Connect with us

AMERICA

Biden withdraws: what happens next?

Published

on

The US President Joe Biden, who was expected to be the Democratic candidate in the 024 presidential elections, has announced his withdrawal from the race.

Biden, who had long been under pressure from both mega-donors and key figures within the Democratic Party to withdraw, could not continue his resistance.
Biden, 81, said in a written statement on Sunday that it had been ‘the greatest honour’ to serve, but that his withdrawal was ‘in the best interests of his party and the country’.

Not only did the list of Democratic lawmakers reiterating their call for Biden to step down grow to at least 40 before Sunday’s announcement, but staunch Biden supporters such as Senator Joe Manchin also stepped up their public calls for the 81-year-old to end his presidential campaign.

Shortly before the withdrawal, Manchin appeared on ABC’s ‘This Week’ and urged Biden to ‘pass the torch to a new generation’.

Biden endorsed Vice President Kamala Harris for the nomination. I am honoured to receive the President’s endorsement and it is my intention to seek and win this nomination,’ Harris said in a statement.

Harris must win support of Biden delegates

Biden’s candidacy was due to be formalised at the Democratic National Convention (DNC), which takes place from 19-22 August. Now, delegates who previously backed Biden will have to choose the Democratic nominee by supporting Harris or other candidates who emerge.

Dozens of senior Democrats and big names immediately praised the decision, including former President Barack Obama, Senate leader Chuck Schumer and former House Speaker Nancy Pelosi.

Former President Bill Clinton and 2016 Democratic presidential nominee Hillary Clinton said they supported Kamala Harris as the party’s nominee for the November vote and would ‘fight with everything we have to elect her’.

While Obama said he had “extraordinary confidence” that “an extraordinary candidate will emerge”, he did not explicitly endorse Harris or any other candidate.

Two major Democratic donors, LinkedIn founder Reid Hoffman and Alexander Soros, son of investor George Soros, have publicly backed Harris.

It will also be interesting to see who Amala Harris chooses as her vice-president if she becomes a candidate. California Governor Gavin Newsom, Illinois Governor JB Pritzker, Pennsylvania Governor Josh Shapiro, Arizona Senator Mark Kelly, Michigan Governor Gretchen Whitmer and Kentucky Governor Andy Beshear have all been mentioned as possible running mates.

Poll results were influential in the decision

POLITICO wrote about the behind-the-scenes process of Biden’s withdrawal.

According to the report, the president’s decision came on his fourth day of isolation at his Delaware beach house, where he was quarantined while recovering from Covid.

Biden was initially accompanied by only a small group of aides and spent the entire time away from the public.

The White House, meanwhile, gave few details of Biden’s activities, saying there were only a few briefings with top aides and a congratulatory call to European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen.

But Biden was joined this weekend by one of his closest advisers, Steve Ricchetti, who travelled to Delaware to review recent polls and reactions from Democrats who want Biden to step aside, people familiar with the matter said.

Just hours before Biden announced his withdrawal from the race, his campaign was rocked by more bad news: a new poll showed Biden down 7 points in Michigan, more than double the margin he faced in the state he should have won going into last month’s debate.

The White House was unaware of Biden’s announcement.

Biden made separate calls to Vice President Kamala Harris, Chief of Staff Jeff Zients and Campaign Manager Jen O’Malley Dillon. He then called other senior White House and campaign advisers and publicly announced his plans to withdraw.

Biden’s message on X surprised most other White House and campaign staff, who had received no indication that he was reconsidering his candidacy.

Sources also told ABC that Biden’s own staff did not know the president was stepping down until a minute before he made his decision public on Sunday, and some members of the staff were blindsided by the decision.

Zients is scheduled to hold a conference call with the entire White House staff on Monday morning, as well as a call with executive branch officials.

Did the Obama family force Biden to withdraw?

Biden’s youngest brother, Frank Biden, told ABC that his brother’s decision to withdraw was a “close call” made after several meetings between several members of the Biden family over the past week, led by “first lady” Jill Biden, and that the family has always supported the president doing what he thinks is best for the country.

“The bottom line is this: this is about his overall health and vitality. It’s not an attachment thing. He’s a man of honour, it annoys him that he shuffles his feet when he walks,” he said.

Many people close to Den say he has a lot of resentment towards former President Obama.

According to the IOS news, many of Obama’s advisers pressured Biden not to run in 2016.

‘Obama already used this leverage in 2016 when his team lobbied him not to run,’ said a former Biden aide. ‘You can’t do that more than once,’ he said.

Obama’s strongest connection is with White House Chief of Staff Jeff Zients, who is influential but not as personally close to Biden as other top aides.

There is also tension between Michelle Obama and the Biden family over the Bidens’ treatment of Kathleen Buhle, the former wife of Hunter Biden and a close friend of Michelle Obama. It has been said that the book Buhle wrote after her divorce from Biden following a contentious process was not welcomed by the Bidens.

Obama a ‘puppet master’, according to Biden

Sources who spoke to the New York Times also claimed that Biden had become “angry” with party leaders, particularly former President Barack Obama, and that Obama was involved in discussions about the 81-year-old’s withdrawal from the Democratic nomination.

