Tag: election

  • Trump returns to Washington after 2020 election loss

    Trump returns to Washington after 2020 election loss

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    Trump returns to Washington after 2020 election loss

    Donald Trump returned on Tuesday to Washington for the first time since he left the White House after a failed attempt to overturn his election loss to Joe Biden.

    Trump, increasingly teasing a bid to win back the presidency in 2024, is set to address the America First Policy Institute, a think tank run by allies.

    He’ll be appearing in a city riveted by weeks of hearings held by a Democratic-run House of Representatives committee on the January 6, 2021 riot where Trump supporters stormed Congress, trying to stop certification of the election result.

    The Republican continues repeatedly to push his lie in speeches that he was robbed of victory in 2020, but America First Policy Institute spokesman Marc Lotter said Trump would be looking ahead, rather than back.

    “This is a policy speech he will be giving,” he told CNN.

    However, Trump is unlikely to deviate too far from his typically incendiary blend of right-wing nationalism, anti-immigrant rhetoric and conspiracy theories about the election.

    The Capitol riot hearings, which revealed harrowing details of the assault on Congress and also the attempt by Trump political backers to overturn the election through manipulation of the complicated US electoral system, are believed to have damaged Trump.

    Biden, who at the start of his presidency went out of his way to avoid so much as mentioning Trump’s name, launched a blistering broadside Monday on the Republican’s failure to pull back his mob of supporters.

    “Brave law enforcement officers were subject to the medieval hell for three hours, dripping in blood, surrounded by carnage, face to face with the crazed mob that believed the lies of the defeated president,” Biden told the National Organization of Black Law Enforcement Executives Conference.

    “For three hours, the defeated former president of the United States watched it all happen as he sat in the comfort of the private dining room next to the Oval Office,” he said.

    – Trump in pole position –

    Trump, 76, remains by far the most recognizable name in Republican politics. He is believed to retain an intensely loyal core of supporters, putting him in pole position if he decides to seek the party nomination.

    Potential rivals are gaining ground as the negative publicity piles up.

    All eyes are on the progress of Florida Governor Ron DeSantis, who has not declared a bid for the presidency, but has growing stature on the right.

    And a recent New York Times/Siena College poll showed that nearly half of Republican primary voters would vote for any Republican other than Trump.

    Last week, the right-leaning editorial boards of two newspapers owned by the Murdoch family, the Wall Street Journal and New York Post, issued harsh critiques of Trump’s behavior during the January 6 calamity.

    Trump showed he is “unworthy” of becoming president again, the usually friendly Post wrote.

    However, both Trump and his portrayal of an America under attack by leftists continues to be boosted by enormously popular commentators on Murdoch-owned Fox News.

    “Across American history, our era is easily among the most fraught — and the most alarming,” wrote the leaders of the pro-Trump think tank, including his former economy advisor Larry Kudlow.

    AFP

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  • Muslim-Muslim Ticket: Tinubu Only Desperate To Win Election, Doesn’t Care If Decision Was Right Or Wrong – Ruling APC Chieftain

    Muslim-Muslim Ticket: Tinubu Only Desperate To Win Election, Doesn’t Care If Decision Was Right Or Wrong – Ruling APC Chieftain

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    A chieftain of the All Progressives Congress (APC) In Adamawa State, Vrati Nzonzo, has added his voice in rejecting the party’s Muslim-Muslim presidential ticket.
    Nzonzo lambasted the party’s presidential candidate, Bola Tinubu, for undermining the interest of Christians in northern Nigeria.





    He said the decision to adopt a fellow Muslim as a running mate by the presidential candidate of the APC, Tinubu may have grave consequences for the party, amongst northern Christians.
    In an interview with journalists, Nzonzo, who is also vying for a seat in the National Assembly, vehemently condemned Shettima’s selection as a fellow Muslim, as it amounted to insulting the sensibilities of Christians in Nigeria.
    He said, “Let me be as blunt as I can be; I’ll not hesitate to show my displeasure over the decision of my party, the APC, to make our presidential ticket a religious affair.
    “Making it a Muslim-Muslim affair has brought to the fore the issue of religion in our politics in Nigeria. Tinubu has through his scheming for the ticket promised to pick a northern Muslim as running mate. He openly said he needs to bring a Muslim VP from the North to win.
    “So, ‘ab initio’, he did not paint the picture of competence as he would later want us to believe; he painted the picture of religion. The governor of Kano (Abdullahi Ganduje) was heard saying before it happened that Tinubu has promised to give them a Muslim VP from the North. Several other notable names have been corroborated.”
    “Does it mean Tinubu is not Muslim enough; are we having two types of Muslims or what is the issue?” Nzonzo probed.
    He maintained that the controversial ticket was capable of truncating the party’s chances in the North.
    “Why this issue has caused more damage than good is because for Tinubu is all about winning election, without recourse to whether it is right or not. Now what becomes of people like me who are Christians and candidates on the APC platform? Are we now saying Christian votes don’t matter, if they don’t, are you now not telling them not to vote for me?
    “Because I’m in APC and my party has refused to recognise or to be fair to my faith and it’s people in Northern Nigeria. And it’s not only me, a lot of other contesting Christian candidates of the Christian stock will also be victims”, he lamented.
    Nzonzo, however, pleaded with the electorates across the country who may have been irked by the choice not to reject other APC candidates, “because it won’t be fair to punish us for Tinubu’s sins,” he said.

