Republican leaders urge colleagues to steer clear of racist and sexist attacks on Harris

Republican leaders urge colleagues to steer clear of racist and sexist attacks on Harris
Vice President Kamala Harris campaigns for President as the presumptive Democratic candidate during an event at West Allis Central High School on Tuesday, July 23, 2024, in West Allis, Wis. (AP)
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Updated 24 July 2024
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Republican leaders urge colleagues to steer clear of racist and sexist attacks on Harris

Republican leaders urge colleagues to steer clear of racist and sexist attacks on Harris
  • The warnings point to the new risks for Republicans in running against a Democrat who would become the first woman, first Black woman and first person of South Asian decent to win the White House

WASHINGTON: Republican leaders are warning party members against using overtly racist and sexist attacks against Vice President Kamala Harris, as they and former President Donald Trump ‘s campaign scramble to adjust to the reality of a new Democratic rival less than four months before Election Day.
At a closed-door meeting of House Republicans on Tuesday, National Republican Congressional Committee chairman Richard Hudson, R-N.C., urged lawmakers to stick to criticizing Harris for her role in Biden-Harris administration policies.
“This election will be about policies and not personalities,” House Speaker Mike Johnson told reporters after the meeting.
“This is not personal with regard to Kamala Harris,” he added, “and her ethnicity or her gender have nothing to do with this whatsoever.”
The warnings point to the new risks for Republicans in running against a Democrat who would become the first woman, first Black woman and first person of South Asian decent to win the White House. Trump, in particular, has a history of racist and misogynistic attacks that could turn off key groups of swing voters, including suburban women, as well as voters of color and younger people Trump’s campaign has been courting.
The admonitions came after some members and Trump allies began to cast Harris, a former district attorney, attorney general and senator, as a “DEI” hire — a reference to diversity, equity and inclusion initiatives.
“Intellectually, just really kind of the bottom of the barrel,” Wyoming Rep. Harriet Hageman said in a TV interview. “I think she was a DEI hire. And I think that that’s what we’re seeing and I just don’t think that they have anybody else.”
Since Biden announced he was exiting the campaign, Republicans have rolled out a long list of attack lines against Harris, including trying to tie her to the most unpopular Biden policies and his handling of the economy and the Southern border. Trump campaign officials and other Republicans have accused Harris of being complicit in a cover-up of Biden’s health issues, and they have been mining her record as a prosecutor in California as they try to paint her as soft on crime.
Johnson said both Trump and Harris have records in White House policy and said voters can compare how families were doing under the Trump administration with how they’re doing now under Biden.
“She is the co-owner, co-author, co-conspirator in all the policies that got us into the mess,” Johnson said.
Biden announced Sunday that he was withdrawing from the race. In a memo on the state of the race Tuesday, Trump campaign pollster Tony Fabrizio argued the fundamentals of the campaign had not changed now that Harris appears increasingly likely to be the Democratic nominee.
“The Democrats deposing one Nominee for another does NOT change voters discontent over the economy, inflation, crime, the open border, housing costs not to mention concern over two foreign wars,” he wrote. “As importantly, voters will also learn about Harris’ dangerously liberal record before becoming Biden’s partner.”
In similar messaging, Hudson told members at the Tuesday meeting that the NRCC is focusing on how Harris is even more progressive than Biden and essentially “owns” all the administration’s policies, according to a person familiar with the conversation and granted anonymity to discuss it.
Sen. Steve Daines, who chairs the National Republican Senatorial Committee, echoed that criticism, calling Harris “too liberal.”
“She’s not an Irish Catholic kid who grew up in Scranton. She’s a San Francisco liberal,” Daines said.
Trump offered a similar argument in call with reporters Tuesday.
“She’s the same as Biden but much more radical. She’s a radical left person and this country doesn’t want a radical left person to destroy it. She’s far more radical than he is,” he said.
“So I think she should be easier than Biden because he was slightly more mainstream, but not much,” he added.
Later, in an interview on Newsmax, Trump claimed Harris “destroyed the city of San Francisco,” though she left her job as district attorney there in 2011, and called her “the worst at everything.”
“Kamala Harris is just as weak, failed and incompetent as Joe Biden — and she’s also dangerously liberal,” the Trump campaign said in a statement. “Not only does Kamala need to defend her support of Joe Biden’s failed agenda over the past four years, she also needs to answer for her own terrible weak-on-crime record in California.”
Trump has a long history of launching particularly caustic and personal attacks against women, from former Fox News host Megyn Kelly to his 2016 primary opponent Carly Fiorina to New York Attorney General Letitia James, who successfully sued him and his business for fraud.
In a sign of what could come, Trump in a Fourth of July message on his Truth Social network took a jab at Harris’ poor performance in the 2020 Democratic primary, adding “that doesn’t mean she’s not a ‘highly talented’ politician! Just ask her Mentor, the Great Willie Brown of San Francisco.” Harris dated Brown in the mid-1990s.
Strong and intelligent women who attack him seem to get especially under Trump’s skin, said Stephanie Grisham, a 2016 campaign aide who served for a time as Trump’s White House press secretary, before breaking with him after the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the US Capitol.
“She’s going to get a real rise out of him,” predicted Grisham, noting that when Trump is attacked, he “punches 1,000 times harder. He’s not going to be able to help himself.”
When it comes to women, she added: “His go-to is to attack looks and to call women dumb. It’s his go-to and I don’t expect this to be any different.”
Rep. Maxine Waters of California, who is a prominent member of the Congressional Black Caucus and was among the early Democrats to confront Trump, said she is well-braced for what’s ahead as the Republicans turn the campaign toward Harris.
“The first thing I think about are the attacks that are going to come from the Trump, the MAGA right wing — that have already started,” Waters told the AP. “They’re going to be nasty they’re going to be bad.”
She predicted that approach might backfire on Trump.
“The danger is that he’s so arrogant and egotistical that he’s going to step on women and it’s going to backfire,” she said.
The dynamics could be heightened on the debate stage, if Trump goes through with debating Harris, as he said Thursday he would.
Republican pollster Neil Newhouse said Trump was unlikely to debate Harris in the same way he would debate Biden — or the same way he debated another female rival, Democrat Hillary Clinton, in 2016.
“I don’t think Trump can approach a debate against Kamala Harris with the same tone that he approached the debate with Hillary Clinton. Kamala Harris does not have the negatives that Hillary had and she is a relatively new political face,” he said. “Caution might be warranted.”


