Lanz bringt Grünen-Politiker Hofreiter mit Fragen zum Abgasskandal ins Stottern

Lanz bringt Grünen-Politiker Hofreiter mit Fragen zum Abgasskandal ins Stottern
Hofreiter geriet in Bedrängnis. 

  • Bei “Markus Lanz” muss sich Anton Hofreiter für das Versagen der Politik in der Abgas-Affäre rechtfertigen
  • Schon bald gerät er mächtig ins Stottern

Die Empörung ist groß. Die Autoindustrie, allen voran Volkswagen, soll Abgastests an Menschenaffen durchgeführt haben. Politiker überbieten sich in der rhetorischen Verteufelung dieser Methoden: “Zynisch”, “schockierend”, “kriminell”.

Dabei liegen dem Untersuchungsausschuss zum VW-Abgasskandal bereits seit eineinhalb Jahren Informationen zu den Tierversuchen vor. Nachfragen zu dem Thema stellte allerdings kein Politiker, wie das “Handelsblatt” berichtet.

Auch Grünen-Fraktionschef Anton Hofreitern gilt als lauter Kritiker der Auto-Lobby. In der ZDF-Talkshow von Markus Lanz musste er sich nun für die Ignoranz der deutschen Politik rechtfertigen.

► Zum Hintergrund: Hofreiter war nicht Mitglied des Untersuchungsausschuss (“Als Fraktionsvorsitzender sitzt man nicht in Untersuchungsausschüssen”).

Wirklich erklären, wie es zu dem Versäumnis kommen konnte, kann er Moderator Lanz nicht – und gerät schon bald ins Stottern.

“Keiner kommt darauf, nachzufragen?”

“Man hat nicht damit gerechnet, dass der sogenannte Experte die Leute so blank in ihrer Wahrnehmung angelogen hat”, beginnt Hofreiter seinen Versuch.

Lanz hakt nach: “Herr Hofreiter, ich kann Sie so nicht aus der Nummer rauslassen. Wenn man doch weiß, mit wem man es da zu tun hat, muss man doch erst recht nachfragen?” 

► Helmut Greim, ehemaliger Lehrstuhlinhaber für Toxikologie und Umwelthygiene an der Technischen Universität München, hatte den Politikern im September erklärt, wie die Forschung ihre Erkenntnisse über die Wirkung von Stickstoff gewonnen habe: “Das ist unsere Information aus Tierversuchen.”

Mehr zum Thema: Kinderarzt klagt an – Skandal um Abgasversuche ist nichts gegen das Versagen der Politik

Der ZDF-Moderator kennt das Protokoll der Sitzung – und fragt nach: “Da erzählt er das in einem Untersuchungsausschuss, in dem alle Parteien vertreten sind – und keiner kommt darauf, mal nachzufragen?”

Hofreiter stockt. Man sieht, wie unangenehm ihm die Situation ist.

“Schlichtweg lag es halt daran, dass… äh.. dass die nicht auf die Idee kamen, dass dieser Wissenschaftler im Moment aktuell Versuche mit Affen durchführt, um nachzuweisen, dass diese Schadstoffe ungefährlich sind.”

Niemand habe sich vorstellen können, “wie ganovisch die Autoindustrie in Teilen unterwegs war.”

Diese Naivität müssen sich alle Parteien nun vorwerfen lassen. Auch die so Autoindustrie-kritischen Grünen. 

www.huffingtonpost.de/entry/lanz-bringt-grunen-politiker-hofreiter-mit-fragen-zum-abgasskandal-ins-stottern_de_5a716416e4b0ae29f08c1c69

Theresa May Faces The Real Prime Minister’s Questions: Will She Stay On As Tory Leader? And For How Long?

Theresa May Faces The Real Prime Minister’s Questions: Will She Stay On As Tory Leader? And For How Long?
It was PMQs, but not as you know it.  As her RAF Voyager jet cruised at an altitude of 35,000 ft, Theresa May was standing at the plane’s bar, taking queries from a hungry press pack.

A pile of black digital voice recorders and smartphones gathered before her like winking beetles, the Prime Minister gave a brief summary of the plans for her three-day trip to China.

