logo
Former Biden aide dishes on ex-president's health after others scurry to avoid legacy-tarnishing revelations

Former Biden aide dishes on ex-president's health after others scurry to avoid legacy-tarnishing revelations

Daily Mail​3 days ago
Joe Biden 's former chief of staff appeared before congressional investigators to testify in the House Republican's inquiry into the former president's cognitive state.
Ron Klain, 63, appeared on Capitol Hill Thursday morning for a transcribed interview with the House Oversight Committee.
Committee chairman James Comer, R-Ky., has been investigating whether former Biden officials intentionally hid signs of the president's decline.
He is also probing the aide's use of the autopen, an instrument used to sign official documents, like letters, executive actions and possibly even legislation.
The committee seeks to uncover whether orders were signed without the commander-in-chief's full knowledge.
Klain worked as Biden's White House chief of staff from January 2021 until February 2023; he also worked as the Democrat 's chief of staff when he was vice president.
The ex-chief of staff is the sixth former Biden aide to testify in the probe. He did arrive to his meeting with lawmakers voluntarily - one of three of the ex-staffers to do so.
Biden's senior advisors Annie Tomasini and Anthony Bernal, along with ex-White House doctor Kevin O'Connor, were all forced to testify after being subpoenaed.
All three of them pleaded their pleaded the fifth amendment protections in recent weeks.
Comer has released some video of their testimony where they repeat the same legal jargon when asked questions about the 82-year-old former president.
Peppered with questions from the press when walking into the meeting, Klain, flanked with staffers, did not answer.
On the other hand, he was cooperative and spoke cordially with the panel, lawmakers exiting the session told reporters.
'He answered every single question,' Democrat Rep. Ro Khanna of California told reporters. 'He was fully cooperative.'
'Unlike the other Biden officials the committee has deposed, Klain is not asserting any executive privilege or invoking his Fifth Amendment right against self-incrimination,' Arizona Republican Rep. Andy Biggs wrote on X after exiting the room. 'He is answering the Committee's questions accordingly.'
But there's still more to be uncovered, the Arizona Republican added, including questions stemming from a recent Hunter Biden interview about whether his father was given sleeping medication by his staff before his June 2024 debate with Trump.
'I still have many unanswered questions regarding who was running the country and Joe Biden's mental and physical acuity, especially in light of Hunter Biden's revelation that his father was being drugged with Ambien,' Biggs wrote.
The last Biden aide to sit for questioning, Tomasini, invoked her right to remain silent and avoid incrimination during her closed-door interview with the Republican-led committee last Friday.
Tomasini's interview lasted less than an hour and videos show she did not answer any reporter questions on her way in or out of the private session.
A video of the transcribed interview published by Comer showed Tomanisi repeatedly invoking her right to remain silent.
Comer has called the cover-up a 'historic scandal.'
Earlier this month, the Kentucky congressman accused Dr. O'Connor of a conspiracy to 'cover up' Biden's cognitive decline.
O'Connor cited provider-patient privilege as his reason for pleading the fifth.
His lawyer, ahead of his testimony, expressed concern about what O'Connor would be able to say without violating doctor-patient confidentiality laws.
The physician was in charge of Biden's annual physical and repeatedly deemed Biden fit to hold office.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Number of Democratic voters who are ‘extremely motivated' to vote in next election skyrockets
Number of Democratic voters who are ‘extremely motivated' to vote in next election skyrockets

The Independent

time5 hours ago

  • The Independent

Number of Democratic voters who are ‘extremely motivated' to vote in next election skyrockets

