaders, including close allies, to a version of the vitriol he frequently employs against political adversaries and news organizations in speeches and on Twitter.

“This is the worst deal ever,” Trump fumed as Turnbull attempted to confirm that the United States would honor its pledge to take in 1,250 refugees from an Australian detention center. Trump, who one day earlier had signed an executive order temporarily barring the admissions of refugees, complained that he was “going to get killed” politically and accused Australia of seeking to export the “next Boston bombers.”

U.S. officials said that Trump has behaved similarly in conversations with leaders of other countries, including Mexico. But his treatment of Turnbull was particularly striking because of the tight bond between the United States and Australia — countries that share intelligence, support one another diplomatically and have fought together in wars including in Iraq and Afghanistan.

The characterizations provide insight into Trump’s temperament and approach to the diplomatic requirements of his job as the nation’s chief executive, a role in which he continues to employ both the uncompromising negotiating tactics he honed as a real estate developer and the bombastic style he exhibited as a reality television personality.

The depictions of Trump’s calls are also at odds with sanitized White House accounts. T
he official read-out of his conversation with Turnbull, for example, said that the two had “emphasized the enduring strength and closeness of the U.S.-Australia relationship that is critical for peace, stability, and prosperity in the Asia-Pacific region and globally.”

A White House spokesman declined to comment. A senior administration official acknowledged that the conversation with Turnbull had been hostile and charged, but emphasized that most of Trump’s calls with foreign leaders — including the heads of Japan, Germany, France and Russia — have been both productive and pleasant.

Trump also vented anger and touted his political accomplishments in a tense conversation with Mexican President Enrique Peña Nieto, officials said.
The two have sparred for months over Trump’s vow to force Mexico to pay for construction of a border wall between the two countries, a conflict that prompted Peña Nieto to cancel a planned meeting with Trump.

Even in conversations marred by hostile exchanges, Trump manages to work in references to his election accomplishments. U.S. officials said that he used his calls with both Turnbull and Peña Nieto to mention his election win or the size of the crowd at his inauguration.

One official said that it may be Trump’s way of “speaking about the mandate he has and why he has the backing for decisions he makes.” But Trump is also notoriously thin-skinned and has used platforms including social-media accounts, meetings with lawmakers and even a speech at CIA headquarters to depict his victory as an achievement of historic proportions, rather than a narrow outcome in which his opponent, Hillary Clinton, won the popular vote.

The friction with Turnbull reflected Trump’s anger over being bound by an agreement reached by the Obama administration to accept refugees from Australian detention sites even while Trump was issuing an executive order suspending such arrivals from elsewhere in the world.

The issue centers on a population of roughly 2,500 people who have sought asylum in Australia but were diverted to facilities off that country’s coast at Nauru and Manus Island in Papua New Guinea. Deplorable conditions at those sites prompted intervention from the United Nations and a pledge from the United States to accept about half of those refugees, provided they passed U.S. security screening.

Many of the refugees came from Iran, Iraq, Sudan and Somalia, countries now listed in Trump’s order temporarily barring their citizens entry to the United States. A special provision in the Trump order allows for exceptions to honor “a preexisting international agreement,” a line that was inserted to cover the Australia deal.

But U.S. officials said that Trump continued to fume about the arrangement even after signing the order in a ceremony at the Pentagon.

“I don’t want these people,” Trump said. He repeatedly misstated the number of refugees called for in the agreement as 2,000 rather than 1,250, and told Turnbull that it was “my intention” to honor the agreement, a phrase designed to leave the U.S. president wiggle room to back out of the deal in the future, according to a senior U.S. official.

Turnbull told Trump that to honor the agreement, the United States would not have to accept all of the refugees but only to allow them each through the normal vetting procedures. At that, Trump vowed to subject each refu*gee to “extreme vetting,” the senior U.S. official said.

Trump was also skeptical because he did not see a specific advantage the United States would gain by honoring the deal, officials said.

