Wednesday, October 21, 2020

How the FDA Stood Up to Crybaby Trump


 

On Sept. 23, Dr. Stephen M. Hahn left a virtual meeting of the White House’s coronavirus task force to take a call from the president’s chief of staff,  criminal .

Meadows was angry with Hahn, head of the Food and Drug Administration, for pushing new guidelines for vaccine developers, according to two senior administration officials familiar with the call who requested anonymity because they were not authorized to discuss it. The FDA wanted to require two months of follow-up data to make sure a vaccine was safe and effective, all but ensuring one would not be ready by Election Day as President Donald Trump had promised.

Meadows told the commissioner the White House would not sign off on the guidance because it was unnecessary and would delay vaccine approval, so he should drop it, the officials said.

Hahn had been overruled by the White House before, most notably when the agency caved to the president’s desire to authorize malaria drug hydroxychloroquine to treat COVID-19 despite a lack of evidence. This time, stung by embarrassing scientific misstatements he made at a news conference in late August and concerned about the imperiled scientific credibility of the agency, Hahn would not be as obedient.

Meadows; Jared Kushner, the president’s son-in-law and senior adviser; and the president himself have called Hahn directly to urge him to speed up emergency authorization of vaccines and treatments, according to the two senior administration officials.

But despite the White House refusal to approve the new vaccine guidance document, the FDA published the guidelines in briefing materials to an advisory committee that will discuss them Thursday, effectively making them official. And nearly two weeks after Trump called the antibody treatment he received when sick with COVID-19 a miraculous “cure” and said that he had authorized it, the FDA has not yet approved it.

Internally, Hahn has tried to erect a shield between his staff and White House officials, asking that all calls be routed directly to him and not to his staff. His situation is especially fraught because Trump has openly accused the FDA of engaging in political ploys to harm his reelection chances. Criminal Alex M. Azar II, the secretary of health and human services and Hahn’s direct superior, has also questioned Hahn’s motives in some conversations with the White House, according to multiple officials.

A senior administration official, who spoke on condition of anonymity, denied that Hahn and Meadows were deeply at odds over the vaccine guidance, saying “the two have a good relationship.” Meadows’ only concern was that changing the guidance in the middle of ongoing clinical trials could confuse vaccine makers, said the official, who noted that the White House eventually approved it.

Alyssa Farah, the White House communications director, said, “The White House has always encouraged the FDA to follow the science and their expert medical viewpoints while also encouraging the FDA to work around the clock to help advance therapeutics and ultimately a vaccine that will save American lives.” An FDA spokesman also said that the White House and the Department of Health and Human Services “continue to support the science-based decisions of the agency’s career professionals.”

In what might be the final months of the Trump administration, and close enough to the election to make his firing unlikely, Hahn seems to be trying to save the FDA from the fate of its sister agency, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, whose scientists have been stripped of much of their authority and independence in responding to the pandemic.

“It’s better late than never, but I do think we can see a lot of damage has been done,” said Dr. Jesse L. Goodman, the FDA’s chief scientist from 2009 to 2014. “And I don’t think they are out of the woods yet.”

It has been a bleak year for the FDA and morale is low, according to interviews with high- and midlevel employees over the past six months. FDA scientists and policymakers have questioned whether Hahn could preserve their scientific integrity in the face of a president who openly calls them untrustworthy actors of the deep state.

Over the past few tumultuous months, Hahn has commiserated with Dr. Robert R. Redfield, director of the CDC, who has also been widely criticized for failing to stand up to the White House. At a late September birthday party for Seema Verma, the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services administrator, Redfield and Hahn joked about quitting together to open a restaurant, according to several people who were there.

To many FDA scientists, Hahn, an oncologist and former hospital administrator with no experience in Washington, has been a disappointing leader for much of his 10-month tenure. Under his leadership, the FDA authorized hydroxychloroquine for hospitalized COVID-19 patients despite a lack of evidence, only to reverse the decision once the drug was tied to severe side effects.

