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NHS ‘broken’ by past govts, says Starmer  

Daisy Cooper, health spokesperson for the Liberal Democrats, said “years and years of Conservative failure have brought the NHS to its knees…reports Asian Lite News

The NHS in England has been “broken” by successive Conservative-led governments – and the state it is now in is “unforgiveable”, Starmer has told the BBC.

In his first major interview in Downing Street, the prime minister said a review of the health service to be published on Thursday finds changes to the NHS were “hopelessly misconceived”.

He said austerity in the coalition years, and then the Conservative government’s handling of the pandemic, left the NHS in an “awful position”. Starmer added that the review by an eminent surgeon, Lord Darzi, is expected to reveal too many children “are being let down” by the health service.

“Everybody watching this who has used the NHS, or whose relatives have, knows that it’s broken,” Starmer said. “That is unforgivable, the state of our NHS.”

In response to Starmer’s comments, shadow health secretary Victoria Atkins said after 14 years in opposition, “Labour’s instinct is to politicise children’s health, rather than provide solutions and reform our NHS”.

Daisy Cooper, health spokesperson for the Liberal Democrats, said “years and years of Conservative failure have brought the NHS to its knees”. She said the party has “called for an emergency health budget from this new government” and “will be pushing them every step of the way”.

The prime minister said the report will claim the current problems come from historical factors, including “hopelessly misconceived” reforms pursued by the former Conservative Health Secretary Andrew Lansley in 2012.

It is also expected to find that children from the most deprived backgrounds were twice as likely to be obese by reception age. In the poorest communities, the report finds, nearly one-in-three children is obese by Year 6. Meanwhile, the report says life-threatening and life-limiting conditions among children are up 40% over the past two decades. The full contents of the Darzi report will be published on Thursday.

Some of Lord Darzi’s report has been put out early by the government with eye-catching findings, and his conclusion that there were “real concerns” over the ability of the NHS to deliver quality care. But there will be much more in the report to be published in the next few days. What will it say, for example, about overstretched GP services? Or retention and recruitment of staff? It will undoubtedly set out more problems and challenges.

Starmer pinned the blame for the problems on the Tories, in an echo of the government’s criticisms of its economic inheritance, and argued only Labour can bring the reform the government needs. “It’s the last government that broke the NHS,” Starmer said. “Our job now through Lord Darzi is to properly understand how that came about and bring about the reforms.”

He said that started with the first step of funding 40,000 out-of-hours NHS appointments each week to cut waiting lists. There are questions over how long Labour can keep blaming the Conservatives and when scrutiny will turn to their own performance against NHS targets.

Starmer appeared to acknowledge this, saying: “We’ve got to do the hard yards of reform as well. “And as I say, I think it’s only a Labour government that can do the reform that our NHS needs, and we’ll start on that journey.”

In the wide-ranging interview in Downing Street’s Cabinet Room, Starmer also discusses the summer riots, Grenfell disaster, public finances and his upcoming second visit to the White House.

Health minister says NHS needs to make ‘three big shifts’ to survive

The NHS must undergo three “big shifts” in how it delivers care to ensure a sustainable future, Wes Streeting has said. The health and social care secretary told Financial Times the new government would prioritise moving NHS treatment “from hospital to community”, “analogue to digital” and “sickness to prevention”.

The three shifts “are absolutely necessary, and actually existential . . . for the future of the NHS”, Streeting said.  “We’ve got to take the best of the NHS to the rest of the NHS,” he said, noting that collaboration between the health service and life sciences sector was happening but only “in exceptional cases”. 

People were “living longer but . . . not living well for longer”, adding that the NHS needed to modernise and “diagnose earlier and treat faster”.

More emphasis on prevention and primary care would help ease pressure on overstretched hospitals and “push ill health and co-morbidities . . . later into retirement”, he said.  Analysis published in the Lancet Health Longevity journal this year suggested that, using England as an example, more than 70,000 extra “quality-adjusted life-years” could be generated over roughly 20 years through steps to reduce risk factors for dementia, such as vision loss and high cholesterol.