Russia holds three over alleged plot to attack church

Russia holds three over alleged plot to attack church
Updated 41 sec ago
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Russia holds three over alleged plot to attack church

Russia holds three over alleged plot to attack church

MOSCOW: Russian investigators said Wednesday they had held three people for allegedly plotting a terrorist attack on a church in Ingushetia, a small Muslim-majority republic in the Caucasus region.
The three Russian nationals were preparing to attack a church in the city of Sunzha, the regional branch of the investigative committee in Ingushetia said on Telegram.
Investigators have opened a criminal case against the three for “participation in the activities of a terrorist organization” and “preparation to commit a terrorist act by prior conspiracy.”
“During the investigation and related searches, it was established that the defendants... were planning to commit sabotage and terrorist acts in the region,” they said.
Those arrested are members of the Islamic State (IS) group, according to a source familiar with the case quoted by the Ria Novosti news agency.
Russia regularly announces that it has foiled plans for attacks by presumed Islamist cells. IS has repeatedly pledged to target Russia over its support of Syrian leader Bashar Assad.
In March, 145 people were killed in an attack on a Moscow concert hall — the most deadly terror attack in Russia for two decades.
A Central Asian branch of IS claimed responsibility for the attack and four suspected gunmen, now in pre-trial detention, are citizens of Tajikistan.
Last week, inmates killed at least three Russian prison guards in a prison siege, according to officials, with the assailants having apparent connections to IS.
Russian special forces stormed the facility in Russia’s southern Volgograd region and shot dead all four attackers after an hours-long stand-off.
It was the second such case of IS-affiliated prisoners taking staff hostage since June.


