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Barr says Biden ‘weakened’ US economy by ‘stopping’ energy production before Russia’s war on Ukraine

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Former Legal professional Basic Invoice Barr stated President Biden has “weakened” the USA and its financial system by “stopping” U.S. power manufacturing, including that Biden had accomplished so lengthy earlier than Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.

Barr, in an interview with Fox Information Digital Thursday about his new e book, “One Rattling Factor After One other,” reacted to Biden’s announcement this week to ban all imports of Russian oil, fuel and power to the USA amid Russian President Vladimir Putin’s two-week lengthy invasion of Ukraine.

RUSSIA INVADES UKRAINE: LIVE UPDATES

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“Biden has weakened the USA dramatically and the ability of our financial system by curbing our power independence — and that’s even aside from Ukraine,” Barr stated. Barr added that Biden’s “choice to drag again on American power was a catastrophe — is a catastrophe — for the USA.”

“Ukraine definitely places a higher emphasis on the necessity for us to cease all this nonsense about stopping our personal power manufacturing,” Barr stated.

In saying the ban on Russian oil imports, Biden warned that it might price American households on the pump.

Individuals are experiencing the best fuel costs because the 2008 monetary disaster, with the nationwide common worth reaching $4 per gallon, the highest common to this point, based on AAA.

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Russian oil exports account for about one-third of Europe’s oil imports, however Russian exports are just below 10% of U.S. total imports.

Amid surging fuel costs, Biden has been dealing with criticism from Republicans, who’ve urged him to carry his govt orders that canceled the Keystone XL pipeline from Canada and froze new oil and fuel leases on federal lands.

Legal professional Basic William Barr speaks throughout a information convention Dec. 21, 2020, on the Justice Division in Washington. 
(Michael Reynolds/Pool through AP)

“It was American manufacturing that saved costs low in the USA,” Barr stated. “And whether or not it’s stopping the stream of power over the Keystone, right down to the refineries within the Gulf space, or the allowing course of, and even the financing of exploration and oil and fuel manufacturing.”

TRUMP SAYS BIDEN IS LETTING ‘RADICAL CLIMATE EXTREMISTS RUN OUR COUNTRY’ AS US SEES RECORD-HIGH GAS PRICES

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Barr stated U.S. power independence “helped gas financial development and the broader advantages of that underneath the Trump administration up till COVID.”

“The truth that we’re an power large, probably, and that we are able to have cheap power right here in the USA, that’s additionally comparatively clear and pure fuel, offers us so many benefits economically and guarantees to permit us to renew high-end manufacturing and so forth at decrease price then the remainder of the world,” Barr stated. “And as we discovered from COVID, it’s crucial that now we have right here in the USA the very important sources that we’d like and that we’re not depending on different international locations.

“And there may be nothing extra very important than power.”

On Wednesday, White Home press secretary Jen Psaki stated restarting development of the Keystone XL pipeline was not one of many choices on the desk to alleviate rising prices of fuel for Individuals.

“If we’re making an attempt to result in extra provide, that doesn’t deal with any drawback,” Psaki stated. “The pipeline is only a supply mechanism – it’s not an oil discipline, so it doesn’t present extra provide into the system.”

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White House press secretary Jen Psaki speaks during a press briefing at the White House Feb. 16, 2022.

White Home press secretary Jen Psaki speaks throughout a press briefing on the White Home Feb. 16, 2022.
(AP Photograph/Patrick Semansky)

When pressed additional on whether or not restarting the pipeline is one thing the White Home is contemplating, Psaki replied, “There’s no plans for that, and it might not deal with any of the issues we’re having at present.”

WHITE HOUSE BLAMES RUSSIA FOR RECORD-HIGH GAS PRICES, COINING ‘#PUTINPRICEHIKE’

Biden this week stated it’s “not true” that his administration is holding again home power manufacturing, warning that fuel costs will “go up additional” from their present report ranges. And he reiterated his help for presidency spending on renewable power sources and criticized the oil and fuel trade for not taking full benefit of drilling alternatives within the U.S.

However Barr disagreed and stated limiting U.S. power manufacturing “elevated Russia’s leverage.”

“It helped open the window for Putin to do what he’s doing with the concept he might get away with it as a result of the Europeans could be too depending on them,” Barr stated. “And the costs that have been being paid to him have been serving to to gas his battle machine.”

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Barr was requested in regards to the Biden administration weighing the acquisition of petroleum from Iran, Saudi Arabia and Venezuela.

“It appears there is no such thing as a finish to the worth that they’re keen to pay to keep away from having the USA produce its personal power,” Barr stated. 