The NHS in England is grappling with long waiting lists for routine care, exacerbated by the cancellation of about 1.5mn appointments and operations owing to a wave of strike action, and an ageing population.

In secondary care there were 100,658 vacancies as of March, according to the British Medical Association, the main medical union.

Streeting, in an echo of his first official statement as health secretary, said the health service was “broken but not beaten” and argued that “good social care” was necessary to achieve “the recovery we want to see” in the NHS. 

Social care was barely mentioned in the general election campaign, despite the millions of people affected by England’s increasingly threadbare provision for the elderly and the disabled. 

Prime Minister Keir Starmer inherited plans from the Conservative government to cap the amount individuals contribute towards their own care costs, but England’s largest councils in July warned of a £30bn “black hole” in funding for the proposals. At the end of July, chancellor Rachel Reeves announced it would not be implemented, saving the £1bn it would have cost in 2025-26.

Streeting said that while “action on social care needs to happen now”, longer-term challenges also had to be addressed, including around more complex care needs and an ageing population. 

“Give us time,” he said of calls for the Labour government to move more quickly to implement its policies.  Streeting said he would work with Peter Kyle, science and technology secretary, to “bulldoze through . . . institutional barriers” in the NHS to make the service “a catalyst for great, groundbreaking science made here in Britain”. 

Asked about the decision by Reeves to cut winter fuel payments for better-off pensioners, Streeting said “we’ve got to get the balance right . . . and invest in our public services without always having to reach for the tax lever”.

ALSO READ: UK PM to discuss Ukraine, Gaza with Biden

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UK PM to discuss Ukraine, Gaza with Biden

Starmer visited the White House two months ago for one-on-one talks with Biden when he was in Washington for the NATO Summit…reports Asian Lite News

US President Joe Biden will host Prime Minister Keir Starmer for talks in Washington next week that are expected to touch on the wars in Ukraine and Gaza and other issues.

Next Friday’s meeting with the leader of one of America’s closest allies comes as Biden looks to step up engagement on the international stage in his final months in office.

US allies and adversaries are also intently watching how the race to succeed Biden between Democratic Vice President Kamala Harris and Republican former President Donald Trump plays out.

White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre said in a statement that the Oval Office visit, the second by Starmer since he was elected earlier this summer, will focus on continuing Western support for Ukraine as it tries to repel Russia’s invasion, ongoing efforts to secure a hostage and cease-fire deal between Israel and Hamas, threats to commercial shipping in the Red Sea posed by the Houthis, an Iranian-backed group, as well as shared concerns about the Indo-Pacific.

Starmer visited the White House two months ago for one-on-one talks with Biden when he was in Washington for the NATO Summit.

In a statement, the White House said the leaders would focus on “global issues of mutual interest”.

“The leaders will have an in-depth discussion… including continuing robust support to Ukraine in its defence against Russian aggression, securing a hostage release and ceasefire deal to end the war in Gaza, protecting international shipping in the Red Sea from Iranian-backed Houthi threats, and advancing a free and open Indo-Pacific,” the White House statement said.

It continued: “They will also discuss opportunities to strengthen US-UK cooperation to secure supply chains and increase climate resilience. President Biden will underscore the importance of continuing to strengthen the special relationship between the United States and the United Kingdom.”

The UK is heavily invested in several live geopolitical challenges which all predate Starmer’s  premiership. The hope, according to sources, is that mutual progress can be made on the various challenges with the outgoing Biden administration.

Britain and the US have cooperated closely on Ukraine, leading a Western alliance that has, at times, shown some reluctance in its continued support against Russian aggression.

On protecting international shipping in the Red Sea against continued Houthi attacks from Yemen, the UK has been a key partner for the US in a mission that’s shown limited success. The potential for some divergence between the two leaders could come over Gaza.

Last week, the UK announced that it would suspend the export of some arms to Israel because of the risk that they could be used in non-compliance with international humanitarian law.

