Trump crosses another line
With twenty unprecedented steps at the Demilitarized Zone between the two Koreas, President Trump set up an elaborately symbolic photo opportunity and took “Twitter diplomacy” to a new level. After a hour-long closed meeting, Trump said stalled discussions on denuclearization would resume, but there was some caution that the US was giving the North Korean regime legitimacy with nothing to show for it in return. As usual, any ultimate value will be in the eventual outcome.
Kim Jong-un said the meeting was "very significant" and "this means we can feel at ease and meet each other with positive answers"
Mr Kim accepted Mr Trump's invitation to meet at DMZ, which he sent via tweet on Saturday
More: https://t.co/ZBPA2uHgEQ pic.twitter.com/0lUT9H8M0M
— BBC Breaking News (@BBCBreaking) June 30, 2019
ANALYSIS: Trump, ever the showman, delivers his greatest performance at DMZ. https://t.co/Y4KmaMTLjL
— ABC News (@ABC) June 30, 2019
Reminder: Kim Jong Un has not met the 1st commitment of the Singapore summit a year ago: disclosing inventory of his weapons so there could be a baseline for denuclearization talks and is testing missiles but US has not held joint military exercises with SK since the 1st summit
— Andrea Mitchell (@mitchellreports) June 30, 2019
A North Korean defector at the SOTU. A West Wing driveway announcement. The nighttime tarmac welcome of three American captives. And now a DMZ handshake. Trump, doubling as producer, has used elaborate set pieces on live TV to drive his policy. My debrief: https://t.co/bNCnVWzXgb
— David Nakamura (@DavidNakamura) June 30, 2019
Trump’s trip to Korea came after the G20 meeting in Japan, where he met with Chinese President Xi Jinping and Saudi Arabia’s Crown Prince Mohammad Bin Salman as well as joking with Vladimir Putin about getting rid of journalists and Russian meddling in US elections.
My question to Trump at the G20: “what is it with your coziness with some of these dictators and autocrats at these summits?” https://t.co/WgEfws1Q5w
— Jim Acosta (@Acosta) June 29, 2019
And the president turned the event into a family affair, even if world leaders seemed less than enamoured.
When we look back on the Trump era, it'll be Ivanka and her husband that will shock us most, even more than her Dad. Either that or Ivanka will be president by then in which case I'll be living in North Korea. https://t.co/Y5hqWhF1E4
— Edward Luce (@EdwardGLuce) June 30, 2019
Ivanka Trump, Kushner take a seat at the table for high-stakes G20 talks.
Is G20 the privileged kids business workshop, now? https://t.co/li1UpUCsRw via @scmpnews— Jim Clancy (@ClancyReports) June 29, 2019
Ivanka Trump tried to speak to world leaders at the G20 and everyone made the same jokes https://t.co/uvoGydCtsg
— The Independent (@Independent) June 30, 2019
"Being someone's daughter actually isn't a career": AOC mocks video showing Ivanka Trump failing to mingle at G20 Summithttps://t.co/nkmI8b9ruk
— Newsweek (@Newsweek) June 30, 2019
But of course, all that was just a successfully distracting sideshow.
Instead of focusing on Ivanka Trump’s presence at the G20, it’s dialogue like this that really demands our attention and carries far more consequence in geopolitics:https://t.co/VqWy3c45q9
— Caroline Rose (@CarolineRose8) June 30, 2019
This coming week, Trump is planning an elaborate Fourth of July event in Washington DC, but has been accused of politicizing what has been a traditionally non-partisan celebration.
Why did Trump Hotel rates double around the Fourth of July?
It’s no different than any other weekend…except that the owner of the hotel is giving a speech and invited his supporters to townhttps://t.co/hLucHK2YAd— Citizens for Ethics (@CREWcrew) June 30, 2019
Oh, and he also found time to attack former President Jimmy Carter.
Meanwhile, the circular firing squad reloads
As the so-called “attention primary” gears up, the Democrats who want to take Donald Trump’s job next year held their first televised debates over two nights in Miami. They were probably most notable for good performances by Elizabeth Warren and Kamala Harris, and a worrying wake-up call for former Vice President Joe Biden, who’s perhaps realizing that he has to do more to win than just show up, and that there are many cons as well as pros to a lifetime of public service. As he tried to restore equilibrium the following day, he managed to mangle a Seamus Heaney quote – surprisingly, since it’s one he has used many, many times – so clearly he’s finished…
The past finally caught up with Joe Biden in the Democratic debate #2020 https://t.co/EgQO6lE9XX
— The Daily Beast (@thedailybeast) June 30, 2019
Kamala Harris's attack on Joe Biden at the Democratic debate was months in the making. She and her advisers carefully plotted it — and how to capitalize on it afterwardhttps://t.co/rG0wz05v2s
— POLITICO (@politico) June 29, 2019
Donald Trump Jr., the president’s eldest son, shared another person’s tweet during the Democratic debate this week that falsely claimed Senator Kamala Harris was not black enough to be discussing the plight of black Americans. He later deleted it. https://t.co/HieF4NNu5I
— The New York Times (@nytimes) June 29, 2019
But of course…
There’s a fair amount of discussion as to which Democrat would do best in debates with Trump. But I wouldn’t assume Trump will agree to debate his Democratic opponent. He could invent a host of excuses, which his credulous supporters might well accept, to kill the debates.
