President Joe Biden lambastes Trump for Jan. 6 Capitol riot, a day ‘we nearly lost America’

President Joe Biden lambastes Trump for Jan. 6 Capitol riot, a day ‘we nearly lost America’
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President Joe Biden delivers a speech to mark the third anniversary of the January 6, 2021 attack on the US Capitol at a campaign event near Valley Forge, Pennsylvania, on January 5, 2024. (REUTERS)
President Joe Biden lambastes Trump for Jan. 6 Capitol riot, a day ‘we nearly lost America’
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President Joe Biden delivers a speech to mark the third anniversary of the January 6, 2021 attack on the US Capitol at a campaign event near Valley Forge, Pennsylvania, on January 5, 2024. (REUTERS)
President Joe Biden lambastes Trump for Jan. 6 Capitol riot, a day ‘we nearly lost America’
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President Joe Biden, with his wife Jill Biden by his side, delivers a speech to mark the third anniversary of the January 6, 2021 attack on the US Capitol at a campaign event near Valley Forge, Pennsylvania, on January 5, 2024. (REUTERS)
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Updated 06 January 2024
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President Joe Biden lambastes Trump for Jan. 6 Capitol riot, a day ‘we nearly lost America’

President Joe Biden lambastes Trump for Jan. 6 Capitol riot, a day ‘we nearly lost America’
  • Biden kickstarts campaign as Trump continues to lead race for Republican Party nomination
  • Warns that Trump’s efforts to return to power in 2024 pose a grave threat to the nation

VALLEY FORGE, Pennsylvania: President Joe Biden warned Friday that Donald Trump’s efforts to retake the White House in 2024 pose a grave threat to the country, the day before the third anniversary of the violent riot at the US Capitol by then-President Trump’s supporters aiming to keep him in power.
Speaking near Valley Forge, Pennsylvania, where George Washington and the Continental Army spent a bleak winter nearly 250 years ago, Biden said that Jan. 6 2021, marked a moment where “we nearly lost America — lost it all.” He said the presidential race — a likely rematch with Trump, who is the far and away GOP frontrunner — is “all about” whether American democracy will survive.
The speech, the president’s first political event of the election year, was intended to clarify the expected choice for voters this fall. Biden, who reentered political life because he felt he was best capable of defeating Trump in 2020, believes focusing on defending democracy to be central for persuading voters to reject Trump once again.
“We all know who Donald Trump is,” Biden said. “The question we have to answer is who are we?”
Biden, laid out Trump’s role in the Capitol attack, as a mob of the Republican’s supporters overran the building while lawmakers were counting Electoral College votes that certified Democrat Biden’s win. More than 100 police officers were bloodied, beaten and attacked by the rioters who overwhelmed authorities to break into the building.
“What’s Trump done? He’s called these insurrectionists ‘patriots,’” Biden said, “and he promised to pardon them if he returns to office.” He excoriated Trump for “glorifying” rather than condemning political violence
At least nine people who were at the Capitol that day died during or after the rioting, including several officers who died of suicide, a woman who was shot and killed by police as she tried to break into the House chamber, and three other Trump supporters who authorities said suffered medical emergencies.
Biden said that by “trying to rewrite the facts of Jan. 6, Trump is trying to steal history the same way he tried to steal the election.”
Trump, who faces 91 criminal charges stemming from his efforts to overturn his loss to Biden and three other felony cases, argues that Biden and top Democrats are themselves seeking to undermine democracy by using the legal system to thwart the campaign of his chief rival.
“Donald Trump’s campaign is about him,” Biden said, saying it was Trump’s aim to get retribution on his political enemies. “Not America. Not you. Donald Trump’s campaign is obsessed with the past, not the future.”
He added: “There’s no confusion about who Trump is or what he intends to do.”
Before his remarks, Biden, joined by his wife Jill, participated in a wreath laying ceremony at Valley Forge National Arch, which honors the troops who camped there from December 1777 to June 1778. He also toured the home that served as Washington’s headquarters.
Biden invoked Washington’s decision to resign his commission as the leader of the Continental Army after American independence was won — and the painting commemorating that moment that resides in the Capitol Rotunda — to cast Trump as unworthy of Washington’s legacy.
“He could have held onto that power as long as he wanted,” Biden said of Washington. “But that wasn’t the America he and the American troops of Valley Forge had fought for. In America, our leaders don’t hold on to power relentlessly. Our leaders return power to the people – willingly.”
Although the chaos of Jan. 6 came down on members of both political parties, it is being remembered in a largely polarized fashion now, like other aspects of political life in a divided country.
In the days after the attack, 52 percent of US adults said Trump bore a lot of responsibility for Jan. 6, according to the Pew Research Center. By early 2022, that had declined to 43 percent. The number of Americans who said Trump bore no responsibility increased from 24 percent in 2021 to 32 percent in 2022.
A Washington Post-University of Maryland poll released this week found that about 7 in 10 Republicans say too much is being made of the attack. Just 18 percent of GOP supporters say that protesters who entered the Capitol were “mostly violent,” down from 26 percent in 2021, while 77 percent of Democrats and 54 percent of independents say the protesters were mostly violent, essentially unchanged from 2021.
Biden said that “politics, fear, money” have led many Republicans to abandon their criticism of Trump after the Jan. 6 attack.
“These MAGA voices who know the truth about Trump and Jan. 6th have abandoned the truth and abandoned democracy,” Biden said. “They’ve made their choice. Now the rest of us – Democrats, Independents, mainstream Republicans – we have to make our choice. I know mine. And I believe I know America’s.”
Biden has frequently invoked the dangers of Jan. 6 since his 2021 inauguration on the same Capitol steps where police officers were struggling to battle back rioters just two weeks earlier. On the first anniversary of the Jan. 6 attack, Biden had stood in the Capitol’s Statuary Hall, a historic spot where the House of Representatives used to meet before the Civil War. On Jan. 6, rioters filled the area, some looking for lawmakers who had run for cover.
“They weren’t looking to uphold the will of the people,” Biden said of the rioters. “They were looking to deny the will of the people.”
On the second anniversary, Biden presented the nation’s second highest civilian award to 12 people who were involved in defending the Capitol during the attack.
Friday’s appearance included supporters and young people motivated by the attack to get involved in politics, campaign advisers said.