In late August, on the eve of the Republican convention, Hahn made a significant error at a news conference with the president announcing the approval of plasma treatments for COVID-19. The commissioner greatly exaggerated the benefits of the treatment, angering the scientific community. He publicly corrected the record.

“I think that was really a wake-up call about the legacy of his leadership,” said Goodman, now a professor of medicine and infectious diseases at Georgetown University.

Indeed, the plasma debacle seems to have been a turning point for Hahn and agency scientists dismayed by the White House’s efforts to influence the FDA’s actions. Within days, Hahn demoted the new FDA spokeswoman, Emily Miller, who had arranged the White House appearance and also ousted John E. (Wolf) Wagner, who had been installed by White House appointees to run the agency’s communications shop.

Soon after the plasma announcement, Hahn told top scientists at the FDA that he would handle White House calls in an effort to create what he called a “cocoon” around the agency, according to multiple agency officials who asked not to be identified.

Many polls have shown a growing public distrust of the first coronavirus vaccines, and FDA scientists worried that the perception of political meddling in the vetting process would jeopardize their widespread uptake.

On Sept. 10, eight high-level directors at the FDA took the unusual step of writing a joint statement, published in USA Today, warning that real or perceived political interference could destroy the agency’s credibility with the public. Hahn tweeted his support of the statement and later that day noted that new vaccine guidelines were coming.

Some regulators at the FDA were worried about companies rushing early trial data to the agency before enough had been collected to make sound judgments about safety and efficacy. Pfizer’s chief executive, Dr. Albert Bourla, had repeatedly dangled the prospect of an early readout of Pfizer’s trial data by late October.

A growing number of pharmaceutical companies and medical groups were also privately appealing to FDA regulators to give more clarity about what it would take to earn an emergency authorization. The criteria for such authorizations are vague, essentially just calling for potential benefits to outweigh the risks.

In early September, a small team of experts in the FDA’s Office of Vaccines Research and Review drafted new guidelines, to make its standards unmistakable to drugmakers and reassure jittery Americans that the agency would not cut corners when assessing a vaccine’s safety and effectiveness, including after granting an emergency authorization.

Within days of submitting the guidelines to the White House, FDA scientists began to fear they would never be made public — Trump attacked them in a news briefing — and began discussing how to get them out. They settled on an idea that would most likely draw less attention: including them in the briefing materials for an outside group of vaccine experts scheduled to meet Oct. 22.

The maneuver was unusual: Briefing materials for outside advisory groups are typically posted just a few days ahead of the meeting. FDA regulators had expected to provide the guidelines there well after they had been cleared by the White House. But as West Wing officials stalled, agency scientists began to discuss using the upcoming meeting to their advantage.

They slipped a condensed version of the guidelines into the appendix of the committee’s briefing materials, with reordered paragraphs and a new title, describing it as a summary of advice already given to companies. Dr. Peter Marks, the agency’s top regulator for vaccines, has called the recommendations “aspirational” in what some saw as a deliberate effort to downplay their importance to those officials who might obstruct them.

Privately, some White House officials argued that the pharmaceutical industry was not in favor of the guidelines. But in fact, executives from Johnson & Johnson and Merck, each with vaccine candidates, called for their release. The biotech industry’s trade organization wrote a public letter to the Department of Health and Human Services asking Azar to quickly publish the guidelines and make them available to the public, and Oct. 6, Bourla, Pfizer’s top executive, wrote on Twitter that he had faith in the FDA’s ability to set standards.

The same morning, the FDA’s briefing materials were quietly posted online. The White House was given only about an hour’s notice, according to a senior administration official. Later that day, the White House surprised top FDA officials and abruptly cleared the guidelines, which were then posted to the FDA website.

Scientists at the Food and Drug Administration celebrated on video calls. It was a win for career civil servants — and for the pharmaceutical industry, which played an important part in helping the agency get the guidelines cleared, some experts said.

“We think of the coalition of careerists of Dr. Hahn’s that struck back, but there were also scientists in industry,” said Daniel Carpenter, a professor at Harvard University. “Very few people in industry are going to want to appear as if they were pushing for a product on the president’s timeline.”

