3.25am BST
Today in Campaign 2016
- Donald Trump lashed out reporters during a combative press conference at Trump Tower in Manhattan as he faced sustained questioning over the money he pledged to donate to veterans’ organizations. The New York real estate developer was under pressure to release details about the m he said he raised for veterans during a January charity event in Iowa that his campaign hosted after he skipped a Fox News presidential debate because of an ongoing feud with the network.
- The Associated Press today found that of the nearly two dozen charities that responded to its survey, nearly half received checks dated May 24, the same day the Washington Post published a story that revealed that no veteran-oriented nonprofits had received money from Trump’s charity event.
- Trump also answered a question about the shooting of a gorilla at a zoo in Cincinnati, because this campaign cycle is imbecilic.
- But not all the press was bad: North Korean state media has praised Trump, describing him as a “wise politician” and “far-sighted candidate” who could help unify the Korean peninsula, according to JH Ahn for NK News.
- As Trump held his news conference detailing donations to veterans’ groups, the Hillary Clinton campaign released a new policy paper describing ways she would support military families as president.Clinton’s paper lists six bullet points:
- Realign the demands of a military career in service to the nation to accommodate 21stcentury family realities while maintaining a strong force
- Back military spouses as they pursue education, seek jobs, build careers, and secure their finances
- Ensure military children receive a high-quality education and the resources to succeed
- Bring key resources for military families into the information age
- Champion efforts to care for our military members and families
- Continue and build on the Obama Administration’s effort to elevate military families in the White House and across the government
That’s it for today – tune in tomorrow for more up-to-the-minute coverage of the presidential campaign! Hopefully with fewer gorillas.
3.20am BST
Donald Trump on Sean Hannity: The press are ‘bad people’
In a satellite appearance on Hannity, presumptive Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump decried what he perceived as unfair treatment by the national press, exemplified by a contentious press conference today in which he was accused of lying about seven-figure donations to veterans’ groups.
“They cover me so incorrectly… and it was a horrible experience with the press,” Trump told Sean Hannity, whose line of questioning tonight was decidedly more friendly than that of the national press corps. “I raised .6 million, and instead of like being treated at least reasonably, it’s a whole big deal going on whose getting the money.”
The New York real estate developer was under pressure to release details about the million he said he raised for veterans during a January charity event in Iowa that his campaign, which he hosted after skipping a Fox News presidential debate because of an ongoing feud with the network.
“Instead of being thankful, or at least being treated nicely by the press, I get bad publicity,” Trump continued, criticizing questions raised about the fact that roughly half of the donations that his campaign manager had said were paid out in full were only made after a Washington Post story revealed that no veteran-oriented nonprofits had received money from Trump’s charity event.
The Associated Press today found that of the nearly two dozen charities that responded to its survey, nearly half received checks dated May 24, the same day the Post published its story.
“What it does, Sean is people in my position say why should we do this anymore? If we’re gonna raise money… and then we’re criticized, it’s easier not to do it,” Trump threatened. “I figured the best way to handle it would be to hold a news conference and to show everybody where the money went, and I did that.”
Hannity, after listing instances of alleged liberal bias in mainstream media, told Trump that “journalism’s dead – you’re confronting this institutional bias and they don’t seem to like it. You think this is the whole campaign?”
“The press is really dishonest – and I don’t mean everybody, but a big proportion of them,” Trump said. “They’re bad people.”
2.42am BST
Donald Trump, escalating the feud with members of the press whose fires he stoked at a contentious press conference earlier today, has lashed out at veteran news anchor Katie Couric for “fraudulent editing” in a new documentary about gun violence that she produced, calling her a “third rate reporter” who is “largely forgotten.”
Trump was referring to the apparent selective editing of a scene in Under the Gun, a documentary that aims to explore gun violence in the US.
Couric issued a statement earlier today in which she took responsibility for the “misleading” edit, in which gun rights activists were shown to appear at a loss for words in response to a question posed by Couric.
“I regret that those eight seconds [of pause] were misleading and that I did not raise my initial concerns more vigorously,” Couric wrote. “I hope we can continue to have an important conversation about reducing gun deaths in America, a goal I believe we can all agree on.”
2.20am BST
Senate majority leader Mitch McConnell has become the most high-profile Republican to urge presumptive nominee Donald Trump to release his tax returns, telling Business Insider that every major party nominee of the past four decades can’t be wrong.
“For the last 30 or 40 years, every candidate for president has released their tax returns, and I think Donald Trump should as well,” McConnell said.