UK’s Starmer faces calls for detail on trumpeted EU ‘reset’ plans

UK’s Starmer faces calls for detail on trumpeted EU ‘reset’ plans
Updated 5 min 41 sec ago
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UK’s Starmer faces calls for detail on trumpeted EU ‘reset’ plans

UK’s Starmer faces calls for detail on trumpeted EU ‘reset’ plans
  • UK leader under pressure to be more precise about what exactly he wants for Britain from the EU — and what he is willing to give in return

LONDON: UK leader Keir Starmer heads to Brussels on Wednesday for the first time as prime minister, looking to build on a promised “reset” of relations with the European Union that were strained by Brexit.
Starmer will hold his first formal meeting with European Commission president Ursula von der Leyen since his Labour party ousted the Conservatives from power in a general election in July.
It is a further sign of new British goodwill toward European neighbors following the UK’s rancorous 2020 departure from the bloc under Brexit champion Boris Johnson.
But Starmer is also under pressure to be more precise about what exactly he wants for Britain from the EU — and what he is willing to give in return.
“It’s symbolic of this great blowing away of the fog that’s been across the Channel,” professor Richard Whitman, an EU expert at the University of Kent, said.
“But I think it’s also probably the prelude to a reality check on the side of the UK that it’s going to be a long old slog if you’re going to get anything worth boasting about in terms of improving the relationship.”
Starmer’s Brussels sojourn follows recent bilateral meetings with French President Emmanuel Macron, German Chancellor Olaf Scholz and Italian premier Giorgia Meloni.
In July, he hosted dozens of leaders at the European Political Community meeting in July and pledged to rebuild bridges with Europe.
Downing Street said Starmer will use the Brussels trip to discuss “his ambitions for the next few months” with von der Leyen and other EU leaders.
Ahead of the visit, he said he was “so determined to put the Brexit years behind us and establish a more pragmatic and mature relationship” with the EU.
Starmer, who voted in the 2016 referendum to remain in the EU, has insisted that his reset will not mean reversing Brexit, which remains a politically toxic subject in the UK.
Instead, Labour wants improvements to the existing Trade and Co-operation Agreement between the UK and the EU that is due for renewal in 2026.
These include negotiating a new security pact with the 27-member bloc, a veterinary agreement to ease border checks on farm produce and mutual recognition of professional qualifications.
But Starmer has put forward little detail, while also laying down red lines for any negotiations, pledging no return to the European single market or customs union, or any return to freedom of movement.
“Starmer has to present the plan,” said Mujtaba Rahman, managing director for Europe at political risk consultancy Eurasia Group.
Starmer has also poured cold water on the EU’s big proposal so far — a youth mobility scheme for 18- to 30-year-olds.
Brexit ended the free movement of EU citizens to live and work in Britain, and vice versa.
The EU would like younger people from its member countries to be able to move freely in the UK.
But Starmer has rejected the idea over fears it looks too much like freedom of movement. The interior ministry is resistant to anything that increases levels of legal migration.
The EU’s ambassador to the UK, Pedro Serrano, played down the notion that the proposal was a stumbling block last week, when he likened it to a “gap year” that would not give EU citizens the right to work in Britain.
Analysts say Labour could be tempted by a limited exchange program if it helps to achieve its overarching objective of boosting economic growth.
Starmer met von der Leyen on the sidelines of the UN General Assembly last month.
According to European Commission spokesman Eric Mamer, Wednesday’s meeting “will simply be the beginning of a conversation.”
An EU diplomat speaking on condition of anonymity insisted the chat would focus on “broad brushstrokes,” with nothing concrete expected from it.
“The general feeling is that yes, there’s a positive mood, yes, we need to keep on implementing the current agreements and yes, there may be areas where there could be the possibility for structured cooperation.
“But a lot of work would need to go in to defining how anything could work,” the diplomat said.


