The Ledes

Tuesday, October 8, 2024

The New York Times is live-updating developments Tuesday as powerful Hurricane Milton moves through the Gulf of Mexico toward Central Florida.

New York Times: Cissy Houston, a Grammy Award-winning soul and gospel star who helped shepherd her daughter Whitney Houston to superstardom, died on Monday at her home in Newark. She was 91.”

The Wires
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The Ledes

Monday, October 7, 2024

Weather Channel: “H​urricane Milton has rapidly intensified into a Category 3 and hurricane and storm surge watches are now posted along Florida's western Gulf Coast, where the storm poses threats of life-threatening storm surge, destructive winds and flooding rainfall by midweek. 'Milton will be a historic storm for the west coast of Florida,' the National Weather Service in Tampa Bay said in a briefing Monday morning.” ~~~

     ~~~ New York Times live updates are here for what is now a Cat 5 hurricane. 

CNN: “This year’s Nobel Prize in physiology or medicine has been awarded to Victor Ambros and Gary Ruvkun for their work on the discovery of microRNA, a fundamental principle governing how gene activity is regulated. Their research revealed how genes give rise to different cells within the human body, a process known as gene regulation. Gene regulation by microRNA – a family of molecules that helps cells control the sort of proteins they make – ... was first revealed by Ambros and Ruvkun. The Nobel Prize committee announced the prestigious honor ... in Sweden on Monday.... Ambros, a professor of natural science at the University of Massachusetts Medical School, conducted the research that earned him the prize at Harvard University. Ruvkun conducted his research at Massachusetts General Hospital, and is a professor of genetics at Harvard Medical School.”

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Public Service Announcement

Washington Post: "Americans can again order free rapid coronavirus tests by mail, the Biden administration announced Thursday. People can request four free at-home tests per household through covidtests.gov. They will begin shipping Monday. The move comes ahead of an expected winter wave of coronavirus cases. The September revival of the free testing program is in line with the Biden administration’s strategy to respond to the coronavirus as part of a broader public health campaign to protect Americans from respiratory viruses, including influenza and respiratory syncytial virus (RSV), that surge every fall and winter. But free tests were not mailed during the summer wave, which wastewater surveillance data shows is now receding."

Washington Post: “Comedy news outlet the Onion — reinvigorated by new ownership over this year — is bringing back its once-popular video parodies of cable news. But this time, there’s someone with real news anchor experience in the chair. When the first episodes appear online Monday, former WAMU and MSNBC host Joshua Johnson will be the face of the resurrected 'Onion News Network.' Playing an ONN anchor character named Dwight Richmond, Johnson says he’s bringing a real anchor’s sense of clarity — and self-importance — to the job. 'If ONN is anything, it’s a news organization that is so unaware of its own ridiculousness that it has the confidence of a serial killer,' says Johnson, 44.” ~~~

     ~~~ Marie: I'll be darned if I can figured out how to watch ONN. If anybody knows, do tell. Thanks.

Washington Post: “First came the surprising discovery that Earth’s atmosphere is leaking. But for roughly 60 years, the reason remained a mystery. Since the late 1960s, satellites over the poles detected an extremely fast flow of particles escaping into space — at speeds of 20 kilometers per second. Scientists suspected that gravity and the magnetic field alone could not fully explain the stream. There had to be another source creating this leaky faucet. It turns out the mysterious force is a previously undiscovered global electric field, a recent study found. The field is only about the strength of a watch battery — but it’s enough to thrust lighter ions from our atmosphere into space. It’s also generated unlike other electric fields on Earth. This newly discovered aspect of our planet provides clues about the evolution of our atmosphere, perhaps explaining why Earth is habitable. The electric field is 'an agent of chaos,' said Glyn Collinson, a NASA rocket scientist and lead author of the study. 'It undoes gravity.... Without it, Earth would be very different.'”

The New York Times lists Emmy winners. The AP has an overview story here.

