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Bill Clinton warns 'The View 'why Americans 'should be worried,' wants Supreme Court to 'rediscover the Constitution'
Bill Clinton warns 'The View 'why Americans 'should be worried,' wants Supreme Court to 'rediscover the Constitution'

Yahoo

time11 hours ago

  • Politics
  • Yahoo

Bill Clinton warns 'The View 'why Americans 'should be worried,' wants Supreme Court to 'rediscover the Constitution'

Bill Clinton and James Patterson joined The View to promote their new book. Clinton warned the audience why they "should be worried" about America's political future. He also said that he hopes the Supreme Court will "rediscover the Constitution."Former President Bill Clinton sounded a political alarm during his latest appearance on The View. The 78-year-old Democrat and author James Patterson appeared Thursday morning on the talk show to promote their new novel The First Gentleman, though the conversation naturally turned to real-world politics amid controversial policies and patterns of conduct under President Donald Trump's Republican administration. "We need to talk about the future," panelist Sunny Hostin told Clinton, before observing that she feels Trump is "working to dismantle, in my view, our foundational institutions" through his conflicts with American universities, deportations, and his tumultuous dealings with judges in the legal system. "Are you confident that the courts will hold, and what concerns you most about what he's doing now?" "That the courts won't hold until we have our midterm elections," Clinton replied, going on to reference the deportation of Kilmar Abrego Garcia, an El Salvador man whose "deportation violated a U.S. immigration judge's order in 2019 that shielded Abrego Garcia from expulsion to his native country," per the Associated Press. "The guy is still there in jail, so I'm worried about that, and you should be worried about that. Whatever your politics [are]," Clinton said. "Because, although I have a sneaking suspicion, if our party wins the White House in the next election, there will be a hallelujah moment and the Supreme Court will rediscover the Constitution, the Bill of Rights, and limits." Clinton said he'll "be happy if that happens because all of us should operate under guard rails," and that "the whole purpose of the Constitution was to repeal royal governance, unaccountable governance, that no Democrat or Republican can be without accountability." Later in the discussion, Joy Behar asked Patterson if the pair wrote The First Gentleman hoping that "life would imitate art," seeing as the book revolves around a female president and her spouse, mirroring a scenario that would've resulted for Clinton if his wife and 2016 presidential candidate Hillary Clinton would've won the presidency in her race against Trump. "I wanted the job," he told the cohosts. "It's the only political job I ever wanted that I didn't get."Whoopi Goldberg then jumped in to offer a bit of hope: "There's still time, nothing is off the table, that's what I say." The View airs weekdays at 11 a.m. ET/10 a.m. PT on ABC. Read the original article on Entertainment Weekly

Bill Clinton reveals why Secret Service gave him an M&M's box
Bill Clinton reveals why Secret Service gave him an M&M's box

The Hill

time2 days ago

  • Entertainment
  • The Hill

Bill Clinton reveals why Secret Service gave him an M&M's box

Former President Clinton says the Secret Service helped him mark a fitness milestone when he was at the White House with a candy-coated memento that he's held onto. 'I went running every morning for years,' the ex-commander in chief said in an interview with USA Today published Monday, while promoting the political thriller he co-authored with James Patterson, 'The First Gentleman.' 'I still have the M&M's box that I was given by the head of my security detail on my 100th run when I was president,' Clinton said. 'I loved it,' he told the newspaper. 'Once M&M's get 20 years old, you don't eat them anymore,' Patterson quipped. Retired Secret Service agent Nick Trotta recalled in a 2012 interview how Clinton's security detail developed a system that would give them a heads-up when the 42nd president was ready to go for a jog. 'One of the valets would leak President Clinton's attire — running clothes or suit — to the nearest agent. That's how we knew he wanted to run,' Trotta said. While Clinton said he's cherished the box of M&M's since exiting the White House in 2001, the milk chocolate candies are unlikely to conform to his dietary lifestyle in recent years. Seventy-eight-year-old Clinton has credited a vegan diet with preserving his health. '[It] changed my life,' he said in 2016.

