President Donald Trump unveiled a deal Thursday with drugmakers Eli Lilly and Novo Nordisk to expand coverage and reduce prices for the popular obesity treatments Zepbound and Wegovy.
Tag: Donald Trump
Jury deliberates in assault case against DC man who threw sandwich at federal agent in viral video
WASHINGTON (AP) A jury began deliberating Wednesday in the Justice Department’s assault case against a man who threw a.
Karoline Leavitt Gives The Worst Possible Answer To Why Trump Had An MRI
The American people deserve to know about the health of the president, but White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt couldn’t be straight about Trump’s health.
‘Breaking the law’: Trump blasted after threatening to defy judges’ orders on SNAP funds
Despite two federal judges ordering the Trump administration to fund food stamps for 42 million Americans whose payments were shut down on Saturday, President Donald Trump said he will not do so until the federal government is reopened. SNAP benefits, Trump wrote on social media, “will be given only when the Radical Left Democrats open up government, which they can easily do, and not before!”The New York Times reported that “Tens of millions of Americans will get only partial payments from the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program for this month, the Trump administration told a federal judge on Monday, and it was not clear when even those reduced benefits would be distributed.” Critics were quick to respond.“The president appears to be saying he will NOT abide by the court order to release SNAP benefits even though the WH said they would partially release them,” The Bulwark’s Sam Stein wrote. He added, “an hour ago Trump’s own Ag Sec was explaining that they’d given guidance to states about how to administer SNAP benefits from the emergency fund. Now Trump is saying he won’t pay those benefits until the government is reopened.”“Trump is both defying a court order and taking ownership of the ending of food benefits for needy people all during a shutdown fight that polls show him losing,” Stein observed, “and doing this just days after his Great Gatsby party!”Media Matters’ senior fellow Matthew Gertz wrote: “Since the ‘No Kings’ rallies, the president has launched an ill-defined bombing campaign without congressional sanction; orchestrated federal charges against his enemies; promised not to release appropriated funds to a jurisdiction if it elects someone he opposes.” He added, “and now” before pointing to Stein’s remarks on Trump’s refusal. U. S. Senator Chris Coons (D-DE) remarked: “To be clear, Trump isn’t just trying to deny food from hungry American families. He’s breaking the law so he can deny food from hungry American families.”Rep. Brad Schneider (D-IL) observed, “The President is suggesting he will defy a court order so he can starve kids, seniors, veterans, and families.”Bloomberg columnist Matthew Yglesias wrote: “Of all the things to break the seal on defying court orders over, I thought Trump would pick something politically savvier than ‘make poor kids go hungry.’”West Virginia House of Delegates Democratic Minority Whip Shawn Fluharty commented, “Not sure on the category we put this in . pro-life, family values, or compassionate conservatism?”Former Obama and Biden official Alex Jacquez noted, “If anyone had any doubt as to who is responsible for SNAP benefits not going out to 42 million people.”.