Danish police investigate two blasts near Israel’s embassy in Copenhagen

Danish police investigate two blasts near Israel’s embassy in Copenhagen
Updated 32 min 20 sec ago
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Danish police investigate two blasts near Israel’s embassy in Copenhagen

Danish police investigate two blasts near Israel’s embassy in Copenhagen
  • Investigators were seen wearing coverall suits as they combed the scene for evidence

COPENHAGEN: Danish police said on Wednesday they were investigating two blasts in the vicinity of Israel’s embassy in the northern outskirts of Copenhagen.
“No one has been injured, and we are carrying out initial investigations at the scene,” Copenhagen police said on social media platform X.
“A possible connection to the Israeli embassy, ​​located in the area, is being investigated,” they said.
A large area was cordoned off amid heavy police presence, according to local media reports.
Investigators were seen wearing coverall suits as they combed the scene for evidence, tabloid B.T. reported.
The Israeli embassy was not immediately available for comment when contacted by Reuters.
Police said they will give an update on the investigation at 0530 GMT.


Thai police arrest driver and work to identify victims of the school bus fire that killed 23

Thai police arrest driver and work to identify victims of the school bus fire that killed 23
Updated 02 October 2024
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Thai police arrest driver and work to identify victims of the school bus fire that killed 23

Thai police arrest driver and work to identify victims of the school bus fire that killed 23
  • The fire started while the bus was on a highway north of the capital and spread so quickly many were unable to escape

BANGKOK: Thai police have arrested the driver of a bus carrying young students and teachers that caught fire and killed 23 in suburban Bangkok, as families arrived in the capital Wednesday to help identify their loved ones.
The bus carrying six teachers and 39 students in elementary and junior high school was traveling from Uthai Thani province, about 300 kilometers north of Bangkok, for a school trip in Ayutthaya and Nonthaburi provinces Tuesday. The fire started while the bus was on a highway north of the capital and spread so quickly many were unable to escape.
Trairong Phiwpan, head of the police forensic department, said 23 bodies were recovered from the bus. The recovery work and confirmation of the total dead had been delayed earlier because the burned vehicle, which was fueled with natural gas, remained too hot to enter for hours.
The families were driven from Uthai Thani in vans to the the forensic department at the Police General Hospital in Bangkok on Wednesday to provide their DNA samples for the identification process. Kornchai Klaiklung, assistant to the Royal Thai Police chief, told reporters the forensics team was working as fast as it could to identify the victims.
The driver, identified by the police as Saman Chanput, surrendered Tuesday evening several hours after the fire. Police said they have charged him with reckless driving causing deaths and injuries, failing to stop to help others and failing to report the accident.
The driver told investigators he was driving normally until the bus lost balance at its front left tire, hit another car and scraped a concrete highway barrier, causing the sparks that ignited the blaze, Chayanont Meesati, deputy regional police chief, told reporters.
The driver said he ran to grab a fire extinguisher from another bus that was traveling for the same trip but he could not put out the fire, and ran away because he panicked, Chayanont said.
Police said they are also investigating whether the bus company followed all safety standards.
In an interview with public broadcaster Thai PBS, bus company owner Songwit Chinnaboot said the bus was inspected for safety twice a year as required and that the gas cylinders had passed the safety standards. He also said he would compensate the victims’ families as best as he could.
Three students are hospitalized, and the hospital said two of them were in serious condition. A 7-year-old girl suffered burns on her face, and a surgeon said doctors were doing their best to try to save her eyesight.