Bill Clinton & James Patterson return with ‘The First Gentleman', a political thriller where the President's husband is on trial
Bill Clinton & James Patterson return with ‘The First Gentleman', a political thriller where the President's husband is on trial

Indian Express

time3 days ago

  • Entertainment
  • Indian Express

Bill Clinton & James Patterson return with ‘The First Gentleman', a political thriller where the President's husband is on trial

Co-authors Bill Clinton and James Patterson's are back for the third time with their latest political thriller, The First Gentleman. The collaboration that banks on Patterson's writing prowess and Clinton's insider knowledge opens with a premise that remains a pipedream, especially for presidential candidates Hillary Clinton and Kamala Harris – United States has its first female president, Madeline Wright. Wright is fighting for re-election, but predicably her campaign hits the doldrums after her husband, former NFL star Cole Wright, is accused of a decades-old murder. The victim, is a young Patriots cheerleader, Suzanne Bonanno, who vanished 17 years ago after an alleged affair with Cole. The scandal predictably ignites a media firestorm, a brutal courtroom battle, and a political crisis that could derail President Wright's economic reforms. Journalism in focus Unlike Clinton and Patterson's previous thrillers, which centered on presidents in physical danger (The President Is Missing) or protecting their families (The President's Daughter), The First Gentleman shifts the spotlight to investigative journalists Brea Cooke and Garrett Wilson. Their relentless pursuit of the 'truth' drives the narrative, a nod to the power (and peril) of a free press. The novel's most compelling moments come from Clinton's intimate understanding of political survival. The West Wing scrambles to contain the fallout, allies turn on each other, and the president must weigh loyalty against the demands of office—all while prosecutors circle her husband. The parallels to real-life political scandals are impossible to ignore, though Clinton and Patterson stop short of direct commentary. Instead, they let readers wonder how it would play out in reality. Before The First Gentleman, Bill Clinton and James Patterson had already proven their knack for blending political insider knowledge with razor-sharp thriller mechanics. Their collaborations—both bestsellers—laid the groundwork for this latest high-stakes drama. President Jonathan Lincoln Duncan faces an unprecedented cyberattack that could cripple the United States. When intelligence suggests the threat comes from within his own administration, the president disappears from the White House to personally stop the conspiracy. As terrorist attacks erupt across the country, Duncan races against time to uncover the traitors in Washington while evading both foreign operatives and his own Secret Service detail. The story unfolds over three chaotic days, blending high-tech threats with old-fashioned political betrayal. Former President Matthew Keating, a decorated Navy SEAL before entering politics, faces his worst nightmare when his teenage daughter Melanie is kidnapped. Though out of office, Keating uses his military training and political connections to track her captors across Europe and the Middle East. The chase reveals a personal vendetta against the ex-president, forcing him to confront enemies from both his military past and presidential tenure. With the current administration unwilling to help, Keating operates outside the law to rescue his child.

Piers Morgan and Bill Clinton clash over Biden's health
Piers Morgan and Bill Clinton clash over Biden's health

The South African

time3 days ago

  • Entertainment
  • The South African

Piers Morgan and Bill Clinton clash over Biden's health

Piers Morgan, the outspoken British broadcaster, set social media alight with a scorching attack on former US president Bill Clinton. The reason? Clinton's unwavering support for Joe Biden's health and fitness for office. Morgan, never shy of a headline, called Clinton 'delusional' and even questioned the former president's own cognitive state. 'This is either staggering delusion, wilful blindness, or President Clinton himself is now suffering from serious cognitive decline,' Morgan thundered on X. The drama kicked off after Clinton appeared on CBS Sunday Morning to promote his new memoir, The First Gentleman , according to Express. During the interview, Clinton dismissed claims that Biden was in decline while in the White House. When pressed about allegations from the explosive book Original Sin: President Biden's Decline, Its Cover-Up, and His Disastrous Choice to Run Again , Clinton stood firm. 'No. I thought he was a good president. The only concern I thought he had to deal with was, could anybody do that job until they were 86?' Clinton said. He added, 'I had never seen him and walked away thinking he can't do this anymore. He was always on top of his brief'. But Piers Morgan wasn't buying it. He shared a Fox News article and unleashed his trademark fury. The internet, as expected, erupted. Some supported Morgan's blunt honesty. Others accused him of stirring the pot for clicks. Clinton, for his part, brushed off the controversy. He insisted he'd never witnessed any signs of cognitive decline in Biden. 'I didn't know anything about any of this. And I haven't read the book. I saw President Biden not very long ago, and I thought he was in good shape,' Clinton said. He even questioned the motives behind the book's release, suggesting it was 'a way to blame him for the fact that [Donald] Trump was reelected'. As the Democratic Party faces scrutiny for allegedly hiding Biden's condition, the world watches. Clinton's defence may have backfired, fuelling more questions than answers. Morgan's words echo across continents: 'Is it delusion, or just politics as usual?' One thing's certain. In the world of power and politics, the battle for truth is never dull. As Morgan said, 'The public deserves honesty, not fairy tales.' Let us know by leaving a comment below, or send a WhatsApp to 060 011 021 1. Subscribe to The South African website's newsletters and follow us on WhatsApp, Facebook, X and Bluesky for the latest news.