Trump’s position appears to reflect the transactional view he takes of relationships, even when it comes to diplomatic ties with long-standing allies. Australia has sent troops to fight alongside U.S. forces for decades and maintains close cooperation with Washington on trade and economic issues.

Australia is seen as such a trusted ally that it is one of only four countries that the United States includes in the “Five Eyes” arrangement for cooperation on espionage matters. Members share extensively what their intelligence services gather and generally refrain from spying on one another.

There also is a significant amount of tourism between the two countries.

Trump made the call to Turnbull about 5 p.m. Saturday from his desk in the Oval Office, where he was joined by chief strategist Stephen K. Bannon, national security adviser Michael Flynn and White House press secretary Sean Spicer.

At one point, Turnbull suggested that the two leaders move on from their impasse over refugees to discuss the conflict in Syria and other pressing foreign issues. But Trump demurred and ended the call, making it far shorter than his conversations with Shinzo Abe of Japan, Angela Merkel of Germany, François Hollande of France or Putin.

“These conversations are conducted candidly, frankly, privately,” Turnbull said at a news conference Thursday in Australia. “If you see reports of them, I’m not going to add to them.”


This is indeed going to put our own on notice given the feverish support of the TPP and close security and intelligence ties with Australia.


https://www.theguardian.com/us-news...aim-trump-threatened-to-send-troops-to-mexico

'Bad hombres': reports claim Trump threatened to send troops to Mexico

Transcript of phone conversation is said to include president telling his Mexican counterpart ‘your military is scared’ of gangs but ‘our military isn’t’

Donald Trump threatened to send troops south of the border to take care of “bad hombres” while on the telephone with his Mexican counterpart, according to a transcript cited by the Associated Press.

Trump was said to have issued the threat in a conversation on Friday that Enrique Peña Nieto’s office later described as “constructive”.

According to reports, the US president told Peña Nieto: “You have a bunch of bad hombres down there. You aren’t doing enough to stop them. I think your military is scared. Our military isn’t, so I just might send them down to take care of it.”

The overall tone of the conversation is unknown and who the “hombres” are is unclear but in a separate report Mexican journalist Dolía Estévez said it referred to drug cartels.

It portends a further souring of relations between Mexico and Trump, who partly built his election campaign on vilifying Mexicans and promising to make the southern neighbour pay for a border wall.

Peña Nieto called off a trip to Washington last week after Trump tweeted that it was not worth coming unless paying for the wall was on the agenda. Trump and Peña Nieto ended up speaking on 27 January by telephone and reportedly agreed not to speak publicly about who would pay. It was a conversation Peña Nieto’s office called “constructive and productive around the bilateral relationship”.

Mexico’s foreign ministry denied any threats were issued by Trump in his talks with Peña Nieto, saying in a statement on Tuesday evening that the information in Estévez’s report “didn’t correspond with reality”. It reiterated that the tone of the telephone conversations between Peña Nieto and Trump “was constructive”.

Some reporting suggested the transcript came from an internal White House summary of the phone call and was not a verbatim account – though the “bad hombres” reference reprises comments Trump made during the 2016 election campaign about evicting Mexican criminals from the US.

Estévez, who is based in Washington, reported earlier on Tuesday that Trump had “humiliated” Peña Nieto and threatened to slap import duties on Mexican-made goods to pay for a border wall.

Sources told Washington-based Estévez that Trump said: “I don’t need the Mexicans. I don’t need Mexico. I’m going to build a wall and you’re going to pay for it, like it or not.”

Estévez wrote in the Mexican publication Proyecto Puente: “Trump signalled that Mexican soldiers are not doing a good job in combating narcotics trafficking and therefore suggested that he would have to send US troops to assume the duties of defeating the cartels.”

The Mexican military has battled drug cartels for a decade in a crackdown that has cost an estimated 200,000 lives and left another 25,000 people missing.

