Trump seeks to activate his base at Moms for Liberty gathering but risks alienating moderate voters

Trump seeks to activate his base at Moms for Liberty gathering but risks alienating moderate voters
Republican presidential nominee former President Donald Trump speaks with Moms for Liberty co-founder Tiffany Justice during an event at the group's annual convention in Washington on Aug. 30, 2024. (AP)
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Updated 31 August 2024
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Trump seeks to activate his base at Moms for Liberty gathering but risks alienating moderate voters

Trump seeks to activate his base at Moms for Liberty gathering but risks alienating moderate voters
  • Moms for Liberty serves on the advisory board for Project 2025, a detailed and controversial playbook for the next conservative presidency
  • The group, which as a nonprofit is officially nonpartisan, said it also invited both Kamala Harris and independent presidential candidate Robert F. Kennedy

WASHINGTON: Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump appeared Friday at the annual gathering of Moms for Liberty, a national nonprofit that has spearheaded efforts to get mentions of LGBTQ+ identity and structural racism out of K-12 classrooms.
In a “fireside chat” in the nation’s capital, the former president sought to shore up support and enthusiasm among a major part of his base. The bulk of the group’s 130,000-plus members are conservatives who agree with him that parents should have more say in public education and that racial equity programs and transgender accommodations don’t belong in schools.
Yet Trump also runs the risk of alienating some moderate voters, many of whom see Moms for Liberty’s activism as too extreme to be legitimized by a presidential nominee.
A year ago, Moms for Liberty was viewed by many as a rising power player in conservative politics that could be pivotal in supporting the Republican ticket. The group’s membership skyrocketed after its launch in 2021, fueled by parents protesting mandatory masking for students and remote learning during the COVID-19 pandemic.
But in the last several months, a series of embarrassing scandals and underwhelming performances during local elections have called Moms for Liberty’s influence into question.
The group also has voiced support for Project 2025, a detailed and controversial playbook for the next conservative presidency from which Trump has repeatedly tried to distance himself.
Moms for Liberty serves on the advisory board for Project 2025, and the author of the document’s education chapter taught a “strategy session” at the group’s Friday gathering.
The negative perceptions about Moms for Liberty around the country could increase the potential liability for Trump as he sits down with co-founder Tiffany Justice on Friday evening, said University of Central Florida political science professor Aubrey Jewett.
“It certainly helps him rally his base,” Jewett said. “But will that be enough to outdo the backlash?”
Justice said she wanted to ask Trump about “what was important in his kids’ lives and his kids’ education.”
“I think the fascinating thing about Donald Trump is that he’s a father and a grandfather, but he’s involved his children in business and in politics with him,” she said. “They have a very strong family. And so I think we’ll enjoy hearing more about that from him tonight.”
Justice disputed the idea that her group’s influence is waning, pointing to the 60 percent of Moms for Liberty-backed candidates who won their recent races in the Florida primaries.
That’s “a really big deal,” she said, especially considering that many of the school board hopefuls the group endorses are first-time candidates running against incumbents. She also noted three Moms for Liberty members who won Florida House primaries, showing the group’s reach into other political offices.
The group, which as a nonprofit is officially nonpartisan, said it also invited both Democratic presidential nominee Kamala Harris and independent presidential candidate Robert F. Kennedy, who recently suspended his campaign and endorsed Trump, to speak at the gathering. Neither is scheduled to make an appearance.
Trump didn’t share details of what he would discuss at the gathering, but his campaign pointed to his education proposals, which include promoting school choice, giving parents more say in education and awarding funding preference to states and school districts that abolish teacher tenure, financially reward good teachers and allow parents to directly elect school principals.
He also has called for terminating the Department of Education, barring transgender athletes from playing in girls’ sports, and cutting funding from any schools pushing “inappropriate racial, sexual or political content.”
“President Trump believes students should be taught reading, writing and math in the classroom — not gender, sex and race like the Biden Administration is pushing on our public school system,” said Karoline Leavitt, the Trump campaign’s national press secretary.
The event took on a party-like atmosphere as the group awaited Trump’s arrival to a hotel ballroom in Washington. Donning shirts with messages like “Moms for Trump” and “We don’t co-parent with the government,” attendees at the group’s annual gathering ate buffet desserts, drank beer and cheered to a cover band playing country hits.
Trump entered the ballroom as he does at his signature rallies, standing onstage and soaking up applause for the entirety of Lee Greenwood’s “God Bless the USA.” Despite the event’s focus on education, Trump began by discussing illegal immigration, an issue he’s put at the center of his campaign.
“Many of these people are coming out of the roughest countries in the world, and they’re coming from all over the world, they’re not just coming from South America,” Trump said.
Vice President Harris has criticized her Republican opponent for his threats to dismantle the Department of Education. She also has spoken out against efforts to restrict classroom content related to race.
Democrats have lauded her running mate, Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz, for an executive order he signed protecting the rights of LGBTQ people to receive gender-affirming health care in his state. Republicans, including Trump, have lambasted him for it.
During a campaign stop earlier Friday in Johnstown in the battleground state of Pennsylvania, Trump offered extensive criticism of the media for what he called unfavorable coverage and singled out CNN for its interview with Harris and Walz on Thursday.
Moments later, a man rushed the media area and made it over a bike rack barrier and close to a riser where television reporters were watching the rally. Private security pushed him back, and the man was eventually subdued by law enforcement using a Taser.
Trump at first said of the man, “he’s on our side,” but it’s not clear what his intent was. As police led the man away, the former president declared, “Is there anywhere that’s more fun to be than a Trump rally?”
Johnstown was once a steel-producing hub but has seen its factories close over the decades. In his speech, Trump vowed to restore American manufacturing by imposing steep tariffs on goods from China and other foreign countries. He also used energy-rich Pennsylvania as a backdrop to deride Harris for once suggesting she’d be willing to ban hydraulic fracturing — a position her campaign says she no longer supports.
The former president said he was “exposing how bad it’s going to be in Pennsylvania and our country if we stop doing the fossil fuel thing.”
 


