Biden feeling ‘optimistic' after cancer diagnosis
Former US President Joe Biden told reporters on Friday he was feeling 'optimistic' about the future after delivering his first public remarks since revealing he had an aggressive form of prostate cancer.
'Well, the prognosis is good. You know, we're working on everything. It's moving along. So, I feel good,' Biden, 82, said after an event in Delaware belatedly marking Monday's Memorial Day federal holiday.
Biden's office announced earlier this month he is battling prostate cancer with a Gleason score of nine, which places him in the most severe category.
The veteran Democrat told reporters he had decided on a treatment regime, adding that 'the expectation is, we're going to be able to beat this.'
'It's not in any organ, my bones are strong, it hasn't penetrated. So I'm feeling good,' he said.
The mental and physical health of the former president, the oldest person ever to hold the office, was a dominant issue in the 2024 election.
After a disastrous debate performance against Trump, Biden ended his campaign for a second term.
When Biden's office announced his diagnosis, they said the cancer had spread to his bones.
But Biden told reporters: 'We're all optimistic about the diagnosis. As a matter of fact, one of the leading surgeons in the world is working with me.'
The political row over Biden's aborted candidacy has become a major scandal since the release of the book 'Original Sin' - which alleges that Biden's White House covered up his cognitive decline while he was in office.
The ex-president was asked about the controversy and responded with sarcasm, joking that 'I'm mentally incompetent and I can't walk.'
He said he had no regrets about initially running for a second term, and that his Democratic critics could have challenged him but chose not to 'because I'd have beaten them.'
In earlier formal remarks in New Castle, Delaware, Biden spoke of his presidency as his greatest honour, and called for better treatment of veterans.
But he saved his most poignant comments to mark the 10th anniversary on May 30 of his son, National Guard veteran Beau Biden, dying of brain cancer at the age of 46.
'For the Bidens, this day is the 10th anniversary, the loss of my son Beau, who spent a year in Iraq,' said Biden, who had attended a memorial service for his son earlier in the day.
'And, to be honest, it's a hard day.'
Agence France-Presse
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Gulf Today
3 hours ago
- Gulf Today
GOP states embrace paid parental leave for teachers
Anna Claire Vollers, Tribune News Service More Republican-led states are giving paid parental leave to public school teachers and other state employees, signaling a broader acceptance of family-friendly workplace policies once championed primarily by Democrats. 'All of these red states, I think we're late to the party,' said South Carolina state Rep. Beth Bernstein, a Democrat who sponsored a bill this year to increase state employees' paid parental leave from six to 12 weeks. It passed the majority-Republican South Carolina House in April with strong bipartisan support. This year, Alabama, Iowa and Mississippi joined 37 other states in granting paid parental leave to thousands of state workers. The trend has gathered steam in recent years. Some experts link it to the cascade of state abortion bans that followed the US Supreme Court's 2022 Dobbs decision, which dismantled the federal right to abortion. Under fire from critics to do more to care for babies once they're born, at least a dozen conservative-led states with abortion bans have since granted or expanded paid parental leave for their state employees. But others say the increasing bipartisan support for measures that help working parents is also a reaction to economic realities. 'What we've seen, especially in more conservative states, is the public sector has experienced a lot of turnover,' said Kameron Dawson, legal director of the Southern Office of A Better Balance, a legal organization focused on workplace rights. 'They're looking for tools to recruit younger employees.' Paid parental leave is the time off granted to workers for the birth or adoption of a baby, to care for a child, or to recover from a stillbirth or miscarriage. Without it, employees are left to cobble together their sick leave and vacation leave — or go unpaid — to stay home with a child and heal. Alabama Republican state Rep. Ginny Shaver watched her daughter, a public school teacher, struggle to get the leave she needed after the births of her children in recent years. 'With her second, she had complications in her pregnancy and used up her [paid vacation and sick] leave before she even had the baby,' Shaver told Stateline. Her daughter contracted COVID-19, and the baby had to spend time in neonatal intensive care. 