Key events
MSNOW reports that the White House hosted a briefing for about two dozen pro-Trump conspiracy theorists and election deniers this week, led by the conservative lawyer Cleta Mitchell, who was on Donald Trump’s notorious phone call with Georgia’s top election official on 2 January 2001, in which the president asked for 11,780 votes for Joe Biden to be tossed out, which would have enabled Trump to win the state’s 2020 presidential election by a single vote.
One of the participants told the broadcaster the presentation “was basically all the media reporting that John Solomon and others have done already.”
Solomon, a former Associated Press reporter turned far-right media figure, became a special government employee of the White House last month. He has reportedly been working with Bill Pulte, Trump’s acting director of national intelligence, to declassify documents on alleged efforts by foreign nations to interfere in US elections.
After meeting Todd Blanche, Epstein survivor urges senators to reject him as attorney general
Annie Farmer, a survivor of sexual abuse by Jeffrey Epstein, called on US senators to reject Donald Trump’s nominee for attorney general, Todd Blanche, his former criminal defense lawyer, after he agreed to meet her and other victims of the late sex offender who socialized with Trump for nearly two decades.
“After meeting with Todd Blanche, I feel even more confident in urging senators to vote against his confirmation as the United States’ Attorney General,” Farmer said in a statement.
She continued:
I found him abrasive, condescending, and intentionally noncommittal to survivors – a marked contrast to his public testimony during his confirmation hearing.
While quick to point to the failures of previous administrations, he refused to take accountability for mistakes made under his own leadership. Specifically, he would not commit to an inquiry into why my sister Maria Farmer’s 1996 report went uninvestigated; he refused to release documents related to internal discussions about charging Epstein that would provide important clarification about previous errors, and his explanations for his nine-hour interview with Ghislaine Maxwell and her subsequent transfer to a less secure facility were wholly dissatisfactory and contrived.
His evasiveness felt like a deliberate attempt to claim the Attorney General’s office is powerless in this matter. By passing the buck once again, he is leaving survivors trapped in the same endless loop of searching for answers and receiving none.
CBS, owned by Trump supporter, to air president’s speech live, as CNN joins ABC and NBC in not giving airwaves to president known for lying
CBS, which is now owned by the Trump supporter David Ellison, will air Donald Trump’s primetime address live, unlike the rival networks ABC and NBC, which have decided to relegate the president’s remarks to their streaming platforms.
CNN has also decided to not confront its viewers with the prepared remarks of a president known for incessant lying, particularly about the likely subject of the speech: his loss to Joe Biden in the 2020 presidential election, which appears to have inflicted a psychic wound so grave Trump is unable to get over it.
CNN’s chief media analyst, Brian Stelter, reports that CNN will make a live feed of the remarks available online, with analysis and commentary, but not air it live on television.
“CNN will cover the President’s speech as a news event, and monitor it for news developments, providing analysis and commentary from CNN experts who cover elections, intelligence and the FBI,” Stelter quoted a spokesperson for the network saying.
Both Fox News and the Fox broadcast network, also owned by the Trump-supporting Murdoch family, plan to carry the president’s remarks live, just three years after their parent company was forced to pay a $787.5m settlement to the voting machine company Dominion for knowingly broadcasting false claims that Dominion was involved in a plot to steal the 2020 election.
Former Trump lawyer says president is looking for an excuse ‘to declare an emergency’ before midterms
Ty Cobb, a lawyer who coordinated Donald Trump’s legal response, during his first term, to the special counsel investigation of his campaign’s ties to Russia, told PBS News Hour on Thursday that he fears that “tonight’s speech is intended to add to the predicate that he needs to declare an emergency at or about the time of the elections”.
Cobb, who has become a critic of the president, predicted that Trump will try “anything” to disrupt the midterm elections his party is widely expected to lose, opening the door to a third impeachment.
“Steve Bannon and Todd Blanche have suggested that there will be ICE agents at the polls,” Cobb said. “I think that that’s a virtual certainty. Whether that will include the national guard or not, we don’t know, but anything to intimidate minority voters, particularly immigrant voters,.” He also suggested that the president was looking for an excuse “to try to seize voting machines as Trump wanted to do in 2020”.