— Bill Kristol (@BillKristol) June 28, 2019
Yearning to breathe free
One of the issues raised in the debate and sure to be at the centre of the coming campaign is immigration, with the Democratic candidates appearing unsure of an effective strategy. President Trump, meanwhile, warned that a series of raids was coming on illegal immigrants, likely beginning on or after July 4th, after being previously postponed.
Donald Trump: Immigration raids could start July 4 https://t.co/pU24ZpmZuV
— UPI.com (@UPI) June 29, 2019
BREAKING: The Senate has approved a bipartisan $4.6 billion border bill, with fewer curbs on Trump immigration policies than were in the House-passed plan. The next step is unclear. https://t.co/lBDksFDLWt
— The Associated Press (@AP) June 26, 2019
The world was stunned earlier in the week by a tragic photograph of a father and daughter who had drowned attempting to cross the Rio Grande. The image inflamed debate around the humanitarian crisis at the southern border and, perhaps unexpectedly, about media sensitivities.
I guess that stuff about great journalism afflicting the comfortable and comforting the afflicted is just horseshit nowadays. Because this is a brutal, purposed and worthy editorial cartoon. https://t.co/6Uz8gKdU6k
— David Simon (@AoDespair) June 30, 2019
On Friday, the Supreme Court said it would address the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) legislation affecting the so-called “dreamers” in its next term, guaranteeing to keep the controversial issue in the public eye ahead of the election.
‘A cavorting charlatan’
Despite all the attention-generating news their president creates every single day, the US press also found time to take a look this week at the contest to be Britain’s next prime minister – and particularly at its front-runner. The outcome probably wasn’t what Boris Johnson would welcome, even if by now he should probably be expecting it.
actual headline in the NYT https://t.co/xgFNLOkuad
— emily bell (@emilybell) June 30, 2019
“Johnson is not the cause of British unseriousness. He is, rather, the product of institutions that stopped behaving seriously a long time ago.” Britain, starting with its press, is constitutionally bankrupt https://t.co/yByeiFd7Cf
— Peter Jukes (@peterjukes) June 30, 2019
This by @NickCohen4 on the situation in the UK very much applies to the US:
The Right "is throwing off the standards it once pretended to abide by…For all its rage, don’t underestimate how much it is enjoying the release."https://t.co/cJPQlBTjYF— Bill Kristol (@BillKristol) June 30, 2019
But, demonstrating his famous water-off-a-duck’s-back political strategy, Boris followed up “hairgate” by managing to put a positive spin on events at Glastonbury this week.
This is the moment Boris Johnson claimed Stormzy actually said "back Boris" during his Glastonbury performance pic.twitter.com/plh70eFG1X
— PA Media (@PA) June 29, 2019
This, though, was maybe the best thing about Stormzy’s set…
Only 4 British Sign Language interpreters in the UK are specialists in Grime. Tara Asher signed Stormzy’s Glasto set for deaf festival goers.
She rehearsed each song for a day. This is joyous. She LOVES her job. Have a watch please. @BritishSignBSL @deafzone1 #glastonbury19 pic.twitter.com/OkeW9irIoG— 📻 Colin Paterson 📺 (@ColinGPaterson) June 29, 2019
Meanwhile, Michael Spicer gave us this piece of comedic genius:
the room next door pic.twitter.com/EoTO3jUTEo
— Michael Spicer (@MrMichaelSpicer) June 25, 2019
(and he followed it up with a similarly brilliant skewering of the Dalai Lama)
‘A leader for her team and her time’
Finally, Sunday sees New York’s Pride parade and celebrations surrounding the 50th anniversary of the Stonewall Uprising.
New York to throw a massive LGBTQ Pride march as other cities including San Francisco, Chicago and Seattle also host parades commemorating the 50th anniversary of the clash between police and gay bar patrons that sparked the modern gay rights movement. https://t.co/CPMsmOpxXa
— The Associated Press (@AP) June 30, 2019
For some, it was their first time returning to the city since 1969. https://t.co/mKTB9dQJjR
— USA TODAY (@USATODAY) June 29, 2019
Protest, outrage and a hunger for equality. That's what Pride was built on.
💜💙💚💛🧡❤️https://t.co/D4foA6RcQF— Amnesty International (@amnesty) June 28, 2019
And it’s beautifully fortuitous that there’s a certain football match happening on Tuesday that features America’s latest great gay icon:
This may be the greatest headline ever written. https://t.co/NRoX4K9xgi
— Erin Biba (@erinbiba) June 29, 2019
‘She has perhaps become the representative athlete of our times — wearing the jersey of a nation that is divided, playing for a team that is not, fearless and unapologetic about demanding excellence from herself and fair and equitable treatment by others.’ https://t.co/TUOZZMGe1P
— Andrew Das (@AndrewDasNYT) June 30, 2019
From opponents to the president, racism & equal rights to equal pay, U.S. soccer star Megan Rapinoe is ready for a fight & taking it to the World Cup stage. She's on fire & won't be quiet, & it's glorious. New column: https://t.co/cOJQSq3293 @HeraldSports @mPinoe #USWNT #WWC2019
— Greg Cote (@gregcote) June 29, 2019