The senate majority leader had previously expressed interest in seeing Trump’s tax returns released, but not in such quite strong terms. Two weeks ago, McConnell told McClatchy that “most candidates for president have, and that’s been the tradition… He’ll have to make that decision himself, but that’s certainly been the pattern for quite some time.”
2.07am BST
Libertarian presidential nominee and former New Mexico governor Gary Johnson told MSNBC this evening that he has no plans to attack presumptive Republican nominee Donald Trump or likely Democratic nominee Hillary Clinton, preferring to confront the two candidates “from a [sic] issues standpoint.”
“I have no intention, neither of us have any intention of attacking Trump or Hillary,” Johnson said during an appearance on MTP Daily with vice presidential candidate Bill Weld. “But, you know, from a issues standpoint, absolutely.”
“The stuff that he’s saying,” Johnson said of Trump, “I think he’s said 100 things that would have tubed any other candidate, but here he is.”
Johnson and Weld are confident that their ticket will be able to reach the 15% support nationally necessary for them to be included on the debate stage during the general election – and recent polling shows them already in the double digits.
1.37am BST
Looks like Mitt Romney is feeling the #FrenchRevolution:
I know David French to be an honorable, intelligent and patriotic person. I look forward to following what he has to say.
— Mitt Romney (@MittRomney) June 1, 2016
Updated at 1.37am BST
1.12am BST
Presumptive Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump has doubled down on comments made earlier today mocking likely Democratic nominee Hillary Clinton for her limited press availability, urging reporters and voters to “admonish” Clinton for not having held a press conference since December 4 of last year.
In an interview on CNN today, Clinton defended her willingness to speak to the press, telling Jake Tapper that she has done “nearly 300 interviews just in 2016.”
“I believe that it’s important to continue to speak to the press as I’m doing right now,” Clinton said.
12.21am BST
The Trumptini, a twist on the classic martini served with flakes of gold and a T-shaped slice of lemon, and 100-odd other Trump trademarks including simply “Donald Trump” are now owned by a company in Delaware – allowing the US presidential candidate to save a fortune in taxes.
Filings at the US Patent and Trademark Office show that the ownership of Trump trademarks have been moved from various states to DTTM Operations LLC, a recently incorporated company registered alongside thousands of others at National Registered Agents office in Dover, Delaware.
Shifting his portfolio of trademarks, also including “Trump Tower” and “Trump National Golf Club”, to Delaware will help Trump in his mission to “pay as little tax as possible”.
The presumptive Republican nominee for president is exploiting the so-called “Delaware loophole”. It allows him to legally avoid paying taxes on royalty fees for use of his trademarks in every other state. It is unclear how much tax Trump will save from the move, but his financial disclosure form states that Trump “deals, brand and branded developments” are worth bn.
11.59pm BST
Just a reminder…
11.33pm BST
A federal judge has given the world an unprecedented glimpse into the ruthless business practices Donald Trump used to build his business empire, report the Guardian’s Rupert Neate and Lauren Gambino.
US district court judge Gonzalo Curiel today made public more than 400 pages of Trump University “playbooks” describing how Trump staff should target prospective students’ weaknesses to encourage them to sign up for a ,995 Gold Elite three-day package.
Trump University staff were instructed to get people to pile on credit card debt and to target their financial weaknesses in an attempt to sell them the high-priced real estate courses.
The documents contained an undated “personal message” from Trump to new enrollees at the school: “Only doers get rich. I know that in these three packed days, you will learn everything to make a million dollars within the next 12 months.”
The courses are now subject to legal proceedings from unhappy clients.
Judge Curiel released the documents, which are central to a class-action lawsuit against Trump University in California, despite sustaining repeated public attacks from Trump, who had fought to keep the details secret.
Curiel ruled that the documents were in the public interest now that Trump is “the front-runner in the Republican nomination in the 2016 presidential race, and has placed the integrity of these court proceedings at issue”.
Trump hit back calling Curiel a “hater”, a “total disgrace” and “biased”. “I have a judge who is a hater of Donald Trump. A hater. He’s a hater,” Trump said at a rally near the courthouse in San Diego. “His name is Gonzalo Curiel. And he is not doing the right thing … [He] happens to be, we believe, Mexican.”
Curiel, who is Hispanic, is American and was born in Indiana.
11.16pm BST
#FrenchRevolution.