US government lawyers have not come to the same conclusions about how Israel is using weapons in Gaza but this week a State Department spokesman said the UK was making a sovereign decision that it was entirely entitled to make.

Notably, however, a foreign policy advisor to Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump struck a different tone.

Robert O’Brien – who is likely to be in a Trump White House if he wins in November – said that a UK-US special relationship would be under strain if the UK restricted weapons sales to Israel.

The relationship between Biden and Starmer reflects their political alignment. During his first visit to the White House, just days after taking office, President Biden, who was then the Democratic candidate for November’s election, spoke warmly of the much coveted “special relationship”.

“I kind of see you guys as the knot tying the transatlantic alliance together, the closer you are with Europe. We know where you are, you know where we are,” Biden told Starmer.

No meetings with Harris, Trump

No meetings have been announced between Starmer and vice president Kamala Harris, the new Democratic Party candidate for the November election, though it’s possible she will be part of the bilateral meetings with President Biden. A significant moment would be a meeting between Starmer and Trump.

No plans have been announced but such a meeting would be seen as diplomatically savvy, especially if a Harris meeting materialises, and it would not be without precedent. Former prime minister David Cameron met Republican nominee Mitt Romney in July 2012 and Gordon Brown met Barack Obama when he was the Democratic Party candidate in 2008.

Starmer’s visit comes at the end of a week in which US secretary of state Antony Blinken will meet Foreign Secretary David Lammy in London. Gaza will be a key focus but Blinken will travel with ambassador Katherine Tai, the US trade representative. Trade and technology are set to be on the agenda too. The UK is still seeking to formalise a post-Brexit trade partnership with the US.

ALSO READ: National Memorial For Queen Elizabeth II At London’s St James’s Park

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National Memorial For Queen Elizabeth II At London’s St James’s Park

Chosen for its proximity to significant historical landmarks, including the Buckingham Palace and the Commonwealth headquarters, the site also holds a personal connection to the late Queen, reports Asian Lite News

The UK government has announced that the new national Queen Elizabeth II Memorial will be located in St James’s Park, London.

The memorial will be situated near The Mall at Marlborough Gate, encompassing the surrounding land and the pathway leading to the lake, including the Blue Bridge, the government said in a statement.

Chosen for its proximity to significant historical landmarks, including the Buckingham Palace and the Commonwealth headquarters, the site also holds a personal connection to the late Queen.

The location near the ceremonial route of The Mall, close to statues of her parents, King George VI and Queen Elizabeth The Queen Mother, reflects its constitutional and historical importance.

A committee, established by the UK government and the Royal Household in 2023, selected the location after consulting the public, key stakeholders, and experts across the four nations of the UK.

The government will support the project, with plans to fund additional memorials in Scotland, Wales, and Northern Ireland, details of which will be announced later.

The memorial aims to be a fitting tribute to Queen Elizabeth II, providing a space for reflection and community. It is intended to be of significant scale to reflect her lasting impact on national and global life.

UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer commented that the memorial would allow the public to “honour the Late Queen and connect with the shared history we cherish”.

“Queen Elizabeth II’s enduring legacy of service and devotion to our country will never be forgotten,” he said.

Chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster, Pat McFadden, emphasised the significance of memorialising the longest reigning British monarch in a location that represents her role at the heart of British society.

The design phase for the memorial will begin later this year, with proposals invited from architects and designers. The final design will be unveiled in 2026, marking what would have been Queen Elizabeth’s 100th birthday.

The memorial continues the UK’s tradition of honouring its monarchs with permanent landmarks, such as the Victoria Memorial and Royal Albert Hall.

ALSO READ: London Tube Map Goes Circle Way

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Pakistani Man Charged In New York Terror Plot Targeting Jews

Muhammad Shahzeb Khan is charged with attempting to provide material support to a foreign terrorist organisation.

The US Department of Justice has charged a Pakistani national with allegedly plotting to attack Jews in New York on the anniversary of the October 7 terror attacks in Israel, media reported.