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  • Atiku Abubakar: It’s difficult for a miracle to happen for Peter Obi to win 2023 election

    Atiku Abubakar: It’s difficult for a miracle to happen for Peter Obi to win 2023 election

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    The presidential candidate of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), Atiku Abubakar, said it is difficult for a miracle to happen for Labour Party candidate Peter Obi to win the 2023 presidential election.

    Atiku, a former vice president, during an interview on Arise TV, said he is not expecting Peter Obi and Labour Party to pull off a surprise in the next general elections.

    The PDP candidate dismissed political calculations that Obi, a former Anambra State governor, will divide votes of his party.

    Atiku noted that the political status of the Labour Party does not agree with those calculations, citing instances from the just concluded governorship election in Osun and that the party does not have governors, members of the national assembly and state assemblies.

    “I really don’t expect the Labour Party to take as many votes from the PDP as people are suggesting,” he said.

    “We could have seen it in the last election in Osun state. What is the performance of the Labour Party?

    “This is a party that doesn’t have a governor, doesn’t have members of the national assembly, doesn’t have state assembly members, and politics in this country depends on the structures you have at the various levels — at the local government level, at the state level, and at the national level.”

    Atiku said 90 percent of people in the north are not social media, insinuating that it will limit the chances of the LP to win the 2023 presidential election.

    “So, it is very difficult to expect a miracle to happen, simply because Peter Obi is in the Labour Party. After all, they were saying through social media, they had more than one million votes in Osun state,” he said.

    “But how many votes turned for the Labour Party? And then again, mark you, you’re talking about social media. In the north, 90 percent of our people are not tuned to social media.”

    New Nigeria Peoples Party (NNPP) presidential candidate Rabiu Kwankwaso, who had a failed merger negotiation with Labour Party had argued that northern voters will not vote for Obi.

    “The implication is if you put somebody from the south-east, unfortunately, there are many issues in the south-east,” Kwankwaso said on Channels Television.

    “You see, northern voters are the worst hit by this country’s maladministration issue. Even under that circumstance, a northern voter also believes that he is better as a one united Nigeria.”

    Obi, however, refuted the claims, saying he has a national structure in young people across the country.

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  • Osun election: Koshoedo congratulates Adeleke, Makinde, South West PDP | The Guardian Nigeria News

    Osun election: Koshoedo congratulates Adeleke, Makinde, South West PDP | The Guardian Nigeria News

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    Deputy National Secretary of the People’s Democratic Party (PDP) Setonji Koshoedo has congratulated the winner of the Osun State governorship election Senator Ademola Adeleke.

    Koshodeo commended Oyo State governor Seyi Makinde and PDP in Southwest for their resolve to work for the emergence of Adeleke as Osun State governor-elect.

    According to him, “the success and result of the Osun State election is much welcome because it has returned the state to its traditional political roots in the Peoples Democratic Party.

    Koshoedo urged the Governor-Elect to join Governor Seyi Makinde, the current leader of the PDP in the South West, and work in concert with him to make members of the Party in other states of the zone to close ranks and rally round for the success of other candidates in subsequent elections to recover the South West from the incompetence of the opposition party and its current ruinous policies. This, he said, is even more imperative now that votes of the people are beginning to count.

    He also urged the party members and the entire people of the zone not to rest on their oars till the whole of South West is returned to true progressive democracy.

    He advised party faithful and the entire people of the South West to replicate the same result in Oyo, Lagos Ogun as well as Ondo and Ekiti states later.

    15 political parties participated in the Osun State gubernatorial elections which held on Saturday, July 16, 2022 with the Peoples Democratic Party candidate, Senator Ademola Nurudeen Adeleke emerging victorious with 403, 371 votes to beat the All Progressives Congress and incumbent governor, Isiaka Oyetola who was runner up with 375, 027 votes.



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  • Kenya: EU Election Observation Mission to Deploy 180 Monitors in 39 Counties

    Kenya: EU Election Observation Mission to Deploy 180 Monitors in 39 Counties

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    Nairobi — The European Union Election Observation Mission to Kenya is set to deploy 180 monitors in 39 counties, the Missions Chief Observer Ivan Štefánek has said.

    The Mission told news reporters at a media briefing in Westlands on Saturday that the team will include 48 short-term observers who will arrive in the county shortly before the election day on August 9.

    “This reflects the EU’s established election observation methodology which is based on long-term approach and focuses on the entire electoral process,” the Chief Observer said.