Mexico has captured dozens of cartel kingpins and increasingly extradited them to the United States – most recently two-time escapee Joaquín “El Chapo” Guzmán, who was sent north on the eve of Trump’s inauguration.

Talk of troops violating Mexican sovereignty stirs up strong emotions in Mexico, which lost half its territory – including California, Arizona and Nevada – in the Mexican-American war of the 1840s.
 
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Leongsam

High Order Twit / Low SES subject
Admin
Asset
Turnbull met his match. Good on Trump for bringing him down a peg or two.
 

winnipegjets

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
Trump is doing very well in showing US allies who is boss. Now, the question is will these allies fall in line or give Trump the finger.
 

Fugitive

Alfrescian
Loyal
Another fake news trying to undermine Trump.

These days I don't read anything from the media about Trump, I just wait patiently for Trump's tweet
 

ckmpd

Alfrescian
Loyal
Another fake news trying to undermine Trump.

These days I don't read anything from the media about Trump, I just wait patiently for Trump's tweet

Yes. dont trust the media. Hear from the horse's mouth. Trump is clever to by pass the media.

Singaporeans will be wise to learn from Trump and dont trust SG's media
 

gatehousethetinkertailor

Alfrescian
Loyal
Another fake news trying to undermine Trump.

These days I don't read anything from the media about Trump, I just wait patiently for Trump's tweet

Yes. dont trust the media. Hear from the horse's mouth. Trump is clever to by pass the media.

Singaporeans will be wise to learn from Trump and dont trust SG's media

Sure - Washington Post, BBC, Telegraph, Guardian, Financial Times, Le Monde, Der Spiegel also reporting fake news nowadays - indeed a conspiracy of global proportions :rolleyes:

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-australia-38837263

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/201...donald-trump-told-malcolm-turnbull-attacking/

https://www.ft.com/content/b6644ce2-e902-11e6-893c-082c54a7f539

https://www.theguardian.com/austral...ugee-agreement-was-the-worst-deal-ever-report

http://www.lemonde.fr/ameriques/art...ies-rejetes-par-l-australie_5071563_3222.html

http://www.spiegel.de/politik/ausla...malcolm-turnbull-geworden-sein-a-1132800.html

Do flick through the Grasshopper Lies Heavy for guidance on how to counter this onslaught from untrustworthy media....
 
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steffychun

Alfrescian
Loyal
https://www.washingtonpost.com/worl...0e57e57e05d_story.html?utm_term=.b798a3068dbe


No ‘G’day, mate’: On call with Australian prime minister, Trump badgers and brags


It should have been one of the most congenial calls for the new commander in chief — a conversation with the leader of Australia, one of America’s staunchest allies, at the end of a triumphant week.

Instead, President Trump blasted Australian Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull over a refugee agreement and boasted about the magnitude of his electoral college win, according to senior U.S. officials briefed on the Saturday exchange. Then, 25 minutes into what was expected to be an hour-long call, Trump abruptly ended it.

At one point Trump informed Turnbull that he had spoken with four other world leaders that day — including Russian President Vladi*mir Putin — and that “This was the worst call by far.”

Trump’s behavior suggests that he is capable of subjecting world leaders, including close allies, to a version of the vitriol he frequently employs against political adversaries and news organizations in speeches and on Twitter.

“This is the worst deal ever,” Trump fumed as Turnbull attempted to confirm that the United States would honor its pledge to take in 1,250 refugees from an Australian detention center. Trump, who one day earlier had signed an executive order temporarily barring the admissions of refugees, complained that he was “going to get killed” politically and accused Australia of seeking to export the “next Boston bombers.”

U.S. officials said that Trump has behaved similarly in conversations with leaders of other countries, including Mexico. But his treatment of Turnbull was particularly striking because of the tight bond between the United States and Australia — countries that share intelligence, support one another diplomatically and have fought together in wars including in Iraq and Afghanistan.

