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The Millions of Americans Donald Trump and Hillary Clinton Barely Mention: The Poor

The Millions of Americans Donald Trump and Hillary Clinton Barely Mention: The Poor

© Sam Hodgson for The New York Times Hillary Clinton in Des Moines on Wednesday. She is scheduled to speak about her economic plans on Thursday near Detroit.
 
The United States, the wealthiest nation on earth, also abides the deepest poverty of any developed nation, but you would not know it by listening to Hillary Clinton, the Democratic Party’s presidential nominee.

Mrs. Clinton, who is scheduled to speak about her economic plans on Thursday near Detroit, is campaigning as an advocate for middle-class families whose fortunes have flagged. She has said much less about helping the millions of Americans who yearn to reach the middle class.

Her Republican rival, Donald J. Trump, spoke in Detroit on his economic proposals three days ago, and while their platforms are markedly different in details and emphasis, the candidates have this in common: Both promise to help Americans find jobs; neither has said much about helping people while they are not working.
“We don’t have a full-voiced condemnation of the level or extent of poverty in America today,” said Matthew Desmond, a Harvard professor of sociology. “We aren’t having in our presidential debate right now a serious conversation about the fact that we are the richest democracy in the world, with the most poverty. It should be at the very top of the agenda.”

It is not as if Washington policy makers have completely forgotten the poor. President Obama and House Speaker Paul D. Ryan of Wisconsin have both advocated expanding the earned-income tax credit for childless men and tackling a criminal justice system that has saddled minor offenders with lives of economic struggle.

And Mrs. Clinton’s policies, although rhetorically geared toward the middle class, would most likely have a broader impact. She has promised an economy that works for “everyone, not just those at the top.” She has called for raising the federal minimum wage to $12 an hour from $7.25 an hour, which would directly benefit many lower-income workers. And her proposals to help the middle class would benefit some lower-income families, too. She has proposed expanding federal subsidies for health care, child care and education, and mandating improved benefits for workers.

“You want more?” Heather Boushey, the executive director of the Washington Center for Equitable Growth, asked of those who argue that Mrs. Clinton should embrace an explicit anti-poverty agenda. “That’s great. That is such an audacious statement. They want everything, and I am with them. But it is also worth noting that Hillary Clinton is running on the most progressive platform any party has put together.”

Ms. Boushey is an adviser to the Clinton campaign but said she was not speaking for it. The campaign itself did not respond to a request for comment.

Mr. Trump said Monday that he would spur economic growth by reducing taxes and regulation, and by renegotiating trade agreements to bring manufacturing back to the United States. He also outlined a plan to help some families offset the expense of child care.

Both Mrs. Clinton and Mr. Trump have said they are focused on creating more and better jobs.

“My primary mission as president will be to create more opportunity and more good jobs with rising wages right here in the United States,” Mrs. Clinton said in accepting the Democratic nomination in Philadelphia last month.

But Mr. Desmond, the Harvard sociologist, said that was not enough because the poor faced a wide range of other obstacles to economic stability. His own work has focused on a growing shortage of affordable rental housing. In his recent book, “Evicted,” he showed that evictions are a regular feature of life in lower-income neighborhoods, and that they are not just the result of poverty, but that instability causes poverty.

Increasing affordable housing was until recently a standard campaign pledge for presidential candidates of both parties. President Bill Clinton created a “National Home Ownership Strategy.” President George W. Bush announced early in his first term a target of creating 5.5 million new minority homeowners by 2010, alongside measures to encourage the construction of rental housing.

But Mrs. Clinton did not mention housing in her Philadelphia acceptance speech. Her campaign website highlights 37 issues, but housing is not among them, although the campaign issued some proposals in February.

“It was pretty shocking not to hear that word, housing, uttered on the main stage” at either party’s convention last month, Mr. Desmond said.

The silence is particularly striking because the problem is growing. There is not a single state where a full-time worker earning the minimum wage can rent a market-rate one-bedroom apartment for 30 percent or less of their income, according to the National Low Income Housing Coalition. And more than 11 million households spend more than half of their income on rent.

Kathryn Edin, a professor of public health at Johns Hopkins University, said it was particularly important to focus on the plight of families without regular income. Federal benefits for workers, notably the earned-income tax credit, have steadily expanded in recent decades, improving the lives of those who have jobs.

Mr. Ryan presented an anti-poverty plan in June that suggested another expansion of the tax credit, an idea that is also popular among many Democrats.

But Ms. Edin said the 1996 deal between the Clinton administration and congressional Republicans to curtail cash benefits for needy families had left those without jobs behind.

