White House Releases Hilarious Photos of Trump Wishing He Was Golfing During Govt Shutdown

White House Releases Hilarious Photos of Trump Wishing He Was Golfing During Govt Shutdown
trump working photo

trump working photos

The White House on Saturday released a set of photos to show Americans that Donald Trump is totally working during the government shutdown.

One image showed Trump on a phone in the Oval Office with an unhappy look on his face.

Another photo showed Trump walking purposefully from one area of the White House to another.

A third photo showed Trump standing before Sarah Huckabee Sanders, Marc Short, Hope Hicks, Jessica Ditto, Hogan Gidley, Dan Scavino, Raj Shah, Jared Kushner, Ivanka Trump, Rob Porter, Mick Mulvaney and Lindsay Walters, in the West Wing communication offices.

The photos are being widely mocked on social media, particularly the photo of the desk with nothing on it, which was also noted by MSNBC’s Ali Velshi.

An emerging trend is that Trump and his staff have no idea how to stage photos to make it seem like he’s actually working. pic.twitter.com/kFHKvWdKLf

— Matt Fuller (@MEPFuller) January 21, 2018

The White House released this to show how hard Trump’s working during the #TrumpShutdown. He might as well be holding a banana. pic.twitter.com/r4Bmvi0Doe

— shauna (@goldengateblond) January 21, 2018

Trump working is such a rare occurrence, the White House had to make it a news announcement ???pic.twitter.com/8aaOH4AITx

— Matthias Beier (@MatthiasBeier) January 21, 2018

I too conduct most of my most important work with a phone in my hand and nothing on my desk, while staring vacantly off into space t.co/XrYVv3YEae

— janu-erin (@morninggloria) January 20, 2018

The post White House Releases Hilarious Photos of Trump Wishing He Was Golfing During Govt Shutdown appeared first on Towleroad.


White House Releases Hilarious Photos of Trump Wishing He Was Golfing During Govt Shutdown

Liz Truss: No ‘Full Estimate’ Of Cost To Taxpayers From Carillion Collapse

Liz Truss: No ‘Full Estimate’ Of Cost To Taxpayers From Carillion Collapse
Ministers do not have a “full estimate” of how much the collapse of construction services company Carillion will cost the taxpayer, Liz Truss has said.

The Chief Secretary to the Treasury said it would be “completely wrong” to speculate on the cost, but said it would be a “significant amount of money”.

Do we know how much the collapse of #Carillion will cost taxpayers? @Peston asks Chief Secretary to the Treasury @trussliz#Pestonpic.twitter.com/GtdYoSkio7— Peston on Sunday (@pestononsunday) January 21, 2018
“At the moment we don’t have a full estimate – we heard about the collapse last week, we’ve been working to make sure public services keep going, that’s of course our most important priority,” she told ITV’s Peston On Sunday.

“There’s a lot of investigatory work to do in terms of what the directors knew and when they knew it, but also making sure that we can move those contracts on, either to organisations within the public sector or to other private sector organisations.

“It’s right that that’s our priority – making sure things work – but of course we will be doing a sort of post review of understanding what the total costs are.”

Truss was later challenged on whether she was being “economical with the truth” about the cost of the collapse to taxpayers, and said: “There’s a difference between the cost that the administrator finds and what the impact will be on public spending and public services.

“What I’m talking about is the cost to the taxpayer which there will be but we don’t know until we find out exactly which bits will be run by other parts of the private sector, which bits will be run by the individual Government department where we can find savings and efficiencies which I am constantly looking for.”

She was also asked about comments by the head of the CBI, who said remaining in a customs union with Brussels is the best option for British business.

Truss said: “It’s very important that we don’t just listen to the big players, we also listen to those who want to enter the market, the new businesses starting up, the exciting new disruptors who might have different ideas about the way of doing things.