'It was a very difficult time, and she had to take unpaid leave.' Last year, Shaver and Democratic state Sen. Vivian Figures worked to win approval of a paid parental leave bill for state employees. It failed. But they tried again this year. With the support of Republican Gov. Kay Ivey, the state legislature — which has a Republican supermajority — passed it nearly unanimously. The new law gives female state employees, including teachers, eight weeks of paid parental leave in connection with birth, stillbirth or miscarriage, and gives male employees two weeks. Adoptive parents get eight weeks for one parent and two for the other. Shaver said she thinks the law passed thanks to vocal support from the governor and increased awareness of the issue due to the work she and Figures did in previous sessions. 'And the fact that all of the southeast states around us offered it,' Shaver said. 'We're trying to attract and retain state employees and teachers, and we're in competition with everyone around us, and the private sector as well.' For many Republicans, the workforce development argument for paid leave is a persuasive one. For states such as Alabama and South Carolina that have some of the lowest workforce participation rates in the nation, paid leave can be a tool to keep more people — particularly women — working. And it can be a way to retain educators as many states struggle with teacher shortages in K-12 schools. 'For several years we've seen state legislatures acknowledging the importance of child care to businesses and the economy,' said Feroza Freeland, policy director at the Southern Office of A Better Balance. 'But in the last few years, we've seen a growing recognition that paid leave is another piece of that puzzle.' States have taken up the issue because the federal government has not. The United States is a global outlier; among 38 peer nations, it's the only one that doesn't mandate paid parental leave, according to the Organization of Economic Cooperation and Development. The group comprises 38 democracies with market-based economies. The federal Family and Medical Leave Act, passed in 1993 and extended in 2020, only requires public agencies and companies with at least 50 employees to give up to 12 weeks of unpaid leave for parents of newborns or newly adopted children, or caregivers of sick family members. During his first term, President Donald Trump publicly supported some forms of paid family leave and signed a defense bill that gives 12 weeks of paid parental leave to most federal employees. Paid family leave was a signature issue for his daughter Ivanka Trump, at the time a senior adviser to the president. She even held a paid leave and child care summit at the White House in late 2019. That set the stage for other Republicans to take up the issue more publicly. And after the Dobbs decision, family-friendly policies have increasingly become conservative talking points in states with restrictive abortion laws. After the Mississippi House unanimously passed a paid parental leave bill earlier this year, Republican House Speaker Jason White celebrated the bill as a reflection of Mississippi's status as a ' pro-life state.' In a recent post on X announcing her signing of a new paid parental leave law, Iowa Republican Gov. Kim Reynolds called Iowa 'a pro-family state.' North Carolina was one of the first Southern states to grant paid parental leave to state workers in 2019 when then-Gov. Roy Cooper, a Democrat, signed an executive order. In 2023, several months after the Dobbs decision, the state's majority-Republican legislature extended paid parental leave to public school employees by tacking it onto a law banning most abortions after 12 weeks of pregnancy. Meanwhile, Indiana Republican Gov. Mike Braun signed an executive order in March to add up to eight additional weeks of paid leave for 'childbirth recovery' to the state's existing four weeks of paid parental leave. The new laws won't apply to most residents, because they only cover state employees. But they could have a downstream effect. Shaver, the Alabama lawmaker, said she hopes her state's new law will not only help the state be competitive with the private sector, but also set a precedent for other employers to follow. 'I hope they will see it's in their benefit to offer what they can,' she said. 'It may not be eight or 12 weeks, but even offering a reduced or flexible work schedule can help families.' Just over a quarter of private-sector workers have access to paid family leave through their employer as of March 2023, according the most recent data from the US Department of Labor. Among the lowest-wage earners, that share drops to 6%. State paid leave programs run the gamut in terms of what they offer. While Alabama's new law offers up to eight weeks of leave for all state employees, including teachers, Mississippi's offers six and does not require public schools to offer paid parental leave to their employees.