According to the NYT report, Biden sees Obama as a “behind-the-scenes puppet master” when it comes to speeches about the president’s campaign.

Sources close to Biden, who requested anonymity, said the president ‘has been in politics long enough to assume that the media leaks in recent days were coordinated to increase pressure on him to step aside’.

According to a report in the Washington Post, Obama told allies on 19 July that Joe Biden should reconsider his re-election bid.

The paper quoted Obama as saying that he believed Biden’s path to victory was narrowing and that the 81-year-old should ‘seriously consider the viability of his candidacy’.

Trump and Republicans begin attacking Harris

An hour after Den’s statement, the pro-Trump super PAC campaign fund Make America Great Again released an ad attacking Harris, claiming she had ‘covered up Joe’s obvious mental decline’.

‘Whoever the left nominates now, there will be more of the same,’ Donald Trump said.

Trump’s son Donald Trump Jr. also posted on Truth Social, saying: ‘Kamala Harris has all of Joe Biden’s left-wing policy record. the difference is she is more liberal and less competent than Joe, which is really saying something. was held responsible for the border and we saw the worst illegal invasion in our history!!!’ he wrote.

Chris LaCivita and Susie Wiles, senior advisers to the Trump campaign, wrote in a note: ‘Kamala Harris is as much of a joke as Biden. Harris will be even WORSE for the people of our nation than Joe Biden. Harris has been Crooked Joe’s top aide all along. They have each other’s records and there is no distance between the two. Harris should be defending the failed Biden administration AND his poor record on liberal crime [in California],’ they wrote

AMERICA

Trump renews interest in Greenland following Panama controversy

Published

on

Former U.S. President Donald Trump has reignited discussions about Greenland’s strategic importance, sparking strong reactions from Denmark and Greenland’s leadership. On Sunday, Trump announced his nomination of former Swedish ambassador Ken Howery as U.S. ambassador to Copenhagen. During this announcement, he reiterated Greenland’s significance, labeling its “ownership and control” as critical for U.S. national security and global freedom.

Trump took to Truth Social, stating, “The United States considers the ownership and control of Greenland to be an absolute necessity for the purposes of National Security and Freedom around the World.”

Trump’s remarks were met with immediate backlash in Denmark and Greenland. Rasmus Jarlov, a member of Denmark’s opposition Conservative Party, emphasized on X (formerly Twitter) that Greenland’s sovereignty is non-negotiable.

“To the extent that U.S. activities aim to take control of Danish territory, this must be prohibited and resisted. Then they cannot be there at all,” Jarlov asserted.

Greenland’s Prime Minister, Mute Egede, echoed this sentiment on Monday, stating unequivocally, “Greenland is ours. We are not for sale and we will never be for sale. We must not lose our long struggle for freedom.”

Greenland, an Arctic island rich in minerals, oil, and natural gas, has long been of strategic interest to global powers. Despite its natural resource potential, its economy remains heavily reliant on fishing and annual subsidies from Denmark. The Pituffik Air Base, located in Greenland, plays a critical role in the U.S. ballistic missile early warning system and is positioned along the shortest route from Europe to North America, further underlining its military value.

While Greenland is an autonomous territory of Denmark, it has the right to declare independence under its 2009 Self-Government Act. Despite this, the island’s population of roughly 56,000 has so far opted to remain part of the Danish Kingdom, relying on Copenhagen for substantial financial support.

This isn’t Trump’s first foray into Greenland-related controversies. In 2019, during his presidency, he proposed purchasing Greenland. Denmark and Greenland’s leadership rejected the suggestion outright, with then-Danish Prime Minister Mette Frederiksen calling the proposal “absurd.” Trump responded by canceling a planned visit to Copenhagen, labeling Frederiksen’s reaction “outrageous.” Frederiksen remains Denmark’s Prime Minister to this day.

Greenland, while a part of the Kingdom of Denmark for over 600 years, does not fall under European Union jurisdiction, despite Denmark’s EU membership since 1973. Its unique position in the Arctic continues to make it a focal point for geopolitical and strategic interests.

Continue Reading

AMERICA

Silicon Valley giants form consortium to compete for U.S. defense contracts

Published

on

Two of the largest U.S. defense technology companies, Palantir and Anduril, are in discussions with several firms to create a consortium aimed at bidding for U.S. government contracts. This initiative seeks to disrupt the long-standing dominance of the nation’s “prime contractor oligopoly.”

The consortium is expected to officially announce in January that agreements have been reached with a variety of technology groups. Companies reportedly in talks to join include Elon Musk’s SpaceX, OpenAI (creator of ChatGPT), autonomous shipbuilder Saronic, and artificial intelligence data group Scale AI, according to sources familiar with the matter who spoke to The Financial Times (FT).

“We are working together to build the next generation of defense companies,” stated one individual involved in forming the group.

This move underscores the growing ambition of technology firms to claim a larger share of the U.S. government’s $850 billion defense budget, traditionally dominated by contractors like Lockheed Martin, Raytheon, and Boeing.

