US revokes policy restricting subpoenas of reporters’ phone records – live


Wisconsin governor statement after arrest of Milwaukee judge: a move by Trump to ‘undermine our judiciary’

Wisconsin’s governor Tony Evers released the following statement regarding the arrest of Milwaukee county judge Hannah Dugan:

In this country, people who are suspected of criminal wrongdoing are innocent until their guilt is proven beyond reasonable doubt and they are found guilty by a jury of their peers—this is the fundamental demand of justice in America.

Unfortunately, we have seen in recent months the president and the Trump Administration repeatedly use dangerous rhetoric to attack and attempt to undermine our judiciary at every level, including flat-out disobeying the highest court in the land and threatening to impeach and remove judges who do not rule in their favor.

I have deep respect for the rule of law, our nation’s judiciary, the importance of judges making decisions impartially without fear or favor, and the efforts of law enforcement to hold people accountable if they commit a crime. I will continue to put my faith in our justice system as this situation plays out in the court of law.

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Key events

Robert Mackey

Speaking to reporters on Air Force 1 earlier, the president was asked if he had any message for the leaders of India and Pakistan, amid heightened tensions between the two countries, following the killing of 25 Indian tourists and one Nepalese national in Kashmir three days ago.

Trump responded by mistakenly claiming that the conflict in Kashmir, which started after the partition of India in 1947, had been going on for centuries. He also misstated the death toll and when the attack took place.

“They’ve had that fight for 1,000 years in Kashmir. Kashmir’s been going on for 1,000 years, probably longer than that” Trump said. “And, it was a bad one yesterday, that was a bad one, over 30 people.”

Asked in a follow-up question if he was concerned that there is now increased tension on the border between the two nuclear-armed powers along the line of control between the parts of the region controlled by each country, Trump replied: “Well, there have been tensions on that border for 1,500 years. So, you know. The same as it’s been.”

Trump was born in June of 1946, making him more than one year older than the conflict in Kashmir.

When the president travels to the United Kingdom, for a state visit, he will be hosted by King Charles, whose great-uncle, Lord Mountbatten, was the last British viceroy of India and oversaw the hasty partitioning of the subcontinent, during which more than a million people were killed and many millions more displaced. Both India and Pakistan claimed Kashmir after its status was not settled by the partition plan, and the region was divided between the two during fighting that began in 1947.

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