Nearly three-quarters of Democratic voters say they are 'extremely motivated' to cast their ballots in the 2026 midterm elections, a dramatic uptick from four years ago, polling shows. Just six months after Republicans took control of the White House and Congress, 72 percent of Democrats and Democratic-aligned voters say they are 'extremely motivated' to vote in the next election, a CNN poll conducted by SSRS this month found. By contrast, only 50 percent of Republicans say the same. Democrats are now looking to enter midterm elections in 2026 under similar circumstances as 2018 in an attempt to break up the GOP's control of both chambers of Congress and the White House. During the 2018 elections, voters dealt a massive blow to President Donald Trump's first-term agenda, with House Democrats gaining 23 seats to take control of the House. In October 2022, two years into President Joe Biden's term when Democrats narrowly controlled the trifecta, just 44 percent of Democratic voters expressed the same motivation to vote in the midterm. That figure was just slightly higher for Republicans, with 48 percent saying they were eager to vote. In that election, Republicans clinched the House of Representatives while Democrats retained control of the Senate. Still, the poll shows Democrats could have some work cut out for them. Just 28 percent of respondents said they view the Democratic Party favorably. Meanwhile, 33 percent expressed a favorable view of the Republican Party. 'I think that the Democratic Party, we have a lot of work to do to make sure we are meeting voters where they are, listening to what they have to say, and talking to them about issues that they want us to take action on,' Virginia Democratic Congresswoman Jennifer McClellan told CNN in response to the poll. "What's going to matter is what we're doing on the ground in these districts.' Recovering from Kamala Harris' defeat to Trump in 2024, Democrats are looking to harness an electorate that they lost in the last election. A separate poll by Lake Research Partners and Way to Win analyzed 'Biden skippers,' those living in battleground states who voted for Biden in 2020 but sat out of the 2024 presidential election. The survey poked holes in the idea that Harris was 'too far left.' Progressive lawmaker Vermont Independent Senator Bernie Sanders and New York Democratic Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez topped the list of public figures respondents viewed positively, with 78 percent having a favorable view of Sanders and 67 percent having a favorable view of Ocasio-Cortez. Republicans are also making moves ahead of the 2026 midterms. The White House is already strategizing to ensure the GOP retains the trifecta. The plan reportedly includes Trump returning to the campaign trail as well as him having a hand in advising which candidates run and which 'stay put' in the upcoming election, sources told Politico.

Keir Starmer to raise Gaza starvation with Donald Trump during Turnberry summit
Keir Starmer to raise Gaza starvation with Donald Trump during Turnberry summit

Daily Record

time5 hours ago

  • Daily Record

Keir Starmer to raise Gaza starvation with Donald Trump during Turnberry summit

The Prime Minister and President will hold talks at the Ayrshire gold course. Keir Starmer will raise the humanitarian crisis in Gaza and try to seal a US trade deal during a high-stakes summit with Donald Trump on Monday. ‌ The Prime Minister will also demand tough action against Vladimir Putin when he meets the US President at Turnberry. ‌ The Republican arrived at Prestwick airport on Friday to kickstart a five day trip that will combine golf and political meetings. ‌ He played his Turnberry course over the weekend and will travel to his other golf club at the Menie Estate in Aberdeenshire on Monday as well. One of his final acts at Turnberry will be talks with Starmer on a range of international and domestic issues. Condemnation of the Israeli Government' s actions in Palestine are growing as people in Gaza starve. ‌ Starmer, who said he is 'horrified' by the crisis, wants Trump to revive ceasefire talks between Israel and Hamas when they meet. He also hopes to get a trade deal between the US and UK, which is currently in draft form, over the line. The President and the Prime Minister will travel together for a private engagement in Aberdeen after their Turnberry meeting. ‌ Trump will open his third golf course on Tuesda y during his stay in Aberdeenshire, where he is also expected to meet First Minister John Swinney. Trump was seen teeing off at his Turnberry golf course over the weekend. A woman shouted 'We love you Trump' as the US president played golf. Wearing a white baseball camp branded USA, Trump waved to journalists as he arrived on the green at Trump Turnberry in Girvan, Ayrshire, driving a white golf buggy. ‌ A female well-wisher could be heard repeatedly shouting 'we love you Trump' and 'thank you'. Someone else shouted: 'Trump Trump Trump Trump '. The sound of cheering could be heard as Trump took a shot. Protesters carrying placards stood in the dunes at Trump Turnberry, urging the president: 'Don't trust Starmer '. Three people carried placards reading: 'President Trump don't trust Starmer'. The hand-painted sign also branded the Prime Minister an explicit term. ‌ A woman holding it wore a red baseball cap with fake hair which read Make America Great Again, and appeared to laugh as she watched Mr Trump. Another female supporter dressed in a floral anorak, held a US flag and wore a baseball cap reading Make England Great Again. She carried a smaller sign which also branded Sir Keir an explicit term. They were joined by a man dressed in black, who wore an Adidas baseball cap. ‌ A Trump supporter who travelled from Liverpool to Ayrshire in the hope of seeing the US President at his Turnberry golf course said he is 'chuffed' to have interacted with the President. Tom English, 37, who made the four-and-a-half hour journey with some other Trump supporters, explained: 'We rushed up here hoping to get a glimpse of him. And that's happened this morning when we've got to interact with him a little bit. 'We couldn't really hear him because he was trying to shout to us in this wind, in the Scottish wind on the coast. So it was kind of hard to hear what he said. ‌ 'But he blew a kiss to the girls. Gave us a little wave. Trump junior gave us a little wave. And that's what it was about. 'We just wanted to see him in the flesh, and to get that interaction was an added bonus.' When asked what he and the other supporters had said to the president, English recounted: 'Just that we love him, basically. The UK loves Trump. Don't believe the mainstream media.'

