Connect with us

Published

on

Laura Loomer, a right-wing conspiracy theorist who believes 9/11 was an inside job, has joined Donald Trump on the campaign trail in recent days, a move that has raised eyebrows among his Republican supporters.

Ms Loomer, 31, is banned on nearly every social media platform, from Instagram and Twitter, and claims even Uber and Chase bank have shut down her accounts.

She joined the former president during campaign appearances this week, including at Ground Zero for a 9/11 memorial.

This angered many, given she has promoted the false notion the terror attack was somehow related to then-Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld announcing $2.3 trillion in “lost” government funds on 10 September 2001.

“23 years later, and there’s still a lot of unanswered questions… The American people deserve to know the entire truth. Not just what our lying government chose to tell us,” Loomer posted on Friday, alongside a video of Trump in 2001 questioning whether airplanes could cause explosions like the ones that happened at the Twin Towers.

Laura Loomer arrives with Republican presidential nominee former President Donald Trump for a visit to the Shanksville Volunteer Fire Company in Shanksville, Pa., Wednesday, Sept. 11, 2024. (AP Photo/Matt Rourke)
Image:
Pic: AP

Her stepped-up presence among Trump’s entourage has come as he made a number of staff changes, including bringing back veterans of his 2016 and 2020 campaigns.

A senior official from the 2020 campaign team said that helps explain why Loomer is no longer being kept at arm’s length.

More on Donald Trump

“The people that have the authority to stop it are hanging on to their jobs,” the former official said. “So, are you going to pick that fight with him?”

Who is Laura Loomer?

Born in Arizona in 1993, Loomer has styled herself as an investigative journalist and activist. She worked for Project Veritas (a far-right activist group that produces deceptively edited videos of its undercover operations) and Alex Jones’s Infowars.

She ran for Congress in Florida in 2020, with Trump’s support, and celebrated her primary win at a party with the founder of the far-right extremist group the Proud Boys. She would later lose the House race to Democrat Lois Frankel.

She also ran unsuccessfully for Congress in 2022.

Republican congressional candidate Laura Loomer celebrates with Milo Yiannopoulos (left) and campaign director Karen Giorno (right) at an election night event at the airport Hilton in West Palm Beach, August 18, 2020. Loomer is one of five GOP candidates hoping to secure the nomination in the primary on Aug. 18. The winner will challenge the winner of Democratic primary between incumbent U.S. Rep. Lois Frankel and Guido Weiss in the November general election. [ALLEN EYESTONE/palmbeachpost.com]
Image:
Loomer ran for congress – unsuccessfully – twice. Pic: AP

She has been a long-time Trump supporter and promoted a string of political conspiracy theories, including that Kamala Harris is not black.

She has also repeated the baseless claims that Haitian immigrants are eating pets in Springfield, Ohio – something Trump himself would go on to repeat during his election debate with Ms Harris.

Please use Chrome browser for a more accessible video player

‘They’re eating pets in Springfield’

Tommy Robinson is a fan – but Marjorie Taylor Greene is not

Earlier in the year she travelled on Trump’s private plane to an event in Iowa where he praised her on stage.

“You want her on your side,” Trump said. He has also shared several of her videos on his own social media platform, Truth Social.

Read more:
How JD Vance used his ‘hillbilly’ background
Can reality TV and prime-time cameos catapult Trump to the White House (again)?
‘Putin would eat you for lunch’, says Harris

But on Friday, appearing to distance himself somewhat, he said: “I don’t control Laura. Laura – she’s a, she’s a free spirit. Well, I don’t know. I mean, look, I can’t tell Laura what to do.”

And she has divided even the right of the political spectrum.

Tommy Robinson declared he was a “big fan” of Ms Loomer when she appeared on his podcast in August last year.

Right-wing activist Laura Loomer is in front of the courthouse where the hush-money trial of Donald Trump got underway Monday, April 15, 2024, in New York. (AP Photo/Ted Shaffrey)
Image:
Pic: AP

But Marjorie Taylor Greene, another outspoken Trump supporter has taken issue with Ms Loomer after she wrote the White House “will smell like curry” if Ms Harris is elected.

Greene said Ms Loomer’s comments were “appalling and extremely racist” and did “not represent who we are as Republicans or MAGA”.

Continue Reading

US

Titan submersible: New coastguard video shows wreckage on seafloor

Published

on

By

Titan submersible: New coastguard video shows wreckage on seafloor

New video has been released of the remains of the Titan submersible – more than 3700m down on the seafloor.

The US Coast Guard said it shows “the aft dome, aft ring, remnants of the hull and carbon fiber debris”.