“When you can’t pay the utility bill, you can’t pay the rent and you can’t buy socks and underwear for your kids, how much does the fact that you have a Medicaid card really do for you?” asked Ms. Edin, who wrote about the plight of such families in her 2015 book, “$2.00 a Day: Living on Almost Nothing in America.” She said that she had hoped the 20th anniversary of the “end of welfare” might spark renewed discussions about what should be done instead, but that she had been disappointed.

Ms. Edin and other advocates also express frustration that both candidates tend to focus on manufacturing, a sector that employs less than 10 percent of the work force. Mrs. Clinton chose to speak on Thursday at Futuramic Tool and Engineering, a company in Warren, Mich., just north of Detroit, which makes parts for cars and airplanes including the F-35 fighter jet.

The candidates have spent less time talking about the service jobs performed by the vast majority of low-wage workers. There were 64,000 steelworkers last year — and 820,000 home health aides.

“Much of what I hear is an argument over who is going to help the working class that’s been hurt by globalization, more than the retail or restaurant worker who is stuck at a low wage,” said Jared Bernstein, an economist at the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities, a left-leaning research group. “We have to be mindful of where those displaced manufacturing workers have ended up, which is in the low-end service sector.”

But Mr. Bernstein added that Mrs. Clinton’s proposals could benefit those workers, even if that was not her focus on the campaign trail.

“It’s not at all unusual for people running for president not to talk about poverty because the poor are not necessarily the swing voters you’re trying to pick off,” he said. “But I actually think a lot of her proposals would help — she just doesn’t always connect the dots to poverty and low-income workers.”

SOURCE :
In rebuttal to Trump’s economic speech, Clinton to accuse him of trying to help himself

In rebuttal to Trump’s economic speech, Clinton to accuse him of trying to help himself


© Melina Mara/The Washington Post Hillary Clinton tours the Raygun store in Des Moines, Iowa, on Wednesday.

Hillary Clinton plans to use a speech Thursday to attack Republican Donald Trump for putting forward an economic plan this week that in Clinton’s estimation “only benefits millionaires like himself,” according to aides to the Democratic presidential nominee.

In a rebuttal to Trump’s speech here Monday, Clinton will argue that her economic agenda by contrast is focused on helping lower- and middle-class families. Aides say she plans to highlight previously released proposals that include investing in job creation, making public college tuition-free for most families and raising taxes on corporations and the wealthy.

Clinton plans to deliver her speech in nearby Macomb County, a location selected with electoral politics in mind. The largely blue-collar jurisdiction has sided with the Democratic nominee four times and the Republican nominee four times during the past eight presidential elections.

Aides say Clinton will zero in on a Trump proposal to dramatically reduce taxes on “pass-through” businesses, which do not pay corporate income taxes but whose owners are taxed at individual rates on their share of profits.

Such entities are the most common structure for small businesses — which would benefit from Trump’s plan — but they are also heavily utilized by the scores of companies that make up the Trump Organization. Clinton will argue that the real estate mogul is attempting to give himself “a backdoor tax cut” and characterize his proposal as the “Trump Loophole,” aides to the Democrat said.

Clinton aides requested anonymity to preview her speech before it is delivered.

Clinton also plans to take aim at a provision in Trump’s economic plan that repeals the estate tax, another measure she says would benefit his family personally. Earlier this week in Florida, Clinton branded that provision as Trump’s “friends-and-families discount.”

More broadly, Clinton plans to argue that Trump’s plan is weighted too heavily towards helping the wealthy and corporations and that it would “balloon the national debt,” aides said.

Clinton arrived in Michigan on Wednesday night and attended a fundraiser in Birmingham, a suburb of Detroit. Donors paid $25,000 apiece to attend and were entertained by soul singer Aretha Franklin, according to a Clinton aide.

Proceeds were to benefit the Hillary Victory Fund, a joint venture of the Clinton campaign, Democratic National Committee and Democratic state parties.

SOURCE : The Washington Post
Trump: Obama 'absolutely' founded ISIS

Trump: Obama 'absolutely' founded ISIS


© Provided by CNBC

Donald Trump insisted in a CNBC phone interview Thursday that President Barack Obama "absolutely" founded ISIS, and that Hillary Clinton was the terrorist group's co-founder.

In a wide-ranging interview detailing his economic plans on CNBC's "Squawk Box," the GOP presidential candidate also allowed for the possibility that he may not defeat Hillary Clinton.

  Trump initially made the ISIS comments on Wednesday.

Asked about them on CNBC, he doubled down and said "[Obama] was the founder of ISIS absolutely, the way he removed our troops. ..I call them co-founders."

This week, Trump has come under fire for remarks he made about the Second Amendment which had been interpreted by some as suggesting violence against Hillary Clinton.