The consortium will unite some of Silicon Valley’s most innovative and valuable companies, leveraging their technologies to offer the government more efficient, cutting-edge solutions for defense and weapons systems. A second source described the collaboration as a way to modernize defense capabilities through advancements in artificial intelligence, automation, and software.

Defense technology startups have attracted record funding in 2023, fueled by increased federal spending on national security, immigration, and space exploration. This trend reflects rising geopolitical tensions involving the U.S., China, and conflicts in Ukraine and the Middle East. These dynamics have bolstered government confidence in advanced AI for military applications, further enticing investors into the sector.

Palantir, founded by tech investor Peter Thiel, has seen its share price soar by 300% over the past year, giving the company a market value of $169 billion—surpassing even Lockheed Martin. Anduril, founded in 2017 with Thiel’s backing, reached a valuation of $14 billion this year. Similarly, SpaceX was valued at $350 billion in December, making it the world’s largest private startup. OpenAI has climbed to a valuation of $157 billion since its inception in 2015.

While SpaceX and Palantir have a long history of securing public contracts, newer entrants like OpenAI are adapting their policies to enter the defense sector. OpenAI recently revised its terms of service, removing restrictions on the use of its AI tools for military purposes.

U.S. defense procurement has faced criticism for being anti-competitive and favoring a few entrenched firms producing large-scale systems like tanks, ships, and aircraft. These systems often require years to design and manufacture, with high associated costs.

In contrast, Silicon Valley’s emerging defense sector emphasizes smaller, more affordable autonomous weapons systems, which proponents argue are better suited to modern warfare.

One source described the consortium as a strategic alignment of industry players to address the Department of Defense’s (DoD) technical priorities and resolve critical software capability gaps.

According to the FT, agreements among participating companies are already underway, with integration efforts to begin immediately. Recent collaborations include the integration of Palantir’s AI Platform, a cloud-based data processing tool, with Anduril’s autonomous software Lattice for national security applications.

Anduril and OpenAI have also partnered on U.S. government contracts, combining Anduril’s anti-drone defense systems with OpenAI’s advanced AI models to counter aerial threats.

“We aim to provide the U.S. Department of Defense and the intelligence community with access to the most advanced, effective, and secure AI-driven technologies available in the world,” Anduril and OpenAI said in a joint statement.

Continue Reading

AMERICA

Fed cuts interest rates, dollar surges to two-year high

Published

on

The U.S. Federal Reserve reduced interest rates by a quarter percentage point but signaled a slower pace of easing next year. This move drove the U.S. dollar to its highest level in two years and triggered a sell-off in both domestic and international stock markets.

The Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) voted on Wednesday to lower the benchmark interest rate to 4.25–4.5%, marking the third consecutive cut. The lone dissenting vote came from Cleveland Fed President Beth Hammack, who favored maintaining the current rates.

Officials highlighted concerns about persistent inflation, projecting fewer rate cuts for 2025 than previously expected. Reflecting these worries, policymakers also raised their inflation forecasts for the coming year. Following the announcement, Fed Chair Jay Powell remarked that the current policy settings were “significantly less restrictive,” indicating the Fed’s inclination to adopt a more cautious approach to further easing.

“This decision was a ‘closer call’ than prior meetings,” Powell noted, emphasizing that inflation trends remain “sideways” while risks to the labor market are “diminishing.”

Aditya Bhave, senior U.S. economist at Bank of America, described the Fed’s message as “unabashedly hawkish.” He pointed to the shift in officials’ 2025 forecasts, which now anticipate just two quarter-point rate cuts instead of three, calling it a “wholesale shift.”

JPMorgan Chase, a key player in U.S. bond markets, noted that money markets are pricing in only a 0.31 percentage point rate cut in 2025. This outlook, significantly tighter than the bank’s earlier 0.75-point forecast, underscores the magnitude of the Fed’s policy shift.

The decision triggered a sharp sell-off on Wall Street, with the S&P 500 falling 3% and the tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite dropping 3.6%. High-profile winners of the 2024 rally were hit hard, including: Tesla, down 8.3%; Meta (Facebook’s parent company), down 3.6%; Amazon, down 4.6%.

Smaller companies, often seen as more sensitive to US economic fluctuations, also suffered. The Russell 2000 index declined 4.4%.

In Asia, stocks fell in early Thursday trading. Benchmarks in South Korea and Taiwan dropped 1.8% and 1.6%, respectively. Meanwhile, U.S. government bond prices fell, driving the yield on two-year Treasuries—sensitive to Fed policy—up by 0.11 percentage points to 4.35%.

The U.S. dollar surged 1.2% against a basket of six major currencies, reaching its strongest level since November 2022. According to Wells Fargo senior economist Mike Pugliese, the currency had already been rising on expectations of inflationary pressures following Donald Trump’s election victory last month. However, Wednesday’s Fed decision “poured more petrol on the fire.”

The South Korean won dropped to a 15-year low against the dollar, while the Japanese yen weakened 0.5%.

Continue Reading

MOST READ

Turkey