“The concept that we’re reopening relationships with Maduro, who has put the Venezuelan individuals by way of unbelievable struggling, the place a excessive share have fled the nation and live in refugee camps — that we might have turned to get oil from him — simply reveals you the intense diploma to which they’re keen to go to do something however have the USA produce its personal power.”
 

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Biden urges respect for legal system after Trump conviction while publicly flouting SCOTUS rulings

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Biden urges respect for legal system after Trump conviction while publicly flouting SCOTUS rulings

President Biden said on Friday that the justice system “should be respected” and that it was “reckless” for former President Donald Trump to claim that the verdict in his New York trial was “rigged,” just days after he told his supporters the Supreme Court could not “stop” him from carrying out his agenda.

“It’s reckless, it’s dangerous, it’s irresponsible for anyone to say this was rigged just because they don’t like the verdict,” Biden said in response to the former president’s remarks about the NY v. Trump verdict, which found Trump guilty Thursday on all 34 counts of falsifying business records related to the hush money payment to adult film actress Stormy Daniels in the lead up to the 2016 presidential election.

“Our justice system has endured for nearly 250 years, and it literally is the cornerstone of America. Our justice system, that justice should be respected. And we should never allow anyone to tear it down. It’s as simple as that,” Biden added.

TRUMP TURNS CONVICTION INTO CASH, SPOTLIGHTS RECORD FUNDRAISING IN WAKE OF GUILTY VERDICT

President Biden said Friday that the justice system “should be respected” and that it was “reckless” for former President Donald Trump to claim that the verdict in his New York trial was “rigged.” (Getty Images)

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Biden’s remarks came just two days after he bragged to his supporters at a rally in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, that the Supreme Court ruling his student debt relief plan was unconstitutional did not “stop” him from canceling student loans.

“The Supreme Court blocked me from relieving student debt, but they didn’t stop me,” Biden said Wednesday from Girard College.

Biden, like several other Democrat and Republican presidents throughout history, has taken aim at the Supreme Court for a number of rulings they have made during his tenure in the White House.

During his State of the Union address in March, Biden took direct aim at the justices and insisted they had underestimated the “electoral and political power” of women in their decision to overturn Roe v. Wade. During an interview with MSNBC about his remarks directed at the justices, Biden said, “Look, I think they made a wrong decision, think they read the Constitution wrong, I think they made a mistake.”

Biden made similar comments on how the high court’s ruling “didn’t stop” him from canceling student loans in February while speaking at the Julian Dixon Library in Culver City, California.

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BLACK VOTERS CRITICIZE BIDEN FOR ‘PANDERING’ AS SUPPORT SHIFTS TO TRUMP: ‘IT’S INSULTING’

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The Supreme Court in Washington, D.C. (AP Photo/Jacquelyn Martin, File)

“Early in my term, I announced a major plan to provide millions of working families with debt relief for their college student debt,” Biden said at the time. “Tens of millions of people in debt were literally about to be canceled in debts. But my MAGA Republican friends in the Congress, elected officials and special interests stepped in and sued us. And the Supreme Court blocked it. But that didn’t stop me.”

Last June, the Supreme Court ruled in a 6-3 decision that federal law does not allow Biden’s Secretary of Education to cancel more than $430 billion in student loan debt. Biden promised at the time that his administration would continue to push for his student debt relief plan.

Shortly after the court’s ruling, Biden said: “I think the court misinterpreted the Constitution.”

Earlier this year, Biden announced the Savings on Valuable Education (SAVE) plan that cancels debt for enrolled borrowers who have been in repayment for at least 10 years and hold $12,000 or less in student loan debt. Those with larger debts will receive relief after an additional year of payments for every additional $1,000 they borrowed.

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In a statement to Fox News Digital, Biden campaign spokesperson James Singer said: “Expressing disagreement with a Supreme Court decision – as all Presidents do – is not the same as attacking the rule of law and undermining our judicial system.”

Following the verdict in Trump’s trial, Biden took to social media on Friday to claim, “No one is above the law.”

Biden speaks at White House

President Biden speaks in the State Dining Room of the White House in Washington, D.C., on May 31, 2024. (Michael Reynolds/EPA/Bloomberg via Getty Images)

He has also used Trump’s remarks to raise funds for his re-election campaign, claiming in another post on X that Trump “questioned our judicial system.”

“Donald Trump is threatening our democracy. First, he questioned our election system. Then, he questioned our judicial system,” Biden wrote Friday.

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Biden said Friday that Trump, who is the first president to be convicted of a felony, will “be given the opportunity, as he should, to appeal” the conviction.

Fox News’ Lindsay Kornick contributed to this report.