"On the Second Amendment everybody came to my defense because there was nothing said wrong, I'm talking about the power of the voter," Trump said in a phone interview on "Squawk Box" Thursday. "Only the haters tried to grab on to that one."
However, Trump allowed for the possibility that his uncensored views may not result in a win.

"I think we're going to have victory but will see," Trump said. "At the end it's either going to work or I'm going to have a very very nice long vacation."

The GOP presidential nominee also addressed criticism that he had made a mistake when it came to comments about the Muslim parents of a deceased soldier, saying "its been put to bed for a longtime." The controversy erupted after the Khans appeared at the Democratic Convention on July 28.

Trump also said Obamacare, high taxes, and regulation are stifling business in the United States.

He said regulations are "making it virtually impossible to start new businesses and a lot of old businesses are being hurt very badly."

"Obamacare is devastating businesses, I get it all the time," he said.

  Trump's comments came Thursday morning during a stretch in which he has sought to focus on his campaign's economic message amid a series of controversies.


The Republican presidential nominee has spent much of this week fighting off criticism for comments he made about the Second Amendment interpreted by some as suggesting violence against Hillary Clinton. Clinton called him out on the remarks Wednesday, saying Trump's "casual inciting of violence" shows he does not have the temperament to be president.

Late last week Trump announced his team of economic policy advisers, which featured a number of high-profile financiers including hedge fund titan John Paulson. On Monday, Trump gave a speech in Detroit laying out his economic vision, which included a significant change to his tax plan. 

SOURCE : CNBC
PHARMACEUTICAL EXEC: Hillary Clinton Has Parkinson's Disease

PHARMACEUTICAL EXEC: Hillary Clinton Has Parkinson's Disease

According to pharmaceutical executive Martin Shkreli, footage of Hillary Clinton exhibiting bizarre behavior is proof that the presidential candidate is suffering from Parkinson’s disease.
“Involuntary movements” and difficulty walking is a form of dyskinesia


 
By Paul Joseph Watson

According to pharmaceutical executive Martin Shkreli, footage of Hillary Clinton exhibiting bizarre behavior is proof that the presidential candidate is suffering from Parkinson’s disease.

Citing his “15 year background in drug discovery and pharmaceuticals,” Shkreli asserts that the videos of Hillary’s strange facial movements and her difficulties with walking are “pretty unmistakable signs of Parkinson’s disease.”

Explaining that a stroke or a concussion wouldn’t explain the symptoms, Shkreli says that Hillary’s walking difficulties are a “cardinal symptom of Parkinson’s disease” and what is known as “freezing gait.” Shkreli adds that he helped develop a drug to treat the problem.

Hillary’s “on-off episodes” are a result of dopamine depletion, according to Shkreli, which is impacting Hillary’s movement.

“We’ve all seen the videos of her kind of making these perplexed facial movements,” says Shkreli, noting that Hillary’s over-reaction to balloons at the DNC was “unusual” because it betrayed an “inability to control her facial movements.


However, Hillary’s seizure-like behavior in response to reporters asking questions in another clip was even more odd because she “made this involuntary movement for about ten seconds which was truly unusual,” states Shkreli, identifying the condition as a form of Parkinson’s-induced dyskinesia.READ MORE


Democrat Plot to Prop-Up ‘Never Trump’ Republican Revealed

Democrat Plot to Prop-Up ‘Never Trump’ Republican Revealed

A Democratic political veteran is joining forces with #NeverTrump Republicans as Hillary Clinton sympathizers prop up fringe small-party candidates to bring down Donald Trump’s vote share and smooth the road to the White House for Clinton.

The race now has five candidates, with Gary Johnson running as a Libertarian, Jill Stein with the Green Party, and former Goldman Sachs employee Evan McMullin for the #NeverTrump independent party. Two of these candidates stand to help Clinton, whose husband never won 50 percent of the popular vote in two national elections with Ross Perot.



Breitbart News has learned that the McMullin effort is being led by a former top Democratic staffer, while evidence surfaces that Johnson is a tool in a wider conspiracy to hurt Trump on behalf of Clinton.

The new pro-Evan McMullin super PAC “Stand Up Together” is led by political operatives Kahlil Byrd and Chris Ashby. Who is Kahlil Byrd?

Kahlil Byrd is the former communications director and senior strategist for Democrat Deval Patrick’s campaign for governor in Massachusetts in 2006 and the director of gubernatorial appointments for the Deval Patrick administration.

At that time, national Democrats were circling around Patrick, who was being advised by David Axelrod. When Axelrod left Patrick to advise Barack Obama two months after Patrick’s election to the governorship, progressive politics on the presidential level shifted in Obama’s favor.