Muhammad Shahzeb Khan, 20, was going to carry out the attack in support of ISIS, prosecutors allege, and told an undercover agent he wanted to target New York because it has the “largest Jewish population in America”, CNN reported.

Khan is charged with attempting to provide material support to a foreign terrorist organisation. He was arrested on Wednesday in Canada. The charges were unsealed on Friday.

“The defendant was allegedly determined to kill Jewish people here in the United States, nearly one year after Hamas’ horrific attack on Israel. This investigation was led by the FBI, and I am proud of the terrific work by the FBI team and our partners to disrupt Khan’s plan,” FBI Director Christopher Wray said.

“The FBI will continue to work closely with our partners to investigate and hold accountable those who seek to commit violence in the name of ISIS or other terrorist organizations. Fighting terrorism remains the FBI’s top priority,” Wray added.

“The defendant is alleged to have planned a terrorist attack in New York City around October 7 of this year with the stated goal of slaughtering, in the name of ISIS, as many Jewish people as possible,” Attorney General Merrick Garland said in a statement, adding that “Jewish communities — like all communities in this country — should not have to fear that they will be targeted by a hate-fueled terrorist attack”.

In November 2023, Khan, who lives in Canada, began allegedly discussing his support for ISIS on an encrypted messaging application with two people who, unknown to him, were undercover law enforcement officers, CNN reported.

Khan told the officers that he was trying to create “a real offline cell” of ISIS that would target Jewish institutions around an unnamed city, according to court documents, and instructed the officers to buy firearms for those attacks.

Khan allegedly told the officers that he wanted to carry out the attacks on either October 7 or 11, because “October 7 they will surely have some protests and October 11 is yom.kippur,” a major Jewish holiday.

By August of this year, prosecutors allege, Khan decided that he wanted to carry out the attacks at a Jewish centre in Brooklyn.

It is easy to “target jews” in New York because of the large Jewish population, he allegedly told the undercover officers, adding that “even if we don’t attack an Event, we could rack up easily a lot of Jews”. Once he decided on the location of the attack, Khan allegedly paid a human smuggler to help him cross the border into the US.

On September 4, Khan allegedly used three separate cars as he tried to cross Canada and enter the US. He was stopped nearly 12 miles from the US-Canada border, according to the Justice Department.

The Pakistani national is charged with one count of attempting to provide material support and resources to a designated foreign terrorist organisation. If convicted, he faces a maximum sentence of 20 years in prison. A federal district court judge will determine any sentence after considering the US Sentencing Guidelines and other statutory factors.

The Israel Defense Forces on October 7 last year declared a state of readiness for war following a massive barrage of rockets from the Gaza Strip and infiltration of Hamas terrorists into Israel, and the war is on ever since.

ALSO READ: Israeli Army Withdraws From Jenin

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Ukraine Takes Down 27 Russian Drones

Apart from the drones, Russia fired Kh-59 guided missiles and Kh-31P anti-radiation missiles at Ukraine

Ukraine shot down 27 out of 44 Shahed-131 and Shahed-136 drones launched by Russia overnight, the Ukrainian Air Force said.

Eight drones have disappeared from the radars, while another one has flown in the direction of the Russia-held area in the Donetsk region, it said on Friday in a post on social media app Telegram.

Several drones remained in the Ukrainian airspace as of Friday morning, the Air Force said.

Apart from the drones, Russia fired Kh-59 guided missiles and Kh-31P anti-radiation missiles at Ukraine, Xinhua news agency reported.

In the attack one person was killed and 30 others injured in the town of Pavlograd in the central Dnipropetrovsk region, said regional governor Sergii Lysak.

The air defence was also activated in the Kyiv region, but there were no casualties or damage to critical and housing infrastructure, according to the Kyiv Regional Military Administration.

The governor of the northeastern region of Kharkiv said a missile attack damaged residential buildings and injured three people in the town of Liubotyn on Friday morning.

Lysak said the Air Force shot down five drones and one missile over the region.

