Close X
Saturday, January 11, 2025
ADVT 
International

Trump is named Time's Person of the Year and rings the New York Stock Exchange's opening bell

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 12 Dec, 2024 11:06 AM
  • Trump is named Time's Person of the Year and rings the New York Stock Exchange's opening bell

NEW YORK (AP) — President-elect Donald Trump rang the opening bell Thursday at the New York Stock Exchange after being recognized for the second time by Time magazine as its person of the year.

The honors for the businessman-turned-politician are a measure of Trump's remarkable comeback from an ostracized former president who refused to accept his election loss four years ago to a president-elect who won the White House decisively in November.

Before Trump rang the opening bell at 9:30 a.m., a first for the native New Yorker, he spoke at the exchange and called it “a tremendous honor.”

Time magazine, getting this honor for the second time, I think I like it better this time actually,” he said.

Trump, accompanied by his wife, Melania Trump, daughters Ivanka and Tiffany and Vice President-elect JD Vance, grinned as people chanted “USA” before he opened the trading day. He then raised his fist.

In his remarks, he promoted some of the people he has named to his incoming administration, including Treasury pick Scott Bessent, and some of his policies, including a promise that the federal government will expedite permits for projects and construction worth more than $1 billion.

“I think we’re going to have a tremendous run. We have to straighten out some problems, some big problems in the world,” he said.

Sam Jacobs, the magazine's editor in chief, made the announcement on NBC's “Today” show, saying Trump was someone who “for better or for worse, had the most influence on the news in 2024.” Trump was Time’s Person of the Year in 2016, when he was first elected to the White House.

“This is someone who made an historic comeback, who reshaped the American presidency and who’s reordering American politics," Jacobs said.

In an interview with the magazine that was published Thursday, Trump spoke about his final campaign blitz and election win.

“I called it ‘72 Days of Fury,’” Trump said. “We hit the nerve of the country. The country was angry.”

As Trump marked the ceremonial start of the day’s trading, the magazine cover featuring him was projected onto a wall at the NYSE. He was flanked by family and members of his incoming administration while his favored walk-on song, “God Bless the U.S.A.,” played. Afterward, he returned to his home in Florida.

The NYSE regularly invites celebrities and business leaders to participate in the bell-ringing, which has become a marker of culture and politics.

Trump has long had a fascination with being on the cover of Time, where he first made an appearance in 1989. He has falsely claimed to hold the record for cover appearances, and The Washington Post reported in 2017 that Trump had a fake picture of himself on the cover of the magazine hanging in several of his golf country clubs.

Earlier this year, Trump sat for interviews with the magazine for a story that ran in April. Time’s billionaire owner, Salesforce CEO Marc Benioff, criticized Harris for not granting the magazine an interview during her campaign with Trump.

In his latest interview, Trump reaffirmed plans to pardon most of those convicted in the riot at the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021. “It’s going to start in the first hour,” he said of the pardons.

He said he would not ask members of his administration to sign a loyalty pledge. “I think I will be able to, for the most part, determine who’s loyal,” he said. But he said he will fire anyone who doesn’t follow his policies.

The incoming president also reflected on the future of his “Make America Great Again” political movement.

"I hope when I leave office, I’ll be able to also leave people that are extremely competent and get it. And we do have those people. We have far more than you think," he said.

Trump said some of those people include family members and that some of his children would do well in politics. He suggested that daughter-in-law Lara Trump, who recently announced she is stepping down from her role as co-chair of the Republican National Committee, could be a part of his political dynasty.

“I think there could be, yeah. I see the people we’re talking about. Lara has been amazing. Look, she was the head of the Republican Party,” he said.

With Sen. Marco Rubio, R-Fla., awaiting confirmation to be secretary of state, Lara Trump has said serving in the Senate is “something I would seriously consider.”

Trump crafted his image as a wealthy real estate developer, which he played up as the star of the TV reality show “The Apprentice” and during his presidential campaign. He won the election in part by channeling Americans' anxieties about the economy’s ability to provide for the middle class.

In an interview on CNBC after he rang the NYSE bell, Trumplikened the broad cuts to the federal workforce that he and his advisers have telegraphed to the TV firings he made of contestants.

“We're going to be doing the same thing, I can tell you. Unfortunately, there's too many of them," Trump said.

Afterward, he walked the floor of the exchange and shook hands with traders.

MORE International ARTICLES

Biden to finally visit Canada March 23-24

Biden to finally visit Canada March 23-24
The two leaders will discuss ongoing upgrades to the aging, jointly led Norad continental defence system, which came under heavy scrutiny last month when a Chinese surveillance balloon drifted through U.S. and Canadian airspace.

Biden to finally visit Canada March 23-24

Indian-American pleads guilty in $20 mn fraud scheme

Indian-American pleads guilty in $20 mn fraud scheme
Nikesh Ajay Patel of Florida was charged with 13 counts, including one count of conspiracy to commit wire fraud, three counts of wire fraud, one count of conspiracy to commit money laundering, and eight counts of money laundering.

Indian-American pleads guilty in $20 mn fraud scheme

Indian-origin woman killed, daughter hurt in small plane crash in US

Indian-origin woman killed, daughter hurt in small plane crash in US
Roma Gupta, 63, was killed on Sunday on Long Island when the plane, a four-seater single-engine Piper Cherokee, went down in flames as it was returning to the Republic Airport on Long Island from where it had also taken off. Her daughter Reeva Gupta, 33, and the pilot are in hospital with severe burns. 

Indian-origin woman killed, daughter hurt in small plane crash in US

Cap reached for H-2B visas for second half of FY 2023

Cap reached for H-2B visas for second half of FY 2023
The US Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) said February 27 was the final receipt date for new cap-subject H-2B worker petitions requesting an employment start date on or after April 1 and before October 1.

Cap reached for H-2B visas for second half of FY 2023

Majority of voters not keen on Indian-origin Harris as president: Poll

Majority of voters not keen on Indian-origin Harris as president: Poll
Between February 14 and 20, a poll conducted by the Berkeley Institute of Government Studies and The Los Angeles Times asked 7,512 registered voters about Harris running for President if Biden decided not to seek a second term. It found that 59 per cent of registered voters were hesitant about Harris seeking the country's highest office.

Majority of voters not keen on Indian-origin Harris as president: Poll

FTX fraud: Indian-origin Nishad Singh pleads guilty to criminal charges

FTX fraud: Indian-origin Nishad Singh pleads guilty to criminal charges
Singh pleaded guilty to six conspiracy charges, including conspiracy to commit wire fraud, conspiracy to commit money laundering and conspiracy to violate federal campaign finance laws. The US Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) charged Singh for his role in a multi-year scheme to defraud equity investors in FTX.

FTX fraud: Indian-origin Nishad Singh pleads guilty to criminal charges