But after the obligatory initial questions about trade and foreign relations with Beijing, the floodgates opened for the only issue many hacks wanted answers on: her leadership of the Tory party, or lack of it.

With her plainclothes security officers and phalanx of nervous media advisers looking on, more than two dozen reporters proceeded to grill May about her troubles back home.

Some of us stood on the business class seats to get a better view. Others strained their necks to hear her words above the aircraft’s hum.

As her flight had taken off, Brexit minister Steve Baker was still on his feet in the Commons, explaining why a leaked Whitehall document had revealed that every Brexit scenario would leave the UK worse off.

More worrying for No.10, speculation had been mounting that dissident MPs were close to getting the 48 letters needed to trigger a vote of no confidence in their leader.

Just as Margaret Thatcher was famously in Paris when her own premiership began to fall apart back in Westminster, some in her party felt that May’s trip to China offered a dangerous opportunity for the plotters. While the No10 cat was away, the mice could play, as one rebel had put it.

In the RAF Voyager’s functional business class suite, the BBC’s Laura Kuenssberg led the charge. “Are you confident that you will lead the Tory party into the next election?  And is it up to you or your colleagues to make that decision?”

May replied with an oven-ready answer. “First and foremost, I’m serving my country, my party…I’m not a quitter and there’s a long term job to be done”.

She proceeded to trot out a list of what that ‘job’ entailed, with less than convincing lines about getting ‘the best Brexit’, stamp duty cuts and renaming the Department of Health to include the words ‘And Social Care’.

She talked about “a reduction in the attainment gap between rich and poor kids”, somehow managing to mix the vernacular with Whitehall-ese. She failed to mention the continuing earnings squeeze, or austerity, housing crisis for millions or NHS funding.

Occasionally, her gaze would flicker towards her official spokesman, as if checking her lines were following the script. Yet her determination to stay in post was striking, her mood defiant, her demeanour bullish. All the talk of motions of no confidence strangely seemed to have made her more, well, inner confidence.

For those MPs who simply think that the longer May remains leader, the more damage she does to the Tory brand, her central message – I’m not quitting, you should quit plotting – could help them goad waverers into joining the rebellion.

The last time the PM – on the same plane but on her way to Japan – had been asked if she wanted to fight the next election, she replied with an unequivocal “Yes”.

Perhaps overconfident that her challengers had not seized their moment after her humiliating 2017 general election, she surprised journalists by walking straight into the trap.

That answer sparked the trouble that has bubbled under ever since, famously spilling over after her disastrous Tory conference last September, when former party chairman Grant Shapps broke cover to call for her to go.

This time, she left herself some wriggle room, ducking a direct answer.  But the key difference now is that the ratchet of the leadership letters threat is wound tighter.  Back home in Blighty, rumours swirl that she is one more policy blunder, one more poor set of election results, away from a leadership challenge.

In the media huddle, May was pushed again and again on the mounting attacks from normally loyal backbenchers.

Perhaps the most surreal moment came when she was asked if she was a ‘tortoise’ or a ‘lion’ (former minister Rob Halfon had suggested she was the former on policy but needed to be the later).

May replied with the inimitably awkward line: “I have never tried to compare myself to any animal, or bird or car or whatever sort of comparisons that sometimes people use.”  It was as if someone had asked her if she’d rather fight a horse-sized duck or a hundred duck-sized horses.

Would she stand and fight if a no confidence vote was triggered? “You always like talking about hypothetical situations. Let’s talk about where we are now and what we are doing now…”

Did she think Tory MPs were cowards for hiding behind anonymous letters urging her removal? “Look, the Conservative party leadership rules have been written and it’s a matter for the Conservative party, it’s always been written by the [backbench] 1922 [Committee]. They went through a long process in terms of writing those leadership rules.”

“So, you’re saying ‘write those letters if you like’?” HuffPost asked. “It’s a matter for the party,” she replied. “The rules that are set are a matter for the party.”

There was a glimmer of an admission that she had failed to communicate all the policies she was most proud of, as well a concession that she more needed to be done and faster.