The characterizations provide insight into Trump’s temperament and approach to the diplomatic requirements of his job as the nation’s chief executive, a role in which he continues to employ both the uncompromising negotiating tactics he honed as a real estate developer and the bombastic style he exhibited as a reality television personality.

The depictions of Trump’s calls are also at odds with sanitized White House accounts. T
he official read-out of his conversation with Turnbull, for example, said that the two had “emphasized the enduring strength and closeness of the U.S.-Australia relationship that is critical for peace, stability, and prosperity in the Asia-Pacific region and globally.”

A White House spokesman declined to comment. A senior administration official acknowledged that the conversation with Turnbull had been hostile and charged, but emphasized that most of Trump’s calls with foreign leaders — including the heads of Japan, Germany, France and Russia — have been both productive and pleasant.

Trump also vented anger and touted his political accomplishments in a tense conversation with Mexican President Enrique Peña Nieto, officials said.
The two have sparred for months over Trump’s vow to force Mexico to pay for construction of a border wall between the two countries, a conflict that prompted Peña Nieto to cancel a planned meeting with Trump.

Even in conversations marred by hostile exchanges, Trump manages to work in references to his election accomplishments. U.S. officials said that he used his calls with both Turnbull and Peña Nieto to mention his election win or the size of the crowd at his inauguration.

One official said that it may be Trump’s way of “speaking about the mandate he has and why he has the backing for decisions he makes.” But Trump is also notoriously thin-skinned and has used platforms including social-media accounts, meetings with lawmakers and even a speech at CIA headquarters to depict his victory as an achievement of historic proportions, rather than a narrow outcome in which his opponent, Hillary Clinton, won the popular vote.

The friction with Turnbull reflected Trump’s anger over being bound by an agreement reached by the Obama administration to accept refugees from Australian detention sites even while Trump was issuing an executive order suspending such arrivals from elsewhere in the world.

The issue centers on a population of roughly 2,500 people who have sought asylum in Australia but were diverted to facilities off that country’s coast at Nauru and Manus Island in Papua New Guinea. Deplorable conditions at those sites prompted intervention from the United Nations and a pledge from the United States to accept about half of those refugees, provided they passed U.S. security screening.

Many of the refugees came from Iran, Iraq, Sudan and Somalia, countries now listed in Trump’s order temporarily barring their citizens entry to the United States. A special provision in the Trump order allows for exceptions to honor “a preexisting international agreement,” a line that was inserted to cover the Australia deal.

But U.S. officials said that Trump continued to fume about the arrangement even after signing the order in a ceremony at the Pentagon.

“I don’t want these people,” Trump said. He repeatedly misstated the number of refugees called for in the agreement as 2,000 rather than 1,250, and told Turnbull that it was “my intention” to honor the agreement, a phrase designed to leave the U.S. president wiggle room to back out of the deal in the future, according to a senior U.S. official.

Turnbull told Trump that to honor the agreement, the United States would not have to accept all of the refugees but only to allow them each through the normal vetting procedures. At that, Trump vowed to subject each refu*gee to “extreme vetting,” the senior U.S. official said.

Trump was also skeptical because he did not see a specific advantage the United States would gain by honoring the deal, officials said.

Trump’s position appears to reflect the transactional view he takes of relationships, even when it comes to diplomatic ties with long-standing allies. Australia has sent troops to fight alongside U.S. forces for decades and maintains close cooperation with Washington on trade and economic issues.

Australia is seen as such a trusted ally that it is one of only four countries that the United States includes in the “Five Eyes” arrangement for cooperation on espionage matters. Members share extensively what their intelligence services gather and generally refrain from spying on one another.

There also is a significant amount of tourism between the two countries.

Trump made the call to Turnbull about 5 p.m. Saturday from his desk in the Oval Office, where he was joined by chief strategist Stephen K. Bannon, national security adviser Michael Flynn and White House press secretary Sean Spicer.

