U.S. News

The adult vs. the alien: Former Trump and Biden insiders weigh in on tonight's debate

After months of contentious debate at long distance due to the ongoing coronavirus pandemic, President Donald Trump will stand beside Democratic rival Joe Biden on stage for the first debate of the 2020 cycle on Tuesday night in Cleveland. The much-anticipated face-to-face matchup will set in motion the final countdown to one of the most consequential elections in modern history.

Members of the two candidates' inner circles predict that the winner of debate night will be decided by contrasts of competence and character, and they view the competition as Biden's to lose. Salon reached out to a number of Trump and Biden associates — as well as campaign veterans, including Omarosa Manigault-Newman, Michael Cohen, A.J. Delgado and Philippe Reines — to find out how each candidate can come out on top.

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Here's Trump's 'October Surprise' plan in several cities to lock down his base

On Tuesday, The Washington Post reported that Trump administration officials are planning to move ahead with raids on a number of "sanctuary cities" in October, to bolster his "law and order" rhetoric and excite his voters.

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Trump biographer: President deserves to be jailed -- but the system is set up to let rich avoid paying taxes

Ahead of the first of three presidential debates between President Trump and Joe Biden, we speak with David Cay Johnston, founder and editor-in-chief of DCReport.org, who says the bombshell New York Times report on Trump’s taxes highlights the existence of “two income tax systems, separate and unequal.” The Times reports that Trump paid no federal income tax in 10 of the past 15 years and just $750 in 2016 and 2017. In a follow-up report, the Times reveals Trump made $427 million in connection to the hit reality TV show “The Apprentice,” providing him a financial lifeline as other investments lost money. “People who own their own businesses, like Donald Trump, are under a different system,” says Johnston.

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Kayleigh McEnany defends Trump's distracting debate rumors: 'The work ethic of President Trump says it all'

White House Press Secretary Kayleigh McEnany on Tuesday sought to defend distracting rumors spread by the Trump campaign prior to the evening's debate.

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Showing 76 percent of Amy Coney Barrett rulings put corporate interests over people, analysis warns confirmation would 'supercharge' GOP agenda

A new analysis out Tuesday examining the federal judicial record of Amy Coney Barrett, President Donald Trump's controversial U.S. Supreme Court nominee, reveals a pattern of legal thought that critics charge reveals a deeply-held allegiance to right-wing and Republican Party ideology that places the supremacy of corporate power over the needs of both people and planet.

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Fascism expert: Trump has used all ‘four threats’ that can topple a democracy

On Tuesday, speaking with Molly Jong-Fast and Rick Wilson on the podcast The New Abnormal, Johns Hopkins political science professor Robert Lieberman warned that President Donald Trump poses all of the fundamental "four threats" that he argues can erode democracies in his book with Suzanne Mettler.

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Ex-Trump official says White House staff believe COVID-19 lies because they have Stockholm Syndrome

Former Department of Homeland Security official Elizabeth Neumann doesn't think that the White House is nefariously plotting to kill Americans by downplaying the coronavirus and how it impacts children. She thinks it's Stockholm Syndrome.

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WATCH: Nicolle Wallace cracks up after watching clip of Trump talking about the Bible

MSNBC anchor Nicolle Wallace on Tuesday played a clip of Donald Trump talking about the Bible where he comes off like a middle school student trying to BS their way through a book report on something that they have never read.

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Disney to cut 28,000 US employees due to coronavirus

Disney announced Tuesday it will cut 28,000 jobs from its US parks and experiences division, pointing to depressed demand caused by the coronavirus and uncertainty on when it will recover.

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Here's why the Midwest can't defeat the coronavirus

As a Californian with family in the Midwest, my Instagram feed has become a slideshow of two jarringly different pandemic experiences. I see acquaintances in Kansas having large parties, no masks in sight, literally popping bottles of champagne indoors. An old friend having a big wedding in Wisconsin, and a gender reveal party in Illinois, too, were both mask-free affairs. This observation of the digital world transcends into the real one: a close friend who just returned from Iowa said it looked like the pandemic "never happened."

The culture around the pandemic in the San Francisco Bay Area, where I live, is much different. In many ways, life still feels like it did in March, when the region first descended into a shelter-in-place status. I don't know anyone here in California who's hosted or attended a gathering with more than 10 people without observing the recommended mitigation strategies like wearing a mask, being outside and social distancing. Salons, gyms and hotels are just starting to open. Indeed, the difference between the Midwest and California is a bit confusing, particularly as cases rise in the Midwest.

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WATCH: Pat Robertson predicts 5 years of ‘paradise’ – which he says includes the end of Black Lives Matter and Antifa

To televangelist Pat Robertson "paradise" means the end of the racial justice activism group Black Lives Matter, and the end of the fascism-fighting group Antifa.

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NYT report fuels hope that a massive new source of green energy could be on the horizon

How the United States will meet its energy needs in the future has been hotly debated among politicians. President Donald Trump has been a strong supporter of fossil fuels, while some progressive Democrats have been pushing for green energy. Journalist Henry Fountain, in the New York Times, reports Tuesday on research on the possibility for a fusion energy power plant, which could be a complete game-changer in the hunt for green energy. According to Fountain, such a plant is on the way — although some scientists are skeptical about the timetable.

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Republicans rejected a report as 'Russian disinformation' -- but it was just declassified by John Ratcliffe

One of the many concerns that Democrats had when Rep. John Ratcliffe was appointed as the Director of National Intelligence is that he is a conspiracy theorist

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