Tuesday, August 1, 2017

Trump news on Youtube Aug 1 2017

Another day of drama in Washington...

President Donald Trump has fired his communications director, Anthony Scaramucci, just ten days

into the job.

With more on this and other news around the world we turn to Ro Aram…

Aram…this is the latest in a series of high-profile departures in the Trump White House after

former Chief of Staff Reince Priebus resigned at the end of last week, as well as a host

of others…

Do we know why Scaramucci was told to clear his desk?

Well Mark…

White House Press Secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders is saying there was a mutual understanding

between Scaramucci and Priebus' replacement John Kelly, who was sworn in on Monday.

She says the former communication director felt it was best to give Kelly a clean slate

and the ability to build his own team.

However, she did confirm that President Trump was unhappy with Scaramucci's performance,

adding that his profanity-laced rant to a reporter against Priebus, as well as Trump's

chief strategist Steve Bannon, was innapropriate.

Other White House officials also say the new Chief of Staff John Kelly did not think Scaramucci

was disciplined enough and thought he had burned his credibility.

During that phone call with the reporter last week, Scaramucci labeled Priebus a "paranoid

schizophrenic" and accused him of leaking information to the media.

Although the White House is refuting claims of feuds within the Trump administration,

the appointment of John Kelly, a retired four-star general, is seen as a desperate move to bring

more discipline to a chaotic West Wing.

For more infomation >> Scaramucci sacked as Trump media chief - Duration: 1:40.

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BREAKING Trump's threat to force the collapse of Obamacare could put him in a tricky legal situation - Duration: 6:06.

For more infomation >> BREAKING Trump's threat to force the collapse of Obamacare could put him in a tricky legal situation - Duration: 6:06.

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President Trump Insists White House Is Not In Turmoil - Duration: 1:56.

For more infomation >> President Trump Insists White House Is Not In Turmoil - Duration: 1:56.

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Breaking News , President Trump Latest News Today 7/31/17 ,Sarah Sanders Press Briefing White House - Duration: 19:33.

For more infomation >> Breaking News , President Trump Latest News Today 7/31/17 ,Sarah Sanders Press Briefing White House - Duration: 19:33.

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Trump may have known about Russian meeting - Duration: 1:07.

For more infomation >> Trump may have known about Russian meeting - Duration: 1:07.

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Best of Anthony Scaramucci, Trump's 1-Week Communications Director - Duration: 5:11.

What a great honor it must be for you to honor me tonight

You're gonna see the nicest apartment in New York City.. it's my apartment!

but here's what I'll tell you about the president:he's the most competitive person I've ever met..

I've seen this guy throw a dead spiral through aa tire, I've seen him at Madison Square Garden

with a topcoat on, he's standing in the key, he's hitting foul sots and swishing them.

He's sinks 30-foot puts.

I don't see this guy as a guy that's ever under siege.

He's a very, very competitive person.

Obviously there's a lot of incoming that comes into the white house, but the president's

a winner, ok and what we're gonna do is we're gonna do a lot of winning.

This woman from CNN, the "news organization" best known for spending 95% of the last 7

months covering a Russia Collusion Conspiracy- a narrative CNN itself was caught on camera

laughing about how stupid its viewers are for believing, is complaining about being

called fake news.

'So again, I want to speak for myself.

It's my first day on the job, I have to get to know everybody in the room, but I had personal

incident with YOUR news organization, you said something about me that was totally unfair

and untrue, so I sued, you retracted it and issued me an apology, and I accepted the apology

immediately.

So for me, I've never been a journalist but I have played a journalist on television,

I was the host of the Wall Street Week on Fox Business, so I have empathy for journalists

who sometimes they're going to get stories wrong, but I sort of don't like the fake news,

and if you said to be that there's some media bias out there, you want me to be as candid

as I would like to be with you guys, there feels like there's a little bit of media bias,

and so what we hope we can is- people I grew up with - I get it- they get

me, and they get him - I grew up in a very similar neighborhood

He's gonna win again, Jake, he's gonna win again, I'll bring a box of kleenex over here

to CNN.

He's gonna win again, Jake, he's gonna win again in 2020, and we're gonna get his agenda

prosecuted.

I'm not gonna make any prejudgements about anybody on that staff.

If they want to stay on the staff, they've got to stop leaking.

If the leaks continue, we are as strong as our weakest link.

And I'll say it a little differently, in a pun, we are as strong as our weakest leak.