Byrd was working for Patrick as early as Patrick’s gubernatorial announcement in 2005, when Patrick launched the Obama-sounding campaign slogan “Believe Again” while Obama was a rookie in the Senate.

Byrd is a Huffington Post blogger, a onetime “Team Member” on the Council on Foreign Relations, and a graduate of Harvard’s John F. Kennedy School of Government.

Byrd’s Council on Foreign Relations bio notes that in addition to Democrats he has also worked for independents and Republicans. He was identified as a media adviser to Massachusetts Republican Jeff Beatty, who got 31 percent of the vote running for Senate against John Kerry in 2008. The progressive blog Blue Mass Group called Byrd’s involvement with Beatty a case of “strange bedfellows.”

Byrd went on to co-found the 2012 group Americans Elect, which sought to reform party primaries and place a “bipartisan” ticket on state ballots. But despite raising upwards of $40 million and winning some awards, Americans Elect did not actually field a candidate to challenge Barack Obama and Mitt Romney.

Stand Up America says that it is not working on ballot access for McMullin but rather focusing on marketing and grassroots campaign activity.

Ashby, a Republican lawyer and political operative, is joined with Byrd in this anti-Trump effort.

Byrd and Ashby did not participate in this report.

“I am running against the Washington insiders, just like I did in the Republican Primaries” Trump declared on Twitter.

Those insiders are raining fire on Trump’s insurgent candidacy with 88 days to go. Globalist media corporations are turning their networks into all-day anti-Trump marathons. The media is flogging the narrative that fringe candidates have the chance to win in the House of Representatives in a constitutional-crisis situation.

CNN’s Anderson Cooper mentioned that kind of scenario in his ridiculously pro-Clinton primetime town hall with Libertarian Party candidate Gary Johnson and his running mate William Weld, who defended Clinton on her email scandal. Johnson tore into Trump and put up light and perfunctory opposition to Clinton, saying, “Was there anything she didn’t promise to anyone in her acceptance speech?”

Johnson’s campaign donor list includes corporate heavyweights like IBM, United Technologies, and even Republican-hated housing giant Freddie Mac. READ MORE
Police grab man climbing Trump Tower in New York City

Police grab man climbing Trump Tower in New York City

A man who wanted an "audience" with Donald Trump spent three hours scaling the glass facade of Trump Tower on Wednesday using large suction cups, climbing as high as the 21st floor before police officers grabbed him and hauled him to safety through an open window.



The climber, identified by police as a 20-year-old Virginia man, wore a backpack and used a harness and rope stirrups to fasten himself to the side of the 58-story Manhattan skyscraper.

For a long time, the climber played a slow-motion cat-and-mouse game with would-be rescuers. Officers smashed windows and broke through ventilation ducts to block his progress. Police also lowered themselves toward him using a window washer's platform.

The man kept his distance by methodically working his way back and forth across the facade, repeatedly repositioning suction cups resembling a type commonly used by window washers to remove big panes of glass.

The chase ended dramatically just after 6:30 p.m.
As a crowd gasped on the street below, two officers leaned far out of a window, grabbed the climber's arm and harness, and in a flash yanked him from his dangling stirrups. He went through the opening head first, his legs pointed skyward.

"I reached out. I took hold of his hand and I said, 'Sir, would you come with me,'" said detective Christopher Williams, who made the grab.

Police had deployed large, inflated crash pads at the scene, but it was unclear how much protection they would have offered if the climber fell.
A day before the ascent, police said the climber posted a video on YouTube entitled, "Message to Mr. Trump (why I climbed your tower)." He posted the video under the name Leven Thumps, which is a character in a series of children's fantasy novels by the writer Obert Skye.

"I am an independent researcher seeking a private audience with you to discuss an important matter. I guarantee that it's in your interest to honor this request," he said. "Believe me, if my purpose was not significant, I would not risk my life pursuing it. The reason I climbed your tower is to get your attention. If I had sought this via conventional means, I would be much less likely to have success because you are a busy man with many responsibilities."

NYPD Assistant Chief William Aubrey said the man, who was not named by police, told officers the same thing after he was safely inside the building.

"At no time did he express that he wanted to hurt anybody," he said.
The tower is headquarters to Donald Trump's Republican presidential campaign and his business empire. Trump also lives there, though he was in Virginia in the afternoon and was headed to Florida for an evening event.

A Trump campaign spokeswoman didn't immediately respond to a request for comment.

"This man performed a ridiculous and dangerous stunt," Michael Cohen, an executive at the Trump Organization, said in an emailed statement. "I'm 100 percent certain the NYPD had better things to do."

The climber began his ascent from a terrace that is open to the public during the day. Police said he was taken to a hospital to be evaluated.

SOURCE : Associated Press