The National
7 hours ago
- The National
The 'Taco Trump' jibe proves that words do really matter
It's one of the most famous quotes from Shakespeare: 'What's in a name? That which we call a rose by any other name would smell as sweet.' Juliet says it about Romeo, suggesting she loves him not for his family connections but for who he is. In modern politics however, especially in the US, names and name-calling in the Donald Trump era seem to have a different significance, and it's not so sweet. American media outlets are full of observations about the nickname given to Mr Trump by Wall Street insiders. He is known, they say, as 'Taco Trump', but not because of his fondness for those crispy Mexican delicacies. It's for his fondness for tariffs that are put on foreign imports at extremely high levels and then reduced – and then maybe reimposed and reduced again. The 'Taco' tag stands for 'Trump Always Chickens Out' meaning that he talks tough, makes an announcement but when confronted by resistance or jitters in the bond market, he backs down. Mr Trump has described the nickname as 'nasty', but he himself is the king of nicknames and clickbait-friendly put-downs. He repeatedly referred to his predecessor Joe Biden as 'Sleepy Joe'. He talked of 'Crooked Hillary' Clinton. He sums up his entire political philosophy in four letters – not Taco but 'Maga', which stands for 'Make America Great Again'. It's not clear exactly when America ceased to be great, but that isn't the point. Maga is a stroke of genius. It means that any American voter can think of anything in their lives that they don't like, and Mr Trump's slogan somehow might miraculously fix it. Outside the US, in some other countries Maga has come to mean 'Make America Go Away' and stop tariffs unsettling the world economy. There are even ruder terms in circulation that I won't quote here but which are used to describe the Trump-inspired market fluctuations. This market volatility has been noted by investors who – if they assume that tariff uncertainty is pushing markets up and down – may be able to choose how to buy in the dip and sell on the upturn at a profit. Reuters quoted Mark Spindel, the chief investment officer of Potomac River Capital, observing that the market is caught 'in a pinball machine as a result of [Mr Trump's] policymaking process'. The White House official line is that Taco and the other jibes are 'asinine acronyms', but the fact they have had to respond suggests Mr Trump and his staff are well aware of the communication skills involved in making a neat – if nasty – nickname or observation. It's a skill that Mr Trump has himself used for years. Why? Because it works. The stark truth about politics and economics in the 21st century is that most voters don't have the patience, the inclination or even the skills to analyse economic or trade policies. What tariff should be on imports of beef? How about cars or clothing or iPhones? What are the implications? Will the share prices of importers and manufacturers go up or down? Most of us don't know, and perhaps most of us don't care, until the car or washing machine or clothes we plan to buy suddenly go up in price. But a brief phrase or nasty nickname cuts through where a PhD in economics or a disquisition on the benefits of free trade may not. The Taco jibe has also sparked off a creative deluge of another kind. On social media there are now endless memes, some showing Mr Trump in a yellow chicken suit, sometimes covered in tacos. When popular culture picks up a meme or a slogan like this – as all those Maga hats prove – then words really do matter and they cut through. So what should Mr Trump do about the Taco jibe? Nothing, probably. Ignore it. But it will not go away. California Governor Gavin Newsom, a probable candidate for the Democratic Party's presidential nomination in 2028, jokes publicly that 'it's raining tacos'. Other Democrats, who have seemed silent or even neutered by the Trump blitz on Washington, have picked up the serious point. For them, the Taco jibe sums up in four letters the Trump administration's apparent economic incoherence in the way tariffs are being used. Until most voters notice changes in prices to the things they want to buy but can no longer afford, the economic arguments may be lost. But the political capital from the nickname, especially the alliteration of 'Taco Trump', is appearing on outlets ranging from the sober pages of The New York Times to the lower depths of clickbait social media. For Mr Trump's opponents, it's a useful propaganda tool. And it may have wider implications, too. This is a President who suggested he could end the Ukraine war in 24 hours, change China's lucrative US trade imbalances and solve the problems of Gaza. Faced with leaders like Vladimir Putin, Xi Jinping and Benjamin Netanyahu, perhaps the Taco tag and the idea that 'Trump Always Chickens Out' is something the world's hard-nosed leaders may already be considering.


Gulf Today
2 days ago
- Gulf Today
Israeli strikes in south Lebanon kill two
Lebanon's health ministry said on Sunday that Israeli strikes on the country's south killed two people, as the Israeli army said it targeted Hizbollah members in the latest raids despite a ceasefire. The ministry said an "Israeli enemy" strike targeted a motorcycle in Arnoun, a village in the Nabatiyeh region about five kilometres (three miles) from the Israeli border, killing one person. It said another person was killed in an Israeli raid that "targeted a vehicle on the Debl road" in the Bint Jbeil district. Another strike on a car in nearby Beit Lif wounded one person, the ministry said. The Israeli military said in a statement that its forces "struck and eliminated a terrorist in Hizbollah's anti-tank array" in the Arnoun area. It later said its forces killed an operative from "Hizbollah's artillery array" in the Aita al-Shaab area, near the village of Debl. Israel has continued to strike Lebanon despite the November 27 ceasefire that sought to end more than a year of hostilities -- including two months of open war -- with the group Hizbollah, which emerged severely weakened. On Thursday, two people were killed in Israeli strikes on the south, and another died in a raid on Saturday. Under the truce, Hizbollah fighters were to withdraw north of the Litani River, about 30 kilometres from the border, and dismantle their military posts to the south. Israel was to pull all its troops from Lebanon but has maintained five positions it deems "strategic" along the frontier. The Lebanese army has been deploying in the south and dismantling Hizbollah infrastructure there. Agence France-Presse