“The whole point about the customs union is if we remained in the customs union, we can’t run an independent trade policy, we can’t get the best possible deal on a trade deal with America or the Far East where a lot of those new opportunities are emerging from.”

www.huffingtonpost.co.uk/entry/carillion-collapse_uk_5a649720e4b002283003a349

Watch Time’s Up Women’s March In London

Watch Time’s Up Women’s March In London
Thousands of women have taken to the streets in London to say “Time’s Up” on issues including sexual harassment and the gender pay gap, a day after huge crowds gathered for marches across the US.

The march, which began on Richmond Terrace, opposite Downing Street at 11am, is the latest in a series of rallies that have seen women in at least 34 countries protest this weekend.

The march marks the anniversary of the Women’s March movement which was sparked by the US Presidential election victory of Donald Trump and comes as organisers urge people to come together to say “Time’s Up” in honour of the #MeToo movement.

Women’s rights activist Helen Pankhurt, great granddaughter of Emmeline Pankhurst and journalist and author Reni Eddo-Lodge are to speak at the event along with MP Stella Creasy and Sophie Walker.

Around three thousand people registered their interest in the march on a  Facebook page for the event, while more than 8,000 said they were interested.

A statement from organisers reads:

One year on, we are coming together to say Time’s Up.

Time’s Up on gender based violence, sexual harassment and abuse. Time’s Up on the systematic and politically motivated underfunding of the services survivors depend on. Time’s Up on victimizing survivors and allowing abusers to avoid accountability. Time’s Up on the misogynistic abuse of women on social media. Time’s Up on the culture that tells men they are entitled to women’s bodies.

Time’s Up on bigotry and prejudice – scapegoating Refugees and Muslims. Time’s Up on racially motivated violence and harassment. Time’s Up on deportations, inhuman detention centres and human trafficking. Time’s Up on islamophobia, anti-semitism, transphobia, homophobia and ableism. Time’s Up on the under representation of marginalised groups in politics and in the media.

Time’s Up on the economic oppression of women. Time’s Up on the gender pay gap that sees women paid less than their male counterparts for the same job. Time’s Up on the cruel and ideological universal credit system which plunges millions into deeper poverty. Time’s Up on austerity, a policy which serves to worsen the country’s economy and disproportionately impacts women. Time’s Up on the needless deaths from benefit cuts and sanctions.

Time’s Up on controlling the bodies of either women or anyone who was assigned female at birth. Time’s Up on telling women what to wear. Time’s Up on Burka Bans and the phobia of Hijabs. Time’s Up on body shaming and fatphobia. Time’s Up on menstrual poverty and taboo. Time’s Up on the unequal provision of abortion services. Time’s Up on the policing of trans women’s bodies.

Time’s Up on the climate of profit over people. We want#Justice4Grenfell. Time’s Up on climate change denial and the destruction of the environment. #ClimateChangeIsReal.

We are coming together to pledge that we are going to make change in big and small ways. We will stand side by side, once again, in solidarity with our sisters, brothers and siblings around the world. Together we are strong and if we all work for a better world then time is really up for oppressors of women.

www.huffingtonpost.co.uk/entry/times-up-womens-march_uk_5a64764de4b0dc592a09925a

Costa Rica: Peer Kusmagk teilt ein Babybild, das einen großen Streit auslöst

Costa Rica: Peer Kusmagk teilt ein Babybild, das einen großen Streit auslöst
Peer Kusmagk mit seiner Verlobten Janni Hönscheid

  • Peer Kusmagk hat ein Urlaubsbild aus Costa Rica geteilt
  • Die Fans erkennen sofort, dass sein kleiner Sohn darauf einen Sonnenbrand hat

Der Moderator Peer Kusmagk und seine Verlobte Janni Hönscheid machen gerade Urlaub in Costa Rica. Mit dabei: Söhnchen Emil-Ocean. Trotz Sonnencreme hat der Kleine – genauso wie seine stolzen Eltern – einen Sonnenbrand bekommen. 