10.57pm BST
A federal prosecutor and former colleague of Gonzalo Curiel, the federal judge presiding over the Trump University fraud case whom Donald Trump has accused of bias because of his Latino heritage, has written Talking Points Memo in response to the candidate’s attacks, calling them “offensive and wrong”:
These attacks say far less about Judge Curiel than they do about Trump and what he thinks of his own legal case in the Trump University scam (and that’s what it was). Trump knows that he is bound to lose some important decisions in the case and he has decided to preemptively inoculate himself by calling into question the integrity of the umpire. It’s an old trick and for someone who won’t accept responsibility for anything, entirely predictable. He’s giving his supporters a counter-narrative to be able to explain away a lot of bad facts that I expect to emerge in the course of this litigation. Frankly, this case should draw the interest of federal prosecutors to investigate the case as mail and wire fraud, but given the toxic political environment they will probably lay off at least until after the election.
10.19pm BST
Conservative columnist, talking head and Weekly Standard editor William Kristol has apparently found a potential seat-filler for his Quixotic third-party candidacy aimed at stopping Donald Trump from winning the White House: David French, a staff writer at the conservative (and anti-Trump) National Review.
Bloomberg Politics, citing sources close to Kristol, reports that French “is open to launching a bid, but that he has not made a final decision.”
In an article penned for the June 6 issue of Weekly Standard, Kristol urges conservatives to “resist” the three remaining presidential candidates, and pressing that “resistance means finding a serious and credible independent candidate.”
“I happen to know David French,” Kristol writes, after floating his name as a potential candidate. “To say that he would be a better and a more responsible president than Hillary Clinton or Donald Trump is to state a truth that would become self-evident as more Americans got to know him. There are others like him. There are thousands of Americans who – despite a relative lack of fame or fortune – would be manifestly superior to our current choices. And there are many, many others who stand ready to help whoever emerges to have the basic resources, assistance, and infrastructure to mount a credible effort.”
Updated at 10.21pm BST
9.47pm BST
Former secretary of state Hillary Clinton leads presumptive Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump by a mere four points in New Jersey, according to a Monmouth University poll that shows 15% of Garden State voters say they are not sure who they plan on voting for.
According to the poll, released this afternoon, Clinton wins 38% of the state’s general-election voters, while Trump wins the support of 34%, with Clinton barely edging out the 3.7% margin of error. When the race is expanded to include third-party candidates, Clinton wins a slightly larger 6% lead over Trump, 37% to 31%.
“Based on historical precedent, these undecided minority voters should break strongly for the Democratic nominee,” said Patrick Murray, director of the independent Monmouth University Polling Institute. “On the other hand, not much about the 2016 race has followed historical precedent.”
In a state that has not voted for a Republican presidential candidate since 1988, Clinton leads among women 44% to 28%, while Trump leads among men 40% to 31%. Voters under 35 prefer Clinton (41% to 27%), while voters age 35 to 54, 36% support Clinton and 32% support Trump. Among those age 55 or older, 40% support Trump and 37% support Clinton.
9.22pm BST
Former New Mexico governor and Libertarian presidential nominee Gary Johnson told C-SPAN today that he agrees with the policies of self-described democratic socialist Bernie Sanders 73% of the time.
“Of course I side with myself 100% of the time, but interestingly, of all the presidential candidates, I next side with Bernie Sanders at 73 percent,” Johnson said.
“Now, that’s the side of Bernie that has to do with pro-choice, pro-marriage equality, let’s stop with the military interventions, that there is crony capitalism, that government really isn’t fair when it comes to this level playing field, legalize marijuana,” Johnson continued. “Look, 73% of what Bernie says I agree with. We come to a ‘T’ in the road when it comes to economics. I would really argue that if we absolutely had a fair system of economics, that free markets, that we would do a lot better than going down the going down the path of socialism.”
Aligning himself with Sanders is a canny move on the part of the former governor. With disapproval ratings among the two likely major-party nominees at record highs and growing dissatisfaction with the primary process by Sanders supporters, Johnson appears to be positioning himself as a potential alternative to likely Democratic nominee Hillary Clinton, who hasn’t found her footing in the bid to unify liberal voters behind her candidacy.
8.56pm BST
Bernie Sanders holds rally in Santa Cruz, California
Watch it live here:
8.43pm BST
Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump took aim at the political press at a news conference in New York earlier today, saying they were “among the most dishonest people” he has ever met.
Trump made the comments during a news conference on donations to veterans’ groups. Several journalists questioned Trump’s treatment of them, saying it was their right to ask questions and vet presidential candidates.
8.35pm BST
First there was Megyn Kelly – and now Judge Gonzalo Curiel?