Bill Clinton reveals key White House details in murderous new political thriller
Bill Clinton reveals key White House details in murderous new political thriller

USA Today

time3 days ago

  • Politics
  • USA Today

Bill Clinton reveals key White House details in murderous new political thriller

Bill Clinton reveals key White House details in murderous new political thriller Show Caption Hide Caption Bill Clinton and James Patterson talk new political thriller book Bill Clinton and James Patterson release "The First Gentleman," using Clinton's White House experience to shape their third political thriller. WHITE PLAINS, NY – Most former presidents write memoirs after they leave the White House. Former President Bill Clinton has been there, done that. First on his literary agenda now? Writing political thrillers. Clinton is a thriller reader himself, but more than that he just really wanted a chance to work with bestselling author James Patterson. Their third novel, "The First Gentleman" is out now from Little, Brown and Company. Sitting down for an interview with USA TODAY, the prolific pair catch up like a couple of old friends – Clinton shares a story of tourists he spotted reading his wife's book while in Korea and gives Patterson the name of a new author to check out. "He reads everything," Patterson tells me. Both love S.A. Cosby, Michael Connelly and Lee Child. In their latest novel, the fictional Madame President Wright's husband is on trial for murder, a potential crime uncovered by journalist couple Brea and Garrett. Not only is it harmful to the White House image for the first gentleman and former Patriots player to be accused of murder, but it threatens to upend the carefully crafted economic "Grand Bargain" the president is nearly ready to announce. It's a twisty thriller with plenty of inside jobs, political sabotage and many, many deaths. Clinton and Patterson take us inside their writing process, revealing how they weave details pulled from real life with fictional characters to create the next big nail-biter. This interview has been edited and condensed for clarity. Question: How has your collaboration changed over three books? Patterson: I don't think it's changed. Other than, I will say, I think this turned out really, really well. If somebody's looking to read a book with really good characters and great story or if they want to find out sort of how Washington really works, I think this is really cool for either one of those kinds of people. But initially we had, it was a little bit of a problem in terms of getting the characters real. They weren't working and we just kept going at it. Clinton: We had this just gut-wrenching conversation because in the beginning, we were excited – what would it be like to write a book that was from the point of view of the first gentleman, the first woman president's husband? It had all kinds of fascinating ramifications. But then something happened while we were doing it and I realized we hadn't created anybody you could like. Patterson: We have these two (reporters) and they weren't working, either, in the beginning. When people think of my writing, they go "short chapters," but the whole thing is character. Alex Cross is, in my opinion, a great character. Lindsay Boxer is a really good character. The characters in "First Gentleman," there are four of them, are really good characters, and that's the key. Obviously (Clinton) was key in terms of making those characters work, especially in the White House. Clinton: People (in the White House) struggle to maintain some measure of normalcy, however they define it. Even though you have to be ambitious to be elected president and disciplined to execute the job, you're still a person. We all react differently to different things that happen. So we try to capture that. Patterson: The humanity. I wish we could get back to the understanding that whatever party you're with, (we are) human beings. I'll give you one quick example: Last year, the president called the house and my wife and he said, put it on (FaceTime). And there he was with his grandkids, and he was in a tiger suit with only his face showing. Human being! Right, and in this book, all the first gentleman wants to do is go on a run with no one bothering him. Patterson: President Clinton used to go on runs. Clinton: I went running every morning for years. I still have the M&M's box that I was given by the head of my security detail on my 100th run when I was president. I loved it. Patterson: Once M&M's get 20 years old you don't eat them anymore. Are there any other signature Clinton White House details that made it into the book? Patterson: You have a relationship with a man and a woman, and obviously, it would've been possible at one point for President Clinton to be the first gentleman. Clinton: It's the only job I ever wanted that I didn't get. Is that why you chose to make a female president in this book? Clinton: I had thought a lot about, long after I left the White House and Hillary was running, and I thought about it. This character, he and his president wife, they're closer to the age Hillary and I were when we actually served. So I was thinking about, even though he was a pro football player and macho guy, he was really proud of his wife. He wanted her to succeed. He wasn't threatened by her being president, but he could be threatened by people making certain assumptions about him, like he was a dumb jock, which he's not. Patterson: But is he a murderer? Clinton: We keep that hanging a long time. In the book, President Wright is trying to pass legislation to address Social Security, Medicaid and Medicare. How did you