Yet when asked if she acknowledged she personally needs to do more to convince her colleagues that she was the right person to deliver on policy, the autopilot reappeared. “What I think is important for colleagues and for the public is actually what we’re doing as a government and what we’re achieving…”

It was the same on Trump, Brexit, immigration. Each time there was a straight bat that would make her beloved Geoffrey Boycott proud. The constant riff was that the key issue was presentation, not substance. Or her leadership. It’s not quite clear whether that excuse will still convince her MPs.

Still, by the end of the session, May’s aides looked relieved. There had been 25 minutes of questions (almost as much as the old PMQs in the Commons), and one official confessed that it was a new record for the PM. Her previous longest session with the media on a plane was 4 minutes shorter. A similar informal press conference on the way to Washington a year ago lasted just seven minutes in total.

Part of the reason for her confidence may lie in the pre-briefing she had gone through beforehand. Insiders say that May has a very strict routine for foreign trips. She will spend the first hour on her ‘red box’ business first, reading in silence a thick dossier on the coming days’ talking points and policy.

Others around her normally join in the silence as they too cram the same stat-packed document, which can often only be available days or hours before. Seated at her side for the China flight were Gavin Barwell, her chief of staff since the election, and husband Philip, here for his first full foreign trip as a spouse.

After the departure of former joint chiefs of staff Fiona Hill and Nick Timothy – dubbed “the gruesome twosome” by their Whitehall enemies – the mood is noticeably less scratchy, sources say.

Some things have not changed, however. In keeping with her reputation for caution and meticulous preparation, once her red box is done, May will spend 45 minutes getting primed for her session with the media. Given that the media questions normally last only 15 minutes, that’s a ratio that resembles her three hours of PMQs prep each week.

Official spokesman James Slack is a former Daily Mail Political Editor, and well versed in sitting at the back, not the front, of the plane. In the prep session, he and others will often play the role of a reporter, probing the PM with tricky question in a dry-run of the Q&A ahead.

When she is finally ready, the curtains part from her first class section and May heads down to the bar for the media grilling.

Unlike David Cameron, who used to pad about and shoot the breeze with the media in his socks and pyjamas, May prefers a more formal approach. When she does sleep, it’s almost always behind a curtained section, away from even her closest staff.

Insiders say that one key factor that helps boost May’s mood is when she is on a plane packed with business people, rather than just politicians and the media.

“She’s much better when she can meet real people running real companies,” one old hand confided. “She asks them what they do, who they are meeting, and so on.”

And on the flight to Wuhan, May made a clear effort to tour the plane and talk not just to those big companies and organisations in business class, but also the smaller firms travelling in economy with the  assembled media delegation.

She spent at least 20 minutes chatting freely with them, showing a relaxed side rarely seen on camera. Many of those she chatted to were struck by how different her private image was from the public one. However, some confided that the trip suffered from a lack of advance notice that would have allowed them more meetings with counterparts in China.

Perhaps the most pleasure the PM gets on her ‘May Force One’ flights, however, is in talking to the RAF crew.  On this trip, she walked up to the very back of the plane and chatted to a gaggle of attendants, the men wearing classic light blue shirts, the women white, on a rare break. One servicewoman was in khaki, another reminder that this is very much a military plane (in fact a converted refuelling jet).

In a vignette that her critics will find hard to believe, she actually made the whole RAF group erupt into peals of laughter, courtesy of a joke about them being able to ‘crash out’ when their 18-hour shift ended on landing (the crew are swapped over and can return home on a ‘civ’ or civilian flight). As well as tending to Prime Ministerial planes, the crew often man troop carrier flights and officers’ messes. All of them had praise for May.

After one particular trip to a ‘dry’ country, and all set for the journey home, she was once greeted by a friendly RAF attendant with the words: “Welcome to Great Britain, Prime Minister…Gin and tonic?”

The PM never drinks alcohol on the way out to foreign visits, and even on the way back only allows herself a G&T or glass of red wine once she has finished her new ‘red box’ of domestic duties awaiting her back home.

She has three more days of this trip, and a lot of Chinese protocol ahead, before that homeward drink beckons.