At one point, Turnbull suggested that the two leaders move on from their impasse over refugees to discuss the conflict in Syria and other pressing foreign issues. But Trump demurred and ended the call, making it far shorter than his conversations with Shinzo Abe of Japan, Angela Merkel of Germany, François Hollande of France or Putin.

“These conversations are conducted candidly, frankly, privately,” Turnbull said at a news conference Thursday in Australia. “If you see reports of them, I’m not going to add to them.”


This is indeed going to put our own on notice given the feverish support of the TPP and close security and intelligence ties with Australia.


https://www.theguardian.com/us-news...aim-trump-threatened-to-send-troops-to-mexico

'Bad hombres': reports claim Trump threatened to send troops to Mexico

Transcript of phone conversation is said to include president telling his Mexican counterpart ‘your military is scared’ of gangs but ‘our military isn’t’

Donald Trump threatened to send troops south of the border to take care of “bad hombres” while on the telephone with his Mexican counterpart, according to a transcript cited by the Associated Press.

Trump was said to have issued the threat in a conversation on Friday that Enrique Peña Nieto’s office later described as “constructive”.

According to reports, the US president told Peña Nieto: “You have a bunch of bad hombres down there. You aren’t doing enough to stop them. I think your military is scared. Our military isn’t, so I just might send them down to take care of it.”

The overall tone of the conversation is unknown and who the “hombres” are is unclear but in a separate report Mexican journalist Dolía Estévez said it referred to drug cartels.

It portends a further souring of relations between Mexico and Trump, who partly built his election campaign on vilifying Mexicans and promising to make the southern neighbour pay for a border wall.

Peña Nieto called off a trip to Washington last week after Trump tweeted that it was not worth coming unless paying for the wall was on the agenda. Trump and Peña Nieto ended up speaking on 27 January by telephone and reportedly agreed not to speak publicly about who would pay. It was a conversation Peña Nieto’s office called “constructive and productive around the bilateral relationship”.

Mexico’s foreign ministry denied any threats were issued by Trump in his talks with Peña Nieto, saying in a statement on Tuesday evening that the information in Estévez’s report “didn’t correspond with reality”. It reiterated that the tone of the telephone conversations between Peña Nieto and Trump “was constructive”.

Some reporting suggested the transcript came from an internal White House summary of the phone call and was not a verbatim account – though the “bad hombres” reference reprises comments Trump made during the 2016 election campaign about evicting Mexican criminals from the US.

Estévez, who is based in Washington, reported earlier on Tuesday that Trump had “humiliated” Peña Nieto and threatened to slap import duties on Mexican-made goods to pay for a border wall.

Sources told Washington-based Estévez that Trump said: “I don’t need the Mexicans. I don’t need Mexico. I’m going to build a wall and you’re going to pay for it, like it or not.”

Estévez wrote in the Mexican publication Proyecto Puente: “Trump signalled that Mexican soldiers are not doing a good job in combating narcotics trafficking and therefore suggested that he would have to send US troops to assume the duties of defeating the cartels.”

The Mexican military has battled drug cartels for a decade in a crackdown that has cost an estimated 200,000 lives and left another 25,000 people missing.

Mexico has captured dozens of cartel kingpins and increasingly extradited them to the United States – most recently two-time escapee Joaquín “El Chapo” Guzmán, who was sent north on the eve of Trump’s inauguration.

Talk of troops violating Mexican sovereignty stirs up strong emotions in Mexico, which lost half its territory – including California, Arizona and Nevada – in the Mexican-American war of the 1840s.

I await his call to PM Pinky Lee.
 

gatehousethetinkertailor

Alfrescian
Loyal
Obviously he's faking it :rolleyes:


Donald Trump warns call where he hung up on Australian Prime Minister is 'just the start'


Donald Trump has warned that he plans to be "tough" and "straighten things out" hours after reports emerged that he had "yelled" at the Australian Prime Minister and their refugee resettlement deal and had hung up mid-conversation.