Rough deal: Social media roasts Trump's golf game after clip appears to show alleged cheating in Scotland
Rough deal: Social media roasts Trump's golf game after clip appears to show alleged cheating in Scotland

The Independent

time5 hours ago

  • The Independent

Rough deal: Social media roasts Trump's golf game after clip appears to show alleged cheating in Scotland

Social media users pounced on a clip that appears to show Donald Trump cheating on the golf course during his ongoing trip to Scotland, the latest in a long line of accusations that the president cheats on the fairway. In the video circulated by liberal commentators, a caddy appears to walk ahead of the golf-loving president in his golf cart and drop a ball behind him as the president approaches. 'Trump working hard to bring down grocery prices,' the caption says, making a satirical reference to the president's campaign promises to tackle inflation and costs 'For the morons that think Trump doesn't cheat at golf and wins all those club championships fair and square….watch his caddie here,' another account wrote. The phrase 'commander in cheat' was soon trending on the social media site. 'The video of Trump's caddy doing an Oddjob Slazenger drop isn't a big deal; cheating at golf isn't nearly the worst thing about Trump,' wrote The Atlantic 's Tom Nichols. 'But watching the cult of personality try to explain it away is really some creepy North Korean level stuff.' The Independent has requested comment from the White House. The president has faced a long list of accusations that he doesn't play fair from figures ranging from actor Samuel Jackson to LPGA player Suzann Pettersen. Trump's alleged cheating, which has always denied, is even the subject of a book: Rick Reilly's Commander in Cheat. 'At Winged Foot, where Trump is a member, the caddies got so used to seeing him kick his ball back onto the fairway they came up with a nickname for him: Pele,' Reilly writes in the book. Controversy has always followed Trump, an avid golfer and developer of golf resorts, when he hits the 18 holes. The president has golfed at least 45 days out of his 189 days in office this year, or roughly 24 percent of his second term thus far. In April, the president faced criticism for attending an event from Saudi Arabia-backed LIV Golf while missing the return ceremony for the remains of four dead American soldiers. Others have criticized the president's promotion of his business interests on his own properties. During the Scotland trip, Trump met with European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen at his Turnberry golf course to announce an EU trade deal, and the president plans to attend a ribbon-cutting ceremony on Tuesday for a new course in Aberdeenshire. The White House described the Scotland tour as a 'working trip' while touting that Trump 'has built the best and most beautiful world-class golf courses anywhere in the world, which is why they continue to be used for prestigious tournaments and by the most elite players in the sport.' The president's Mar-a-Lago club and estate in Florida, near one his golf courses, has also emerged as a key hub for lobbying and fundraising, home to visits from tech billionaires and $1-million-per-head fundraising dinners. In the Middle East, meanwhile, the president's family company, the Trump Organization, recently struck a deal to build a golf resort in Qatar, weeks before the nation announced the gift of a $400 million Boeing 747 plane to be used for the new Air Force One. Despite the administration's insistence on cutting government spending, the president has also reportedly drained taxpayers of over $10 million in costs related to his many golf trips, while the Secret Service has spent hundreds of thousands of dollars for the use of golf carts and port-a-potties at Trump's New Jersey golf club. Since retaking office, Trump and his family businesses have taken in hundreds of millions of dollars on business ventures including cryptocurrency, real estate, and branded merchandise. 'He is president and is supposed to be working in the public's interest,' James Thurber, an emeritus professor at American University, told The Associated Press last month. 'Instead, he is helping his own personal interest to grow his wealth. It's totally not normal.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store