You guys want to keep leaking, why don't guys all get together as a team and make decision

that you're gonna stop leaking.

If you're gonna keep leaking, I'm gonna fire everybody.

It's

very binary.

For more infomation >> Best of Anthony Scaramucci, Trump's 1-Week Communications Director - Duration: 5:11.

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Breaking : Good News For Sessions Trump Has '100 Percent Confidence' in Cabinet - Duration: 2:24.

Breaking : Good News For Sessions Trump Has '100 Percent Confidence' in Cabinet

For more infomation >> Breaking : Good News For Sessions Trump Has '100 Percent Confidence' in Cabinet - Duration: 2:24.

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Unpacked: Can Trump stop the DOJ's Russia investigation? - Duration: 5:10.

My name is Benjamin Wittes, I'm a senior fellow in Governance Studies at the

Brookings Institution, where one of the things I do is edit Lawfare, which is a

website devoted to national security. I do it because there are enormous number

of complicated issues that involve the intersection of law, policy, and very

difficult national security choices. Both Rosenstein and Sessions are in an

unspeakably difficult position right now. The president is publicly ridiculing

them, is making substantive demands on them as law enforcement officers that no

self-respecting law enforcement officer could possibly comply with. Under normal

circumstances, when a boss publicly puts you in a position like that,

the only self-respecting thing to do is to resign and in particular, to resign in

a fashion that makes clear the unacceptability of the behavior. And so,

there's, I think, a very good argument that both men should step down and

and make very strong statements as to the unacceptability of what the

president is doing here. But, there are also important countervailing factors in

this situation. Which is: as long as Jeff Sessions and Rod Rosenstein remain in

place, the Mueller investigation is protected. The president probably can't

simply snap his fingers and make Mueller go away. And so, they have a very

important role in protecting the integrity of an ongoing investigation

that affects the president's interests very personally. And for that reason, a

lot of people at the Justice Department have really rallied behind them and feel

it's very important that they stay in place. A lot of people feel that it's

important that they not give in to this kind of bullying. The president clearly

wants to get rid of them and so staying is a kind of defiance that has value in

and of itself. What I would say both men have an obligation to do more of

than they've done is to speak up on behalf of law enforcement, because one of

the problems with the way the president has behaved is that it describes law

enforcement in a political and unacceptable fashion, that is, as merely

an arm of presidential power, rather than a vocation of the independent delivery

of justice. And when the president talks that way and senior members of law

enforcement do not push back publicly, they risk that infecting the way both

law enforcement and the public thinks about the function. If Rosenstein and

Sessions were forced from office, either because they found the conditions

unacceptable and resigned or because they were fired, there would be an

immediate crisis with respect to the Russia investigation and the question of

whether the president would then be able, either by installing somebody or by his

own action, to destroy that investigation would be immediate and acute. Congress

can do a number of things to prevent that. The first, which certain members

have already done, is to speak up very loudly about that as an unacceptable

situation. Senator Grassley, who chairs the

Judiciary Committee, has made clear that there will not be a confirmation hearing

for another attorney general. Senator Graham said very clearly that the firing

of Mueller could mark the beginning of the end of the Trump presidency. So,

members are speaking out. But, the second thing that members can do is follow

through on that and make clear that the president cannot expect their support on

any matters related to the interference with the Mueller investigation or the

removal of the senior leadership of the Justice Department. This is not the way

they behaved with respect to the firing of Jim

Comey, where a lot of them said nothing or did very little, or in some cases,

actively supported it. It's fair to say that the fact that these interferences

did not end with Comey seems to have waken a few people up and Congress's

reaction to the possibility of a sessions or Rosenstein or Mueller removal

it's been very different from the reaction to Comey's removal.

For more infomation >> Unpacked: Can Trump stop the DOJ's Russia investigation? - Duration: 5:10.

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North Korea finally reveals 'Hotel of Doom' as 'Trump readies military action' - Duration: 2:09.

North Korea finally reveals 'Hotel of Doom' as 'Trump readies military action'

The futuristic pyramid-shaped 105-storey hotel had been a source of embarrassment for leader Kim Jong-un, as it stood as the tallest unoccupied building in the world.

Work has now officially restarted, with construction workers and new walkways installed at the site. Propaganda billboards have even been installed at the Ryugyong hotel, with the chilling term "Rocket Power Nation.

BANKROLLED BY CHINA? Where is Kims money coming from to finish these pictures. But experts believe this will increase pressure on China for not doing enough to stop their nuclear missile programme.