    Štefánek also said the Observer Mission will include a Technology Analyst who will assess the electoral commission’s technology, specifically the Kenya Integrated Election Management System, and media monitors who will examine media coverage on a wide range of platforms including traditional, social and vernacular channels.

    “For the first time in Kenya the EU EOM has a dedicated Election Technology Analyst who will assess the use of technologies in different phases of the election processes as well as social media observers to assess the role of social media and digital communication process,” Stefanec said.

    He said the Mission will deploy a Social Media Analyst who will lead a team of six monitors in assessing social media and digital communication.

    “We will issue a preliminary statement shortly after the election day and will remain in Kenya until the completion of the electoral process including in case of a second round of presidential elections and any complaints and appeal processes,” he told reporters.

    The Election Observation Mission was hosted by Chief Justice Martha on Friday on Judiciary’s readiness to handle electoral disputes highlighting key preparatory efforts to prepare the courts for election petitions.

    Koome noted she had gazetted 120 special magistrates in February to enhance the capacity of courts to handle electoral disputes arising from the August 9 General Election.

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  • Security fears for Bolsonaro, Lula in tense election campaign — World — The Guardian Nigeria News – Nigeria and World News

    Security fears for Bolsonaro, Lula in tense election campaign — World — The Guardian Nigeria News – Nigeria and World News

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    Brazil’s far-right President Jair Bolsonaro and leftist rival Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva have both taken to wearing bullet-proof vests to campaign rallies ahead of the October elections, with the candidates’ security a major concern in an atmosphere of deep political polarization.

    The assassination last Friday of Japan’s ex-prime minister Shinzo Abe at an election campaign rally sparked a flurry of concern on social media in Brazil that conditions at home were ripe for a similar crime.

    Then on Sunday, a Lula partisan was shot dead at a political party event by a policeman shouting pro-Bolsonaro slogans.

    Lula blamed the death on “hate speech encouraged by an irresponsible president,” while Bolsonaro retorted that violent people should join “the left, which has an undeniable past of violent episodes.”

    The president himself was stabbed in the abdomen during his previous presidential campaign in 2018, by a man later declared mentally unfit to stand trial.

    “Political violence in Brazil has a long history,” political analyst Oliver Stuenkel of the Getulio Vargas Foundation in Sao Paolo told AFP.

    “It has mostly been limited to the municipal level, (but) we now see, in part due to the radical, extreme polarization, that it is reaching the federal level” of politics.

    Historically, dozens of candidates get shot with every municipal election in Brazil.

    Bolsonaro is trailing behind Lula in opinion polls ahead of the first round of presidential elections on October 2.

    There will be a runoff on October 30 if no candidate gets 50 percent of first-round votes.

    ‘Clearly worried’
    Bolsonaro, 67, has had his presidential protection upgraded, but does not avoid crowds on the campaign trail.

    Lula, 76, has employed a team of private security guards to reinforce the team of 35 police that political commentator Lauro Jardim told CBN radio already take care of him.

    The former president has taken a more cautious stance with his public engagements.

    From the official opening of the campaign on August 16, he and all other rival candidates to Bolsonaro will have access to a pool of some 300 federal police members dedicated to election protection.

    This “unprecedented” deployment, according to the federal police, could be increased as the risk calculus changes.

    Lula and Bolsonaro, leading the rest of the candidate pack, “can both be targeted by extremist individuals, so it is good to see them taking their safety more seriously,” said Silvio Cascione, Brazil director for the Eurasia Group consultancy.

    “Lula’s staff is clearly worried about the risk… Lula will prioritize indoor events with strict security protocols” with open-air events “much less frequent than in previous campaigns,” he added.

    Last week, at a Lula campaign event on a massive public square in Rio de Janeiro, a man hurled a small explosive device into the crowd.

    No one was hurt, but the attack sparked concern as it happened despite restricted access to the event and the use of metal detectors to screen attendees.

    ‘Violent language’
    According to the University of Rio de Janeiro’s Observatory of Political and Electoral Violence, 214 cases of violence ranging from threats to murders have been recorded against politicians since January this year.

    About 40 were homicides — many of the victims candidates or ex-candidates for mayoral office or municipal councils.

    The total represented a rise of 32 percent over the first half of 2020 when the country held municipal elections.

    Observers say the political climate in Brazil has become deeply polarized since Bolsonaro took office in 2019.

    The left and right have both accused each other of inflaming violence.

    Stuenkel points to the use of “violent language, especially in pro-Bolsonaro groups, or by the candidate himself.”

    Bolsonaro has repeatedly sought to cast doubt on the credibility of the election system, and there are fears he may reject the outcome if he loses and even foments violence similar to what happened in the United States.

    “They are trying to transform the campaign into a war, to instil fear in Brazilian society,” Lula charged on Tuesday.

    Experts have also pointed with concern to an explosion of 474 percent of private firearm ownership under the Bolsonaro government.

    Despite the growing nervousness, observers doubt the candidates will significantly limit their public outreach.

    “It is tremendously important (to them) to promote a narrative of broad, popular support for their candidacy,” said Stuenkel.



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