The agency’s buoyant mood was quickly tempered with trepidation. New disputes continue to emerge: The FDA and the health department have recently tangled, for instance, over whether it is possible to characterize an emergency use authorization for a vaccine as a form of provisional licensure so that Medicare would cover recipients.

The commissioner’s office has been rampant with rumors that Hahn will be fired, according to three senior administration officials. Although some consider it highly unlikely the president would risk the negative press from such a move, others aren’t so sure.

“The usual rules don’t apply to this administration,” said Coleen Klasmeier, a former FDA lawyer who is now a partner at Sidley Austin. “My conclusion is nobody is particularly safe, even now.”

This article originally appeared in The New York Times.

© 2020 The New York Times Company

CDC Says Impact of Pandemic on US Mortality Underestimated

 

FILE - A general view of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) headquarters in Atlanta, Georgia, Sept. 30, 2014.
FILE - A general view of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) headquarters in Atlanta, Georgia, Sept. 30, 2014.

new study released Tuesday by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention says nearly 300,000 more people in the United States died between late January and early October — two thirds of them due to the novel coronavirus outbreak. 

The federal health agency estimates that of the 299,028 “excess” deaths in the country during that period, more than 198,000, or just over two-thirds, could be attributed to COVID-19, although they were not recorded that way on official death certificates.  The study says the other excess deaths were due to other causes.   

Personnel at the The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) work the Emergency Operations Center in response to the 2019 Novel Coronavirus.
FILE - Personnel at the the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention work at the Emergency Operations Center in response to the 2019 novel coronavirus, Feb. 13, 2020, in Atlanta.

The CDC found that the number of excess deaths of adults between 25 and 44 years of age rose 26.5 during that time frame, the biggest increase among all age groups.  There was also a high percentage of excess deaths among people of color: Hispanics experienced a 56% increase, while Blacks sustained a 33% rise, far higher than the 12% increase among white Americans. 

Hispanics and Blacks, as well as elderly Americans, have been disproportionately affected by the COVID-19 pandemic. 

A "promotora" (health promoter) from CASA, a Hispanic advocacy group, tries to enroll Latinos as volunteers to test a potential…
FILE - A 'promotora' (health promoter) from CASA, a Hispanic advocacy group, tries to enroll Latinos as volunteers to test a potential COVID-19 vaccine, at a farmers market in Takoma Park, Md., on Sept. 9, 2020.

The United States officially leads the world with more than 221,000 confirmed COVID-19 deaths, according to data compiled by Johns Hopkins University’s Coronavirus Research Center.

Reinfection case in Australia?

In Australia, Premier Daniel Andrews of the southern state of Victoria told reporters Wednesday that a man who first tested positive for COVID-19 back in July tested positive for a second time earlier this month.  Premier Andrews said Tuesday that the diagnosis could be a case of the person shedding, or getting rid of, a dead virus.  But he now says doctors are treating the case as a reinfection “out of abundance of caution.”   

Police check details of residents in the Melbourne central business district on August 9, 2020.
FILE - Police check details of residents in the Melbourne central business district in Australia's worst-hit Victoria state, Aug. 9, 2020, as the city struggles to cope with COVID-19 pandemic.

Experts are conducting genomic sequencing and other tests to determine if the man has been reinfected. If the preliminary diagnosis is confirmed, the man would be the first Australian to be reinfected with the disease, and just the sixth case of reinfection in the world.   

Impact on travel industry

The global coronavirus pandemic continues to extract a toll on the travel industry.  Hong Kong-based Cathay Pacific Airways announced Wednesday that it is cutting 5,900 jobs and shutting down its regional Cathay Dragon brand.   

Cathay Pacific is also cutting another 2,600 unfilled positions from its payroll, which adds up to about 24% of the company’s total workforce.   

Cathay Pacific Airways and Dragon Airways planes are seen at the Hong Kong International Airport, China September 6, 2019…
FILE - Cathay Pacific Airways and Dragon Airways planes are seen at the Hong Kong International Airport, Sept. 6, 2019.