It comes shortly after images of the sub’s tail were released.

A hearing is currently taking place in the US about the Titan’s fatal implosion on a trip to the Titanic in June 2023.

Undated handout file photo issued by American Photo Archive of the OceanGate Expeditions submersible vessel named Titan used to visit the wreckage site of the Titanic. A hearing about the deaths of five people who were killed when a submersible imploded while diving to the wreck of the Titanic will open on Monday. Issue date: Sunday September 15, 2024.
Image:
Titan is believed to have suffered a rapid implosion. Pic: PA

OceanGate’s former operations boss told the panel earlier this week the sub was a huge risk and the company was only focused on profit.

David Lochridge also painted an unflattering picture of the firm’s founder, Stockton Rush, saying he would “fly off the handle” and had a “total disregard for safety”.

In one incident, he said Mr Rush crashed the sub into a wreck site and threw the PlayStation controller used to pilot the vehicle at his head.

Three Britons died in the incident – adventurer Hamish Harding and father and son Shahzada and Suleman Dawood

Mr Rush and Frenchman Paul-Henri Nargeolet were also killed instantly when the craft was crushed by the pressure of the ocean.

Please use Chrome browser for a more accessible video player

Tail cone pictured at bottom of Atlantic

OceanGate’s scientific director Steven Ross is expected to give evidence on Thursday, as is Renata Rojas, a mission specialist for the American company.

The firm suspended operations after the disaster and now has no full-time staff but is being represented by a lawyer during the US Coast Guard hearing.

Read more from Sky News:
Exploding tech ‘grey zone’ attack is warning for governments

‘Hero’ 12-year-old saves dad from bear mauling

Follow Sky News on WhatsApp
Follow Sky News on WhatsApp

Keep up with all the latest news from the UK and around the world by following Sky News

Tap here

Titan lost contact with its support ship on 18 June last year, prompting a search in the Atlantic that made global headlines.

However, the wreck was found four days later 300m from the Titanic’s bow. The sub had been making voyages to the site of the legendary shipwreck since 2021.

Continue Reading

US

Sean ‘Diddy’ Combs refused bail a second time as he faces sex trafficking charges

Published

on

By

Sean 'Diddy' Combs refused bail a second time as he faces sex trafficking charges

Sean “Diddy” Combs has been refused bail a second time as he faces several charges including sex trafficking, drug possession and firearms offences.

US district judge Andrew L Carter said the government had proved “by clear and convincing evidence that there is no condition or set of conditions” that will ensure the safety of the community and that the rapper and music mogul will not tamper with witnesses.

The 54-year-old pleaded not guilty after he was first arrested by officers at the Park Hyatt hotel in Manhattan, New York, on Monday.

Combs and his defence lawyer Marc Agnifilo in a courtroom sketch. Pic: Reuters
Image:
Sean Combs (right) and his defence lawyer Marc Agnifilo in a courtroom sketch. Pic: Reuters

He was originally denied bail and told he would be detained after pleading not guilty to three felony counts during an initial court appearance on Tuesday.

Lawyers representing Combs asked a judge on Wednesday to let him await his trial at his luxury home on an island near Miami Beach, as opposed to in jail in Brooklyn.

But prosecutors argued against the proposal, saying there was too great a risk that Combs could threaten or harm witnesses.

Combs’s lawyers offered a $50m (£37.8m) bail package in exchange for his release to home detention with GPS monitoring and strict limitations on who could visit him.

Arguing to keep him behind bars, prosecutor Emily Johnson told the judge that Combs had a long history of intimidating both accusers and witnesses to his alleged abuse.

Ms Johnson cited text messages from women who said Combs forced them into “Freak Offs” and then threatened to leak explicit videos of them engaging in sexual acts.

She also said that Combs’s own defence team was “minimising and horrifically understating” his propensity for violence.

The defence and prosecution were wrangling over the request before the judge passed his ruling.

“I am feeling confident. We’re going to go get Mr Combs out of jail,” Combs’s lawyer Marc Agnifilo said on his way into court on Wednesday, before the judge decided Combs would spend his time before the trial at the Metropolitan Detention Center.

Read more from Sky News:
Weinstein charged with sexually assaulting woman
‘Biden was so nice’, Trump says
Timeline of allegations against Diddy

Sean Combs, centre, is flanked by his defence attorney Marc Agnifilo, left, and Teny Garagos, at Manhattan Federal Court, Tuesday, Sept. 17, 2024, in New York. (Elizabeth Williams via AP)
Image:
Sean Combs, centre, sits next to his defence attorneys Marc Agnifilo, left, and Teny Garagos, at Manhattan Federal Court. on Tuesday. Pic: Elizabeth Williams via AP

A legal indictment released after Combs’s arrest detailed allegations dating to 2008, accusing him of abusing, threatening, and coercing women for years “to fulfill his sexual desires, protect his reputation, and conceal his conduct”.