UK’s Starmer in Berlin for talks to reset ties with Europe

UK’s Starmer in Berlin for talks to reset ties with Europe
Updated 5 min 48 sec ago
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UK’s Starmer in Berlin for talks to reset ties with Europe

UK’s Starmer in Berlin for talks to reset ties with Europe
  • Prime Minister wants Britain to move beyond the previous Conservative government’s fractious relations with European allies
  • Britain and Germany, NATO allies and western Europe’s biggest defense spenders, are looking for ways to increase defense cooperation

BERLIN: British Prime Minister Keir Starmer will discuss a landmark economic and defense accord with German leaders on Wednesday, hoping to use a two-day visit to the European Union’s top powers Germany and France to reset relations with the rest of the bloc.
Starmer said he wanted Britain to move beyond the previous Conservative government’s fractious relations with European allies and put improved ties at the heart of his efforts to boost Britain’s economic growth.
In Berlin on Tuesday, Starmer visited the landmark Brandenburg Gate, before meeting President Frank-Walter Steinmeier early on Wednesday. Later, he was greeted with military honors by German Chancellor Olaf Scholz outside the chancellery under a bright blue sky.
Starmer will discuss with Scholz, a fellow leftist, a new pact they hope will bring about an unprecedented degree of bilateral military cooperation and greater collaboration in areas such as trade and energy.
The pair will hold a joint press conference at midday.
“We must turn a corner on Brexit and fix the broken relationships left behind by the previous government,” Starmer said in a statement. “We have a once-in-a-generation opportunity to reset our relationship with Europe.”
Britain and Germany, NATO allies and western Europe’s biggest defense spenders, are looking for ways to increase defense cooperation ahead of a possible scaling back of US military support for Ukraine if former US President Donald Trump returns to the White House early next year.
The Republican presidential candidate has warned that if elected, he would fundamentally rethink “NATO’s purpose and NATO’s mission.” He has also not committed to sending further aid to Ukraine and said he would not defend allies that do not increase their defense budgets. Trump is locked in a tight race with Vice President Kamala Harris in the Nov. 5 election.
Concerns that the US could cut back support for Ukraine have increased since Trump picked JD Vance as his running mate. Vance has stressed his opposition to the US writing “blank checks” to help Ukraine fight off Russia’s two-and-a-half-year-old invasion.
An Anglo-German defense partnership could resemble the Lancaster House pact between Britain and France agreed in 2010, according to officials, with pledges to create a joint force and share equipment and nuclear missile research centers.
The two sides will continue negotiations over the next six months with the aim of completing the deal early next year, according to Starmer’s office. It would follow the signing of a joint defense declaration in July.
On his trip to Germany, Starmer will also hold talks with business leaders including Armin Papperger, chief executive of German arms manufacturer Rheinmetall, who according to media reports last month was the target of a Russian assassination plot. The Kremlin said the reports were fake and could not be taken seriously.
He will also meet Christian Bruch, Siemens Energy’s CEO, which employs about 6,000 people in Britain, to discuss further investment and creating more highly skilled jobs.
After the talks in Germany, Starmer will head to Paris for the Paralympics opening ceremony on Wednesday night, and hold a breakfast meeting on Thursday with executives from companies including Thales, Eutelsat, Mistral AI and Sanofi.
Starmer is expected to meet Paralympic athletes as they prepare for competition, before having talks with President Emmanuel Macron at the Elysee Palace.


