Wednesday, November 28, 2018

Trump news on Youtube Nov 29 2018

Trump threatens GM over pending plant closures and job losses president Trump

on Tuesday rebuked and threatened General Motors intensifying his attacks

on an automaker whose planned layoffs were encountered - the president's

promise to bring back US manufacturing jobs Trump urged GM to reconsider its

plans to layoff 15,000 workers in close five plants writing on Twitter that he

would evaluate cutting off federal subsidies to the automaker if it went

forward very disappointed with General Motors and their CEO Mary Barra

foreclosing plants in Ohio Michigan and Maryland Trump wrote over the course of

two posts noting being closed in Mexico and China the u.s. safe General Motors

and this is the thanks we get we are now looking at cutting all at GM subsidies

including for electric cars the US government offers financial incentives

such as tax credits for buyers of electric cars as a way to make the

products more attractive Trump could not unilaterally cut off all federal aid to

GM because he would need support from Congress to scrap programs that help the

automaker the administration does have influence over certain federal grants

and subsidies though steering them away from GM could cause further layoffs

For more infomation >> Trump Threatens GM Over Pending Plant Closures And Job Losses - Duration: 1:15.

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G 20: La rencontre entre Trump et Poutine annulée? - Duration: 4:08.

For more infomation >> G 20: La rencontre entre Trump et Poutine annulée? - Duration: 4:08.

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White House confirms Moon-Trump summit will take place on sidelines of G20 Summit - Duration: 0:37.

now as a follow-up to that report the White House has confirmed u.s. President

Donald Trump will hold a summit with president moon jae-in on the sidelines

of the g20 summit in Argentina a US National Security Advisor John Bolton

told reporters on Tuesday the Trump will also hold one-on-ones with Russia's

Vladimir Putin China's Xi Jinping and Japan Shinzo Abe a the moon trump

meeting comes amid a sharp slowdown in North Korea US diplomacy with a

planned second summit between President Trump and Kim jong-un pushed back until

early next year

For more infomation >> White House confirms Moon-Trump summit will take place on sidelines of G20 Summit - Duration: 0:37.

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Trump Just Signaled All Patriots It Has Begun. - Duration: 1:29.

For more infomation >> Trump Just Signaled All Patriots It Has Begun. - Duration: 1:29.

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Moon, Trump to meet on sidelines of G20 Summit; first meeting in 2 months - Duration: 2:11.

president moon jaein is on route to argentina for this year's g20 summit

while he's in South America the South Korean leader will hold one-on-one talks

with his US counterpart Donald Trump the crunch meeting comes as the

denuclearization process hangs in the balance with the lines of communication

between Pyongyang and Washington appearing to fall silent in recent weeks

Shin Semin with this report this summit between presidents Buddha in and Donald

Trump of the u.s. is confirmed following the announcement by the White House

South Korea's presidential office chooses that the leaders will be meeting

on the sidelines of the group 20 summit in Argentina this weekend South Korea

and the US will focus on ways to pursue complete denuclearization and lasting

peace on the Korean Peninsula all while working to boost by a natural

cooperation the exact time and date of L have not yet been confirmed and given

both leaders packed schedules in Buenos Aires but it will be their first meeting

since September in New York on the sidelines of the UN General Assembly and

their sixth in total it's believed that Seoul and Washington are keeping so

closely and touch because of the lack of concrete outcomes in North Korea's

denuclearization and now that a high-level meeting between the north and

the US has been delayed for weeks and it's expected that the summit in Buenos

Aires might see president moon play the role of mediator once again to get the

seemingly stalled talks back on track in the meantime on president boosts first

stop in the Czech Republic he sat down with Prime Minister Andrei Babak and the

to discuss issues of mutual interest as well as South Korea's bid to build a

nuclear reactor for the country spanning continents the president's trip now it

takes him to Argentina along with the world's most important leaders a but for

South Korea the focus is at the summit between moon and Trump and the hope that

they will perhaps lift the cloud of uncertainty on North korea-related

diplomacy Shin Semin Arirang news Prague

For more infomation >> Moon, Trump to meet on sidelines of G20 Summit; first meeting in 2 months - Duration: 2:11.