Auf Instagram teilten die Eltern ein Bild, auf dem der Sonnenbrand gut erkennbar ist. “Trotz Sonnenhut und Creme haben wir heute alle ein bisschen viel gehabt”, schrieb der 42 jährige Moderator als Bildunterschrift dazu. 

A post shared by janniundpeer (@janniundpeer) on

Fans reagierten verärgert

Einige Fans des Moderators reagierten geschockt und verärgert auf das Bild. Ein Streit im Kommentarbereich entstand. 

“Nichts super dran, wenn so ein kleines Baby einen Sonnenbrand hat”, lautet ein Kommentar unter dem Bild. “Sonnenbrand beim Baby auch noch lustig finden. Die Haut vergisst nichts…Unverantwortlich…Fragt mal einen Hautarzt”, schreibt ein anderer Nutzer. 

Einige Fans verteidigen den Moderator aber auch. “Weil ja hier noch NIE JEMAND im Leben Sonnenbrand hatte….man man man…”, schreibt ein Instagram-Nutzer. 

► Auf den meisten Bildern des Paares trägt der kleine Emil-Ocean einen Hut. Die Eltern scheinen also sehr wohl darauf zu achten, dass ihr Kind geschützt ist. 

A post shared by janniundpeer (@janniundpeer) on

(best)

www.huffingtonpost.de/entry/peer-kusmagk-wollte-nur-ein-susses-babybild-teilen-dann-bricht-ein-streit-zwischen-seinen-fans-aus_de_5a645d0ce4b0dc592a098620

UK Weather: More Snow Expected After Coldest Night For Nearly Two Years

UK Weather: More Snow Expected After Coldest Night For Nearly Two Years
People across the country are braced for more snow after the UK froze on the coldest night in nearly two years.

Wintry conditions are to continue to grip large parts of the UK on Sunday, with snow forecast for areas from northern Scotland to the Home Counties.

Temperatures plummeted overnight, with a low of -13.5C (7.7F) recorded in the Highland village of Dalwhinnie, while freezing temperatures were recorded as far south as London Luton Airport.

A yellow severe weather warning for #snow and #ice has been updated: t.co/QwDLMfRBfs Stay #weatheraware@metofficeukpic.twitter.com/sKTW4gDkSq
The Met Office has updated a yellow “be aware” warning of snow and ice to cover much of Scotland, north Wales and England down to southern parts.

The warning, valid from 6am until 6pm, predicts snow on higher routes and says that rain may fall onto frozen surfaces for a time, particularly across Scotland, following a very cold night.

Icy patches are likely on some untreated roads, pavements and cycle paths – while some disruption could be seen to journeys by road, bus and train on affected routes.

Traffic Scotland urged drivers to check their routes before setting off and to ensure they were carrying emergency supplies in case they get stuck.

North Wales Police also warned of poor conditions on the roads due to snow and ice, particularly on routes in Snowdonia.

Meanwhile, the Mountain Road was closed on the Isle of Man due to snow.

#Snow is set to affect parts of the UK today and may cause some disruption. You can also keep up to date with our warnings on our app! Stay #weatherawarepic.twitter.com/E5RDBAFlFZ

January 21, 2018
In Northern Ireland, a yellow warning of ice is in force until 9am on Sunday, while a yellow warning of rain runs until 3pm.

Snowy conditions have seen crowds flock to Scottish ski resorts over the weekend.

On Friday in Glencoe, blizzard conditions hampered a rescue operation to save two ski tourers stranded without shelter at 3,000ft.

The pair were winched into a coastguard helicopter at first light on Saturday before being taken to hospital by ambulance.

Police warned skiers heading to resorts not to park on the verges after disruption on Saturday and warned that cars causing obstructions may be seized.

Skiers faced six-mile tailbacks as they flocked to the slopes at Glencoe Mountain Resort to take advantage of the snowy conditions.

Drivers abandoned their cars on the roads as they tried to reach the resorts where car parks were full and police said high volumes of traffic hampered the efforts of gritters.

