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Jon Stewart on Trump’s Gatsby party: ‘The theme was apparently gross income inequality’

1 day ago
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Late-night hosts reacted to Donald Trump Great Gatsby-themed Halloween party held just hours before millions of Americans lost their food stamp benefits,On the Daily Show, Jon Stewart mocked House speaker Mike Johnson’s insistence that Trump is “desperate for Snap benefits to flow to the American people”, even as his administration let the largest food assistance program in the nation, supporting around 42 million Americans, lapse during the government shutdown,Stewart played a clip of Johnson assuring that Trump “is a big-hearted president”,“Is he? Big-hearted? Loves us?” Stewart replied,“Because again, and maybe I’m misinterpreting it, but he did just recently dump diarrhea on all of us.

” Stewart then played Trump’s infamous AI video in which he is depicted dumping feces on New York protesters.“He cares a lot about the American people,” Stewart deadpanned.“Maybe that is out of love.I don’t know.”Even worse, Trump held a Great Gatsby-themed Halloween party at Mar-a-Lago this weekend, hours before the Snap benefits expired.

The party “once and for all shows that Donald Trump doesn’t give a fuck about even looking like he gives a fuck at all”, Stewart declared,“On the very night Snap benefits ended, Trump threw a Great Gatsby-themed ode to decadence and hedonism that even Jeffrey Epstein would have thought was a little over the top,“ he continued,“There were dancers, costumes, champagne – a wonderful celebration where the theme was apparently gross income inequality,“The slogan of the party, as people were losing their food benefits was, I shit you not, ‘a little party never killed nobody,’” he fumed,“Did you even read the Great Gatsby?! Spoiler alert, the party killed somebody! Two-bodies! How do you not know that? I knew that, and I’ve only read the Cliff notes.

“Usually at a time of national suffering, there’s a generally accepted principle in leadership that you at least pretend to feel the pain of the people that you represent,” he added.“But this president seems to go out of his way to let struggling Americans know that he is doing very well.”Stewart pointed to Trump’s $300m gilded ballroom project, as yet another example of his lack of pretense.“Your premiums may be going up, tariffs may be shutting down your small businesses, you may be losing your food assistance, but it’ll all OK because Donald Trump is building a ballroom that looks like the inside of Marie Antoinette’s vagina,” he joked.“There are so many bad parts of a government shutdown, but the worst so far is that as of this weekend, nearly 42 million Americans have lost their food stamp benefits,” said Stephen Colbert on the Late Show on the 34th day of the government shutdown, with no end in sight.

“No one should understand the importance of daily meals more than Donald Trump,” he added.“Hungry is his favorite emotion.It’s his whole thing – Trump and food is like JFK and sex, or Thomas Jefferson and sex, or Lincoln and his hat, which he had sex with.”Last week, the Trump administration claimed that it couldn’t use US Department of Agriculture emergency funds for Snap benefits.But on Friday, a federal judge directed the administration to use them anyway for the month of November.

“Of course, like all good news during the Trump administration, he managed to make it bad,” said Colbert, as the administration has since said that it will only partially fund Snap, and it could take months because it declined to dip into other contingency pots to find the full $8bn required to fund the program.“So Trump and his people are sitting on a pile of money while American children go hungry, just so they can put pressure on Democrats,” Colbert summarized.On Jimmy Kimmel Live!, the host noted that Trump’s “disapproval rating” is 63%.“And what do you do when you have a terrible approval rating? You throw the most ill-timed, tone-deaf Halloween party imaginable,” he said of Trump’s Gatsby bash – “a theme you would select only if you’ve never read the Great Gatsby.“You know, throwing a party at your private golf club where the theme is rich white people hours before millions of Americans are set to lose their food assistance might be the Trumpiest Trump move of all time,” he said.

“It felt like the last big bash before the Epstein files come out,”Nevertheless, Trump wrote on Truth Social: “I do NOT want Americans to go hungry just because the Radical Democrats refuse to do the right thing and REOPEN THE GOVERNMENT,”“That’s true, he doesn’t want them to go hungry,” Kimmel responded,“He just wants them to lose their health insurance,He wants them to eat, but health insurance? No.

”And on Late Night, Seth Meyers touched on Trump’s redecoration of a White House bathroom to befit his garish style – all white marble, with gold finishes.Trump called the changes “very appropriate for the time of Abraham Lincoln”.“I would love to know how Trump came to the conclusion that the changes were ‘appropriate for the time of Lincoln’,” Meyers laughed.“Does he think Lincoln was a high-roller who loved gold trash cans? Every story I’ve heard about Lincoln is like ‘he did his homework with a lump of coal on the back of a shovel in the pouring rain.’ Or ‘did you know he put himself through law school by eating mud for eight cents a day?’ But to hear Trump talk, Lincoln was like, what, best friends with Hugh Hefner?”Trump has also posted repeatedly about the renovation on Truth Social.