New York Times: “Hvaldimir, a beluga whale who had captured the public’s imagination since 2019 after he was spotted wearing a harness seemingly designed for a camera, was found dead on Saturday in Norway, according to a nonprofit that worked to protect the whale.... [Hvaldimir] was wearing a harness that identified it as “equipment” from St. Petersburg. There also appeared to be a camera mount. Some wondered if the whale was on a Russian reconnaissance mission. Russia has never claimed ownership of the whale. If Hvaldimir was a spy, he was an exceptionally friendly one. The whale showed signs of domestication, and was comfortable around people. He remained in busier waters than are typical for belugas....” ~~~

     ~~~ Marie: Oh, Lord, do not let Bobby Kennedy, Jr., near that carcass. ~~~

     ~~~ AP Update: “There’s no evidence that a well-known beluga whale that lived off Norway’s coast and whose harness ignited speculation it was a Russian spy was shot to death last month as claimed by animal rights groups, Norwegian police said Monday.... Police said that the Norwegian Veterinary Institute conducted a preliminary autopsy on the animal, which was become known as 'Hvaldimir,' combining the Norwegian word for whale — hval — and the first name of Russian President Vladimir Putin. 'There are no findings from the autopsy that indicate that Hvaldimir has been shot,' police said in a statement.”

New York Times: Botswana's “President Mokgweetsi Masisi grinned as he lifted the diamond, a 2,492-carat stone that is the biggest diamond unearthed in more than a century and the second-largest ever found, according to the Vancouver-based mining operator Lucara, which owns the mine where it was found. This exceptional discovery could bring back the luster of the natural diamond mining industry, mining companies and experts say. The diamond was discovered in the same relatively small mine in northeastern Botswana that has produced several of the largest such stones in living memory. Such gemstones typically surface as a result of volcanic activity.... The diamond will likely sell in the range of tens of millions of dollars....”

Click on photo to enlarge.

~~~ Guardian: "On a distant reef 16,000km from Paris, surfer Gabriel Medina has given Olympic viewers one of the most memorable images of the Games yet, with an airborne celebration so well poised it looked too good to be true. The Brazilian took off a thundering wave at Teahupo’o in Tahiti on Monday, emerging from a barrelling section before soaring into the air and appearing to settle on a Pacific cloud, pointing to the sky with biblical serenity, his movements mirrored precisely by his surfboard. The shot was taken by Agence France-Presse photographer Jérôme Brouillet, who said “the conditions were perfect, the waves were taller than we expected”. He took the photo while aboard a boat nearby, capturing the surreal image with such accuracy that at first some suspected Photoshop or AI." 

Washington Post: “'Mary Cassatt at Work' is a large and mostly satisfying exhibition devoted to the career of the great American artist beloved for her sensitive and often sentimental views of family life. The 'at work' in the title of the Philadelphia Museum of Art show references the curators’ interest in Cassatt’s pioneering effort to establish herself as a professional artist within a male-dominated field. Throughout the show, which includes some 130 paintings, pastels, prints and drawings, the wall text and the art on view stresses Cassatt’s fixation on art as a career rather than a pastime.... Mary Cassatt at Work is on view at the Philadelphia Museum of Art through Sept. 8. philamuseum.org

New York Times: “Bob Newhart, who died on Thursday at the age of 94, has been such a beloved giant of popular culture for so long that it’s easy to forget how unlikely it was that he became one of the founding fathers of stand-up comedy. Before basically inventing the hit stand-up special, with the 1960 Grammy-winning album 'The Button-Down Mind of Bob Newhart' — that doesn’t even count his pay-per-view event broadcast on Canadian television that some cite as the first filmed special — he was a soft-spoken accountant who had never done a set in a nightclub. That he made a classic with so little preparation is one of the great miracles in the history of comedy.... Bob Newhart holds up. In fact, it’s hard to think of a stand-up from that era who is a better argument against the commonplace idea that comedy does not age well.”

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Publisher & Editor: Marie Burns


Saturday
Oct052019

The Commentariat -- October 6, 2019

Late Morning Update:

Matt Zapotosky, et al., of the Washington Post: "Those involved in the FBI investigation [of the origins into possible coordination between the Trump campaign & Russia] said they are mystified by the attorney general's activities and interest in the professor, Joseph Mifsud, and they suspect that [AG Bill] Barr might be using Justice Department resources to validate conjecture that Mifsud was deployed against a Trump adviser by Western intelligence to manufacture a basis to investigate the campaign.... Barr's inquiry has heartened Trump and his conservative allies.... Barr has long harbored suspicions about the Russia probe.... The unproven theory about Mifsud is that the Maltese professor was working to set up the Trump campaign." See also the NYT report, linked below, on Barr's investigation of Trump's conspiracy theories.

Tim Hains of Real Clear Politics: "During a heated interview on Sunday's 'Meet The Press,' Republican Senator Ron Johnson accused former members of the FBI and CIA of conspiring to frame President Trump. Host Chuck Todd fired back by calling Johnson's accusations 'Fox News conspiracy propaganda stuff.' [There follwed a contentious back & forth, with Todd trying to get Johnson to answer his questions about Ukraine.]... 'So do you not trust the FBI? Do you not trust the CIA?' Todd asked. Johnson replied: 'No, no, I don't. Absolutely not. After Peter Strzok and Lisa Page, after James Comey?!' 'I'm sorry that you chose to come on this way, senator,' Chuck Todd said as he ended the interview." Includes video.

