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Donald Trump injured in shooting at Pennsylvania rally that leaves two dead

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Donald Trump injured in shooting at Pennsylvania rally that leaves two dead

Donald Trump was injured in a shooting at an election rally in Pennsylvania on Saturday evening, an act of political violence that threatens to upend an already tumultuous US election race and deepen the country’s polarisation.

The former president was injured in a volley of gunfire at 6.15pm that the US Secret Service said came from an “elevated position” outside the venue. The shots killed one spectator and wounded at least two other spectators.

Trump was immediately rushed offstage to his motorcade, with blood visible on his right ear and streaking across his cheek. He pumped his fists and shouted “Fight!” to the crowd before being driven away.

The shooting drew condemnation from across the US political spectrum, with President Joe Biden describing the incident as “sick” and a reason “why we have to unite this country”.

International leaders also condemned the act of violence, with UK Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer saying he was “appalled by the shocking scenes”. Japan’s Prime Minister Fumio Kishida said he would “pray for President Trump’s speedy recovery”.

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There were conflicting reports about the cause of Trump’s injury. He said on his Truth Social platform that he had been “shot with a bullet that pierced the upper part of my right ear”, adding that “Nothing is known at this time about the shooter, who is now dead”.

The Secret Service, which is responsible for protecting current and former presidents, said the suspected shooter had fired “multiple shots toward the stage” and that the assailant was now dead.

The gunfire erupted just minutes after Trump began speaking at a rally of supporters in Butler, a rural town in the state’s north-west. Witnesses and footage suggested seven or eight shots were fired.

Donald Trump with blood on his face after the shooting © AP
Donald Trump is rushed offstage by Secret Service
Trump is rushed offstage by Secret Service © Reuters

Biden was briefed on the shooting soon after the incident and said in a televised address that he had been trying to contact Trump, but the former president was with his doctors.

“Apparently he’s doing well,” said Biden in brief remarks from the police department in Rehoboth Beach, Delaware, where he has a holiday home. “I hope I get to speak with him tonight.”

“I have an opinion but I don’t have any facts,” Biden said when asked if this had been an assassination attempt.

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The president condemned the attack, saying: “There’s no place in America for this kind of violence. It’s sick. It’s sick. It’s one of the reasons why we have to unite this country.”

“You cannot allow for this to be happening. You cannot be like this. We cannot condone this,” Biden continued. “The bottom line is that the Trump rally is a rally that he should have been able to [conduct] peacefully without any problem.”

Biden was set to return to the White House at 1230am on Sunday morning, a spokesperson said.

A Biden campaign official said the president’s re-election campaign was “pausing all outbound communications and working to pull down our television ads as quickly as possible”.

But some Republicans were quick to attribute blame for the incident on Biden’s political rhetoric.

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JD Vance, the Republican Ohio Senator and potential Trump running mate, said the “central premise of the Biden campaign” was that Trump was “an authoritarian fascist who must be stopped at all costs. That rhetoric led directly to President Trump’s attempted assassination”, he said.

The apparent attempt on Trump’s life marks the first time in decades that a current or former president has been a victim in a shooting, and came with less than four months to go until the presidential election in November.

But it comes amid heightened political rhetoric and deep divisions in the country, with sporadic eruptions of violence over the past four years including the January 6 2021 attack on the US Capitol by Trump supporters.

Saturday’s shooting happened just days before the start of the Republican National Convention, when Trump is set to formally accept his party’s nomination for president. His campaign said after the shooting that he still “looks forward to joining [supporters] at the convention”.

“I knew immediately that something was wrong in that I heard a whizzing sound, shots, and immediately felt the bullet ripping through the skin,” Trump said in his post. “Much bleeding took place, so I realized then what was happening.” He offered his condolences to the families of the killed and injured attendees.

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US attorney-general Merrick Garland said in a statement that the “Justice Department will bring every available resource to bear to this investigation”.

Secret Service tends to Donald Trump aftert the shooting
The Secret Service tended to former president Donald Trump after an apparent shooting at a rally in Butler, Pennsylvania © Getty Images

Mike Johnson, Speaker of the US House, said on X that he had been briefed on the situation and was “praying for President Trump”. Others, including Trump’s former vice-president Mike Pence, expressed similar sentiments.

Chuck Schumer, the Senate’s top Democrat, said in a statement that he was “horrified by what happened”, adding: “Political violence has no place in our country.”

Nancy Pelosi, the veteran Democratic US Congress member, and former president Barack Obama were among those echoing that sentiment, with Hakeem Jeffries, the top US House Democrat, saying he was “thankful for the decisive law enforcement response”.

Additional reporting by Felicia Schwartz and Demetri Sevastopulo in Washington

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It Could Take Weeks Before Displaced L.A. Residents Can Go Home

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It Could Take Weeks Before Displaced L.A. Residents Can Go Home

The tens of thousands of people displaced by the devastating wildfires in the Los Angeles area are increasingly anxious to know when they can return home — or to what remains of their properties.

Officials say crews are working to reopen closed areas, snuffing out hot spots and clearing hazardous debris, but no timeline has been announced for lifting the evacuation orders.

Experts have warned that it could take weeks before people can return to the hardest-hit neighborhoods because of the amount of work needed to ensure the safety of residents.

Firefighters are still trying to contain the Palisades and Eaton fires, the biggest ones in the Los Angeles region, a prerequisite to allowing people to return. Both remained largely out of control on Wednesday evening, though their growth had slowed.

Captain Erik Scott of the Los Angeles Fire Department said the timeline for people returning to their neighborhoods can vary. It depends on the extent of the damage, which needs to be mapped and carefully assessed in every impacted community, he added. There is also the threat of hazardous materials, such as asbestos and chemicals.

