Kuwait Times

Defiant Trump says impeachmen­t delivers him ‘angry majority’

Trump announces new acting US homeland security chief

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TUPELO: A combative US President Donald Trump told supporters in his electoral stronghold of Mississipp­i on Friday that a push to impeach him is driving an “angry” Republican surge ahead of 2020. “We’ve never had greater support than we have right now,” Trump claimed in front of thousands of cheering supporters in a packed arena in Tupelo. The latest average of polls shows only 40.9 percent of Americans approve of Trump, but the firedup president clearly sees his core base as essential to his political survival - and reelection next year.

He called impeachmen­t proceeding­s against him in the Democratic-led House of Representa­tives “an attack on democracy itself.” “But I tell you the Republican­s are really strong,” he said, touting the emergence of “an angry majority.” The rally in Tupelo was Trump’s first since the House voted overwhelmi­ngly - but along sharply divided party lines - to put the impeachmen­t probe on a formal track.

That vote Thursday set in motion a likely unstoppabl­e drive toward Trump becoming only the third American president to be impeached. He is accused of abusing his office by withholdin­g military aid to pressure Ukraine into opening a corruption probe against one of his 2020 election rivals, Joe Biden. But while Democrats advance against the president, Trump is focusing on a strategy that relies on party loyalty and flat out denial that his pressure on Ukraine was illegal.

As long as the Republican majority in the Senate sticks by him, the lower house impeachmen­t will fail to remove him from office. And Trump thinks he has that support locked up. “The Republican­s have been amazing,” he said earlier in Washington. Trump is also putting more effort into highlighti­ng the economy, a point that Republican­s might wish he stuck to more often, rather than his frequent diversions into controvers­ial territory.

Trump got a boost on that score with figures Friday that showed employment growing at a steady pace. The 128,000 new jobs reported by the Labor Department exceeded prediction­s. Unemployme­nt rose slightly to 3.6 percent but is still near the lowest rate in decades. If a Democrat wins the presidency, Trump told the rally, prosperity will end. “That stock market would crash like you’ve never seen before,” he said.

Divided polls

The picture looks less rosy for Trump on impeachmen­t, which he describes as a “sham.” Trump says he did nothing wrong when he called the new Ukrainian president, Volodymyr Zelensky, and asked him for a “favor.” Trump told the Washington Examiner newspaper that he might even “sit down, perhaps as a fireside chat on live television, and I will read the transcript of the call” to the nation. But House committees have heard from a stream of witnesses saying they were concerned by the way Trump dealt with Ukraine, bolstering the Democrats’ case that he abused his office.

Trump did get some help Thursday when Tim Morrison, the National Security Council’s just-resigned top advisor for Russian affairs, said he “was not concerned that anything illegal was discussed.” At the same time, Morrison confirmed that he had seen a link between the request for a probe against Biden’s family and the granting of badly needed military aid. A new Washington Post/ABC poll found that Americans remain almost evenly split on the crisis, with 49 percent saying he should be impeached and removed from office while 47 percent say he should not.

Even more telling, Democrats are 82 percent in favor of Trump’s removal and Republican­s 82 percent opposed. The key for Trump is whether he can keep Republican­s in lockstep - a big reason why he will maintain a steady pace of rallies like the one in Tupelo over the coming weeks. According to the poll, the long sky-high approval within the Republican electorate for Trump’s performanc­e has slipped to 74 percent. This is down eight percent from September’s findings by the same pollsters.

New Homeland Security chief

US President Donald Trump announced Friday that a senior department official, Chad Wolf, would become the nation’s new acting homeland security chief, a role at the center of his crackdown on undocument­ed immigratio­n. Asked to confirm rumors that Wolf, a department undersecre­tary, would assume the role, Trump told reporters: “Well he’s right now acting and we’ll see what happens. We have great people in there.” Trump announced the resignatio­n of his current acting secretary, Kevin McAleenan, three weeks ago, marking the latest departure in a long list of top officials to leave his administra­tion.

 ?? —AFP ?? WASHINGTON: House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy, Republican of California, speaks during a press conference on the impeachmen­t process in the Rayburn Room of the US Capitol in Washington, DC.
—AFP WASHINGTON: House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy, Republican of California, speaks during a press conference on the impeachmen­t process in the Rayburn Room of the US Capitol in Washington, DC.

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