As well as unveiling the hotel, the tubby tyrant launched an ICBM believed to be capable of wiping out central New York.

With famine and poverty rife in North Korea, many have asked where Kim's pot of money for these projects is coming from.

US President Donald Trump has called for China to install economic restrictions on the despot nation, but the building of the hotel will be a sign that Kim still has plenty of cash.

Rumours that building had restarted were rife earlier in the year, when lights were spotted on the upper floors and a helicopter landed on the roof. OPEN FOR BUSINESS? Work is going on at the Ryugyong.

When construction began in 1987, it was planned that the building would have been the tallest hotel in the world. Construction was halted in the 1990s, leading to the building to be nicknamed "the Hotel of Doom".

For more infomation >> North Korea finally reveals 'Hotel of Doom' as 'Trump readies military action' - Duration: 2:09.

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Trump removes Scaramucci as communications director - Duration: 0:34.

Trump removes Scaramucci as communications director.

U.S. President Donald Trump has decided to remove Anthony Scaramucci from his job as

communications director, the New York Times reported on Monday, citing three unidentified

people close to the decision.

News of Scaramucci's removal came hours after Trump swore in a new chief of staff, retired

General John Kelly.

Politico reported the dismissal came at Kelly's request, citing two unidentified White House

officials.

For more infomation >> Trump removes Scaramucci as communications director - Duration: 0:34.

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NORTH KOREA CRISIS: Trump vows to take 'all necessary measures' after missile test - Duration: 3:08.

NORTH KOREA CRISIS: Trump vows to take 'all necessary measures' after missile test

The communist state provoked condemnation from the White House last week after testing its second intercontinental ballistic missile in less than a month.

America responded with brazen military exercises – including flying bombers over the Korean peninsula and shooting down a ballistic missiles over the Pacific.

Today US President and Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe agreed to take further action against to "protect allies" from the totalitarian nation in a telephone conversation.

Recalling the conversation, Abe said: "We have made consistent efforts to resolve the North Korean problem in a peaceful manner, but North Korea has ignored that entirely and escalated the situation in a one-sided way.".

ON THE BRINK: Trump told Abe that all necessary measures are on the table.

ICBM: North Korea launches an intercontinental ballistic missile. The pair did not discuss military action against North Korea, but did reaffirm the decision to boost defence commitments in Japan.

Trump also told Abe that Russia and China need to do more to "increase pressure" on the rogue nation to curb its nuclear programme. The phone call came just hours after American's UN envoy was Washington was "done talking about North Korea".

In a statement, the White House said the two leaders agreed that North Korea poses a grave and growing direct threat to the United States, Japan, the Republic of Korea, and other countries near and far.

KIM JONG-UN: North Koreas leader wants nuclear ICBMs capable of reaching the US.

On Sunday, two US Air Force bombers flew over the Korean peninsula in direct response to Pyongyang's ICBM launch. On the same day the US shot down a medium-range ballistic missile over the Pacific with its THAAD defence system.

US defence chiefs were said to be considering military options in the wake of the test on Thursday.

But Hermit Kingdom supreme leader Kim Jong-un doesn't appear to be fazed. Speaking through state-run North Korean newspaper Rodong Sinmun, Kim said he would make the US submit to his power if war were to break out.

The tubby tyrant said the war of words between himself and Trump would end in the "final victory" of North Korea.

For more infomation >> NORTH KOREA CRISIS: Trump vows to take 'all necessary measures' after missile test - Duration: 3:08.

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Another top Trump official is gone. Here's how we got here - Duration: 2:49.

WILLIAM BRANGHAM: The tumult at the White House continues to churn at a pace unprecedented

for an American president.

Anthony Scaramucci, just 10 days on the job of communications director, is out.

The move comes on John Kelly's first day as President Trump's chief of staff.

Our own Lisa Desjardins is here to walk us through these shakeups at the top.

Welcome, Lisa.

LISA DESJARDINS: Thank you.

WILLIAM BRANGHAM: Pretty dizzying set of days here.

Walk us through the timeline of how we got here.

LISA DESJARDINS: All right, to do that, let's go way back to 10 days ago.

That's when we saw Anthony Scaramucci be hired as the communications director, the same day

Press Secretary Sean Spicer resigned.

Then, five days later, July 26, he that call to The New Yorker, to a New Yorker reporter,

in which Scaramucci used a series of profane words to openly attack Chief of Staff Priebus.