At a prayer breakfast, the President said: "That’s what I do, I fix things. We’re going to straighten it out. Believe me.

"When you hear about the tough phone calls I’m having, don’t worry about it. Just don’t worry about it. They’re tough. We have to be tough. It’s time we’re going to be a little tough, folks. We’re taken advantage of by every nation in the world virtually. It’s not going to happen anymore. It’s not going to happen anymore."

The call with Malcolm Turnbull on Saturday should have lasted an hour, but after 25 minutes Mr Trump wanted off the call.

Australia Sky News sources reported that the President "yelled" at Mr Turnbull as he sat in the Oval Office, flanked by Chief Strategist Stephen Bannon, Press Secretary Sean Spicer and Defense Secretary Michael Flynn. It was the last call of the day after several other scheduled phone calls with several foreign leaders.

Mr Trump reportedly criticised the Prime Minister over his refugee agreement with former President Barack Obama, and boasted about his electoral college win.

As reported by The Washington Post, senior US officials briefed on the conversation said Mr Trump hung up after 25 minutes and said "This was the worst call by far" and that the immigrant agreement was "the worst deal ever".

He also reportedly said to Mr Turnbull he was "going to get killed" politically and accused him of wanting to export the “next Boston bombers”.

When Mr Turnbull suggested the two leaders move on from discussing refugees to the conflict in Syria and other issues, the President decided to end the call.

It was far shorter than his conversations with Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, German President Angela Merkel, French Prime Minister François Hollande and Russian President Vladimir Putin.

At almost 11pm the same evening after the Washington Post report surfaced, Mr Trump took to twitter to vent his anger, saying he will review the "dumb deal" to take hundreds of Australian asylum seekers.

"Do you believe it? The Obama Administration agreed to take thousands of illegal immigrants from Australia. Why? I will study this dumb deal," he wrote.

Mr Turnbull told reporters the conversation had been “frank and candid” but said he would not reveal details of a "private" call.

"These conversations are conducted candidly, frankly, privately. If you see reports of them, I'm not going to add to them," he told reporters in Melbourne.

Their conversation has only caused further discord between the two countries, the day after the US announced it would apply "extreme vetting" to Australian refugees.The refugee deal that Mr Trump had berated was agreed late last year due to Australia’s fighting alongside US troops in Afghanistan and Iraq. It includes resettling up to 1,250 asylum seekers who are held in offshore processing camps in Papua New Guinea and Nauru. In return, Australia would take refugees from El Salvador, Guatemala and Honduras.

The official read-out after Saturday’s call highlighted "the enduring strength and closeness of the US-Australia relationship that is critical for peace, stability, and prosperity in the Asia-Pacific region and globally".

http://www.independent.co.uk/news/w...olm-turnbull-refugee-immigrants-a7559381.html

________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

As a footnote, another obviously "fake" planted story by Vanity Fair (http://www.vanityfair.com/news/2017/01/jared-kushner-ivanka-donald-trump-scandals):

Ivanka Trump and Jared Kushner 'struggling to control Donald Trump as their influence wanes'

Jared Kushner and Ivanka Trump have long been said to be a calming influence on Donald Trump. While the President is known for his brash, off-the-cuff remarks, the immaculately turned out couple are reported to be a moderating force behind the scenes.

Mr Kushner, a property developer who is both Mr Trump’s senior advisor and son-in-law, played a pivotal role in his presidential campaign and was often the last person the Republican consulted before making key decisions.

However, Mr Kushner’s influence on Mr Trump is reported to be waning inside the White House. The businessman, who married Ivanka in 2009, is said to have had his patience tested in recent days.

This is reported to have reached a head after Mexico's President Enrique Pena Nieto called off his meeting with Mr Trump last week. The cancellation was prompted by the President tweeting: “If Mexico is unwilling to pay for the badly needed wall, then it would be better to cancel the upcoming meeting”.

Mr Kushner, who had spent 24 hours trying to arrange a meeting between the pair, is said to have been incensed his first triumph in the Oval Office fell through.