Donald Trump has repeatedly attacked a new nemesis in the last week, in the form of Curiel, who is presiding over one of two class-action lawsuits accusing Trump University of fraud. The judge has ruled that the lawsuit can go forward.
Curiel was born in Indiana to Mexican parents, but Trump has referred to him as “Mexican”.
Trump explained today that he calls Curiel Mexican “because I’m a man of principle.”
Trump said he could settle the case but he would not because the judge had been “very, very unfair”:
8.07pm BST
Clinton proposal to ‘support military families’
As Trump held his news conference detailing donations to veterans’ groups, the Hillary Clinton campaign released a new policy paper describing ways she would support military families as president.
Clinton’s paper lists six bullet points:
- Realign the demands of a military career in service to the nation to accommodate 21stcentury family realities while maintaining a strong force
- Back military spouses as they pursue education, seek jobs, build careers, and secure their finances
- Ensure military children receive a high-quality education and the resources to succeed
- Bring key resources for military families into the information age
- Champion efforts to care for our military members and families
- Continue and build on the Obama Administration’s effort to elevate military families in the White House and across the government
In his appearance, Trump said that “politicians” had failed to care for military families, while he, in contrast, had coordinated a fundraising effort and was making direct donations.
“Find out how much Hillary Clinton’s given to the veterans,” Trump said. “Nothing.”
7.45pm BST
The U.S. Supreme Court on Tuesday rejected a union challenge seeking to restore health and pension benefits for more than 1,000 workers at the Trump Taj Mahal casino in Atlantic City, the AP reports:
The justices let stand lower court rulings in favor of the former Trump Entertainment Resorts, once run by presumptive Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump.
But the union indicated it will continue to picket the casino, which is now owned by billionaire investor Carl Icahn.
The company filed for bankruptcy protection in 2014 and a federal bankruptcy judge imposed cost savings sought by the company. They included terminating health insurance and pension benefits for unionized workers.
7.41pm BST
Sanders pooh-poohs Clinton’s Jerry Brown endorsement, saying he prefers the support of health care workers to political professionals:
6.36pm BST
Donald Trump has argued that he will be able to turn states that have been falling Democrat in presidential years – New York, Michigan, Wisconsin, Pennsylvania – Republican (update: Clinton leads Trump in a new Siena College poll of New York by 21 points, 52-31). So far that’s just a claim by Trump, but we’ll keep reporting and watching the polls.
Hillary Clinton, meanwhile, has her own dreams about swiping a state from the other side – specifically, Texas, which will award 38 electoral votes.
The following passage is from a thorough new Clinton profile by Rebecca Traister:
Updated at 7.46pm BST
6.29pm BST
Sanders to speak on health care
Vermont senator Bernie Sanders is scheduled to hold a news conference shortly on the topic of health care. Here’s a live video stream:
Updated at 6.31pm BST
6.26pm BST
Clinton leads Sanders in California polling
Hillary Clinton leads Bernie Sanders in the three latest polls of California voters, one week out from the primary.
A SurveyUSA/KABC/SCNG poll of 803 Democratic likely voters conducted from 19-22 May has Clinton up 57-39 on Sanders.
A Public Policy Institute of California poll of 552 Democratic likely voters conducted from 13-22 May has Clinton up 46-44 on Sanders.
A YouGov/Hoover Institution poll of 694 Democratic likely voters conducted from 4-16 May has Clinton up 51-38.
The HuffPost pollster average of polls in the race has Clinton up by 12 points:
FiveThirtyEight’s forecasting tool has Clinton the 97% favorite to win the state (but the tool has missed badly for example in Indiana).
Turning to the latest general election polling in New Jersey, a Monmouth University poll detects a slight-ish advantage for Clinton, held in check by robust support for Trump among white voters. Strikingly, the poll detects an inversion of the usual home-court-advantage logic of politics, which holds that local associations benefit nonlocal candidates. Trump would lose significant support in the state, the polls finds, if he chose New Jersey governor Chris Christie as a running mate:
6.08pm BST
Donald Trump’s campaign chairman took a “mercenary” approach to lobbying the US government on behalf of international clients accused of killings, rapes and other atrocities, according to one of his former colleagues, writes Guardian Washington correspondent David Smith:
Manafort was a principal at the lobbying firm Black, Manafort, Stone and Kelly, which had close links to the Ronald Reagan and George HW Bush administrations, as well as senior Republicans in Congress.