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Trump rages, Biden struggles to tame the war in Gaza: The contrasting days of a former and current president

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Trump rages, Biden struggles to tame the war in Gaza: The contrasting days of a former and current president

Former President Trump stood in the lobby of his namesake office tower in New York on Friday morning, lashing out at “fascists” in the government, a “sleazebag” star witness and a judge who is “crooked,” “a devil,” “a tyrant” and “can’t put two sentences together.”

He complained for 40 minutes about a “rigged trial” that resulted in his 34 felony convictions Thursday, detailing procedural objections as he vowed an appeal, while occasionally insisting that “it’s not about me.”

President Biden had a more typical day for an incumbent head of state, returning to the White House from an overnight stay at his Delaware beach house to welcome the Kansas City Chiefs to celebrate their Super Bowl win, meet with Belgium’s prime minister behind closed doors and deliver public remarks unveiling a proposed cease-fire in the war between Israel and Hamas.

The American principle that no one is above the law was reaffirmed

— President Biden

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Friday offered the type of contrast that Biden and his allies have been trying to showcase for months: between a president performing a normal mix of duties that range from the ceremonial to the profound and a former president mired in his insular world of grievance.

“The American principle that no one is above the law was reaffirmed,” Biden said from the State Dining Room on Friday before delivering his Middle East proposal. “It’s reckless, it’s dangerous, it’s irresponsible for anyone to say this was rigged just because they don’t like the verdict.”

Biden won the White House in 2020 with a promise to return to normality, offering his five decades in mainstream politics as a steadying alternative to Trump’s chaotic pandemic news conferences and shattering of norms that would lead ultimately to the violent Jan. 6 insurrection.

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“Trump has sought to remake this nation in his image: selfish, angry, dark and divisive,” Biden said in 2020. “This is not who we are. At our best, America’s always been — and if I have anything to do with it — it will be again, generous, confident, an optimistic nation, full of hope and resolve.”

But four years later, polls show that the nation remains deeply divided, pessimistic and concerned about the future and that a large share of voters have forgotten much of the turbulence of the Trump era, or at least decided they are willing to live with it. The former president has a slight edge in national and swing state polls, with voters giving him credit for the pre-pandemic economy while blaming Biden for the inflation that came with the recovery.

It remains unclear whether Thursday’s verdicts in the election interference trial will alter those dynamics.

Trump supporters have stuck with him through any number of crises that would have sunk other politicians, including the insurrection, two impeachments and numerous former officials from his inner circle calling him unfit to serve. His three other criminal cases remain unresolved and will probably hang over him during the November election.

So far, I guess it’s backfired

— Former President Trump on his conviction

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Trump boasted Friday of what he said was a record $39-million fundraising haul that came in the first 10 hours after his conviction. (The numbers have not yet been officially reported or verified.)

“So far, I guess it’s backfired,” he said of the prosecution brought by New York’s district attorney, for which he has falsely blamed Biden, before saying that he would have preferred to skip the ordeal and defeat Biden “legitimately.”

He also returned to the themes his advisors hope will win him a return to the Oval Office, including his mainstays of immigration and “rampant crime.” But the former president who campaigns on law and order is now basing much of his case for reelection on calling out the criminal justice system as rigged and “a scam,” at least when it applies to him.

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When Larry Hogan, a Republican former governor running for Senate in Maryland, wrote on social media that people should “respect the verdict and the legal process” Thursday night, a top Trump aide, Chris LaCivita, rebuked him immediately on the platform X.

“You just ended your campaign,” LaCivita wrote.

Biden has tried to seize that ground from Trump. But after he defended the rule of law on Friday, the subject of his subsequent remarks offered a reminder that life is different for an incumbent president than a challenger.

Biden has been unable to end the war in the Gaza Strip, which has sparked mass protests on college campuses and anger from many on the left who blame him for the humanitarian crisis in Gaza and thousands of deaths of Palestinians. Even as Biden urged the Israeli military to avoid civilian deaths, he has supported Israel’s right to defend itself after Hamas killed about 1,200 people, mostly civilians, and kidnapped about 250 on Oct 7.

Biden on Friday detailed a three-phase deal proposed by Israel that he says would lead to the release of hostages in Gaza and could end the conflict with Hamas. Previous attempts at a deal have failed, provoking further anger on the left that he was enabling Israel’s assault, coupled with criticism from Israel’s moderate and conservative allies that he was wavering in his support as he tried to pressure the government to scale down its counteroffensive.

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“I know this is a subject on which people in this country feel deep, passionate conviction,” Biden said Friday. “So do I. It’s been one of the hardest, most complicated problems in the world.”

Trump had no further public events planned for Friday.