The global coronavirus pandemic continues to extract a toll on the travel industry.  Hong Kong-based Cathay Pacific Airways announced Wednesday that it is cutting 5,900 jobs and shutting down its regional Cathay Dragon brand.   

Cathay Pacific is also cutting another 2,600 unfilled positions from its payroll, which adds up to about 24% of the company’s total workforce.   

The airline has been losing between $193 million to $258 million a month since the start of the outbreak, and it plans to operate at less than 50% of its pre-pandemic capacity in 2021.  Officials say the restructuring plan will cost nearly $284 million to implement. 

 

Incoherent Trump tells Pennsylvania rally 'nobody wants me' before cutting event short and dancing off stage to YMCA

 



In one of his most bizarre and incoherent performances to date, president Donald Trump on Tuesday night told a Pennsylvania rally "nobody wants me" before cutting the event short and dancing off the stage to YMCA.

Outmuscled financially and trailing Joe Biden in most national and battleground polls, Mr Trump did not appear to be his usual energetic self, as he addressed thousands of Make America Great Again supporters crammed into a chilly and dark Erie International Airport.

Two weeks out from election day the president, 74, complained about the temperature, which had been hovering around 10C (50F) telling the crowd he was only there because he was losing, a highly unusual move – even for a president as unpredictable as Mr Trump.

At one point, the commander-in-chief appeared to be trying to get the crowd to feel sorry for him, telling them "nobody wants me". Just last week, he begged suburban women to "please like me" as he sought to recover ground among female voters, who overwhelmingly favour Mr Biden, 77.

"Really, I can't believe it. You better give me the credit damn it, I tell 'ya. What I've gone through – the drug companies, they're spending a fortune on fake ads," Mr Trump told his fans. 

"They don't want me, China doesn't want me, Iran doesn't want me .... no body wants me!" he added as the crowd chanted: "We want you!"

As is often the case with the president's meandering speeches, it was not clear what exactly he was referring to when he said nobody wanted him, although he may have been alluding to the US's deteriorating relations with both countries. 

The Trump administration in 2018 abandoned the Iran nuclear deal and has repeatedly clashed with China over national security issues.

Just minutes after telling Pennsylvania he didn’t want to be there, Mr Trump then announced he would be cutting the rally short because of the cold. 

"And in conclusion, we'll make this a little shorter, you know it's about 40 degrees, I don't want to lose anybody," he said shortly before wrapping up proceedings earlier than usual in the state – a key battleground which the president must win to remain in the White House.

As has been the case at recent rallies, the president then trailed off the stage dancing to YMCA, the 1970s hit by Village People. Footage from the rally shows the president with his feet planted firmly to the ground while bending alternate knees and punching the air.

His press secretary, Kayleigh McEnancy could be seen following the famous dance to the letter, as she spelt out the words the letters 'YMCA' with her arms.

On Wednesday night, Mr Trump will head to North Carolina, another crucial battleground state where polls show a tight race between the two candidates.

Meanwhile, Mr Biden has kept a low profile in recent days and is thought to be preparing for Thursday's third and final presidential debate.

Former president Barack Obama will make his first appearance on the campaign trail on Wednesday to support his Democratic colleague.

Mr Obama, who served eight years in the Oval Office with Mr Biden as his vice president, will urge supporters to vote early for Mr Biden and other Democratic candidates in the general election at an outdoor drive-in rally in Pennsylvania's biggest city, Philadelphia, an aide to the former president said.

Read more

Trump has a Chinese bank account and pursued China projects

Trump tells rally he wouldn’t have come if he wasn’t losing in polls

Trump tends to his electoral map, Biden prepping for debate

Intel Officers 'Terrified' Of Briefing Trump On Russia Because He Would 'Explode': Trumper Tantrum Report




 Intelligence officers in charge of briefing President Donald Trump on threats against the nation are reportedly “terrified” of speaking to him about Russia out of fear of how the president will react.

“No one’s going to brief anything on Russia to the president,” Marc Polymeropoulos told GQ correspondent Julia Ioffe. “They’re terrified of doing that. I know that from the briefers. Because he’ll explode and the whole thing will get derailed, because he has this weird affinity for [Russian President Vladimir] Putin.”