Then, the next one to go, July 28, Friday, Reince Priebus resigned.

That brings us to today, when we're told by the White House that Anthony Scaramucci will

no longer be communications director or have any other role in the White House at all.

Now, for Scaramucci, this comes as the sale of his company is still an open question.

That's still working through a regulatory process, and it's not clear what is going

to happen with him and that.

WILLIAM BRANGHAM: So, what is the -- there's been a lot of reporting as to what actually

drove this.

Was this Chief of Staff Kelly on day one of the job pushing him out?

Was it the president saying enough is enough?

What do we know about how we got here?

LISA DESJARDINS: Well, let's start with the words of the White House press secretary,

Sarah Sanders, herself.

Here's what she said today.

SARAH HUCKABEE SANDERS, White House Press Secretary: The president certainly felt that

Anthony's comments were inappropriate for a person in that position, and he didn't want

to burden General Kelly, also, with that line of succession.

As I think we have made clear a few times over the course of the last couple of days

to several of you individually, but General Kelly has the full authority to operate within

the White House and all staff will report to him.

LISA DESJARDINS: In other words, it was both.

And that last line was really important, William.

She is saying all staff will report to Kelly.

That includes Ivanka Trump, Jared Kushner, Steve Bannon.

All the advisers, she said, now report to him.

WILLIAM BRANGHAM: In your sense, does this really matter?

How important is this kind of a shakeup?

LISA DESJARDINS: Right, clearly a tempest, a tempest that is going to last and be important.

I think the takeaway here for me, as I look at this White House, is the four key positions

that you have year in, year out at the White House, chief of staff, press secretary, communications

director, and your national security adviser, those are the positions that keep changing

at this White House.

They are not stable.

What is stable?

These advisers like Jared Kushner or Steve Bannon, whose jobs, it's not really clear

what they are.

Now, that might work for this president.

It seems to.

But it's a real problem for his Cabinet officials and for agencies in Washington.

WILLIAM BRANGHAM: All right, Lisa Desjardins, thanks so much.

For more infomation >> Another top Trump official is gone. Here's how we got here - Duration: 2:49.

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BREAKING Trump ousts Anthony Scaramucci as communications director at new chief of staff's request - Duration: 4:49.

For more infomation >> BREAKING Trump ousts Anthony Scaramucci as communications director at new chief of staff's request - Duration: 4:49.

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Trump Removes Anthony Scaramucci From Communications Director Role|Scaramucci - Duration: 1:31.

WASHINGTON — President Trump on Monday removed Anthony Scaramucci from his position as communications director, the White House announced, ousting him just days after Mr. Scaramucci unloaded a crude verbal tirade against other members of the president's senior staff.

"Anthony Scaramucci will be leaving his role as White House Communications Director," Sarah Huckabee Sanders, the White House press secretary, said in a statement. "Mr. Scaramucci felt it was best to give Chief of Staff John Kelly a clean slate and the ability to build his own team. We wish him all the best."

Mr. Scaramucci's abrupt removal came just 10 days after the wealthy New York financier was brought on to the West Wing staff, a move that convulsed an already chaotic White House and led to the departures of Sean Spicer, the former press secretary, and Reince Priebus, the president's first chief of staff.

In a Twitter message just before 5:30 on Monday morning, just hours before the announcement about Mr. Scaramucci, Mr. Trump insisted that there has been "No WH chaos!"

The decision to remove Mr. Scaramucci became public as Mr. Kelly, who replaced Mr. Priebus as the top adviser in the White House, began his first day in charge of the White House staff. He told aides gathered in early-morning staff meetings that he intended to impose a new sense of order and operational discipline that had been absent under his predecessor.

Mr. Scaramucci had boasted about reporting directly to the president, not the chief of staff. But the decision to remove him came at Mr. Kelly's request, people close to the decision said Monday.

It was not clear whether Mr. Scaramucci, who is known informally as "The Mooch," will remain at the White House in another position or will leave altogether. The White House had originally said that his official start date as a government employee was to be August 15, although he appeared to begin performing his duties immediately

While Mr. Kelly's objection was the decisive factor in Mr. Scaramucci's departure, people close to the decision said that Mr. Trump had quickly soured on the wisecracking, Long Island-bred former hedge fund manager, and so had his family.

Ivanka Trump, the president's daughter, and Jared Kushner, her husband, had pushed the president to hire Mr. Scaramucci, seeing him as a way to force out Mr. Priebus, the former national Republican committee chairman, and his allies in the West Wing.