In that role, in 1989, he had no qualms about doing business with the “murderous dictator” of Somalia, Washington lobbyist Riva Levinson recalls in a new memoir,Choosing the Hero: My Improbable Journey and the Rise of Africa’s First Woman President, which focuses on her work with Liberia’s Ellen Johnson Sirleaf.
“Arrogant, narcissistic, egotistical, brilliant – all of that I can handle in Paul,” Levinson writes. “But it is Paul’s mercenary attitude that puts us at odds.”
Read the full piece here:
5.54pm BST
At his news conference, Trump called Tom Llamas of ABC News a “sleaze” for Llamas’ having pointed out that Trump lied back in January about having raised m at a charity event for veterans:
5.22pm BST
The group Veterans against Trump is holding a news conference outside Trump tower, reports Lauren Gambino from the scene:
5.13pm BST
A Texas road sign was hacked to make fun of Trump:
5.12pm BST
The Hillary Clinton campaign has released a new installment in its “A message from your possible next president” series highlighting things Donald Trump has said. Today’s edition is on prisoners of war:
5.03pm BST
Trump’s list of charitable donations to veterans’ groups adds up to .5m. He said donations are still coming and he expects to top m.
4.48pm BST
Trump: ‘You think I’m gonna change? I’m not gonna change’
Trump says that the Republican party is unifying, but he’s not required to be nice to party figures who are holdouts.
“Why should I be nice to that person? If I have a person that’s not going to support me, I have no obligation,” he says. “I may choose to hit them back.”
So how about… 2012 nominee Mitt Romney?
I’m not a fan of Mitt Romney. Mitt Romney lost an election that he should have run…If you read the front page of the Wall Street Journal this weekend, he looks like a fool. He let us down.
New Mexico governor Susana Martinez?
She was not nice. You think I’m gonna change? I’m not going to change, not for her.
1996 nominee Bob Dole?
Bob Dole is a fan of mine. Don’t tell me about Bob Dole.
Former New Mexico governor and now Libertarian nominee Gary Johnson?
It’s a total fringe deal. He’s a fringe candidate, if you want to know the truth.
Trump closes by saying the political press is “unbelievably dishonest.” Exeunt.
Updated at 4.50pm BST
4.44pm BST
Trump on ‘loser’ Bill Kristol: ‘he’s not a smart person’
“Bill Kristol is a loser,” Donald Trump says of conservative columnist, talking head and Weekly Standard editor William Kristol. “Bill Kristol’s a loser. His magazine is failing. He’s getting some free publicity.”
Trump is steamed because Kristol has been calling for a third-party candidate to run against Trump and Clinton.
“It’s too late,” Trump says. “Texas is out. What happens is, you will not have Supreme Court justices. You will lose… now, Kristol… he said ‘Donald Trump will never run.’ He’s not a smart person.
“I actually blame you [the media]. Why do you put this guy on television. He looks like such a fool.
“These people are losers.”
Update:
Trump says Republicans should not support a third-party candidate, because “You lose the election for Republicans, and therefore you lose the Supreme Court.”
Updated at 7.42pm BST
4.36pm BST
Trump would consider senator Sessions as veep
Trump says he would consider Alabama senator Jeff Sessions for as a running mate. “He’s a fantastic person.”
4.36pm BST
Trump supports killing of ‘beautiful’ gorilla
A boy fell into a gorilla enclosure in the Cincinnati zoo at the weekend and the zoo killed a big gorilla that was deemed a threat to the boy. You may have seen the video on the Internet.
Trump’s asked about it.
“It was almost like a mother holding a baby. It looked so beautiful and calm,” he said.
“I don’t think they had a choice… it’s too bad there wasn’t another way. I thought it was so beautiful to watch that powerful, almost 500-lb gorilla, how he dealt with that young boy. [But] It just takes one second” for the gorilla to hurt the boy.
Updated at 4.52pm BST
4.31pm BST
Trump: ‘I didn’t want to have credit’
Trump says “I wasn’t too involved in picking the organizations other than I gave a million dollars to the Marine Corps Law Enforcement Foundation. They honored me at the Waldorf Last year. Terrific group.”
Trump says he did not want publicity attached to his donations to veterans: “I wanted to make this out of the goodness of my heart. I didn’t want to do this where the press is all involved.
“I’m totally accountable, but I didn’t want to have credit for it.”
“A lot of this money went out very early,” Trump says.
“I’m happy to do it. I didn’t want the credit for it, but it was very unfair that the press treated us so badly.”