Heading to @glencoemountain & @TheNevisRange today? Please do NOT park on verges/sides of roads & cause obstructions. Gritters & emergency vehicles require access at ALL times. Arrive early & use car parks. Cars causing obstructions may be seized. pic.twitter.com/8p1bMV6bPb— NorthernPolice (@northernPolice) January 21, 2018
Saturday night saw the coldest temperature recorded in the UK since 14 February 2016, when minus 14.1C (6.6F) was recorded at Braemar.

Despite the frigid temperatures in the far north, the mercury rose to 11C in the (52F) in the far south west of England.

Met Office forecaster Steven Keate said the near 20C (46F) difference, caused as warmer air moves in, was “pretty unusual for the UK”.

“The broad theme is it is turning milder from the west, but before we get there some snow will fall,” he said.

Good Morning, A wet, cloudy start for western and southwestern UK. Windy in far west. Cold, dry elsewhere. Rain then spreading eastwards bringing snow to northern high ground and temporarily to lower levels. Snow will turn increasingly to rain. t.co/jtrhUzUBdR ^Daniel pic.twitter.com/x2Go0ktYE8

January 21, 2018
On Friday, members of the public were urged to stay off the roads in some areas of Scotland, with weather warnings covering much of the country.

Dozens of schools around Scotland were closed while some shut early due to the weather.

On Tuesday night, more than 200 motorists were stranded overnight on the M74 as heavy snow and ice caused treacherous driving conditions.

www.huffingtonpost.co.uk/entry/uk-weather-more-snow_uk_5a645d8ee4b0e5630070706d

SPD-Parteitag im Live-Stream: GroKo-Abstimmung online sehen

SPD-Parteitag im Live-Stream: GroKo-Abstimmung online sehen

  • Die SPD-Delegierten treffen die Entscheidung öffentlich
  •  Das Video zeigt, wie ihr die Phoenix-Übertragung im Internet sehen könnt

Die SPD stimmt über die GroKo ab – auch im Live-Stream. Freunde und Gegner der großen Koalition kämpfen um die Stimmen der SPD-Delegierten, die am Sonntag in Bonn abstimmen: Darf Parteichef Martin Schulz in Koalitionsverhandlungen mit der Union einsteigen oder nicht?

► 600 Delegierte und der 45-köpfige SPD-Vorstand dürfen entscheiden. Allerdings sind es nicht automatisch 645 Stimmberechtigte, zum Beispiel weil Vorstandsmitglieder zugleich auch Delegierte sein können.

An Beschlüsse von Landesparteitagen oder -vorständen sind sie nicht gebunden. Ob sie sich für oder gegen die GroKo-Verhandlung aussprechen, ist öffentlich. Bei der SPD werden nur Personen geheim gewählt.

► Sachentscheidungen wie diese treffen die Delegierten, indem sie ihre Stimmkarten hoch halten.

SPD-Parteitag im Live-Stream

Wer die Diskussionen und die Abstimmung am Sonntag, mitverfolgen will. Der Nachrichtensender Phoenix überträgt ab 10.45 Uhr den Parteitag im Free-TV und im Live-Stream auf der Homepage.

Die SPD startet seinen Live-Stream dann um 11 Uhr:

Zu den Delegierten

Wie viele Delegierte zu den Jusos gehören, die lautstark gegen die GroKo Stimmung machen, ist nicht ganz klar – es dürften Schätzungen zufolge 60 bis 90 sein. Nicht jeder unter 35 Jahren ist automatisch Juso.

► Zudem entscheidet sich oft auch erst unmittelbar vor dem Parteitag, wer als Delegierter hinfährt, zum Beispiel, wenn jemand krank wird. Dann gibt es Nachrücker.

Nicht alle Landesverbände haben den gleichen Einfluss. Die mit Abstand meisten schickt der Landesverband Nordrhein-Westfalen.