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“We want people to have realistic expectations,” Mr. Scott said.

It took weeks in the aftermath of some previous destructive blazes for people to return. In 2018, the Camp fire destroyed most of Paradise in Northern California and killed 85 people. The final evacuation orders in that town were lifted more than a month after the fire started.

Similarly, after a devastating fire in Lahaina on the island of Maui killed more than 100 people in 2023, it was nearly two months before the first of the thousands of displaced residents could return to their properties.

The suppression of the fire is only one step in the process, according to fire officials. There are yet more safety and infrastructure issues to tackle. Workers need to clear and replace downed power lines, stabilize partially collapsed buildings and remove toxic ash from the ground.

“That’s why the orders are still in place,” said David Acuna, a battalion chief with Cal Fire. “It’s not just about the fire. There are all these other elements to address.”

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The grim search for human remains has further complicated efforts to clear neighborhoods. Officials are using cadaver dogs to comb through the thousands of structures damaged or destroyed in the fires to locate remains.

“We have people literally looking for the remains of your neighbors,” Sheriff Robert Luna of Los Angeles County said at a news conference on Monday. “Please be patient with us.”

Even for those whose homes survive, the lifting of evacuation orders does not necessarily mean they can return to live in them right away, warned Michael Wara, a climate policy expert at Stanford University.

“There’s going to be smoke damage,” he said. “There’s going to be the fact that you don’t have utilities.”

In Pacific Palisades, the recovery process was underway in its incinerated downtown. The air buzzed with the sound of jackhammers, bulldozers and tree shredders. Workers cleared debris, pulled down charred utility poles and ground up the skeletal limbs of burned eucalyptus trees.

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Ali Sharifi managed to inspect his lower Palisades home on Tuesday. Aside from a burned backyard fence, it was intact. Yet the destruction around it, including charred schools, churches and grocery stores, gave him second thoughts about returning.

“Who wants to live in a ghost town?” Mr. Sharifi said.

Erica Fischer, an associate professor at Oregon State University who studied the aftermath of the Camp fire, said that a fast recovery is not always a good one, especially if it means rebuilding in ways that contributed to the disaster.

Of the ongoing evacuation orders in California, she said, “I know it’s not convenient, and it’s disruptive, but it keeps people out of harm’s way.”

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Joe Biden says ‘oligarchy’ emerging in US in final White House address

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Joe Biden says ‘oligarchy’ emerging in US in final White House address

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US President Joe Biden has warned that an “oligarchy is taking shape in America” that risks damaging democracy, as he blasted an emerging “tech industrial complex” for delivering a dangerous concentration of wealth and power in the country.

Biden’s comments during a farewell address to Americans from the Oval Office on Wednesday night amount to a veiled attack on Donald Trump’s closest allies in corporate America, including tech billionaire Elon Musk, just five days before he transfers power to the Republican.

Biden said he wanted to warn the country of the “dangerous concentration of power in the hands of a very few ultra-wealthy people” and the danger that their “abuse of power is left unchecked”.

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He cited late president Dwight Eisenhower’s warning in his 1961 farewell address of a military-industrial complex and said the interaction between government and technology risked being similarly pernicious.

“I’m equally concerned about the potential rise of a tech-industrial complex that could pose real dangers for our country as well. Americans are being buried under an avalanche of misinformation and disinformation, enabling the abuse of power. The free press is crumbling. Editors are disappearing. Social media is giving up on fact checking,” Biden said.

Biden’s words were a reference to the world’s richest man, Musk, the owner of social media platform X and the founder of electric-vehicle maker Tesla, who gave massive financial backing to Trump’s campaign and has become one of his closest allies during the transition to Trump’s new administration.

Some of Silicon Valley’s top executives, from Jeff Bezos of Amazon to Mark Zuckerberg of Meta, have also embraced Trump since his electoral victory and are expected to have prime spots at the inauguration ceremony in Washington on Monday.

Biden also used his remarks to cast a positive light on his one-term presidency, which ended with the big political failure of him dropping his re-election bid belatedly in late July, passing the torch of the campaign against Trump to vice-president Kamala Harris — an effort that ended in a bitter defeat.

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Biden’s approval ratings have hit new lows as he bows out from the presidency and a political career in Washington that has spanned more than five decades. Just 36.7 per cent of Americans approve of his performance on the job, and 55.8 per cent disapprove, according to the FiveThirtyEight polling average.

Biden said he hoped his accomplishments would be judged more favourably in the future.

“It will take time to feel the full impact of all we’ve done together, but the seeds are planted, and they’ll grow and they’ll bloom for decades to come,” he said.

Biden has not only faced seething criticism from Republicans, but also rebukes from Democrats who blame him for seeking re-election despite his advanced age. He is now 82.

Biden’s presidency was defined by a record-breaking jobs market and a robust recovery from the Covid-19 pandemic, as well as a series of legislative accomplishments on the economy. But the pain of high inflation became a massive political vulnerability for him.

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In foreign affairs, he took credit for western support for Ukraine after Russia’s full-scale invasion of the country in 2022, but his response to conflict in the Middle East, including staunch support for Israel’s war in Gaza, drew a strong backlash from progressive Democrats, undermining the unity of his political coalition.

It was not until Wednesday, with five days to go before he left office, that Biden — with help from Trump aides — was able to broker a ceasefire deal to free hostages held by Hamas. 

“This plan was developed and negotiated by my team and will be largely implemented by the incoming administration. That’s why I told my team to keep the incoming administration fully informed, because that’s how it should be, working together as Americans,” he said at the start of his address.

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Biden touts major wins in farewell address

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Biden touts major wins in farewell address
Biden touts major wins in farewell address – CBS Texas

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In his farewell address, President Biden warned an “oligarch” of “ultrarich” threatens America’s future.

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