4.30pm BST
Here’s the rest of Trump’s list:
Bob Woodruff Family Foundation Inc: ,000
Central Iowa Shelter and Services: 0,000
Connected Warriors Inc: ,000
Disabled American Veterans Charity: 5,000
Fisher House Foundation: 5,000
Folds of Honor Foundation: 0,000
Foundation for American Veterans: ,000
Freedom Alliance : ,000
Green Beret Foundation: 0,000
Higher Heroes USA: ,000
Homes for our Troops: 0,000
Honoring America’s Warriors: 0,000
Hope for the Warriors: ,000
Intrepid Fallen Heroes Fund: 5,000
Canines for Warriors: ,000
Liberty House: 0,00
Marine Corps Law Enforcement Foundation: .1m (including m from Trump himself, he says)
Navy Seal Foundation: 5,000
Navy Marine Corps Relief Society: ,000
New England Wounded Vets Inc: ,000
Operation Home Front: ,000
Project for Patriots: 0,000 (this “check is check is ready to go” but Trump is still vetting the group, he says, awaiting an “IRS determination letter”. “They have to give us that final document”.
Puppy Jake Foundation: 0,000
Racing for Heroes, Inc: 0,000
Support Siouxland Soldiers: 0,000
Task Force Dagger Foundation: ,000
The Mission Continues: ,000
National Military Families Inc: ,000
Veterans Airlift Command: 0,000
Veterans Count: ,000
Veterans in Command Inc: 0,000
Vietnam Veterans Workshop Inc: ,000
Warriors for Freedom Foundation: ,000
“And I believe we’re going to have some more coming in.”
4.17pm BST
“These are checks that have been delivered.” He starts reading his list which he says equals .6m. Here’s the top:
22Kill: 0,000.
Achilles International : 0,000
American Hero Adventures: 0,000
Americas for equal living: 0,000
America’s vet dogs: the veteran canine corp Inc: ,000
AmVets: ,000
Armed Services YMCA: ,000
4.14pm BST
Trump on charitable donations: ‘I wanted to keep it private’
Trump is asked about his donations to veterans’ groups.
“I’ve raised almost m, all the money has been paid out. I have been thanked by so many veterans’ groups across the United States.”
He says he brought a list, “in case that question was asked.”
“The money’s all been sent. I wanted to keep it private. If I could I wanted to keep it private. Because I don’t think it’s anybody’s business.”
Trump says he’s raised .6m dollars. In January he said it was m. He says it will be more than m.
Trump complains about bad publicity, blaming the media. “I sent people checks of a lot of money, and instead of being, ‘thank you very much Mr Trump…’ I have never received such bad publicity for doing such a good job.”
Trump says the donations took time because “you have to vet all of these different groups.” He says he personally gave m and “zero dollars have been taken out for administration.”
4.10pm BST
“We’ve started working already on the convention,” Trump says. He wishes LeBron James and the Cavaliers luck in the NBA playoffs – the sooner the series is done, he explains, the sooner plans for the convention can get under way.
He claims more votes than anyone in the history of the Republican primaries “by many millions more than anyone who’s ever run.” That’s hard to nail down right now but probably inaccurate (George W Bush in 2000 got more than 12m votes; Trump currently has fewer than 12m, with five states still to vote).
Updated at 7.03pm BST
4.07pm BST
It appears the Trump news conference is about to start. Yes, it’s starting. Watch live here.
4.05pm BST
North Korea praises Trump: ‘wise’, ‘far-sighted’
North Korean state media has praised US presidential hopeful Donald Trump, describing him as a “wise politician” and “far-sighted candidate” who could help unify the Korean peninsula, writes JH Ahn for NK News, part of the North Korea Network:
An editorial in DPRK Today, an official media outlet, welcomed the Republican presidential candidate’s proposal to hold direct talks with Kim Jong-un, saying he could help bring about Pyongyang’s “Yankee go home” policy.
“There are many positive aspects to Trump’s ‘inflammatory policies’,” wrote Han Yong-mook, who described himself as a Chinese North Korean scholar.
“Trump said he will not get involved in the war between the South and the North, isn’t this fortunate from North Korea’ perspective?”
Analysts said that although the editorial was not officially from Pyongyang, it was sure to reflect thinking inside the regime.
“This is very striking,” said Aidan Foster-Carter of the University of Leeds.“Admittedly it is not exactly Pyongyang speaking, or at least not the DPRK government in an official capacity. But it is certainly Pyongyang flying a kite, or testing the waters.
“For the rest of us, this is a timely reminder – if it were needed – of just how completely Trump plans to tear up established US policy in the region.”