~~~~~~~~~~

Corruption Corroboration. Max Burman of NBC News: "... a second whistleblower has now come forward with information. 'I can confirm that my firm and my team represent multiple whistleblowers in connection to the underlying August 12, 2019, disclosure to the Intelligence Community Inspector General,' attorney Andrew Bakaj told NBC News." ~~~

I can confirm this report of a second #whistleblower being represented by our legal team. They also made a protected disclosure under the law and cannot be retaliated against. This WBer has first hand knowledge. -- Mark Zaid, in a tweet @9:37 am ET ~~~

~~~ James Meek & Anne Flaherty of ABC News: "Mark Zaid, the attorney representing the whistleblower who sounded the alarm on ... Donald Trump's dealings with Ukraine..., tells ABC News that he is now representing a second whistleblower who has spoken with the inspector general.... While this second official has spoken with the IG -- the internal watchdog office created to handle complaints -- this person has not communicated yet with the congressional committees conducting the investigation. The New York Times on Friday cited anonymous sources in reporting that a second intelligence official was weighing whether to file his own former complaint and testify to Congress." Mrs. McC Note: Zaid & Bakaj are working together "in conjunction with Whistleblower Aid, a nonprofit that exists to support and assist whistleblowers." ~~~

~~~ Annie Karni of the New York Times: "The New York Times reported on Friday that an intelligence official with more direct knowledge of Mr. Trump's dealing with Ukraine than the first whistle-blower ... was weighing whether to come forward. The second official was among those interviewed by the intelligence community inspector general to corroborate the allegations of the original whistle-blower, one of the people briefed on the matter said. The new whistle-blower matches the description of the official that The Times reported on last week. But Mr. Stephanapoulos said that Mark Zaid, one of the lawyers representing the whistle-blower, did not know whether the individual was the same person."

Per @maggieNYT [Maggie Haberman], 'no one from the White House' is booked on the Sunday shows this week. Not for lack of trying. 'And no one in House or Senate GOP leadership,' @JakeTapper [of CNN] adds. Again, not for lack of trying. -- Brian Stelter of CNN, in a tweet

Rosalind Helderman of the Washington Post: "Since the revelation of an explosive whistleblower complaint that sparked an impeachment crisis for President Trump, he and his Republican allies have coalesced around a central defense: The document was based on secondhand information, mere hearsay riddled with inaccuracies.... Independent evidence now supports the central elements laid out in the seven-page document. Even if they disregarded the complaint, legal experts said lawmakers have obtained dramatic testimony and documents that provide ammunition for the whistleblower's core assertion: that the president of the United States used 'the power of his office to solicit interference from a foreign country in the 2020 U.S. election.'... In the complaint, the whistleblower described other internal government deliberations that were not public at the time the document was filed.... Despite the growing body of evidence supporting the whistleblower's factual narration, Trump has continued to maintain that the description in the complaint is false or unsubstantiated. 'The so-called Whistleblower's account of my perfect phone call is "way off," not even close,' Trump tweeted Saturday morning, adding that Democratic leaders 'never thought I would release the transcript of the call. Got them by surprise, they got caught. This is a fraud against the American people!'" Helderman compares some of the whistleblower's assertions to facts that later became public.