In that, Mr. Scaramucci was successful. Mr. Spicer, a close ally of Mr. Priebus, resigned just hours after the news about Mr. Scaramucci's hiring was made public. And shortly after Mr. Scaramucci called Mr. Priebus a "paranoid schizophrenic, a paranoiac," — adding a more vulgar term to the beginning of the phrase — Mr. Priebus, too, offered his resignation.

The president still values Mr. Scaramucci, according to people close to Mr. Trump and his family, and is hoping to find another, less high profile, position for him in the White House — although it is uncertain if Mr. Scaramucci would be willing to accept a demotion.

For more infomation >> Trump Removes Anthony Scaramucci From Communications Director Role|Scaramucci - Duration: 1:31.

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Trump Presidency: New Chief of Staff, AG Jeff Sessions, Obamacare Repeal - Duration: 4:03.

For more infomation >> Trump Presidency: New Chief of Staff, AG Jeff Sessions, Obamacare Repeal - Duration: 4:03.

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Ivanka and Melania Trump were angry about Scaramucci's language and behaviour - Duration: 5:45.

here is our channel Donald Trump news please do not forget to subscribe for

updates

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For more infomation >> Ivanka and Melania Trump were angry about Scaramucci's language and behaviour - Duration: 5:45.

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After Firing Reince Priebus, Trump Is Running Out Of Republican Allies - Duration: 4:49.

As most people are already aware, this past weekend, actually Friday afternoonish, evening

time, Reince Priebus was fired as Donald Trump's Chief of Staff, which effectively means that

Donald Trump is left with no other hardcore establishment type Republicans within his

administration.

While some Republicans probably look at that as a good thing, in reality, it's probably

one of the worst things that could happen to the Trump administration, at least if they

want to stay in power for longer than two years.

Here's why.

Reince Priebus was the former head of the Republican National Committee, meaning he

was the top Republican for many years.

Everybody who wanted anything from the Republican Party had to go through Reince.

With him in the Trump administration, those hardcore Republicans, those loyalists, but

more importantly, those donors knew that they still had a line inside the White House.

That line is now gone.

We have seen reports recently showing that the millionaire class, the billionaire class,

the donor class of Republicans, are getting pretty fed up with Donald Trump.

Yeah, they're happy that the stock market is currently surging, but they also understand

that if some of Donald Trump's policies actually get enacted, all of those gains are going

to come tumbling down.

That's just what happens.

The millionaire class understands that they no longer have an ally inside the White House.

Instead, they're operating and attempting, I guess, to work with an administration that

wants nothing to do with any outside voices.

In a normal situation, that would be ideal.

You don't want big money donors having influence over the President.

But in this particular instance, when you're dealing with a man who is completely irrational,

possibly suffering from some kind of a mental illness that prevents him from fully being

able to reason properly, you need outside advisors.

You need as many voices as possible inside of that White House.

I understand that any policy that would come out this is going to be devastating for the

American public, for the working class, for the underclass, for everyone.

But at the same time, Donald Trump's decision to get rid of Reince Priebus, for God knows

what actual reason, I imagine it has to do more with imaginary sleights than actual sleights,

he is pissing off the people who control the purse.

Furthermore, on Saturday morning, Donald Trump decided to lash out on Twitter against Republicans

in Congress, saying that they've let Democrats take over.

They're weak.

"They look like fools," is what he said, and this is unacceptable.

They need to invoke the nuclear option, pass things in the Senate by a 51 majority, a move

that would absolutely devastate this country.

Republicans are actually a little bit smarter than to think that they could do that and

get away with it and not feel the repercussions from their voters.

Donald Trump has pissed off the donor class, he's pissed off the establishment of the Republican

Party, and now he's personally insulting Republican senators and Republican members of the House

of Representatives.

When you're in the kind of situation that Donald Trump is in, when you're under investigation

for possible treason, along with several members of your family, members of your administration

and staff, the last thing you want to do is insult the people who could save your political

life.

Because when it comes down to it, Donald Trump has alienated every possible person within

the Republican party, including most of the base, with the exception of the American South,

according to the latest poll numbers.

The question's going to be, when it finally hits the fan, who's going to be left to support

Donald Trump?

My guess is there's not going to be too many people standing up willing to say, "Hang on.

In Trump's defense, I have to say this."

No.

In reality, he will have turned his back, burned the bridges to every Republican in

this country that actually matters, and they're going to let him absolutely go down

in flames.

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