Whether her defiant answers in the on-board PMQs will be enough to satisfy her restless backbenches is itself the remaining unanswered question.

www.huffingtonpost.co.uk/entry/pmqs-theresa-may-may-force-one-leadership-plot-china-analysis-new-confidence_uk_5a712226e4b0be822ba160dd

スリランカ:苛酷な治安法の廃止を

スリランカ:苛酷な治安法の廃止を

(ジュネーブ)— スリランカ政府は、人権侵害を引き起こすテロ防止法(PTA)を廃止するという公約を履行していない、とヒューマン・ライツ・ウォッチは本日発表の報告書内で述べた。同法は被疑者や容疑者を訴追や裁判もなしに数カ月、しばしば数年も恣意的に拘禁するために適用されており、拷問などの人権侵害の温床である。

ヒューマン・ライツ・ウォッチのアジア局局長ブラッド・アダムズは、「スリランカ政府は、悪名高いテロ防止法廃止について、話すだけでなんら行動を起こしていない」と指摘する。「政府が人権保護について真剣ならば、この苛酷なテロ防止法を国際基準に適合した法と置き換えることを、緊急の優先課題にすべきだ。」

報告書「証拠なき投獄:スリランカのテロ防止法による人権侵害」(全46ページ)は、同法のもとで起きた、これまでおよび現在の人権侵害を調査・検証したもの。具体的には拷問や性的虐待、自白強制、適正手続の体系的な否定などがある。元被拘禁者、その家族、テロ防止法の事案を担当している弁護士などへの聞き取り調査から、同法がスリランカにおける拷問の継続に大きな役割を果たしていることがわかった。本報告書に収録した17の証言は、テロ防止法関連事案のほんの一部に過ぎないが、これらは同法の苛酷な性質とその人権侵害を浮き彫りにするものである。

タミル・イーラム解放のトラ(LTTE)に対処するために1979年に制定されたテロ防止法に基づき、26年間の内戦中に数百人が拘禁された。2009年5月に内戦が終了して以来、その他の非常事態関連規定は廃止されたが、同法は効力をもったままだ。

スリランカ政府は、2016年にテロ行為の疑いで少なくとも11人にテロ防止法を適用して逮捕している

テロ防止法は、不特定の「違法行為」に対し令状なしで逮捕を認めるもので、被疑者を出廷させずに最長で18カ月の拘禁を許す。ヒューマン・ライツ・ウォッチは、10年あるいはそれ以上にわたって、法律家へのアクセスもなしに拘禁された末、免訴されたり、訴追もなしに釈放された複数のケースの報告を受けている。これらの人びとは、賠償や補償、あるいは謝罪も受けていない。2017年7月に公開された政府統計によると、70人超の囚人が審理前の状態で5年以上、12人超が10年以上拘禁されている。

同法の下で拘禁された人の多くは、自白を引き出すために拷問されたと証言。本報告書にその詳細が記されている17人のうち、11人が殴打や拷問を受けたと話す。ヒューマン・ライツ・ウォッチはこれまでにも、治安部隊が被拘禁者をレイプしたり、性器や胸に火のついたタバコを押し付けたり、殴打や電気ショックでけがを負わせたケースを調査・検証してきた。

テロ防止法関連の事案を扱うある上級裁判官は、2017年に担当した事案のうち90%超で、自白証拠の除外を余儀なくされたと語る。自白が力づくの方法で取得されたものだからだ。元被拘禁者たちは投獄と虐待の結果、心理的および身体的な外傷に苦しんでいることが多い。

テロ防止法は、拷問やその他の虐待行為に関与する治安部隊員に、その行動が誠意のすえ行われていたり、あるいは命令に従った場合、免責を与える。また、拷問などの人権侵害行為を行う治安部隊要員に広く適用される。

国連特別手続からの報告書の多くが、テロ防止法の重大な影響に関し同様の認定を文書化している。対テロに関する国連特別報告者(当時)のベン・エマーソン氏は2017年7月のスリランカ訪問のあと、「治安上の理由で逮捕され、拘禁された人びとに対する拷問は、今日まで常態化している」と述べた。その後氏がまとめた報告書は、2016年に同法下で逮捕された者の80%が、その後、拷問ほかの人権侵害を受けていたと結論づけている。2017年10月には、移行期の法の裁きに関する国連特別報告者のパブロ・デ・グリーフ氏が、容疑者の自白だけに基づいて下されたすべてのテロ防止法に関連する有罪判決を再審理するよう求めた。