It's Rick Perry's Fault. Alayna Treene & Jonathan Swan of Axios: "President Trump told House Republicans that he made his now infamous phone call to Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky at the urging of Energy Secretary Rick Perry -- a call Trump claimed he didn't even want to make. Trump made these comments during a conference call with House members on Friday, according to 3 sources on the call.... Text messages released this week between Trump administration officials and Andrey Yermak, a top aide to Zelensky, suggest that Trump's personal lawyer, Rudy Giuliani, was a primary advocate for arranging the call. There is no mention in the text messages of Perry playing a role in making this call happen.... Perry's spokeswoman, Shaylyn Hynes, told Axios: 'Secretary Perry absolutely supported and encouraged the president to speak to the new president of Ukraine to discuss matters related to their energy security and economic development.'" ~~~

     ~~~ The Perils of Pence & Perry. Mrs. McCrabbie: As many others have pointed out, Trump will besmirch anyone and everyone it is tangentially plausible (or even implausible) to blame for his "perfect" impeachable shakedown of Zelensky. He had already involved pence & Perry in his own misadventures in Ukraine; now he's tying them to the tracks & running them over with the Trump train. ~~~

     ~~~ Update. Tom Boddiger of Splinter: "This might be Donald Trump's most comedic excuse yet for betraying his oath of office as president of the United States. We all knew Trump couldn't withstand the heat of an impeachment inquiry by Congress without throwing someone under the bus. In fact, he's already blurted out the vice president's involvement, practically ensuring that lawmakers take a hard look at Mike Pence. But it also appears that just a day after Energy Secretary Rick Perry tried to tiptoe out the back door, Trump threw a proverbial ax at the center of his back. Unfortunately, no one feels the least bit sorry about any of this, true or not." ~~~

~~~ Ben Lefebvre & Daniel Lippman of Politico: "Energy Secretary Rick Perry urged Ukraine's president to root out corruption and pushed the new government for changes at its state-run oil and gas company, people familiar with his work said Friday -- indications that he was more deeply involved than previously known in ... Donald Trump's efforts to pressure officials in Kiev.... Perry..., is expected to resign next month, attended [Ukraine President] Zelensky's May inauguration in Kiev in place of Vice President Mike Pence. In addition, he was one of the administration's 'three amigos' on Ukrainian policy, along with Kurt Volker, the U.S. special representative for the Ukraine conflict, and Gordon Sondland, the U.S. ambassador to the European Union, as Sondland described their relationship in a July broadcast interview." Mrs. McC: It appears from the report that Perry was pushing the new Ukraine government to put his (Perry's) friends on the board of Naftogaz, Ukraine's state-owned natural gas company. "Two long-time energy executives based in Perry's home state of Texas were among those under consideration for that role, one source familiar with the administration's dealings with the company said." (Also linked yesterday afternoon.) ~~~

     ~~~ AND you know there has to be something in this for the Trump Crime Family: "Among Perry's numerous visits with Zelenksy and other Ukraine officials in the past year was a dinner with Zelensky, Jared Kushner and other officials in June, according to a government photo taken by the U.S. of the event." (Also linked yesterday afternoon.)

Keeping It Classy. Somebody please wake up Mitt Romney and tell him that my conversation with the Ukrainian President was a congenial and very appropriate one, and my statement on China pertained to corruption, not politics. If Mitt worked this hard on Obama, he could have won. Sadly, he choked! Mitt Romney never knew how to win. He is a pompous 'ass' who has been fighting me from the beginning, except when he begged me for my endorsement for his Senate run (I gave it to him), and when he begged me to be Secretary of State (I didn't give it to him). He is so bad for R's! -- Donald Trump, in two tweets Saturday morning ~~~