‘I’m angry with the president’: Florida Trump voters reeling from ‘cruel and bad’ policies
Latino voters who helped seal Florida’s status as a Republican stronghold are now reeling with anger, bewilderment and guilt over their support of President Donald Trump, according to El País.”Trump’s manifesto of economic prosperity and law and order clashes with a reality that continues to punish disadvantaged families,” writes Abel Fernández. Nearly a year into Trump’s first term and the Hispanic community, he writes, is deeply divided.”Frustration and regret have grown among those most affected by the rising cost of living, cuts to social programs and an immigration agenda that has torn the Hispanic community apart,” Fernández writes. The disenchantment, he says, is palpable across the state, with a list of complaints including “the disruption to government aid as a result of the government shutdown, the unstoppable rise in the cost of rest, and persistent inflation.”The loss of Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) benefits, in particular, are affecting those in Miami-Dade County “especially hard,” Fernández explains, where “the shift of the Latino vote from Democrat to Republican was key to Trump’s victory last year.”In Miami-Dade, 215, 000 households (about 24 percent) rely on SNAP, one of the highest rates in the country. “In other words, more than half a million people,” he writes. Alexis Maria, a single mother is one of those and says she deeply regrets her support of Trump.“The last time Trump was president, I made more money than ever in my career. Prices were low. Gasoline was cheap. I remember going on vacation. Interest rates were lower. Now everything is out of control. I can’t even afford the air we breathe. Now I see that I made the wrong decision,” she says. Maria, who relies on food stamps to feed her two children, says “The government is the reason we’ve been able to eat most of the month, and the other half, I’m counting each cent to survive, what with food prices and rent.”As Maria searches for food banks and organizations to help her and her family, her anger at supporting Trump grows.”Now I need to go three times a week to feed my family, and the lines every week have been longer. This sums up why I’m angry with the president. His decisions are now [adversely] affecting the lower and middle class. They only benefit the rich,” she says. Central Florida resident Michael Lyras is disabled and on food stamps and says that though he voted for Trump three times, he’s deeply unsatisfied.“I regret my last vote enormously,” he says. “It was necessary to make changes, but not in this way, sacrificing our civil rights and liberties that are enshrined in our Constitution,” Lyras adds. “[Trump] is turning this into a police state and he’s acting like an authoritarian. I didn’t vote for any of this”Trump supporter Cuban Pita says that the Trump administration’s immigration policies are “a Republican political manipulation. If you say you’re going to deport all criminals, even migrants, like me, they [voters] are happy with that. That is why the Latino vote was oriented towards Trump. People agreed with what the Republicans were saying in the campaign, which was: ‘I’m going to get rid of all criminals.’ But what Trump is doing is something else, and it is very cruel and very bad, and they are going to pay dearly.”.
Gobierno de Trump ordena a programas estatales de Medicaid que ayuden a identificar a inmigrantes indocumentados
La administración del presidente Donald Trump ha ordenado a los estados que investiguen a beneficiarios de Medicaid -el programa que cubre a personas de bajos ingresos o con discapacidades- para verificar si cumplen con los requisitos de elegibilidad en base a su estatus migratorio. Hasta ahora, cinco estados informaron que ya han recibido, en total, [.].
What’s on the ballot in the first general election since Donald Trump became president
What’s on the ballot in the first general election since Donald Trump became president
‘Not really a war’: Analyst reveals ‘unprecedented features’ of Trump’s boat strikes
A prominent political analyst revealed the “unprecedented features” of President Donald Trump’s strikes on alleged drug boats in international waters in a new essay published on Sunday. Richard Galant, executive producer of Now It’s History on Substack and a Senior Fellow at New America, argued in a new essay that Trump seems to be drawing from the authority other presidents have used during America’s War on Drugs. He compared the strikes to operations conducted under the Hoover and Nixon administrations. However, Galant noted in the essay that there are two “unprecedented features” of Trump’s strikes. “For one thing, the people on the boats being blasted out of the water by U. S. drones are being denied even a pretense of the due process U. S. law gives to suspected criminals,” Galant wrote. “‘Judge, jury and executioner,’ would be an apt way of characterizing those in the military who have to pull the trigger. For another, there is no explanation of how the boats and those aboard are being chosen as targets,” he continued. He also noted that Trump appears to be fighting a war, even though he has not formally declared one. “Declaring a war that is not really a war is irresistible for some presidents,” Galant wrote. “It sounds dramatic, forceful and all-consuming even though in reality it isn’t anything like a real war. After all, a real war requires making unpopular decisions like mobilizing much of the economy and potentially drafting citizens into the military.”Read the entire essay by clicking here.
White House unveils details of ‘historic’ trade agreement with China following Trump-Xi meeting
U. S. and China reach historic trade agreement addressing fentanyl trafficking, rare earth exports and agricultural trade between the world’s largest economies.
WATCH: MSNBC’s Ali Velshi Urges Viewers to Ruin Thanksgiving by Confronting Family Over Rumored Trump ‘Third Term’ Run
MSNBC host Ali Velshi has urged his dwindling audience to turn Thanksgiving dinners into heated political showdowns over the idea of Donald Trump seeking a third term as president. The post WATCH: MSNBC’s Ali Velshi Urges Viewers to Ruin Thanksgiving by Confronting Family Over Rumored Trump ‘Third Term’ Run appeared first on The Gateway Pundit.