Various overnight attacks in this central region injured two people, damaged over 12 homes and impacted power lines and gas pipelines, he added.

Lviv regional authorities said drone debris fell in an industrial zone, setting fire to four trucks. A team of 32 firefighters had doused the fire by Friday morning and the governor reported no injuries during the attack.

Another fire caused by falling debris had been put out in the southern region of Mykolaiv where the Air Force shot down seven drones, its governor said.

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Biden To Host Starmer Next Week

The September 13 Oval Office visit will mark the second meeting between the two leaders since Starmer was voted as the British Prime Minister earlier this July.

US President Joe Biden is set to host United Kingdom Prime Minister Keir Starmer, next week, and the two leaders are expected to have in-depth discussions on “a range of global issues of mutual interest,” including the ongoing wars in Ukraine and Gaza amid other issues.

The White House press secretary, Karine Jean-Pierre, said in a statement that the September 13 Oval Office visit will mark the second meeting between the two leaders since Starmer was voted as the British Prime Minister earlier this July.

Discussions between the leaders will include continuing robust support to Ukraine in its defence against “Russian aggression” and securing a hostage release and a ceasefire deal to end the war in Gaza.

Protecting international shipping in the Red Sea from Iranian-backed Houthi threats, and advancing a free and open Indo-Pacific will also figure in the discussions, according to the White House press secretary.

Biden and Starmer will also discuss opportunities to strengthen US-UK cooperation to secure supply chains and increase climate resilience, the White House said.

Prime Minister Keir Starmer meets US President Joe Biden for a bilateral meeting in the White House. Picture by Simon Dawson / No 10 Downing Street

Starmer visited the White House in July this year and held one-on-one talks with Biden when he was in Washington for the NATO Summit.

Earlier this week, US National Security Council spokesman John Kirby stated that the Biden administration believes that the ceasefire deal between Israel and Hamas is 90 per cent agreed on, adding, “That’s how close we believe we are,” Al Jazeera reported.

“Nothing is negotiated until everything is negotiated,” Kirby said. He noted that several detailed issues remain to be resolved, adding that “that’s when things get difficult.”

Earlier, British PM Keir Starmer was among other global leaders to express condolences on the death of six Israeli hostages, found dead in a tunnel in Gaza.

Starmer said he was “completely shocked” at the “horrific and senseless killing” of the hostages, and said that a ceasefire deal must be agreed by all sides immediately to end the suffering.

“I am completely shocked at the horrific and senseless killing of six hostages in Gaza by Hamas. My thoughts are with their loved ones at this awful time. Hamas must release all the hostages now, and a ceasefire deal must be agreed by all sides immediately to end the suffering,” Starmer posted on X.

US President Joe Biden said that he was devastated and outraged by the killing of Israeli hostages. He also informed that Israeli-US citizen Goldberg-Polin was among the people killed by Hamas. (ANI)

ALSO READ: Germany could adopt Rwanda plan paid for by UK

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New French PM Signals Rightward Shift, Takes Hard Line On Immigration

Michel Barnier’s government, which lacks a clear majority in a hung lower house of parliament, may include conservatives as well as members of Macron’s camp, reports Asian Lite News

France’s newly appointed Prime Minister, Michel Barnier, has signalled his position will be titled towards the right, as he said he will toughen the government’s stance on immigration and will defend some of President Emmanuel Macron’s policies, Al Jazeera reported.

Barnier said on Friday that his government, which lacks a clear majority in a hung lower house of parliament, will include conservatives as well as members of Macron’s camp.

He, however, said that members from other groups, including the left, are also welcome to back the new government. “There is no red line,” Barnier said, adding: “We need to open the door…to all those who want it.”

In a surprise pick, Macron, named 73-year-old Barnier, a conservative and the European Union’s former Brexit negotiator, as prime minister on Thursday, putting an end to a two-month political deadlock created after his ill-fated decision to call snap legislative elections that delivered an unruly hung parliament.