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Tales from The Trail: Trump 'unleashed' with criminal trial over

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Tales from The Trail: Trump 'unleashed' with criminal trial over

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Donald Trump is wasting no time in getting back on the campaign trail now that the verdict is in and his historic criminal trial in New York City is over.

The former president and presumptive Republican presidential nominee headlined a campaign fundraiser just a couple of hours after being convicted. On Saturday he’ll attend a UFC (Ultimate Fighting Championship) match in Newark, New Jersey, Fox News confirmed. And on Sunday he’ll sit for a “Fox and Friends” interview.

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“We’ll be fighting hard,” Trump told Fox News’ Brooke Singman in an interview soon after he was found guilty of all 34 felony counts in his case, the first in which a former or current president stood trial.

Trump emphasized that he was excited to get back on the campaign trail. 

2024 SHOWDOWN: TRUMP CASHES IN ON THE CONVICTION IN HIS CRIMINAL TRIAL

Former President Donald Trump appears in Manhattan Criminal Court, Thursday, May 30, 2024, in New York City. (AP Photo/Seth Wenig, Pool)

On Friday, as he addressed reporters from the atrium of his Trump Tower in New York City, where he launched his first White House bid nine years ago, the former president vowed that “we’re going to fight.”.

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For six weeks, Trump had been confined to the courtroom in Lower Manhattan, which prevented him from campaigning across the country other than on weekends and Wednesdays, when there was no trial.

But Trump’s campaign touted that even during the duration of the trial, the candidate was able to generate “billions of dollars” in media coverage as well as host rallies and fundraisers.

HOW TRUMP GUILTY VERDICTS MAY IMPACT THE 2024 REMATCH WITH BIDEN

The former president’s tenure in court also didn’t seem to put a dent in the slight edge he enjoys in the polls over President Biden in the key battleground states that will likely decide the outcome of their rematch.

And the former president’s top pollsters put out a memo on the eve of the verdict arguing that a conviction would not have any electoral consequences.

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“We are already back to the mission,” the Trump campaign told Fox News Digital on Thursday evening. “President Trump won’t let this sham stop the movement of this campaign to save the nation.”

Donald Trump arrives to Trump Tower after being found guilty

Former President Donald Trump arrives at Trump Tower in New  York City on May 30, 2024 after being found guilty on 34 counts of falsifying business records in the first degree. (Felipe Ramales for Fox News Digital)

Longtime Republican strategist David Carney, a veteran of multiple GOP presidential campaigns who is now steering a pro-Trump super PAC, told Fox News that “the show trial is over and Trump is unleashed to campaign at will again. With the miscarriage of justice out in the open, he will have the wind to his back.”

Trump enjoyed an initial burst of fundraising courtesy of his guilty verdicts.

The former president’s campaign announced on Friday morning that it had hauled in $34.8 million in fundraising from 6pm ET to midnight on Thursday, immediately after the verdict went viral.

On Friday evening, the campaign updated their fundraising total – nearly $53 million over 24 hours.

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WHAT TRUMP TOLD FOX NEWS DIGITAL FOLLOWING THE VERDICT

The campaign highlighted in a release that they raked in “a record shattering small dollar fundraising haul and said it was “nearly double the biggest day ever recorded for the Trump campaign on the WinRed platform.” They emphasized that the guilty verdicts “have awakened the MAGA movement like never before.”

Trump will continue his fundraising blitz with a swing at the end of next week in California.

The former president heads to the blue bastion of San Francisco on June 6 for a fundraising dinner hosted by tech investors David Sacks and Chamath Palihapitiya, two of the heaviest hitters in Silicon Valley and co-hosts of the hot “All-In” podcast.

Former President Donald Trump is hitting the campaign trail after the end of his trial

Former President Donald Trump speaks during a news conference at Trump Tower, Friday, May 31, 2024, in New York. A day after a New York jury found Donald Trump guilty of 34 felony charges, the presumptive Republican presidential nominee addressed the conviction and likely attempt to cast his campaign in a new light. (AP Photo/Julia Nikhinson) (AP Photo/Julia Nikhinson)

Sen. JD Vance of Ohio, a Trump ally and potential 2024 running mate who spent time a few years back in San Francisco working for hedge funds in the tech sector, was instrumental in putting the top dollar fundraising together.

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Trump heads south to Beverly Hills for a June 7 fundraiser and a June 8 finance event in Newport Beach in Orange County.

The trip doesn’t mean the Trump campaign thinks overwhelmingly blue California may be in play. 

Instead, Trump’s swing and two fundraisers in the Bay Area on June 5 headlined by Vice President Kamala Harris are the latest proof that the Golden State remains a crucial ATM for campaign cash.

Get the latest updates from the 2024 campaign trail, exclusive interviews and more at our Fox News Digital election hub.

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