“Look, it’s never normal to obsess over a new bathroom, but it’s especially crazy to obsess over a luxurious new bathroom right as tens of millions of Americans are facing uncertainty over food assistance,” said Meyers.“What we should be talking about instead is the government shutdown you’re not solving or the food assistance you refuse to fund,” he added.“Working families are struggling while you renovate your bathroom or you build your ballroom, and that’s why your approval ratings are in the toilet.”
societySee all
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End-of-life care needs a fundamental review, not just more funding | Letters

Your editorial (29 October) highlights the urgent need for better funding for end-of-life care. As a physician and academic who has worked in this area for 40 years, I would like to raise three underlying issues.First, it implies that hospices are the only model for delivering good end-of-life care. It is arguable that in Britain we have overrelied on the charitable sector. We now have NHS-funded hospital palliative care teams who can provide excellent care when patients are coming to the end of life but still needing specialist treatments – which very often hospices cannot or will not offer

about 17 hours ago
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Almost 30% of people abused as children, England and Wales data shows

Nearly a third of women in England and Wales were abused as a child, along with just over a quarter of men, according to new figures which for the first time include emotional, physical or sexual abuse as well as neglect.The data from the Office for National Statistics (ONS) estimates 31.5% of women and 26.4% of men experienced some form of abuse as a child, a total of 13.6 million – almost three in 10 – people

about 18 hours ago
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UK to launch pilot scheme that helps homeless people access banking

Homeless people will for the first time be able to open accounts with the UK’s five biggest banks, in a pilot scheme marking the launch of the government’s financial inclusion strategy.The Treasury said its new national plan was meant to ensure financial services “worked for everyone”, as it also revealed programmes that could help rebuild the credit scores of domestic abuse victims, support families with no savings and roll out financial education in primary schools across the UK.One of the key schemes will see the high street lenders Lloyds, NatWest, Barclays, Nationwide and Santander waive the need for people to have a fixed address in order to open a bank account. The move will help vulnerable people avoid the chicken-and-egg problem of needing a bank account to apply for work and rental accommodation across the UK.It will involve partnerships with the homelessness charity Shelter, which will vouch for prospective customers based on information on the charity’s database, while accompanying individuals to face-to-face meetings at a local bank branch

1 day ago
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MPs ask HMRC to explain child benefit error that froze payments to parents

MPs are demanding answers from HMRC over a child benefit error in which payments to 23,500 families were stopped as part of an anti-fraud crackdown.Meg Hillier, a Labour MP and chair of the House of Commons Treasury select committee, has written to the permanent secretary of HMRC asking who made the decisions, why they were made and whether compensation would be offered to the victims.The letter follows a series of reports by the Guardian and investigative website the Detail on families who had been wrongly suspected of fraud after data showed they had taken flights out of the country but not returned.They received letters demanding they answer 73 questions and provide a mountain of documentation including bank statements, GP and school records on the back of information the Home Office provided.But the Home Office data was incomplete and did not record return journeys of parents, leading HMRC to believe the families had emigrated and were continuing to collect child benefit illegally

1 day ago
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NHS staff bearing brunt as ‘ugly’ racism of 70s and 80s returns, says Streeting

An “ugly” racism reminiscent of the 1970s and 1980s has become worryingly commonplace again in modern Britain and NHS staff are bearing the brunt of it, Wes Streeting has warned.Incidents of verbal and physical abuse based on people’s skin colour now happen so often that it has become “socially acceptable to be racist”, the health secretary said.In a joint interview with the Guardian alongside the NHS England chief executive, Jim Mackey, Streeting told how he has been “shocked” hearing NHS staff, especially those working in A&E, recount growing levels of harassment, aggression and violence when their care gets delayed.Advising the public to brace themselves for the NHS in England getting overwhelmed in the coming weeks because of a triple whammy of flu, Covid and strike action by doctors as winter descends, he admitted that patients would be put in danger as a result of becoming stuck on trolleys or in the back of ambulances – situations that are known to heighten the risk of harm and death.“Even if you’ve got a long wait, which I know is frustrating, or you feel like you’ve been sent from pillar to post, which sadly does happen, there’s no excuse for taking that out on staff,” Streeting said

1 day ago
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A precious web of care still exists | Letters

My long-term partner of 30 years, Megan Davies, died from lung cancer on 31 October.While I agree that there is much to be done to improve end-of-life care (Editorial, 29 October; Letters, 2 November), in Megan’s case, she was able to stay at home and enjoy many of the things she liked until a final two-day stay in hospital, where she also received good care.This was achieved by a combination of support from family, friends and her local GP, together with targeted assistance from hospice-based palliative care nurses.It was not, of course, perfect and sometimes required chasing up treatment and medication, but that web of care seems to me an important matter, if, of course, it can be achieved with a stretched NHS and still austere Britain.Keith FlettTottenham, London Have an opinion on anything you’ve read in the Guardian today? Please email us your letter and it will be considered for publication in our letters section

1 day ago
politicsSee all
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Miscounting to six costs Tory stand-in his gotcha against poppy-shock Lammy | John Crace

about 17 hours ago
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Letter: Prunella Scales obituary

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Reeves refuses to say she will stick to manifesto pledge on tax rises and insists she must face world ‘as it is’ – as it happened

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Reeves wants to talk about the budget, but she’s taken a vow of white noise | John Crace

2 days ago
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French taxi driver cleared of stealing from David Lammy after fare dispute

3 days ago
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Starmer was briefed on Mandelson’s Epstein links before appointing him, say civil servants

3 days ago