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Blue House confirms Presidents Moon and Trump to meet on sidelines of G20 - Duration: 0:40.

The nation's top office confirmed that President Moon Jae-in and his American counterpart Donald

Trump will indeed hold a separate meeting on the sidelines of the G-20 summit, hosted

in Buenos Aires, Argentina.

The South Korean leader's chief press secretary, Yoon Young-chan, said in a press briefing

in Prague on Wednesday... that the exact time of the meeting is still to be determined,...

but the duo will likely discuss ways to work together in promoting the complete denuclearization

of the Peninsula and the establishment of permanent peace.

The White House confirmed the planned encounter between the Presidents earlier in the day.

The last time the two met was on the sidelines of the UN General Assembly in New York, back

in September.

The two-day G-20 summit starts on Friday.

For more infomation >> Blue House confirms Presidents Moon and Trump to meet on sidelines of G20 - Duration: 0:40.

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Robert Reich: What's a Subpoena, and Should Trump Fear It? - Duration: 4:22.

You're probably hearing a lot about subpoenas.

Now, a subpoena is a legal command from a court or from one or both houses of Congress

to do something – like testify or present information.

The term "subpoena" literally means "under penalty."

Someone who receives a subpoena but doesn't comply with it may be subject to civil or

criminal penalties.

Now, here's how it works.

Step one: Let's say the Intelligence Committee of the House of Representatives issues a subpoena

to the President for information about alleged conversations with Russian officials seeking

their help in the 2016 election.

Or say the House Ways and Means Committee subpoenas the President's tax returns–which,

in fact, a law enacted in 1924 after the Teapot Dome scandal of the Harding Administration

specifically authorizes that committee to do.

Step two: If the person named in a subpoena–in these instances, Trump–fails to respond

to it, the House committee issuing the subpoena can vote to issue a citation for contempt

of Congress.

Step three: That proposed contempt citation would then go to the full House for a vote.

Step four: If a majority of the full House agrees, the Speaker of the House would then

refer the contempt citation to a United States Attorney, or to a special prosecutor, for

prosecution in federal court.

The potential penalty is up to $100,000 and imprisonment for up to a year.

Step five: The defendant in such a lawsuit–in this case, Trump–would probably argue that

contempt of Congress doesn't apply to a President because of "executive privilege"–that

is, the supposed Constitutional power of a President and other members of the executive

branch of the government to withhold information from the legislative branch, in the public's

interest.

Step six: Regardless of how the lower court decides on the claim of "executive privilege,"

the case could end up at the Supreme Court, where, unless they could find a way to avoid

it, the nine Justices would have to balance Congress's need for information with the

executive branch's claims of confidentially.

In the 1974 case of United States vs. Nixon, when the Watergate special prosecutor sought

Richard Nixon's audiotapes of conversations in the White House and Nixon claimed executive

privilege, the Supreme Court sided with the special prosecutor, because Nixon had asserted

only a generalized need for confidentiality rather than a specific public interest in

keeping particular conversations confidential.

The Clinton administration invoked executive privilege 14 times.

The George W. Bush administration, 6 times.

The Obama administration, twice.

All these matters were resolved before parties appealed them to the Supreme Court.

Oh, I should mention an alternative route for the House to enforce a subpoena–although

it hasn't been used in over 80 years.

Under its inherent authority to investigate, the House could try someone who refuses to

comply with a subpoena, for contempt, before the entire House chamber.

If found guilty by a majority of the House, the person who has been cited for contempt

could then be arrested by the Sergeant-at-Arms for the House, brought to the floor of the

House, held to answer charges by the presiding officer, and then held in the Capitol until

he or she provided the testimony or documents sought, or until the end of the session of

Congress.

Somehow I doubt this would happen to Trump.

The last time this occurred was in 1934, and it was to a much lower-level official.

But still, even with the formidable power of the subpoena, these days anything is possible.

What do you think?

Should Congress use its subpoena power?

Let us know in the comments.

If you found this video informative, check out our video on how a president can be impeached.

And as always, be sure to subscribe to this channel for more videos like this one.

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