EU Council chief says US sanctions threaten ICC’s independence

EU Council chief says US sanctions threaten ICC’s independence
Updated 2 sec ago
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EU Council chief says US sanctions threaten ICC’s independence

EU Council chief says US sanctions threaten ICC’s independence
Brussels: European Council chief Antonio Costa on Friday warned sanctions on the International Criminal Court (ICC) were a threat to the wider judicial system, after US President Donald Trump punished the court over its probes into America and Israel.
“Sanctioning the ICC threatens the Court’s independence and undermines the international criminal justice system as a whole,” Costa, who heads the body representing the EU’s 27 member states, wrote on X.
Israel on Friday praised US President Donald Trump for imposing sanctions on the International Criminal Court, calling the court’s actions against Israel “immoral” and illegitimate.
“I strongly commend @POTUS President Trump’s executive order imposing sanctions on the so-called ‘international criminal court’,” Foreign Minister Gideon Saar said on X, adding the ICC’s actions were “immoral and have no legal basis.”

Kremlin says Russia and US have not yet begun to discuss a possible Putin-Trump meeting

Kremlin says Russia and US have not yet begun to discuss a possible Putin-Trump meeting
Updated 07 February 2025
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Kremlin says Russia and US have not yet begun to discuss a possible Putin-Trump meeting

Kremlin says Russia and US have not yet begun to discuss a possible Putin-Trump meeting
  • Trump and Putin have both said they are keen to meet in person with an agenda

MOSCOW: Russia and the US have not yet begun to discuss a possible meeting between Russian President Vladimir Putin and US President Donald Trump, Russia’s Interfax news agency reported on Friday, citing Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov.
It cited Peskov as saying there had been no initial contacts about whether such a meeting was needed or where and how it might take place if it did happen.
Trump and Putin have both said they are keen to meet in person with the agenda, if such a meeting does take place, expected to focus on Trump’s stated aim to bring a swift end to the Ukraine war.


Alaska authorities search for missing passenger plane with 10 on board

Alaska authorities search for missing passenger plane with 10 on board
Updated 07 February 2025
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Alaska authorities search for missing passenger plane with 10 on board

Alaska authorities search for missing passenger plane with 10 on board
  • The small turboprop Cessna Caravan plane had nine passengers and one pilot on board

Authorities are searching for a Bering Air passenger plane with 10 people on board that was reported missing while en route from Unalakleet to Nome, Alaska’s Department of Public Safety said on Thursday.
The small turboprop Cessna Caravan plane had nine passengers and one pilot on board, the agency said on its website, adding that crews were working to get its last-known coordinates.
A disproportionate number of air taxi and commuter plane accidents occur in Alaska compared to other US states, the US government’s National Institute of Occupational Safety and Health says.
Alaska has mountainous terrain and challenging weather. Many villages are not connected by roads and small planes are used to transport people and goods.
Bering Air is an Alaska-based regional airline that operates around 39 planes and helicopters, according to data from flight tracking website FlightRadar24.
Its last position, flying over water, was received by FlightRadar24 trackers 38 minutes after departing Unalakleet at 1438 local time Thursday (2338 GMT) for a flight that usually takes under an hour.
Bering Air did not immediately respond to a request for comment.


Rubio renews US hard line with Venezuela plane seizure

Rubio renews US hard line with Venezuela plane seizure
Updated 07 February 2025
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Rubio renews US hard line with Venezuela plane seizure

Rubio renews US hard line with Venezuela plane seizure
  • A Dominican Republic prosecutor and US law enforcement representative together taped a sign that said “seized” on a Dassault Falcon 200 jet bearing a Venezuelan fla