~~~ Nuts AND Ignorant. Colby Itkowitz of the Washington Post: "Hours later, Trump hit Romney again, this time suggesting Utah voters regretted their choice and that Romney should be impeached. 'I'm hearing that the Great People of Utah are considering their vote for their Pompous Senator, Mitt Romney, to be a big mistake. I agree! He is a fool who is playing right into the hands of the Do Nothing Democrats! #IMPEACHMITTROMNEY,' Trump tweeted. Romney won his Senate seat in 2018, with 62.6 percent of the vote. It is not clear what Romney did in Trump's opinion to deserve impeachment other than condemn the behavior that led to an impeachment inquiry into the president. A U.S. senator cannot be impeached. Instead, the Constitution gives the House or Senate the power to expel one of its own by a two-thirds vote." Politico's story is here. ~~~

~~~ Nick Schroeder of the Bangor Daily News: "U.S. Sen. Susan Collins, R-Maine, joined two other GOP senators in criticizing the president this week after he publicly asked the Chinese government to investigate a political opponent while talking to reporters outside the White House this week. The Maine senator was unequivocal in her statements, which came after a firefighters memorial service in Augusta on Saturday morning, joining Mitt Romney, R-Utah, and Ben Sasse, R-Nevada, in breaking rank with GOP support for the president. 'I thought the president made a big mistake by asking China to get involved in investigating a political opponent,' Collins said. 'It's completely inappropriate.'... Collins also said that she was concerned that U.S. Rep. Adam Schiff, D-California, chair of the House Intelligence Committee, 'misrepresented and misled people about what was in the transcript in the call,' joining Republican efforts to discredit the congressman."

Mark Mazzetti & others of the New York Times on Bill Barr, International Sleuth: "Mr. Barr and a top federal prosecutor, John H. Durham, who is reviewing the origins of the Russia investigation, [link fixed] [traveled to Rome late last month seeking] evidence that might bolster a conspiracy theory long nurtured by President Trump: that some of America's closest allies plotted with his 'deep state' enemies in 2016 to try to prevent him from winning the presidency. Mr. Trump has embraced the theory in his interactions with world leaders since the days after the special counsel, Robert S. Mueller III, testified to lawmakers in July that his investigation found insufficient evidence to charge any Trump associates with conspiring with Russia to help subvert the election. An emboldened Mr. Trump — who could benefit politically if Mr. Durham were to unearth facts that undermined Mr. Mueller's investigation -- began pressing close allies to cooperate with the review.... Mr. Barr seems to have embraced his role, signaling that he has made the investigation a priority and is personally overseeing it." ~~~

     ~~~ Mrs. McCrabbie: So what we have for "governance" in this country is a globetrotting gang of crazy old men -- Trump, pence, Barr, Pompeo, Giuliani (Perry??), et al. -- prodding allies & enemies alike to manufacture fake evidence of paranoid conspiracy theories. It isn't the Zelensky call that's so shocking -- it's the whole operation. No wonder Trump thinks his Zelensky call was "perfect"; it was one tiny piece of his insane & costly political conspiracy operation.

Zachary Cohen & Caroline Kelly of CNN: "A House Foreign Affairs Committee aide told CNN that 'Secretary Pompeo has failed to meet the deadline to produce documents required by the subpoena. However, the State Department has contacted the Committees on this matter and we hope the Department will cooperate in full promptly. Apart from the outstanding subpoena, we look forward to hearing from Ambassadors Sondland and Yovanovitch next week.'" (Also linked yesterday afternoon.) ~~~

     ~~~ Update. Karen DeYoung, et al., of the Washington Post: "Secretary of State Mike Pompeo said Saturday that he had sent a response to the House committees seeking documents in their impeachment inquiry of President Trump, but congressional investigators are still waiting for their subpoena to be complied with.... At a news conference with the foreign minister of Greece, Pompeo said he had sent a letter to Capitol Hill as 'our initial response to the document request. We'll obviously do all the things we're required to do by law.'... Pompeo repeated charges made a week ago that the congressional inquiries have 'harassed and abused State Department employees' by contacting them directly and failing to go through proper channels to request both testimony and documents.... He also it was 'very reasonable' and 'our duty' to ask other governments to help investigate interference in the 2016 U.S. election, as Trump has." ~~~

     ~~~ AND Mike Pompeo, Professional Gaslighter. "Pompeo Defends Trump's Ukraine Conspiracy Theory." Lara James of the New York Times: "Secretary of State Mike Pompeo defiantly insisted on Saturday in Greece that the Trump administration was right to ask Ukrainian officials to investigate claims of election interference in the 2016 American presidential campaign, bolstering a widely debunked conspiracy theory that had already been dismissed by his own diplomatic envoy. In comments to journalists in Athens, where he was meeting with Greek leaders, Mr. Pompeo said it was the 'duty' of the Trump administration to pursue whether efforts to tamper in the United States election were rooted in Ukraine, even though the American intelligence agencies have long concluded Russia was to blame.... Mr. Pompeo also appeared to try to shift blame for the election interference -- which has overshadowed Mr. Trump and his government since taking office -- onto the Obama administration. 'I only wish that the previous administration had protected our elections back in 2016,' he told journalists. 'You'll recall that the interference that took place took place under the previous administration.'" ~~~

     ~~~ Russia, If You're Listening ... Mrs. McCrabbie: Somehow I think Mikey knows MoscowMitch said nyet to that, and Pompeo might be aware that Trump not only asked Russia for election help, his staff had something like 140 meetings with Russians, many of which were probably to get Russians to do some dastardly deeds to benefit Trump. ~~~