Asked why Putin is such a touchy subject, Polymeropoulos said that Trump “wants Putin to like him.”

“He doesn’t want to be embarrassed in front of Putin, that’s part of the dilemma,” he said.

“Just look at how he behaves with the Queen. That’s how he behaves with everyone who has any glamour and cachet,” he continued, adding, “Putin has everything he doesn’t have.”

The former official’s comments bolster a September report from Politico alleging that CIA Director Gina Haspel has been preventing intelligence about Russia from reaching the president’s ears to appease him.

The former Soviet republic ran disinformation campaigns to tilt the 2016 U.S. presidential election in Trump’s favor, and Trump has been repeatedly criticized throughout his presidency for his dealings with Putin, which have included at least five secret meetings. Most recently, Trump allies have been accused of playing into the Russians’ hands by accepting and making political hay out of disinformation about Democratic presidential contender Joe Biden and his family.

Ioffe’s in-depth reporting describes the lingering effects of a mysterious attack Polymeropoulos, a former CIA operative, withstood while staying at a Moscow hotel in December 2017. He believes he was hit with the same unknown device that has been aimed at U.S. diplomats in Cuba and China and is believed to be wielded by Russians.

Some experts believe the device uses microwaves to target specific individuals or rooms, causing sudden and overwhelming nausea and dizziness. Some victims say the attacks were accompanied by either a high or low buzzing or grinding noise.

According to Ioffe, the scope of the attacks is actually much larger than previously known to the public ― CIA agents all over the globe have suffered its effects, which include lasting brain damage ― and, under the Trump administration, the United States is not doing much to stop them.

Polymeropoulos alleges that Russia knows Trump “is at war with our intelligence community” and thus feels emboldened to “kick them when they’re down.”

The result has reportedly fueled frustration and anger within the U.S. intelligence community.

OpEd: KILL PUTIN!

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This article originally appeared on HuffPost and has been updated.

Trump Records Shed New Light on Chinese Business Pursuits and Dirty Business Deals

 President Donald Trump and his allies have tried to paint the Democratic nominee, Joe Biden, as soft on China, in part by pointing to his son’s business dealings there.

Senate Republicans produced a report asserting, among other things, that Biden’s son Hunter “opened a bank account” with a Chinese businessman, part of what it said were his numerous connections to “foreign nationals and foreign governments across the globe.”

But Trump’s own business history is filled with overseas financial deals, and some have involved the Chinese state. He spent a decade unsuccessfully pursuing projects in China, operating an office there during his first run for president and forging a partnership with a major government-controlled company.

And it turns out that China is one of only three foreign nations — the others are Britain and Ireland — where Trump maintains a bank account, according to an analysis of the president’s tax records, which were obtained by The New York Times. The foreign accounts do not show up on Trump’s public financial disclosures, where he must list personal assets, because they are held under corporate names. The identities of the financial institutions are not clear.

The Chinese account is controlled by Trump International Hotels Management LLC, which the tax records show paid $188,561 in taxes in China while pursuing licensing deals there from 2013 to 2015.

The tax records do not include details on how much money may have passed through the overseas accounts, though the Internal Revenue Service does require filers to report the portion of their income derived from other countries. The British and Irish accounts are held by companies that operate Trump’s golf courses in Scotland and Ireland, which regularly report millions of dollars in revenue from those countries. Trump International Hotels Management reported just a few thousand dollars from China.

In response to questions from The Times, Alan Garten, a lawyer for the Trump Organization, said the company had “opened an account with a Chinese bank having offices in the United States in order to pay the local taxes” associated with efforts to do business there. He said the company had opened the account after establishing an office in China “to explore the potential for hotel deals in Asia.”

“No deals, transactions or other business activities ever materialized and, since 2015, the office has remained inactive,” Garten said. “Though the bank account remains open, it has never been used for any other purpose.”

Garten would not identify the bank in China where the account is held. Until last year, China’s biggest state-controlled bank rented three floors in Trump Tower, a lucrative lease that drew accusations of a conflict of interest for the president.