Santo Domingo: US Secretary of State Marco Rubio on Thursday supervised the seizure of a second aircraft belonging to Venezuela’s leftist government in less than a year, showing a hard line despite nascent diplomacy.
Rubio, a passionate opponent of Latin America’s leftist authoritarians like Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro, witnessed the confiscation of the aircraft at the end of his first trip in the job, which took him to five countries of Latin America.
Rubio traveled to a military airstrip in the capital Santo Domingo where, in front of cameras, a Dominican Republic prosecutor and US law enforcement representative together taped a sign that said “seized” on a Dassault Falcon 200 jet bearing a Venezuelan flag.
“We are very grateful to the Dominican Republic for participating and cooperating with the US justice system,” Rubio said in an interview with SIN News.
“The message is that when there are sanctions because they are violating human rights, they are violating a whole series of things, traveling to Iran, helping countries that really wish harm to the United States,” he said, “these sanctions are going to be applied and reinforced.”
Dominican Republic authorities detained the aircraft last year after US authorities said it had violated unilateral US sanctions against Venezuela.
Venezuelan officials used the plane to fly to Greece, Turkiye, Russia, Nicaragua and Cuba, and had taken it to the Dominican Republic for maintenance, according to the US State Department.
Maduro’s oil minister also used the plane to attend a meeting of the OPEC oil cartel in the United Arab Emirates in 2019, according to the Treasury Department.
In September, the United States, under then-president Joe Biden, announced the seizure of a first Venezuelan government airplane in the Dominican Republic that had been used to transport Maduro on international trips.
President Donald Trump has long vowed to clamp down on Maduro and in his first term unsuccessfully sought to remove him, after wide international questioning on the legitimacy of Maduro’s re-election.
But an envoy from Trump, Richard Grenell, last week traveled to Caracas to meet with Maduro, securing the release of six US prisoners.
Venezuela said the talks were held with “mutual respect,” but Rubio and other US officials have insisted that there was no backtracking on the US refusal to accept Maduro as Venezuela’s legitimate president.
Rubio said that Venezuela remained a concern for US national security, pointing to the mass migration from it as the economy implodes.
“Venezuela is an issue of national security, not just of lack of democracy,” Rubio told reporters Wednesday in Guatemala.
“It is about a government — a regime — that has harmed more than seven million Venezuelans, and all the neighboring countries that have had to face the reality of this massive migration,” he said, referring to Venezuelans who have left.
Grenell also pressed Maduro to accept the return of Venezuelans deported from the United States.
Trump quickly after taking office stripped roughly 600,000 Venezuelans in the United States of protection from deportation.
Biden had refused to deport them due to the security and economic crises in Venezuela.


Arab Americans for Trump changes name after president’s Gaza comments

Arab Americans for Trump changes name after president’s Gaza comments
Updated 07 February 2025
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Arab Americans for Trump changes name after president’s Gaza comments

Arab Americans for Trump changes name after president’s Gaza comments
  • AAFT changes name to Arab Americans for Peace to lobby Trump to bring about “lasting peace” based on two-state solution
  • Group opposes any proposal to relocate Palestinians to neighboring countries or to convert Gaza into a regional resort

CHICAGO: The chairman of Arab Americans for Trump told Arab News on Thursday that Donald Trump’s statements about taking over Gaza are “political rhetoric,” and that the US president is committed to a peaceful settlement between Israelis and Palestinians.

Dr. Bishara Bahbah said AAFT has changed its name to Arab Americans for Peace to lobby the Trump administration to bring about “lasting peace” based on the two-state solution.

He added that the group opposes any proposal to relocate Palestinians to neighboring countries or to convert Gaza into a regional resort. 

“We appreciate the president’s offer to clean and rebuild Gaza. However, the purpose should be to make Gaza habitable for Palestinians and no one else,” Bahbah said.

“The Palestine that we envision is one that would be on lands occupied by Israel in 1967: the West Bank, Gaza, and East Jerusalem as its capital.”

Bahbah brushed aside Trump’s Gaza comments as a style of American politics in which politicians toss out ideas to kick-start public debate.

“Trump promised specifically to us as a community to bring an end to the wars and an end to the killings of civilians,” he said.

“Secondly, Trump promised to bring about a lasting peace in the Middle East that’s satisfactory to all parties.

“He delivered on the ceasefire and sent back (special envoy to the Middle East) Steve Witkoff in order to ensure that the second phase of the ceasefire goes into effect.”

Bahbah, who met with Trump and several advisers during his election campaign, added: “The ceasefire was a major win for us because we were pleading as a community with the Biden administration to push the Israelis to accept a ceasefire, but clearly President (Joe) Biden and his top lieutenants weren’t pushing the Israelis hard enough.

“President Trump knew how to do it, and from our perspective, that was a big thank you to our community for our vote in supporting the president’s election.”

Regarding Trump’s suggestions that Egypt and Jordan take in Gazans, Bahbah said: “One has to be realistic. Why would Jordan and Egypt bear the brunt of Palestinian refugees when the Israelis were the cause of the Palestinians in Gaza becoming refugees and they caused the destruction of Gaza?”

Bahbah noted that Israel’s actions in Gaza were “funded and supported” by the Biden administration.

“Yes, the Israelis could retaliate for what Hamas did on Oct. 7 (2023), but not in a manner that demolishes 90 percent of the Gaza Strip.

“That’s way over the top. The Israelis have been brought to the International Court of Justice over this particular issue.”