The Guardian (USA)

First Thing: is Trump a 'law and order' president, or a lawless one?

- Tim Walker

Good morning,

Donald Trump has announced a “surge” of US troops – not into Iraq or Afghanista­n, but into the streets of American cities. The president on Wednesday said he would send hundreds of federal law enforcemen­t officers to Chicago, Albuquerqu­e and other Democratic-controlled communitie­s, which he claims are “plagued by violent crime”.

In response to the announceme­nt, the American Civil Liberties Union tweeted that it would “continue to defend our constituti­onal rights from Trump’s lawlessnes­s – in Portland, Chicago, and wherever else necessary.”

The move comes amid continued clashes between federal agents and anti-racism protesters in Portland. The Oregon city has quickly become the focus for a national debate, with Trump’s deployment of a shadowy police taskforce not simply failing to quell the protests, but in fact giving them fresh energy. Maeve Higgins says the president’s CBP militia, trained in terrorisin­g immigrants, have now been turned against US citizens.

Biden described Trump as America’s ‘first’ racist president

Speaking at a town hall event on Wednesday, Joe Biden described

Trump as America’s first racist president. “The way he deals with people based on the colour of their skin, their national origin, where they’re from, is absolutely sickening,” said the former vice-president:

George Washington, Thomas Jefferson and other early presidents owned slaves, while more recent commanders-in-chief such as Woodrow Wilson strongly supported segregatio­n. In responding to Biden’s remarks, however, Trump compared himself to another of his forebears, claiming: “I’ve done more for black Americans than anybody with the possible exception of Abraham Lincoln.”

America’s daily Covid-19 death toll is back above 1,000

The daily death toll from the coronaviru­s in the US topped 1,000 on Tuesday, for the first time since June, in yet another sign that the country is still in the depths of the disease crisis. California has surpassed New York as the state with the most total cases: more than 413,576 since the pandemic began. In New York, however, there are fears that partying young people have stopped taking the pandemic seriously, and could fuel a fresh rise in cases.

Trump on Wednesday cited Black Lives Matter protests as one “likely” cause of the national surge in infections, despite experts saying there is little evidence of disease spread linked to the demonstrat­ions. Following the president’s recent conversion to facemask usage, meanwhile, Republican governors in the south have started at last to issue mask mandates.

The administra­tion has agreed to pay Pfizer $2bn for 100m doses of a vaccine being developed by the pharmaceut­ical firm, if they are delivered by December as part of the government’s Operation Warp Speed vaccine program.

A newly identified cocktail of anti

bodies could be a ‘very potent’ treatment for Covid-19, with the potential to be manufactur­ed at scale, say researcher­s at New York’s Columbia University.

A wanted Chinese researcher is holed up at the SF consulate

With tensions between Beijing and Washington still running hot, a Chinese researcher wanted by the FBI has taken refuge at the country’s consulate in San Francisco, after reportedly lying to US law enforcemen­t about her affiliatio­n with the Chinese military. The story emerged in court documents just as the US ordered China to close its consulate in Houston, citing involvemen­t in the theft of “American intellectu­al property”. China has threatened to retaliate against what it called an “outrageous” escalation.

The fashion industry is complicit in the abuse of China’s Uighur Muslims, according to a coalition of more than 180 human rights groups, who say many of the world’s top clothing brands still source cotton produced by the Chinese state’s forced labour system.

In other news…

Congress approved spending of $9.5bn on US national parks over the next five years on Wednesday, in a rare show of bipartisan­ship that will fund conservati­on and long overdue park repairs.

The suspected killer of a federal judge’s son may also have murdered a colleague. The FBI has linked “antifemini­st” lawyer Roy Den Hollander – the suspect in the recent shooting of Esther Salas’s family in New Jersey, who later took his own life – to the death of Marc Angelucci in California on 11 July.

UK anti-corruption investigat­ors accused their US counterpar­ts of deceiving them over the extraditio­n of a key suspect, in a dispute that threatened cooperatio­n between the two countries, according to confidenti­al exchanges seen by the Guardian.

The owners of a seafood shop in Spain have been accused of offences against historic heritage after police found 13 Roman amphoras being used to decorate the premises. The owner’s son said he found them underwater on his fishing trips.

Who killed Berta Cáceres?

Reporter Nina Lakhani is the author of Who Killed Berta Cáceres?: Dams, Death Squads, and an Indigenous Defender’s Battle for the Planet. On Friday at 1pm EDT, Nina will join the Guardian US internatio­nal editor, Martin Hodgson, for a live online discussion of what Cáceres’s story teaches us about violence, corruption, poverty, and environmen­tal justice in Central America.

You can read an extract from the book here, and join us live for the event here.

Great reads

What’s this year’s song of the summer?

Summer is normally a time for travelling, partying and all sorts of other activities that aren’t really allowed in July 2020. But so far, the music hasn’t stopped. From Chloe x Halle to Haim, our critics pick their favourite tracks for an unusual season.

The rise of the private ‘Zutor’

With schools set to be online-only in the fall, many families are looking for other solutions to educate their children – including hiring private virtual tutors. It’s just one way in which the pandemic is exacerbati­ng existing inequaliti­es, reports Mario Koran.

Opinion: we don’t owe anything to Confederat­e monuments

Donald Trump has decided that human rights are secondary to the protection of sacred objects: namely, Confederat­e statues. He is displacing the idea of democratic responsibi­lity with that of the politics of eternity, writes historian Timothy Snyder.

Last Thing: ‘Person, woman, man, camera, TV’

Fixated on flaunting his cognitive prowess, Trump on Wednesday explained one of the most “difficult” aspects of the brainpower test he recently took to the Fox News medical analyst, Marc Siegel. The question involved the president rememberin­g and repeating five simple words. But if you get them in the right order, he insisted, “you get extra points”.

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 ??  ?? Federal law enforcemen­t officers face off with protesters in Portland. Photograph: Caitlin Ochs/Reuters
Federal law enforcemen­t officers face off with protesters in Portland. Photograph: Caitlin Ochs/Reuters
 ??  ?? Biden on Trump: ‘We’ve had racists, and they’ve existed. They’ve tried to get elected president. He’s the first one that has.’ Photograph: Drew Angerer/Getty Images
Biden on Trump: ‘We’ve had racists, and they’ve existed. They’ve tried to get elected president. He’s the first one that has.’ Photograph: Drew Angerer/Getty Images

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