~~~ Nicole Gaouette of CNN: "... Donald Trump's attempts to compel Ukraine to investigate the family of his chief political rival are deepening anger and concern inside the State Department as Secretary Mike Pompeo's role in the drama comes under greater scrutiny. A dozen current and former staff from different areas of the State Department and at different stages of their careers who spoke to CNN said the Ukraine controversy has exacerbated divisions between political appointees and career diplomats, many of whom say the department is being politicized in ways that undermine US ties to other countries. State Department staff also tell CNN that frustration is building as Pompeo tries to steer the currents created by Trump's personal lawyer Rudy Giuliani, who has inserted himself into foreign policy, and the President's expectations of complete loyalty. Pompeo seems to 'lack the backbone' to push back on Trump, one veteran career official said, even as the President appears to use the department to meet his political aims."

Russia Is Already Taking Advantage of Trump/Giuliani/Pompeo Blunders. Will Englund of the Washington Post: "If any country stands to gain from the developing turmoil, analysts and politicians in Kiev say, it is Russia. And they expect President Vladimir Putin' government to exploit every opportunity it can find.... Russian officials are already publicly telling Ukrainians (and the rest of the world) that the United States has proved itself to be an unreliable friend, with the release of the White House account of the embarrassing July 25 phone call between President Trump and Ukraine's new president, Volodymyr Zelensky.... Russia's foreign ministry spokeswoman, Maria Zakharova, said on Russian television, '... now everyone understands that it is dangerous to call to Washington, to hold talks and meet with it.'" More important in Ukraine is that Russia will likely use the scandal to portray Zelensky as a minor leaguer and Ukraine as an incorrigibly misgoverned country.... Last month, Zelensky met with Trump in New York. 'I really hope you and President Putin get together and can solve your problem,' Trump told him. 'A tremendous achievement and I know you're trying to do that.' That comment, said Konstantin Batotsky, an analyst [in Kiev], was 'a disaster' for Ukraine. It signaled to Putin, he said, that the United States could not be counted on to always be in Ukraine's corner. It was worse than the phone call, he said.... The loss of Kurt Volker, the special U.S. envoy to Ukraine who resigned following the revelation of the Trump administration's pressure on Kiev, was another blow, Batotsky said. 'He was the gamer' who could have helped Ukraine find a way out of its mess, he said. 'The Russians are extremely happy about this.'"