Taiwan shuts down for Typhoon Krathon, torrential rain forecast

Taiwan shuts down for Typhoon Krathon, torrential rain forecast
Updated 02 October 2024
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Taiwan shuts down for Typhoon Krathon, torrential rain forecast

Taiwan shuts down for Typhoon Krathon, torrential rain forecast
  • Although the typhoon has weakened, the threats from a storm surge, strong winds and rain remain
  • The typhoon has revived the older generation’s bad memories of Thelma, prompting extra precautions

KAOHSIUNG, Taiwan: Taiwan shut down on Wednesday, grounding hundreds of flights and closing schools, offices and financial markets ahead of the arrival of a weakening Typhoon Krathon, forecast to lash the coast with storm surges and torrential rain.
Officials in the key port city of Kaohsiung, set to be in the eye of the storm, told people to stay home and avoid the sea, rivers and mountains, warning of a repeat of 1977’s Typhoon Thelma that killed 37 and devastated the city of 2.7 million.
Although the typhoon has weakened, the threats from a storm surge, strong winds and rain remain as it slowly makes its way toward Taiwan’s coast, weather forecasters said.
The typhoon would lose power once it hit land, said Kaohsiung mayor Chen Chi-mai, but would still bring intense winds and rain.
“But if it moves north, the winds will strengthen again, so the threat to Kaohsiung will continue to exist, and people cannot take this lightly,” he told reporters.
All the island’s cities and counties declared a day off, shutting financial markets and canceling domestic flights, along with 246 international ones, while more than 10,000 people were evacuated, mostly in the south and east.
Typhoons often hit Taiwan’s mountainous and sparsely populated east coast facing the Pacific, but Krathon is set to make landfall on its flat western plain.
It is forecast to hit between Kaohsiung and its neighboring city of Tainan in the early hours of Thursday, before heading northeast up toward Taipei, the capital, the Central Weather Administration (CWA) said.
“Because of Typhoon Gaemi being quite severe earlier this year, everyone is more cautious and prepared this time around,” said sales representative Yu Ren-yu, 35, picking up sandbags at a government office, referring to July’s storm that killed 11.
“First be prepared, then we can face this typhoon.”
The typhoon has revived the older generation’s bad memories of Thelma, prompting extra precautions, said Chou Yi-tang, a government official working in the Siaogang district home to the airport.
“We were hit directly by the eyewall,” he added, describing events almost five decades ago. “Power was out for two weeks and no water for almost a month. It was disastrous.”
More than 700 sandbags have been distributed in his district, a record for a typhoon, while authorities are making more to meet demand, Chou said.
Taiwan’s defense ministry said it had put more than 38,000 troops on standby.
The fire department reported 46 injuries, mostly in the mountainous eastern county of Taitung, with one person missing in the central county of Yunlin.
The north-south high speed rail line stayed open, but scaled back services.
TSMC, the world’s largest contract chipmaker and a major Apple and Nvidia supplier, said on Tuesday it did not expect the typhoon would have a significant impact on operations.
TSMC’s factories are along the west coast, some in the city of Tainan.