Barnier faces the daunting task of trying to drive reforms and the 2025 budget through that parliament as France is under pressure from the European Commission and bond markets to reduce its deficit, Al Jazeera reported.

Signalling his readiness to hold up some of Macron’s widely unpopular reform policies, which likely includes taking political risks, Barnier said he was not prepared to repeal the rise of the retirement age to 64 from 62 — a decision that had sparked massive protests in France last year.

“We must not call into question this law, which was adopted in very difficult circumstances,” Barnier said but added he was prepared to adjust the policy to better protect what he called “the most vulnerable”.

The left-wing New Popular Front and the far-right National Rally (RN), which together have a majority and could oust the prime minister through a no-confidence vote if they collaborate, had campaigned strongly against the reform.

Barnier also signalled taking a rightward shift on some issues, as he said he would pursue tougher policies to curb immigration. “There still is a feeling that our borders are sieves and that migration flows aren’t being controlled,” he said, adding: “I don’t have much in common with the ideologies of the National Rally, but I respect it.”

Earlier, Macron’s political rivals alleged Marine Le Pen’s party was exerting outsize power over the president, who nominated Barnier with the tacit support of the far right after spending weeks looking for a candidate who would not immediately be toppled by a majority of lawmakers, Al Jazeera reported.

The RN gave tentative support to Barnier’s nomination by saying it would not immediately try to vote it down

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New French PM Signals Rightward Shift, Takes Hard Line On Immigration

Michel Barnier’s government, which lacks a clear majority in a hung lower house of parliament, may include conservatives as well as members of Macron’s camp.

France’s newly appointed Prime Minister, Michel Barnier, has signalled his position will be titled towards the right, as he said he will toughen the government’s stance on immigration and will defend some of President Emmanuel Macron’s policies, Al Jazeera reported.

Barnier said on Friday that his government, which lacks a clear majority in a hung lower house of parliament, will include conservatives as well as members of Macron’s camp.

He, however, said that members from other groups, including the left, are also welcome to back the new government. “There is no red line,” Barnier said, adding: “We need to open the door…to all those who want it.”

In a surprise pick, Macron, named 73-year-old Barnier, a conservative and the European Union’s former Brexit negotiator, as prime minister on Thursday, putting an end to a two-month political deadlock created after his ill-fated decision to call snap legislative elections that delivered an unruly hung parliament.

Barnier faces the daunting task of trying to drive reforms and the 2025 budget through that parliament as France is under pressure from the European Commission and bond markets to reduce its deficit, Al Jazeera reported.

Signalling his readiness to hold up some of Macron’s widely unpopular reform policies, which likely includes taking political risks, Barnier said he was not prepared to repeal the rise of the retirement age to 64 from 62 — a decision that had sparked massive protests in France last year.

“We must not call into question this law, which was adopted in very difficult circumstances,” Barnier said but added he was prepared to adjust the policy to better protect what he called “the most vulnerable”.

The left-wing New Popular Front and the far-right National Rally (RN), which together have a majority and could oust the prime minister through a no-confidence vote if they collaborate, had campaigned strongly against the reform.

Barnier also signalled taking a rightward shift on some issues, as he said he would pursue tougher policies to curb immigration. “There still is a feeling that our borders are sieves and that migration flows aren’t being controlled,” he said, adding: “I don’t have much in common with the ideologies of the National Rally, but I respect it.”

Earlier, Macron’s political rivals alleged Marine Le Pen’s party was exerting outsize power over the president, who nominated Barnier with the tacit support of the far right after spending weeks looking for a candidate who would not immediately be toppled by a majority of lawmakers, Al Jazeera reported.

The RN gave tentative support to Barnier’s nomination by saying it would not immediately try to vote it down but asserted that it could withdraw support at any point if its concerns on immigration, security and pocketbook issues were not met. (ANI)

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Relief For Trump As Criminal Sentencing Delayed Until After US Election

Judge Juan Merchan explained the reason that delay in the sentencing is in part to avoid any appearance of affecting the outcome of the presidential race.