Read further:
3.46pm BST
California governor Jerry Brown endorses Clinton
California governor Jerry Brown, who has been elected statewide four times, most recently in 2014 with 60% of the vote, has endorsed Hillary Clinton for president, a week in advance of the state’s Democratic primary.
Brown said in a statement that he was “deeply impressed with how well Bernie Sanders has done” in the Democratic nominating competition. But he said Clinton had won the race and the party must unify.
“For her part, Hillary Clinton has convincingly made the case that she knows how to get things done and has the tenacity and skill to advance the Democratic agenda,” Brown said. He called her lead over Sanders “insurmountable” and said Democrats should rally around her to “stop the dangerous candidacy of Donald Trump.”
“The stakes couldn’t be higher…” Brown said. “This is no time for Democrats to keep fighting each other. The general election has already begun. Hillary Clinton, with her long experience, especially as secretary of state, has a firm grasp of the issues and will be prepared to lead our country on day one.”
A nationally recognized progressive leader who was Bill Clinton’s main challenger for the 1992 presidential nomination, Brown was first elected governor of California in 1974 at age 36. He served two terms before moving into other public roles including mayor of Oakland and state attorney general. His father Pat Brown was governor of California in the 1960s.
In an indication of how important a strong showing in California is for the Clinton campaign, the candidate announced Monday that she would would spend the final five days before the 7 June primary campaigning across the state.
Clinton is on track to win the Democratic presidential nomination irrespective of her performance in California, but a decisive victory there could be an accelerant to Democratic cohesion. Sanders has contested the race aggressively to the end, challenging a vote count in Kentucky despite no delegates appearing to be at stake and leveraging his support to add activists to the party’s platform committee.
Updated at 3.58pm BST
3.26pm BST
Trump news conference live stream
Donald Trump is scheduled to speak at Trump Tower in about a half hour. The Guardian’s Lauren Gambino (@lgamgam) is there. You can watch it live here:
1.38pm BST
Hello, and welcome to our live-wire coverage of the 2016 race for the White House. A day after Memorial Day, Donald Trump is to announce in an 11am news conference how his campaign has distributed millions of dollars in charitable donations (by his count) to veterans’ groups.
Trump is holding the news conference in part to answer doubts about whether the money he has raised for vets actually lives up to the claims he has made for his magnanimity.
Trump originally said a charity event for veterans in January raised m, but his campaign admitted this month that the actual figure was smaller. The campaign also reversed itself on whether Trump had personally disbursed the m he promised to veterans, saying months ago that the money had already been distributed before Trump, under media pressure, announced last week that the money had in fact been donated just then.
A Bernie Sanders rally in Oakland, California, saw some unusual activity Monday evening, as secret service agents jumped onstage in response to a reported four people in the crowd “rushing” the stage and yelling. They were arrested; Sanders just kept talking.
Hillary Clinton is in New Jersey and New York today before heading later this week for California, which votes in one week.
Speaking of difficulty counting, Trump appeared at the Rolling Thunder Memorial Day bike rally, and spoke to a crowd that spilled down the steps of the Lincoln Memorial. The Guardian’s Ben Jacobs reports:
Trump repeatedly claimed – falsely – that hundreds of thousands were trying to attend the event, at one point claiming there were “600,000 people trying to get in”.
There were no visible lines or back-ups at any point in or around the mall. Furthermore, according to the United States Census Bureau, the total population of the District of Colombia is just 672,228.
The Libertarian party on Sunday selected Gary Johnson as its nominee for president, on a second ballot.
In his acceptance speech this year, Johnson told delegates his job will be to get the Libertarian platform before the voters at a level the party has not seen.
“I am fiscally conservative in spades and I am socially liberal in spades,” Johnson told the Associated Press. “I would cut back on military interventions that have the unintended consequence of making us less safe in the world.”
Meanwhile, somebody asked Stephen Hawking, the visionary physicist, about Trump, whom Hawking thinks is a “demagogue”:
I can’t. He’s a demagogue who seems to appeal to the lowest common denominator.
Thanks for reading, and as always please join us in the comments.
Updated at 3.07pm BST
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The way we use language in politics matters
This article titled “The way we use language in politics matters” was written by Will Hutton, for The Observer on Saturday 23rd April 2016 23.04 UTC
One of the many depredations resulting from a highly powerful rightwing press and a cowed BBC is that there is a new carelessness about truth. Boris Johnson knocked off a column for the Sun on Friday morning in which he repeated the trope beloved of the US radical right that Barack Obama’s Kenyan origins mean somehow that he is not a “real” American. We should not trust part-Kenyan Obama and his urging Britain to stay in the EU. It was partisan, unforgivable nonsense, with uneasy tones, at best, of crude identity politics, at worst, of sinking to a semi-racist smear. Johnson was badly caught out.