Walz, Vance argue running mates would reduce Mideast instability

Walz, Vance argue running mates would reduce Mideast instability
Updated 02 October 2024
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Walz, Vance argue running mates would reduce Mideast instability

Walz, Vance argue running mates would reduce Mideast instability
  • The role of a presidential running mate is typically to serve as an attack dog for the person at the top of the ticket, arguing against the opposing presidential candidate and their proxy on stage

NEW YORK: Tim Walz and JD Vance on Tuesday each pointed to the crises of the day as reasons for voters to choose their respective running mates for president, opening their vice presidential debate by addressing the growing fears of a regional war in the Middle East and a natural disaster that has ravaged the southeastern US
Walz, answering a question on whether he’d support a preemptive strike on Iran as it’s launched missiles into Israel, quickly pivoted to painting Donald Trump as too dangerous for the country and the world in an unstable moment.
“What’s fundamental here is that steady leadership is going to matter,” said Walz, the Democratic governor of Minnesota. “And the world saw it on that debate stage a few weeks ago, a nearly 80-year-old Donald Trump talking about crowd sizes is not what we need in this moment.”
Vance, in his reply, argued that Trump is an intimidating figure whose presence on the international stage is its own deterrent.
“Donald Trump actually delivered stability,” he said.
The debate in New York hosted by CBS News opened with a sober tone that reflected growing domestic and international concerns about safety and security. It gives Vance, a Republican freshman senator from Ohio, and Walz, a two-term Democratic governor of Minnesota, the chance to introduce themselves, make the case for their running mates, and go on the attack against the opposing ticket.
Both men found unity on Hurricane Helene, which has devastated several states and caused massive flooding in North Carolina in particular. Walz mentioned the storm’s devastation and talked about working with governors across the country, saying they don’t let politics get in the way of collaborating.
Vance said, “I’m sure Gov. Walz joins me in saying our hearts go out to those innocent people.”
Tuesday’s matchup could have an outsized impact. Polls have shown Vice President Kamala Harris and former President Donald Trump locked in a close contest, giving added weight to anything that can sway voters on the margins, including the impression left by the vice presidential candidates. It also might be the last debate of the campaign, with the Harris and Trump teams failing to agree on another meeting.
The role of a presidential running mate is typically to serve as an attack dog for the person at the top of the ticket, arguing against the opposing presidential candidate and their proxy on stage. Both Vance and Walz have embraced that role.
Vance’s occasionally confrontational news interviews and appearances on the campaign trail have underscored why Trump picked him for the Republican ticket despite his past biting criticisms of the former president, including once suggesting Trump would be “America’s Hitler.”
Walz, meanwhile, catapulted onto Harris’ campaign by branding Trump and Republicans as ” just weird,” creating an attack line for Democrats seeking to argue Republicans are disconnected from the American people.
A new AP-NORC poll found that Walz is better liked than Vance, potentially giving the Republican an added challenge.
After a Harris-Trump debate in which Republicans complained about the ABC News moderators fact-checking Trump, Tuesday’s debate will not feature any corrections from the hosts. CBS News said the onus for pointing out misstatements will be on the candidates, with moderators “facilitating those opportunities.”
Trump, on Tuesday evening, said his advice to Vance was to “have a lot of fun” and praised his running mate as a “smart guy” and “a real warrior.”
As they’ve campaigned, both Walz and Vance have played up their roots in small towns in middle America, broadening the appeal of Harris and Trump, who hail from California and New York, respectively.
Walz, 60, frequently invokes his past job coaching a high school football team as he speaks about his campaign with Harris bringing “joy” back to politics and weds his critiques of the GOP to a message to Democrats that they need to “leave it all on the field.”
Walz, a Nebraska native, was a geography teacher before he was elected to Congress in 2006. He spent a dozen years there before he was elected governor in 2018, winning a second term four years later.
He also served 24 years in the Army National Guard before retiring in 2005. His exit and description of his service have drawn harsh criticism from Vance, who served in the Marine Corps, including in Iraq.
The 40-year-old Vance became nationally known in 2016 with the publication of his memoir, “Hillbilly Elegy,” which recounts his childhood in Ohio and his family’s roots in rural Kentucky. The book was cited frequently after Trump’s 2016 win as a window into working-class white voters who supported his campaign. Vance went to Yale Law School before working as a venture capitalist in Silicon Valley.
After the publication of his book, he was a prominent critic of Trump’s before he morphed into a staunch defender of the former president, especially on issues like trade, foreign policy and immigration.