Former US President Donald Trump will not be sentenced in his New York criminal case until after the 2024 presidential election in November, media reported.

As per the CNN report on Friday, Judge Juan Merchan explained the reason that delay in the sentencing is in part to avoid any appearance of affecting the outcome of the presidential race.

Merchan wrote in a new four-page letter that he would sentence Trump on November 26 — if necessary — in response to a request from Trump’s lawyers to push back the sentencing.

Trump was convicted in May on 34 counts of falsifying business records to cover up a hush money payment to an adult-film star alleging an affair with the former President, CNN reported.

But Trump’s sentencing has been on hold for months after the former President’s lawyers pushed to have the conviction tossed because of the Supreme Court’s ruling on presidential immunity.

Merchan noted the upcoming presidential election in his decision to delay sentencing, saying that part of his reason for doing so was to avoid the appearance that the sentencing was intended to influence the November election.

“Adjourning decision on the motion and sentencing, if such is required, should dispel any suggestion that the Court will have issued any decision or imposed sentence either to give an advantage to, or to create a disadvantage for, any political party and or any candidate for any office,” Merchan wrote.

Trump expressed appreciation for the language Merchan used in delaying his sentencing, noting that it will only commence “if necessary”.

“I greatly appreciate the words in the letter today from the judge. He said ‘if necessary’, being utilised in the decision, because there should be no ‘if necessary’. This case should rightfully be terminated immediately,” Trump said during remarks to the Fraternal Order of Police in North Carolina.

The former President also falsely said that the sentencing was “postponed” because he “did nothing wrong”.

Former U.S. President Donald Trump and Republican vice presidential candidate J.D. Vance gesture during the Republican National Convention in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. (Xinhua/Wu Xiaoling/IANS)

In addition to pushing back the sentencing until November 26, Merchan wrote that he would decide on Trump’s motion to vacate the verdict because of the Supreme Court’s immunity decision on November 12, which is also after the election, CNN reported.

Merchan wrote in his letter that the Supreme Court “rendered a historic and intervening decision” with its immunity ruling.

Trump campaign spokesperson Steven Cheung responded to the decision, saying, “There should be no sentencing in the Manhattan DA’s election interference witch hunt.”

“As mandated by the US Supreme Court, this case, along with all the other Harris-Biden hoaxes, should be dismissed,” Cheung said.

A spokesperson for Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg said in a statement: “A jury of 12 New Yorkers swiftly and unanimously convicted Donald Trump of 34 felony counts. The Manhattan D.A.’s Office stands ready for sentencing on the new date set by the court.”

The district attorney’s office did not oppose delaying Trump’s sentence, which Merchan cited in his decision on Friday.

The decision to push back the sentencing until after the November 5 election marks yet another delay that’s been a fixture in all of Trump’s criminal cases since he was indicted four times — in New York, Florida, Washington, DC and Georgia — in 2023.

The Florida classified documents case was dismissed by the judge in July — though the special counsel is appealing that decision — while the other two January 6-related cases are in limbo and won’t move forward before the election.

The only indictment that went to trial this year was the New York hush money case that ended in the May guilty verdict. Now the sentencing in that trial — with the question looming about whether a jail sentence will be imposed — won’t occur until after the election, if it happens at all.

Merchan acknowledged the historic nature of Trump’s hush money trial in his decision to push back the former President’s sentencing until after the election.

“This matter is one that stands alone, in a unique place in this Nation’s history, and this Court has presided over it since its inception — from arraignment to jury verdict and a plentitude of motions and other matters in-between. Were this Court to decide, after careful consideration of the Supreme Court’s decision in Trump, that this case should proceed, it will be faced with one of the most critical and difficult decisions a trial court judge faces — the sentencing of a defendant found guilty of crimes by a unanimous jury of his peers,” Merchan wrote.

“The members of this jury served diligently on this case, and their verdict must be respected and addressed in a manner that is not diluted by the enormity of the upcoming presidential election,” he continued.