“Kushner was f****** furious,” a source said to be familiar with the situation told Vanity Fair. “I’d never once heard him say he was angry throughout the entire campaign. But he was furious.”

The source, who suggested Mr Kushner's influence on his boss might be diminishing, said he had been so invested in the meeting he considered getting on a plane to Mexico in an attempt to convince the President to meet with his father-in-law.

The property developer has previously been viewed as a mediating influence on the President. Like others, former Governer Richard Codey, a state senator from Essex County who is a Kushner family friend, predicted he would be a “calming” influence on Mr Trump and a counterbalance to other influences.

Mr Kushner not only advised Mr Trump on strategy, drafted his speeches and ran his digital media campaign, but has also been a bridging figure.

The developer, whose key contacts include Henry Kissinger and Rupert Murdoch, accompanied him on his first visit to the White House after winning the election and helped him secure a meeting with Jeff Bezos, Sheryl Sandberg, and other tech titans in December. He is also reported to have secured the meeting with Mr Trump and Mr Murdoch, who was formerly an outspoken critic of him.

Mr Kushner's ability to negotiate is unsurprising given that he was left to take over his family’s real-estate business at the age of 25, after his father was sentenced to prison for 18 counts of tax evasion, witness tampering and making illegal campaign donations.

Likewise, Ivanka's influence on her father could be waning. The President’s third child, who is said be his "favourite", was subject to a torrent of memes and broadsides at the weekend after she shared a “date night” photo with Kushner while her father’s immigration ban unleashed chaos in airports across America. People accused her of “extreme insensitivity” and labelled the photo “wildly offensive”, “inappropriate” and “tone deaf”.

A source said to be familiar with the situation told Vanity Fair that Ivanka felt terrible about the post and did not want something like that to happen again. If true, this suggests the first daughter may not be best pleased with Mr Trump’s executive order, which has temporarily banned travellers from seven majority-Muslim nations.

The so-called power couple have already been put in the awkward position of having the preschool attended by their three-year-old son publicly condemn Mr Trump’s “Muslim ban”.

Adas Israel Congregation, a Conservative synagogue in Northwest Washington where Mr Trump’s grandchild Joseph Kushner attends preschool, released a statement on Sunday rebuking the President’s controversial immigration ban.

“The leadership and clergy of Adas Israel Congregation stands with the entire Conservative movement and other local organisations such as the Jewish Community Relations Council of Greater Washington in advocating for the rights of immigrants,“ the synagogue said in a statement on Facebook and in an email sent to synagogue members.


“And rejecting the targeting of individuals based on religion, and calling on the US government to reject policy proposals that would halt, limit, or curtail refugee resettlement in the US or prioritise certain refugees over others.”

Ivanka and Mr Kushner, both practising Jews, are in the awkward position of existing in a community which for the most part rejects the Trump presidency.

Just 24 per cent of Jews voted for Mr Trump and many leading Jews and Jewish organisations have voiced their concerns about Mr Trump’s policies and the issue of anti-Semitism among some of his supporters.


While Mr Kushner was brought up in the Modern Orthodox tradition, Ivanka converted to Orthodox Judaism before they got married. Prior to marrying, the couple reportedly broke up for a short period because Mr Kushner’s parents hoped he would marry a Jewish woman.

A representative for the Trump team did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

http://www.independent.co.uk/news/w...s-president-white-house-adviser-a7557436.html
 
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Victory2016

Alfrescian
Loyal
Will Pinky pee in his pants if he receives a call?

will Trump berate him for sucking up to Obama/Clinton ? I think he should
 

gatehousethetinkertailor

Alfrescian
Loyal
Malcolm Turnbull says Trump phone call worked in Australia's favour

Australia’s prime minister says ‘dozens and dozens’ of US members of congress expressed support for Australia after reports of a hostile exchange


Malcolm Turnbull says his infamous phone call with US president Donald Trump last week has worked in Australia’s favour, because it inspired “dozens and dozens” of US congressmen to publicly support the Australia-US alliance.