Eine Übersicht in absteigender Reihenfolge

Insgesamt: 600 Delegierte

  • Nordrhein-Westfalen: 144

  • Niedersachsen: 81

  • Bayern: 78

  • Hessen: 72

  • Rheinland-Pfalz: 49

  • Baden-Württemberg: 47

  • Saarland: 24

  • Schleswig-Holstein: 24

  • Berlin: 23

  • Hamburg: 15

  • Brandenburg: 10

  • Bremen: 8

  • Sachsen-Anhalt: 6

  • Thüringen: 7

  • Sachsen: 7

  • Mecklenburg-Vorpommern: 5

www.huffingtonpost.de/entry/spd-parteitag-im-live-stream-entscheidung-online-sehen_de_5a630231e4b002283002f952

Kabul Intercontinental Hotel Siege Ends With At Least Five Dead, Government Confirms

Kabul Intercontinental Hotel Siege Ends With At Least Five Dead, Government Confirms
Afghan Special Forces ended an overnight siege at Kabul’s Intercontinental Hotel on Sunday, killing the last gunman from a group of three attackers who stormed the hotel, taking hostages and battling security forces for hours.

Two gunmen were killed on Saturday night. It was initially reported that four gunmen had attacked the hotel.

Interior Ministry spokesman Najib Danish said at least five other people had been killed and six wounded, a lower casualty total than earlier feared, while 153 people, including 41 foreigners had been evacuated.

As day broke on Sunday, thick clouds of black smoke could be seen pouring from the building. Several armored US military vehicles with heavy machine guns could be seen close to the hotel along with Afghan police units.

The raid came just days after a US embassy warning of possible attacks on hotels in Kabul.

There was no immediate claim of responsibility.

The raid was the latest in a long series of attacks which have underlined the city’s precarious situation and the ability of militants to mount high profile operations aimed at undermining confidence in the Western-backed government.

Hotel manager Ahmad Haris Nayab, who escaped unhurt, said the attackers had got into the main part of the hotel through a kitchen before going through the hotel.

According to one witness, who did not want to be named, the attackers took hotel staff and guests hostage.

The Intercontinental Hotel, an imposing 1960s structure set on a hilltop and heavily protected like most public buildings in Kabul, was previously attacked by Taliban fighters in 2011.

It is one of two main luxury hotels in the city and had been due to host an information technology conference on Sunday. More than 100 IT managers and engineers were on site when the attack took place, Ahmad Waheed, an official at the telecommunications ministry, said.

The attack, just days after a United Nations Security Council visit to Kabul to allow senior representatives of member states to assess the situation in Afghanistan, may lead to a further tightening of security in Kabul.

Large areas of the city center are already closed off behind high concrete blast walls and police checkpoints but the ability of the attackers to get into a well-protected hotel frequented by both government officials and foreigners demonstrated how difficult it remains to prevent high profile attacks.

Danish said a private company had taken over security of the hotel about three weeks ago.

The State Department said on Saturday it was monitoring the situation and was in contact with Afghan authorities to determine whether any US citizens had been affected.

Captain Tom Gresback, spokesman for the NATO-led Resolute Support mission in Afghanistan, said they were also watching closely but it was not clear what role international forces were taking in suppressing the attack.

“Afghan National Defense and Security Forces are leading the response efforts. According to initial reports, no Resolute Support or (US forces) members were injured in this incident,” he said in an emailed statement.

Although Resolute Support says the Taliban has come under pressure after the United States increased assistance to Afghan security forces and stepped up air strikes against insurgents, security remains precarious.

As pressure on the battlefield has increased, security officials have warned that the danger of attacks on high-profile targets in Kabul and other cities would increase.

After repeated attacks in Kabul, notably an incident last May in which a truck bomber killed at least 150 people outside the German embassy, security has been further tightened.

While it shares the same name, the hotel in Kabul is not part of InterContinental Hotels Group (IHG), which issued a statement in 2011 saying that “the hotel Inter-continental in Kabul is not part of IHG and has not been since 1980”.

www.huffingtonpost.co.uk/entry/kabul-intercontinental-hotel-siege_uk_5a644c2fe4b0022830037cc0