He allegedly induced female victims and male sex workers into drug-fuelled sexual performances, dubbed “Freak Offs”, according to the report.

Combs, formerly known as Puff Daddy and P Diddy, was once one of the most influential figures in hip-hop – famous as a producer and manager of the late Notorious BIG, as well as a rapper in his own right for hits including I’ll Be Missing You, Come With Me, and Bad Boy For Life.

Follow Sky News on WhatsApp
Follow Sky News on WhatsApp

Keep up with all the latest news from the UK and around the world by following Sky News

Tap here

However, in November, his former girlfriend, the R&B singer Cassie, filed a lawsuit accusing him of coercing her, and others, into unwanted sex in drug-fuelled settings.

The suit was settled in one day, but months later CNN aired hotel security footage showing Combs punching and kicking Cassie and throwing her to the floor.

He apologised after the video aired, saying: “I was disgusted when I did it.”

Continue Reading

US

Bumper US interest rate cut aims to boost flagging economy

Published

on

By

Bumper US interest rate cut aims to boost flagging economy

US interest rates have been slashed for the first time in more than four years – by more than many expected – amid fears the world’s largest economy is flagging.

The US central bank, the Federal Reserve, brought interest rates down by 0.5 percentage points to 4.75% to 5%.

Unlike the UK, the US interest rate is a range to guide lenders rather than a single percentage.

Read more: What next for interest rates?

Bringing down inflation to 2% is a primary goal of the Fed and it has used interest rates to draw money out of the economy by making borrowing more costly since 2022, when the Ukraine/Russia price shock hit.

Follow Sky News on WhatsApp
Follow Sky News on WhatsApp

Keep up with all the latest news from the UK and around the world by following Sky News

Tap here

Recent figures show the Fed is not far from its inflation target – with the main measure hitting 2.5% in August, the lowest rate in three years.

But signs of a weakening economy emerged last month as data on job creation led to recession fears.

More on Interest Rates

The Fed signalled in its statement that while it was confident on both the inflation and growth outlooks, a slowdown in the pace of hiring was a cause for concern.

Only one member of its rate-setting committee dissented on the 0.5 percentage point reduction. Financial market participants had been split on whether it would go for the 0.25 option instead.

US stocks rallied in the wake of the decision, with the Dow Jones Industrial Average and broader S&P 500 both up by more than 0.5% from flat positions moments before the rate decision was revealed.

Please use Chrome browser for a more accessible video player

Trump criticises Harris on economy

The dollar was trading a cent lower versus sterling at $1.32.

Some market analysts said the Fed’s move showed Fed chair Jay Powell and his fellow policymakers had been too slow to react to the employment slowdown.

He told reporters: “We’re going to be making decisions meeting by meeting, based on the incoming data and the evolving outlook, the balance of risks… it’s a process of recalibrating our policy stance away from where we had it a year ago, when inflation was high and unemployment low, to a place that’s more appropriate given where we are now and where we expect to be.

Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell Pic: AP
Image:
Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell Pic: AP

“That process will time time”, he added, saying there would be no “rush”.

Michael Sheehan, fund manager of fixed income at EdenTree Investment Management, said: “Kicking off this cutting cycle with a 50 basis point reduction will undoubtedly vindicate those who had argued that the Fed had fallen behind the curve.

“Any doubts that this cutting cycle would be any less dramatic than previous ones have been firmly laid to rest.

“We expect this larger cut of 50 basis points to boost risk assets in the short term. The key for markets, and indeed the Federal Reserve, will be how far the softening of the labour market has to run.

“Powell will be hoping that taking aggressive action early will go some way to curtailing a substantial weakening and achieve the elusive soft landing.”

What about the UK?

It comes as the UK central bank the Bank of England meets on Thursday to make its own interest rate decision.

While the Bank will focus on UK economic data – and on Wednesday afternoon was expected by markets to hold rates – it could be influenced by US decision-making.

Lower interest rates tend to weaken currencies, so a big cut from the Fed could be good news for the pound.

While being able to buy more dollars is good news for people holidaying in the US and paying for imports like oil, it’s bad news for exporters who get less for their goods as a result and have a less competitive product.

Lower exports can slow inflation, meaning the Bank could be more likely to cut.

Continue Reading

Trending