“Likewise, if one is necessary, the Defendant has the right to a sentencing hearing that respects and protects his constitutional rights.”

This is the second time that Merchan has pushed back sentencing in the case.

Merchan delayed his initial July sentencing by two months after Trump’s lawyers asked Merchan to vacate the guilty verdict in light of the Supreme Court’s ruling on presidential immunity.

Last week, Trump sought to move the state case into federal court, citing the Supreme Court’s decision this summer on presidential immunity, but a federal judge quickly denied the request day slater without considering further arguments from Trump or the Manhattan District Attorney. Trump’s lawyers are appealing that ruling.

After filing that federal petition, Trump’s legal team also asked Merchan to let that litigation play out in federal court and refrain from issuing a decision over presidential immunity.

Merchan noted the attempts to move the case to federal court in his letter on Friday.

Trump’s lawyers have argued that the indictment should be dismissed or at least his conviction should be vacated because the Supreme Court’s ruling on presidential immunity means that certain evidence from the trial, such as the testimony of former White House aide Hope Hicks and tweets Trump sent while in office, should not have come before the jury.

Prosecutors have responded the conviction should stand and that the evidence presented at trial was “overwhelming”.

Merchan had said he would rule on the immunity question on September 16. He had planned to sentence Trump, if necessary, two days later.

But Trump’s lawyers asked Merchan to push that date back until after the election, arguing in part that they wouldn’t have enough time to appeal the judge’s decision. Prosecutors wrote in response that they would defer to Merchan on the scheduling.

The delay means that Trump’s criminal conviction — which dominated both Trump’s time and the news cycle during the spring – won’t return to the forefront of the presidential campaign during the final weeks of the race. It also could mean that the election will not interfere with any sentence that Merchan might impose.

Trump could be sentenced to as much as four years of prison time, but Merchan is not required to sentence Trump to prison, and he could choose to impose a lesser sentence, such as probation, home confinement, community service or a fine.

ALSO READ: Trump pushes high tariffs, onshoring; India could face impact

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Israeli Army Withdraws From Jenin

Israeli forces caused significant damage to infrastructure and residential buildings, leading to power, communication, and internet outages in large areas of the city

 The Israeli army withdrew from the West Bank city of Jenin after a 10-day operation that left 21 people dead, according to Palestinian and Israeli sources.

During the operation, Israeli forces caused significant damage to infrastructure and residential buildings, leading to power, communication, and internet outages in large areas of the city, Palestinian security sources said on Friday.

The Palestinian Civil Defence announced that more than 25 km of streets and neighbourhoods in Jenin city and its camp were completely destroyed by the army’s operation, according to initial damage assessments, Xinhua news agency reported.

Meanwhile, Israeli public broadcaster Kan reported that the Army had eliminated “terrorists” during the operation, arresting more than 40 suspects, seizing 24 weapons, and destroying dozens of explosive devices.

However, Israeli security sources told the broadcaster that the operation is not over, and “we will soon return to Jenin and other places”.

On Thursday, the Ramallah-based Palestinian Health Ministry said that 39 Palestinians had been killed and about 150 others injured in the West Bank since the start of the Israeli military operation on August 28.

The operation, which Israeli military officials said targeted militants in Jenin, Tulkarem and the Al-Faraa refugee camp, is said to be the largest Israeli operation in the West Bank since the war between Israel and Hamas began.

The government-run Palestine News Agency, citing the Palestinian Health Ministry, said that 21 Palestinians had been killed as a result of the assault which also caused extensive damage to the city of Jenin.

The IDF, posting on X on Friday, said it had conducted a counterterrorism operation overnight in the West Bank killing Muhammad Zakaria Zubeidi, who is the son of prominent jailed militant Zakaria Zubeidi, the Jenin chief of the Al-Aqsa Martyrs’ Brigades, a coalition of Palestinian armed groups in the West Bank.

Jenin, originally a refugee camp built to house Palestinians who fled their homes during the war following the creation of Israel in 1948, has seen its water and electricity services cut as a result of the raid.