For, ultimately, truth-seeking and truth-telling matter, as does the language in which they are framed. An article in the Financial Times is more credible than one in the Daily Express because the reader knows that its writer and the paper are more committed to objectivity than is a Eurosceptic propaganda sheet.
But Johnson has built a career out of extravagant use of language with only a tenuous relationship to the truth – and until now it has made many of us smile. He became the pantomime buffoon of British politics, a different politician because of his good one-liners even if they served a very rightwing cause. Now it has become more serious. The referendum is about Britain’s place in the world, real jobs and real economic prospects. It deserves better than smears based on falsehoods.
My Hertford College office in Oxford’s Catte Street is just across the road from the Bodleian, one of the world’s great libraries. The fellows at my college want to impart an appetite for truth and their students diligently acquire and marshal facts, accessing this great library and its millions of books; they are then challenged on both their acquired knowledge and how they interpret it.
Yet increasingly I wonder, particularly in the humanities and social sciences, how much our society values their efforts. If and when as graduates they try to enter the public square, they will find it inhabited by hundreds of Boris Johnsons who regard truth-seeking as secondary to the principal task of smearing opponents, ideas and propositions they don’t like, supported by half-truths or no truths at all. All that scholarly effort is devalued. Just join Leave and make it up. Be sure nobody will challenge you – unless an American president is in town.
The postmodernist claim that there is no such thing as truth, only interpretations; that evidence is not to be trusted and all there can be are pluralist “conversations”, in which anything can be asserted, is the culture in which a Johnson can flourish. Elide it with the politics of identity where blood, culture, race and ethnicity trump argument and rationality – think Nigel Farage darkly muttering about Obama’s family background: “There is clearly something going on there” – and there is a toxic fusion that permits the speaker to say more or less anything he or she wants.
Witness Johnson’s article. If the public square is then largely framed by a media whose core purpose has transmuted from the dissemination of information, news and fact to the propagandising of a worldview, then the zany anti-Enlightenment, anti-democracy project is complete. Euroscepticism, Farage and Johnson are the result.
The referendum debate is widely disparaged for not having provoked elevated debate involving fact-based analysis and counter-analysis, so leaving ordinary citizens bewildered. A referendum on EU membership in our culture so damaged by a pop postmodernism could never have been that. It was called precisely because the only way Cameron could attempt to beat populist identity politics, threatening to overwhelm his party, was to use populism back. Hold and win a referendum.
The problem for the Remain camp is that, perforce, it can’t fight with fire. It has to hope that there is still sufficient British attachment to fact, evidence and argument – and hard-headed appreciation of economics – that it can win. I think building the European Union is a noble cause and that Europeanness is part of my identity. But I fear that emotion will always be bettered by worship at the ancestral shrine of Britishness, an identity I believe I can pursue along with my Europeanness. Sadly that doesn’t cut much mustard on many doorsteps.
What still does is fact. The British do respect different points of view, but not to the point where authors are away with the fairies. Postmodernism is now widely recognised as transient nonsense: it has few fresh adherents even if it has left a cultural legacy. Universities have recommitted to be firm custodians of academic freedom in the quest for understanding, backed by evidence. The BBC, a public broadcaster born of the best Enlightenment tradition of reason, should rejoin their ranks. Its new understanding of objectivity – to treat everything as equal claim and counterclaim – is to surrender. It is not good enough in reporting, say, Treasury analysis on the economic impact of leaving the EU to then “balance” it with a one-liner from Boris Johnson or an interview with John Redwood who have plainly not had time to read the 200-page document.
If Leave have fact and analysis with which to respond, that is different. Both sides should earn their place on news bulletins, not be gifted it because they have an opinion whose value is allegedly equal. If the BBC is terrified that John Whittingdale will take his revenge, after 23 June, if it sticks to Reithian rigour then so be it. Better go down fighting than turn into a glorified clearing house for rival press releases.
The referendum may be unedifying, but it is showing up the great cleavage in our country. Are we so keen to assert an idea of Britishness and so careless about evidence-based argument that we will damage ourselves economically by leaving the EU? Is politics to be framed by unfounded prejudice, funny one-liners and untruths? Do the majority of us want to live in a country constructed by the Eurosceptics and their press? Johnson’s article, I feel, was a watershed moment. I hope others see it that way too.
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