12月に2週間スリランカを訪問した後、国連の恣意的拘禁に関する作業部会は、テロ防止法を人権侵害の「主要な原動力」であるとして、即時廃止を強く求めた。また、欧州連合(EU)は、2018年1月のEU・スリランカ合同委員会協議で、同法を廃止すべきだという要請を再確認している。

スリランカ政府は、2015年10月の国連人権理事会において、責任と法の裁きに関する一連のコミットメントが示された決議案に同意した。しかし2年以上が経過した今も、テロ防止法の廃止など、治安分野の改革に関する主な公約をほとんど履行していない。国連人権高等弁務官のゼイド・ラアド・アルフセイン氏は、2017年9月の第36回人権理事会会合における開会あいさつで、スリランカの遅々として進まぬ改革に言及し、義務の遂行は単なる「官僚主義的な確認手続き」ではないとして、政府に行動を強く求めた。 11月にジュネーブで行われたスリランカの普遍的定期的審査(UPR)では、いくつかの国連加盟国が、拷問に対する保護措置の実施と、テロ防止法の廃止をスリランカ政府に求めている。

シリセーナ大統領の政権が、テロ防止法の被拘禁者を訴追または釈放するための措置を一部とってはいるが、不当に拘禁された人びとの救済措置や、拘禁下で強制された自白のみをもとに訴追および求刑された人びとへの対処に関する計画は進められていない。

政府は新たなテロ防止法をいくつか提案こそしているが、いずれも国際人権基準を満たしていない。2017年5月、テロ防止法に代わる新法案を、ほとんど国民との対話もないまま内閣が承認した。新法案はいくつかの点で改善点がみられるものの、依然として拷問などの人権侵害につながる長期間の恣意的拘禁を認めるものだ。また、あいまいかつ広範なテロ行為の定義も含まれ、平和的な政治活動や抗議活動の犯罪化に利用される可能性がある。つまり、提案された法案は、国連人権理事会への政府のコミットメントをはるかに下回るものであり、テロ防止法の下で広範かつあまりに容易に乱用されていた権限を、完全に放棄するつもりはないと示唆する内容だ。

政府は、テロ防止法の下で何十年も続いてきた過ちを永続させていく法律を制定するのではなく、スリランカの被害者団体、人権団体、国内外の専門家たちと協議し、治安と人権の両方を守る法案を策定する必要がある。同時に、より幅広い治安分野改革の一環として、テロ防止法の名の下で行われていた人権侵害に対する責任追及なども行われるべきだ。

アダムズ局長は、「2015年の人権理事会決議は、スリランカに対する国際的な精査の終わりを意味するものではない」と指摘する。「むしろ、国連加盟国がスリランカにおける改革の進展の不透明さを浮き彫りにし、必要な行動を要求するための具体的なベンチマークを示したのだ。」

報告書からの証言の抜粋は以下をご覧ください。

Vijaykumar Keetheswaran, a student in Colombo, was visiting his family in Kilinochchi when he was arrested under the PTA in June 2014. He alleges that he was tortured in custody by Terrorist Investigation Division (TID) officials during questioning about his contact with a Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) fighter:

This unit beat me on my back with sticks and poles. They stripped me naked, and beat the soles of my feet with pipes. At one point, they rubbed a chili paste on my genitals. I fainted at that point.

In July 2014, Keetheswaran was transferred to Boosa, a maximum-security prison in southern Sri Lanka where many PTA detainees have been held. He was produced before a magistrate in March 2015, after nine months in custody. “Before going to the magistrate, the TID wanted me to sign a confession, and they burned me with cigarettes,” he said.

Keetheswaran was released on bail in November 2015, but arrested again under the PTA in April 2016 and detained for five months, when the TID was searching for his brother:

When they couldn’t find [my brother], they arrested me instead. I was taken to Boosa and tortured all over again. They asked me to admit that my brother had been in the LTTE. I was hanged and beaten so badly that I admitted to it even though I don’t know if it’s true or not…. I was 13-years-old when the war ended. I didn’t even know what the LTTE was. But I’m still being harassed.