come up with the "Grand Bargain"? Clinton: I knew what the drivers of the debt are and what the politics pushing against real change are, and so I tried to think of the things we could do to get it under control that would be the most bearable, both for people and politically. Patterson: It's a fascinating thing. How do you solve the problem with Social Security and Medicaid? And there is, you know, there's in the book, there is a solution. It's complicated, which is kind of cool. You don't hear anything (today), about, well, how do we solve these problems? I'd like to hear that right now. Yes, there is a problem. Clinton: Medicaid pays for about 40% of all childbirth and pays for an enormous percentage of senior citizens' health care and a lot of other stuff. It's really important. So this bill that's just been presented cuts Medicaid in order to help pay for a tax cut for millionaires and billionaires. In all respect, (Patterson) and I don't need a tax cut. We'd rather have people with health care. So these are choices, and unless people understand that these choices are being made, they can't know clearly whether they're against or for whatever's being proposed. Patterson: This lays out that there is an alternative to that which makes sense and we don't have to cut things off for people who really need help. What was it like crafting fictional presidential addresses? Clinton: I imagined what I would say if confronted with the challenges she was confronted with. If you really want to change something, people like to hear about it in speeches and imagine it, but it almost always requires a mind numbing, detail-written piece of legislation – not always, but mostly. So, I tried to figure out how to sell it in the speech and describe how complicated the legislation would be without putting people to sleep. I found it difficult, but I think it's important, because one thing I learned the hard way is if you can't explain it, you can't sell it, and if you can't sell it and it's hard, you're going to get creamed. The problem we describe is something like what really exists today. Except today, it's in many ways more severe. It's just that our economy has been, for the last 20 years, or now 30 years, stronger than any other one in the world. Patterson, were there any details about the presidency or White House that Clinton added that surprised you? Patterson: A lot of little things. I might set a scene and he'd go: "It can't happen in that room. That room is so small, there's not room for three people in that room." And anytime it pops up: "The Secret Service wouldn't act like that. They would act like this." A lot of the thriller writers that we all like, they just make stuff up. When you're working with a president, you just can't make it up, because he'll go: "No, it wouldn't work that way. Here's how it could work." One of the beauties of this book, and the three that we've done, is that it's a really good story with really good characters, but it's also authentic. Did you have a favorite character to write? Patterson: Favorite character for me is Brea – she just develops, she gets stronger and stronger for a lot of reasons, and there is one big twist in there, and that really propels her as a character. Clinton: I agree with that, and one of the reasons I liked her is that she's smart and brave and good and honest, but in the beginning of the book, she thinks something that's very wrong about a big issue, and when she knows she's wrong, she turns on a dime and does the right thing. You don't see that much in Washington. Patterson: Or in general. Clinton: There are people that think that you never admit error. You accuse other people of doing what you're doing, and you roll along. The worst thing you can do is admit that she made a mistake. I like her because she's playing in the big leagues − her whole life is on the line, and she still does the right thing. Patterson: We've sold this in Hollywood and ... the production companies go, "Well, maybe we should cast (First Gentleman) Cole." I'm going like, no, you better cast Brea, because Cole, he's a good character, but Brea, she's real, and Garrett, her partner, they are really key characters. And the president herself, but Cole, eh, I don't know. Not as big a character. Who would be your dream actor to play her? (Brea, the protagonist, is Black.) Patterson: There's so many. I mean, that's the beauty right now − one of the nice things that's happened in Hollywood, especially with Black actors, so many have been discovered. There are so many choices. What are you excited for readers to see in this story, especially fans of your last two thrillers? Clinton: I'm excited for them to see, first of all, that there's still room for citizen activism that can make all the difference in the world, from people who just want to do the right thing, like Brea and Garrett. Secondly, I want them to see that a president and her husband are people. No matter what's going on, she's still got to go to work every day. If she thinks (Cole) machine-gunned half a dozen people, she's still got to go to work. Nobody else can make these decisions. I want them to see how staff behaves, senior staff, and when they're honorable and when they're not, and what a difference it can make, because you can't be president unless you can trust them. You have to have some people you trust. Clare Mulroy is USA TODAY's books reporter, where she covers buzzy releases, chats with authors and dives into the culture of reading. Find her on Instagram, subscribe to our weekly Books newsletter or tell her what you're reading at cmulroy@

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