He has also admitted the Liberal Party’s been in serious financial trouble for a number of years, saying that is why he donated $1.75m to the party during the 2016 election campaign.

“It is a big challenge that we face,” he told Channel 9 on Sunday.

“The corporate sector, particularly public companies, are much more reluctant to make political donations to anybody and we face enormous financial resources from the unions and Labor, so there is no question we are at a massive disadvantage financially these days,” he said.

With the major political parties returning to Canberra this week for the first sitting week of the year, Turnbull said last week’s embarrassing phone call with Donald Trump was not a bad thing.

He said Trump’s administration has since agreed to honour the refugee-swap deal that he had made with former US president Barack Obama, and US leaders had made it known how highly they valued Australia’s friendship.

“So this has been a very good week for Australia,” Turnbull said.

Asked if he would now feel indebted to Trump if his Administration wanted Australian troops “for some Middle Eastern adventure” or for “ships in the South China Sea”, Turnbull said he would not.

“We assess all requests for military assistance on their merits,” he told Channel Nine.

“And there is no linkage, no linkage at all between an arrangement relating to a refugee resettlement and any other matters,” he said.

He said Australia’s military worked very closely with the US military so he would not be caught off-guard by any requests for military help from Trump.

Turnbull would not say whether his strong handling of Trump last week had helped to counter the perception that he was a weak leader.

Malcolm Turnbull questioned on claim Trump hung up on him
“It would be criminal of you, I think, if you didn’t consider whether your performance has got anything to do with the government’s problems. I mean have you done any self-examination?” he was asked.

Turnbull replied: “Well Laurie like all of us we we all reflect on what we do and how we can improve.”

On same sex marriage, which blew up dramatically on the weekend with news some Liberal backbenchers were contemplating making a fresh push for a free vote in parliament, Turnbull said his party’s policy for was a plebiscite.

“I took to the last election the policy of my party and my government which was to have a plebiscite,” he said.

“We are calling on Bill Shorten to rethink his position and if he supports the plebiscite, then it’ll pass through the Senate, then it will be held and every Australian will have a say.”

https://www.theguardian.com/austral...-trump-phone-call-worked-in-australias-favour


White House investigates leaks of Trump calls to Australia, Mexico
The White House is looking into how embarrassing details of President Donald Trump's recent tense phone conversations with his counterparts in Australia and Mexico were leaked to news organizations, White House spokesman Sean Spicer said on Fox News Channel.

"The president takes these leaks very seriously," Spicer said in an interview with Fox News Channel, which on Friday provided a transcript of a segment set to air on Saturday.

Trump cut short a phone call with Australian Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull after an acrimonious discussion about a refugee swap deal, a conversation that threatened ties between the two allies after details appeared in The Washington Post.

In an earlier call with Mexican President Enrique Pena Nieto about paying for a wall on the southern U.S. border, Trump said he might send the U.S. military to Mexico to stop drug cartels - details from a transcript obtained by a Mexican news organization Aristegui Noticias and the Associated Press. The White House later said the comments were meant to be lighthearted.

"That’s troubling and I think the president has asked the team to look into this because those are very serious implications," Spicer said.

Spicer described the conversations as "candid" but respectful, and has noted that both the Australian and Mexican governments have disputed some of the details.

White House officials did not respond to requests for comment on the investigation into the leaks.

Trump told politicians and faith leaders at a prayer breakfast that he was having difficult conversations with world leaders as he worked to overhaul immigration rules.

"Believe me, when you hear about the tough phone calls I'm having - don't worry about it. Just don't worry about it," Trump told the leaders.

http://www.reuters.com/article/us-usa-trump-leaks-idUSKBN15I321



"Investigation" is curious especially since he keeps tweeting about how tough he is on weak leaders and everything else he does. :rolleyes:
 
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