Sahan Kirthi, then 21, was arrested under the PTA in February 2007. He was at first detained for six months, during which he said he endured weeks of torture by TID officials. He told Human Rights Watch:

There was a pattern to the torture. They would take a plastic shopping bag, pour some petrol into it, and then cover my head with the plastic bag. It forced me to breathe the petrol simply to try and get some air. I was beaten on the soles of my feet. The pain was unbearable. I could feel my heart beat and I would get terrible headaches. There was also water torture, where they would put a handkerchief over my face, and put my face under a running tap with high pressure. If you breathe, the water goes into your nose and you feel like you are drowning. At the same time, you can’t really breathe because the water pressure is so high.

TID officials tried to force Kirthi to confess, even threatening to rape his sister. When he was produced before a magistrate after six months, he attempted to report the torture to judicial and medical representatives:

When I was produced before the magistrate, I started telling my story. She called us into her chambers instead and scolded me for saying that the TID had tortured me. I showed her my wounds and scars and she said, “You must have hit yourself.” … I was produced before a JMO [Judicial Medical Officer] after agreeing to sign a confession…. They would not let me read what was written down, so I have no idea what I supposedly confessed to. The JMO didn’t listen to me – there is a network between the JMO, magistrate, and TID, I am certain of that. They protect each other.

Kirthi was transferred to Welikada Prison in Colombo in June 2007 but was not formally charged until 2012. He was eventually acquitted in October 2014 after seven years in prison. Kirthi still has injuries, including loss of hearing, from the torture he endured in custody.

Malathi’s son, Kanna, was arrested by police in Matale in 2008 on suspicion of involvement with the LTTE. He was released after a week in custody and went into hiding. Malathi (a pseudonym) has not heard from him since. Shortly after Kanna’s release, TID officials returned to his house to search for him. When they learned he was missing, they arrested his wife, Durga (a pseudonym), instead. She was held in custody for six months before being produced before a magistrate, and then detained in prison for a further six years before any charges were filed. In 2015, she was acquitted of all charges and released, after seven years in detention.

Durga remains psychologically and physically impaired because of her long incarceration. Her three young children, who were 18 months, 3 years, and 7 years old at the time of her arrest, were raised by her mother-in-law. Malathi said things have been difficult for Durga:

Durga is out of prison now, but is broken. She is not strong enough to take a job on the tea estates, so does menial chores in the bungalows. We have not received any apologies or compensation for our suffering.

(2018年1月29日ヒューマン・ライツ・ウォッチより転載)

www.huffingtonpost.jp/human-rights-watch-japan/sri-lanka-severe_a_23348502/

Donald Trump’s State Of The Union Address – HuffPost UK Verdict

Donald Trump’s State Of The Union Address – HuffPost UK Verdict

  • Donald Trump heralded a “new American moment” for US in an inaugural State of the Union address that was notable for its optimism and self-congratulation.
  • “There has never been a better time to start living the American dream,” said the President.
  • In a plea for unity, the Republican President said: “I am extending an open hand to work with members of both parties, Democrats and Republicans, to protect our citizens, of every background, colour, religion and creed.”
  • The economy was the centerpiece of Trump’s address, hailing a booming stock market and more to come thanks to his recently-secured tax cuts.
  • Trump lauded 2.4 million new jobs, rising wages and unemployment at its lowest ever rate – though critics pointed out much of this was inherited from the Obama era.
  • He called on Congress to advance a $1.5 trillion plan to ‘rebuild our crumbling infrastructure’, which even Democrats applauded. 
  • But there were cracks emerging on the call to unity with a dig at football players who have knelt during the National Anthem in protest against injustice against black people.
  • He unveiled “four pillars” of his immigration plan to put “America First”, but a wall on the Mexican border and a new merit-based system has long been his goal.
  • On foreign policy, Trump highlighted his successes in fighting ISIS, which largely continues Obama’s strategy.
  • In the big news from the speech, Trump also signed an executive order to keep Guantanamo Bay prison open, reversing Obama’s executive order to close to Cuba detention centre.
  • On North Korea, Trump railled against the “depraved character” of the regime, but made no explicit mention of military action.