Thousands told to evacuate as ‘extremely strong’ typhoon nears Japan

Thousands told to evacuate as ‘extremely strong’ typhoon nears Japan
Updated 4 min 51 sec ago
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Thousands told to evacuate as ‘extremely strong’ typhoon nears Japan

Thousands told to evacuate as ‘extremely strong’ typhoon nears Japan
  • Typhoon Shanshan is expected to approach southern Kyushu with extremely strong force through Thursday and it may make landfall
  • Shanshan comes in the wake of Typhoon Ampil, which disrupted hundreds of flights and trains this month

TOKYO: Japan braced Wednesday for its strongest typhoon of the year, with authorities advising tens of thousands of people to evacuate and issuing the highest warning level for wind and storm surges on the main southern island of Kyushu.
“Typhoon Shanshan is expected to approach southern Kyushu with extremely strong force through Thursday and it may make landfall,” Chief Cabinet Secretary Yoshimasa Hayashi told reporters.
“It is expected that violent winds, high waves, and storm surge at levels that many people have never experienced before may occur,” said Hayashi, the top government spokesman.
The approach of the storm, packing gusts of up to 252 kilometers (157 miles) per hour and already bringing widespread heavy rain, prompted auto giant Toyota to suspend production at all 14 of its factories.
Two people remained unaccounted for on Wednesday after a landslide buried a house with five family members inside in Gamagori, a city in central Aichi prefecture.
Rescuers worked around the clock and on Wednesday afternoon they pulled out a woman in her 70s.
“She wasn’t breathing and was unconscious,” a Gamagori official said. They were still searching for a man in his 70s and another in his 30s.
For southern Kyushu the Japan Meteorological Agency (JMA) predicted 1,100 millimeters (43 inches) of precipitation in the 48 hours to Friday morning.
The JMA also issued its highest “special warning” for violent storms, waves and high tides in parts of the Kagoshima region of Kyushu, with authorities there advising 56,000 people to evacuate.
Video on NHK TV showed roof tiles being blown off houses, broken windows and felled trees.
The warnings indicate that the “possibility that a major disaster prompted by (the typhoon) is extremely high,” Satoshi Sugimoto, chief forecaster of JMA, told a news conference.
Japan Airlines canceled 172 domestic flights and six international flights scheduled for Wednesday and Thursday, while ANA nixed 219 domestic flights and four international ones on Wednesday, Thursday and Friday.
The cancelations affected around 25,000 people.
Kyushu Railway said it would suspend some Shinkansen bullet train services between Kumamoto and Kagoshima Chuo from Wednesday night and warned of further possible disruption.
Trains between Tokyo and Fukuoka, the most populous city on Kyushu, may also be canceled depending on weather conditions this week, other operators said.
Shanshan comes in the wake of Typhoon Ampil, which disrupted hundreds of flights and trains this month.
Despite dumping heavy rain, it caused only minor injuries and damage.
Ampil came days after Tropical Storm Maria brought record rains to northern areas.
Typhoons in the region have been forming closer to coastlines, intensifying more rapidly and lasting longer over land due to climate change, according to a study released last month.


Turkiye to join EU meeting in Brussels after five year absence

Turkiye to join EU meeting in Brussels after five year absence
Updated 38 min 5 sec ago
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Turkiye to join EU meeting in Brussels after five year absence

Turkiye to join EU meeting in Brussels after five year absence
  • Turkiye has been an EU candidate since 1999 and launched membership talks in 2005 – but the process has been frozen for years
  • Brussels is concerned by Turkiye’s human rights record, especially after a failed coup attempt that followed mass purges