China continues to be an issue in the 2020 presidential campaign, from the president’s trade war to his barbs over the origin of the coronavirus pandemic. His campaign has tried to portray Biden as a “puppet” of China who, as vice president, misread the dangers posed by its growing power. Trump has also sought to tar his opponent with overblown or unsubstantiated assertions about Hunter Biden’s business dealings there while his father was in office.

“He’s like a vacuum cleaner — he follows his father around collecting,” Trump said recently, referring to Biden’s son. “What a disgrace. It’s a crime family.”

In a misleading claim amplified by surrogates like his son Donald Trump Jr. and his lawyer Rudy Giuliani, the president has said the younger Biden “walked out of China” with $1.5 billion after accompanying his father on an official trip in 2013. Numerous news articles and fact-checking sites have explained that the huge figure was actually a fundraising goal set by an investment firm in which Hunter Biden obtained a 10% stake after his father left office. The firm did receive financial backing from a large state-controlled bank, but it is not clear the fundraising target was ever met, and there is no evidence Hunter Biden received a large personal payout.

As for the former vice president, his public financial disclosures, along with the income tax returns he voluntarily released, show no income or business dealings of his own in China. However, there is ample evidence of Trump’s efforts to join the myriad American firms that have long done business there — and the tax records for him and his companies that were obtained by The Times offer new details about them.

As with Russia, where he explored hotel and tower projects in Moscow without success, Trump has long sought a. His efforts go at least as far back as 2006, when he filed trademark applications in Hong Kong and the mainland. Many Chinese government approvals came after he became president. (The president’s daughter Ivanka Trump also won Chinese trademark approvals for her personal business after she joined the White House staff.)

In 2008, Trump pursued an office tower project in Guangzhou that never got off the ground. But his efforts accelerated in 2012 with the opening of a Shanghai office, and tax records show that one of Trump’s China-related companies, THC China Development LLC, claimed $84,000 in deductions that year for travel costs, legal fees and office expenses.

After effectively planting his flag there, Trump found a partner in the State Grid Corp., one of the nation’s largest government-controlled enterprises. Agence France-Presse reported in 2016 that the partnership would have involved licensing and managing a development in Beijing. Trump was reportedly still pursuing the deal months into his first presidential campaign, but it was abandoned after State Grid became ensnared in a corruption investigation by Chinese authorities.

It is difficult to determine from the tax records precisely how much money Trump has spent trying to land business in China. The records show that he has invested at least $192,000 in five small companies created specifically to pursue projects there over the years. Those companies claimed at least $97,400 in business expenses since 2010, including some minor payments for taxes and accounting fees as recently as 2018.

But Trump’s plans in China have been largely driven by a different company, Trump International Hotels Management — the one with a Chinese bank account.

The company has direct ownership of THC China Development, but is also involved in management of other Trump-branded properties around the world, and it is not possible to discern from its tax records how much of its financial activity is China-related. It normally reports a few million dollars in annual income and deductible expenses.

In 2017, the company reported an unusually large spike in revenue — some $17.5 million, more than the previous five years’ combined. It was accompanied by a $15.1 million withdrawal by Trump from the company’s capital account.

On the president’s public financial disclosures for that year, he reported the large revenue figure, and described it only as “management fees and other contract payments.” One significant event for the company that is known to have occurred in 2017 was the buyout of its management contract for the Soho Hotel in New York, which Bloomberg reported to have cost around $6 million.

Garten would not comment on the specific amount cited by Bloomberg, but said that the contract buyout represented a “significant portion” of the company’s revenue and that the remaining money was not related to China.

Outside of China, Trump has had more success attracting wealthy Chinese buyers for his properties in other countries. His hotels and towers in Las Vegas and Vancouver, British Columbia — locales known for drawing Chinese real estate investors — have found numerous Chinese purchasers, and in at least one instance drew the attention of the Federal Bureau of Investigation.