V E R D I C T

‘Twitter Trump’ had the night off. For his first State of the Union address to Congress, ‘Teleprompter Trump’ took centre-stage.

There were very few ad-libs. No cries of “drain the swamp”. A lack of inappropriate and lewd stories about New York cocktail parties, as he offered when regaling 40,000 Boy Scouts at their annual jamboree.

On script, this was as close as Trump has come to being a conventional politician,  opening with tributes to the heroic responses to a series of natural disasters that have devastated America in the last year and piling platitude upon platitude.

“If there is a mountain, we climb it. If there is a frontier, we cross it. If there is a challenge, we tame it. If there is an opportunity, we seize it,” he opined, wistfully, in remarks so bland they could have been uttered by any president from any party at any time.

We’ve been here before, though.

In March last year, Trump addressed Congress for the first time and shocked the world by his low frequency. CNN political commentator and Democrat Van Jones even said it was the moment Trump “became president”. Yet Trump was soon after calling Kim Jong Un “Rocket Man”, defending white nationalists as “good people” and damning the “fake news” industry whenever possible. 

Advanced warning of Tuesday’s the State of the Union emphasised that Trump was in conciliatory mood. Certainly more optimistic than his inauguration speech warnings of “American carnage” that could have been delivered by Gotham City’s newest villain.

And, yes, talk of the ‘new American moment’ and “extending an open hand” hinted at a light-touch rarely seen with Trump. Glum-faced and sceptical Democrats even cheered when Trump promised to lavish money on new infrastructure, and few would not be moved by the many stories of everyday American heroics.

But if ‘Teleprompter Trump’ is a mask, on occasion it slipped.

Trump pointed to “why we proudly stand for the national anthem”, a barely-disguised dig at NFL players who have taken a knee to protest injustice faced by black people. There could not have been a bigger symbol of divided America. 

And with the line that “Americans are dreamers too”, Trump was differentiating between the DREAMers – youngsters brought to the US illegally who face an uncertain future – and those born in the US. 

There was a flashpoint, too, when Trump suggested migrants can bring “an unlimited number of distant relatives” under the current system. “That’s lies!”, a Democrat reportedly shouted.

R E A C T I O N

From an ex-Obama staffer …

Ted Cruz is on his feet! Trump called his wife ugly and said his dad killed Kennedy and never apologized and Cruz took it. America!

— Jon Lovett (@jonlovett) January 31, 2018

From the Press …

Here’s the front page of tomorrow’s Washington Post: pic.twitter.com/5HQmDNoa4r

— Washington Post (@washingtonpost) January 31, 2018

From the right …

Make no mistake, this was a State of the Union for THE PEOPLE. @realDonaldTrump put the square and sole focus on the forgotten men and women that make our country the greatest on earth! #SOTU

— Kayleigh McEnany (@kayleighmcenany) January 31, 2018

From the far right …

Thank you President Trump. Americans are “Dreamers” too.

— David Duke (@DrDavidDuke) January 31, 2018

 

 

W H A T  N E X T?

All eyes will be on Donald Trump’s next tweet and whether ‘Teleprompter Trump’ slips back into the shadows for another year.

www.huffingtonpost.co.uk/entry/donald-trump-state-of-the-union_uk_5a6f4e2de4b06e25326a385b

GLAAD responds to Trump’s State of the Union Address

GLAAD responds to Trump’s State of the Union Address

No, it was not presidential

NEW YORK -  Sarah Kate Ellis, President and CEO of GLAAD – the world’s largest LGBTQ media advocacy organization released the following statement in response to President Trump’s State of the Union Address. 

“Managing to read a pre-written speech off a teleprompter does not make one Presidential or lend a single ounce of legitimacy to Trump’s anti-LGBTQ agenda. Trump has spent the past year targeting vulnerable communities and surrounding himself with anti-black, anti-Muslim, anti-immigrant, anti-women, and anti-LGBTQ activists with the goal of exacerbating discrimination and erasing LGBTQ Americans from the fabric of this nation.”

 
 
January 30, 2018
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www.glaad.org/blog/glaad-responds-trumps-state-union-address