ISTANBUL: The Turkish foreign minister will on Thursday attend an informal meeting of the European Union in Brussels for the first time in five years, a Turkish diplomatic source said.
Turkiye has been an EU candidate since 1999 and launched membership talks in 2005 — but the process has been frozen for years on a number of fronts.
Ankara and Brussels have a sometimes fraught relation, with the EU relying on Turkiye to house migrants from Syria, but clashing with it on its approach to Greece and the divided island of Cyprus.
Brussels is also concerned by Turkiye’s human rights record, especially after a failed coup attempt that followed mass purges which also targeted opponents of the government.
“We consider the EU’s invitation (to attend the meeting) as a search for dialogue with regard to our calls to revive relations with Turkiye,” the Turkish diplomatic source said.
Ankara hopes Thursday’s meeting would help open dialogue channels.
Foreign Minister Hakan Fidan is expected to meet with senior EU officials in Brussels including foreign policy chief Josep Borrell and enlargement commissioner Oliver Varhelyi.
“It will be in favor of both sides to improve relations in the face of regional and global challenges,” the diplomatic source said.
“Turkiye’s clear stance on the Cyprus issue will once again be explained to the EU side.”
On Cyprus, the EU has opposed calls from Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan for a two-state solution and wants to see Ankara allow new UN-mediated talks.
EU member Cyprus has been divided since 1974 when Turkish forces occupied its northern third in response to a military coup sponsored by the junta then in power in Greece.
The statehood of the republic Turkish Cypriot leaders proclaimed in 1983 is recognized only by Ankara.
Fidan’s talks with his European counterparts will also focus on a new customs union and an easing of visa rules for Turkish citizens.
The Turkish minister is also expected to meet with his Greek counterpart Giorgos Gerapetritis on the margins of the gathering.


Bangladesh probes enforced disappearance by security forces under ousted Hasina 

Bangladesh probes enforced disappearance by security forces under ousted Hasina 
Updated 56 min 8 sec ago
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Bangladesh probes enforced disappearance by security forces under ousted Hasina 

Bangladesh probes enforced disappearance by security forces under ousted Hasina 
  • Human Rights Watch says security forces committed “over 600 enforced disappearances” since Hasina came to power in 2009
  • Many of those detained were from Hasina’s rivals, the Bangladesh Nationalist Party and Jamaat-e-Islami, the country’s largest Islamist party

Dhaka: Bangladesh’s new authorities on Wednesday opened an investigation into hundreds of enforced disappearances by security forces during the rule of ousted premier Sheikh Hasina, the government said.
It includes the notorious Rapid Action Battalion (RAB) paramilitary force, accused of numerous rights abuses, and which was sanctioned by the United States for its role in extrajudicial killings and enforced disappearances.
Human Rights Watch last year said security forces had committed “over 600 enforced disappearances” since Hasina came to power in 2009, and nearly 100 remain unaccounted for.
Many of those detained were from Hasina’s rivals, the Bangladesh Nationalist Party and Jamaat-e-Islami, the country’s largest Islamist party.
Hasina’s government consistently denied the allegations, claiming some of those reported missing had drowned in the Mediterranean while trying to reach Europe.
Hasina fled to India by helicopter on August 5 after weeks of student-led protests forced her to quit, ending her iron-fisted 15-year rule.
The five-member committee, headed by retired high court judge Moyeenul Islam Chowdhury, will also investigate other paramilitary police units, including the Border Guard Bangladesh (BGB), a government order late Tuesday said.
The UN rights office says both the RAB and BGB forces have “records of serious human rights violations, including enforced disappearances and torture and ill-treatment.”
The commission, ordered to begin work by the interim government led by Nobel Peace Prize laureate Muhammad Yunus, has 45 working days to submit its report.
Sanjida Islam Tulee, a coordinator of a group campaigning for the release of people detained under Hasina, welcomed the commission.
“Most importantly, the report needs to be published fully and no information is kept hidden,” Tulee told AFP, who heads the group called Mayer Daak, meaning “The Call of the Mothers.”
Tulee, who along with those who searching for missing relatives met earlier this month with Yunus asking for action, said she wanted the commission to listen to every family without discrimination.
She said they wanted the return of those missing, and for those responsible to face justice.
More than 600 people were killed in the weeks leading up to Hasina’s ouster, according to the United Nations rights team’s preliminary report, suggesting the toll was “likely an underestimate.”
The day after she fled, families gathered outside a military intelligence force building in Dhaka waiting desperately for their relatives.
But only a handful have been confirmed as released.