“I think you will see him doing everything he can to try to prevent the peaceful transfer of power, the election of Democrats, and do whatever he can to remain in power and to keep his cronies in powers, so that he can continue doing what he thinks he’s allowed to do as president, which is anything he wants,” Cobb added.
Trump’s address follows another day of strikes he authorized against Iran.
US forces launched attacks for the sixth straight day Thursday, hitting targets near Tehran and striking a ship military officials accused of trying to break the US blockade. Iran retaliated by firing missiles and drones at US allies in the region.
There’s speculation Trump will mention his ongoing joint war with Israel against Iran in his remarks later tonight. He has claimed to be close to a deal with Iran dozens of times since April. If it does come up in his address, watch how the president spins the conflict as it stretches into its 139th day with an earlier ceasefire in shambles, peace talks in limbo and gas prices ticking higher again.
To air or not to air? That is the question news networks are mulling before Trump’s address
While the president aims for wall-to-wall primetime coverage, some TV networks are playing it safe in an effort to avoid giving Trump airtime to spout more unproven or debunked conspiracy theories to the viewing public – at least for traditional TV viewers. Brian Stelter, CNN’s chief media analyst, reported that NBC and ABC plan to stream Trump’s address online, but won’t carry it live on TV.
In a statement Stelter shared from ABC, the network said its “Special Report team is fully prepared to break into network programming to deliver live updates and reporting should significant developments occur”.
As for NBC, network officials said they “plan to air a special report on the network following the remarks”.
Democrats pre-bunk Trump’s long-running election denials before his address
That includes Jon Ossoff and Raphael Warnock, US senators from Georgia, and Angela Alsobrooks, US senator from Maryland.
Alsobrooks said the administration’s ongoing attacks against election workers and “illegal” raids on election offices are designed to prevent eligible US citizens from voting:
“Let’s let that sink in as we watch the false claims from this president, who, bless his heart, just cannot accept what all of the evidence has shown us: is that there is nothing improper that happened in 2020.”
Ossoff was more pointed in his remarks:
“Here’s what’s going to happen tonight: the world’s most famous sore loser will deliver a prime-time presidential sour grapes address to pursue his six-year-old grievances about the 2020 election, while his war in the Middle East spirals out of control and the cost of living continues to rise for Americans across the country.”
Ossoff’s fellow senator Warnock offered this statement on Trump’s speech:
“Donald Trump lost Georgia in 2020. That’s not my opinion, it’s a fact. The votes were counted, recounted, audited and litigated. He lost, he lost, he lost. But this really isn’t about 2020. It’s about 2026. He is trying to sow doubt on the integrity of our elections in Georgia so that he can create the pretext to interfere in 2026. This president is a liar, a cheater and a fraud. And he has shown us over and over again that staying in power matters more to him than anything else.”
Trump’s press secretary, Karoline Leavitt, returned from maternity leave Thursday and teased the president’s upcoming address from the White House briefing room.
Fielding questions about the substance of the president’s televised address tonight – specifically, reports that Trump plans to unveil new claims of interference in the 2020 election, despite the lack of evidence of widespread fraud – Leavitt argued that the president remains focused on the results because “the media has refused to acknowledge that tens of millions of Americans share his concerns about the sanctity of our elections”.
She added that Trump’s forthcoming “findings will shock you”, urging viewers to tune in. “Everything he is saying will be backed by facts and by evidence that will be provided this evening,” she said.
Trump set to address nation tonight
Welcome to our liveblog with coverage of Donald Trump’s Thursday night address from the White House. The president is slated to begin his remarks at 9pm ET.
While there’s not a complete picture of what he will say, Trump and White House officials have indicated his remarks will include one of his favorite obsessions: his long-repeated claims, without evidence, that US elections were rigged against him by Democrats in 2020 when he lost to Joe Biden.
Trump hinted at the content of his comments from the Oval Office Tuesday, telling reporters: “It doesn’t get bigger, because without free and fair elections, you don’t have a country.”
“We’ll be discussing other things, too,” the president added, but declined to reveal more. “It’s going to be a very big announcement.”
Source: https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/live/2026/jul/16/trump-speech-address-iran-election-latest-updates