During the 2016 campaign, a shell company controlled by a Chinese couple from Vancouver bought 11 units, for $3.1 million, in the Las Vegas tower Trump co-owns with the casino magnate Phil Ruffin. The owner of a Las Vegas-based financial services firm told The Times he was later visited by two FBI agents asking about the company behind the purchases, which he said had used his office address in incorporation papers without his knowledge. It is not known what became of the inquiry.

Garten said the Trump Organization had “never been contacted by the FBI and has no knowledge of any investigation.”

In Vancouver, numerous Chinese buyers of units in Trump’s hotel and tower helped increase licensing fees from that project to $5.8 million in 2016, the year it was completed, according to tax records. The project was built by a Canadian-based firm controlled by the family of Malaysia’s richest man, Tony Tiah Thee Kian, who operates hotels in China and elsewhere. CNN reported in 2018 that the Vancouver operation was the subject of a counterintelligence review related to Ivanka Trump’s need for a security clearance.

And not long after winning the 2016 election, Trump reported selling a penthouse in one of his Manhattan buildings for $15.8 million to a Chinese-American businesswoman named Xiao Yan Chen, who bought the unit, previously occupied by Ivanka Trump and her husband, Jared Kushner, in an off-market transaction. Chen runs an international consulting firm and reportedly has high-level connections to government and political elites in China.

Trump’s tax records show that he reported a capital gain of at least $5.6 million from the illegal penthouse sale in 2017, his first year as president.

This article originally appeared in The New York Times.

© 2020 The New York Times Company

Pathetic Donald Trump Causes A Fuss Over Upcoming ‘60 Minutes’ Interview: The Whiny Little Bitch Has Another Trumper Tantrum


 


Cry Baby Trump caused a fuss on Tuesday about his upcoming interview on “60 Minutes,” reportedly leaving the set early and then complaining about it online.

Traitorous Trump and Vice President Mike Pence spent the day participating in the CBS show’s episode, which is set to air on Sunday, just over a week until the election. The episode is also expected to feature interviews with Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden and his running mate Sen. Kamala Harris (D-Calif.).

The chicken shit president Trump abruptly stopped his interview at the White House with the show’s star, Lesley Stahl, after he had become irritated with her line of questioning, two people familiar with the situation told The New York Times.

Trump reportedly spent more than 45 minutes filming with Stahl and her crew, but cut the interview short when the taping didn’t finish when aides had expected it to. A whiny fat boy president Trump then declined to participate in a “walk and talk” segment with Stahl and Pence, because he too fat and out of shape.

Soon afterward, Trump tweeted a six-second video clip appearing to show Stahl at the White House post-interview. The president, who went maskless even when he had COVID-19, tweeted that Stahl was “not wearing a mask in the White House after her interview with me. Much more to come.”

According to the Times, Stahl wore a mask at the White House right up until the start of her taping with Trump, including when she first greeted him. The video Trump posted shows the anchor conferring with two masked CBS producers immediately after the interview ended. The CBS crew had been tested for the coronavirus before entering the White House on Tuesday, the paper reported.

Stahl has interviewed Trump twice since the beginning of his presidency, including his first televised interview after winning the election. She also filmed with the president at the White House in October 2018. The anchor was hospitalized with COVID-19 in the spring and has since recovered.

After the Times reported Trump’s walkout, the president posted another tweet about the interview.

“I am pleased to inform you that, for the sake of accuracy in reporting, I am considering posting my interview with Lesley Stahl of 60 Minutes, PRIOR TO AIRTIME! This will be done so that everybody can get a glimpse of what a FAKE and BIASED interview is all about,” he wrote, giving no hints at when specifically he would release footage and whose footage it would be. Trump is of course lying. 

Treasonous criminal Trump also tweeted that everyone “should compare this terrible Electoral Intrusion” to recent interviews of Biden. It’s unclear what the president means by “electoral intrusion.”

The former vice president taped his interview with “CBS Evening News” anchor Norah O’Donnell on Monday. He has not yet tweeted about it.

Trump is literally a crying baby in Biden's post-debate ad

https://news.yahoo.com/trump-literally-crying-baby-bidens-124043657.html

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See funny 'Boss Baby' Trump denying pandemic response ...

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This article originally appeared on HuffPost and has been updated.