Jeff Toobin of the New Yorker: "... the Russia and Ukraine scandals are, in fact, one story." Mrs. McC: There's no news in Toobin's column, but he does a fair job of demonstrating that Trump's attempts to manipulate Zelensky are an outgrowth -- and an escalation, because Trump is now putting the power of the U.S. government behind his entreaties -- of his campaign-era courting of Russian assistance.

Chris Hayes did a good dramatic reading of the text messages among U.S. diplomats Kurt Volker, Gordon Sondland & Bill Taylor re: Trump's cash-for-dirt scheme (except I had to listen to the last sentence five times to guess at what he said -- I think it's "Trump releases the aid"). The set-up to the reading starts at about 2:15 min. in, but Hayes' initial remarks are a set-up to the set-up:

Presidential Race 2020

Joe Biden in a Washington Post op-ed: "Enough is enough. Every day -- every few hours, seemingly -- more evidence is uncovered revealing that President Trump is abusing the power of the presidency and is wholly unfit to be president. He is using the highest office in the land to advance his personal political interests instead of the national interest. The president's most recent violation of the rule of law -- openly calling for China to interfere in our elections, as he stood on the South Lawn of the White House -- is so outrageous, it's clear he considers the presidency a free pass to do whatever he wants, with no accountability.... He slanders anyone he sees as a threat. That is why is he is frantically pushing flat-out lies, debunked conspiracy theories and smears against me and my family, no doubt hoping to undermine my candidacy for the presidency." ~~~

~~~ Jonathan Martin, et al., of the New York Times: "... [Joe] Biden looks more vulnerable than at any point since he entered the campaign. Facing one of the greatest challenges of his candidacy, Mr. Biden has plainly struggled to meet the moment, or fully reconcile his own cautious instincts with his protectiveness of his family's privacy and his preference for taking the moral high road against Mr. Trump. Interviews with more than 50 Democratic strategists, lawmakers and lobbyists provide a portrait of a candidacy facing challenges on all sides, and one at risk of losing its core argument that Mr. Biden is the Democrat best able to defeat Mr. Trump in a general election.... David Plouffe, former President Barack Obama's campaign manager, was mystified. Mr. Biden 'should use this moment and become Trump's opponent,' Mr. Plouffe said. 'I don't understand it.'"

News Ledes

AP: "A witness in the murder trial of a white Dallas police officer who fatally shot her black neighbor has been killed in a shooting, the Dallas Morning News reported, citing authorities. The newspaper reported that authorities said Joshua Brown, who lived in the same apartment complex as Amber Guyger and Botham Jean, was shot and killed Friday in Dallas."

AP: "Two men opened fire inside a bar in Kansas City, Kansas, early Sunday, killing four people and wounding five others in a shooting believed to have stemmed from an earlier dispute, police said.Authorities were searching Sunday for the two gunmen, said Officer Thomas Tomasic, a police spokesman."

Friday
Oct042019

The Commentariat -- October 5, 2019

Afternoon Update:

Ben Lefebvre & Daniel Lippman of Politico: "Energy Secretary Rick Perry urged Ukraine's president to root out corruption and pushed the new government for changes at its state-run oil and gas company, people familiar with his work said Friday -- indications that he was more deeply involved than previously known in ... Donald Trump's efforts to pressure officials in Kiev.... Perry..., is expected to resign next month, attended [Ukraine President] Zelensky's May inauguration in Kiev in place of Vice President Mike Pence. In addition, he was one of the administration's 'three amigos' on Ukrainian policy, along with Kurt Volker, the U.S. special representative for the Ukraine conflict, and Gordon Sondland, the U.S. ambassador to the European Union, as Sondland described their relationship in a July broadcast interview." Mrs. McC: It appears from the report that Perry was pushing the new Ukraine government to put his (Perry's) friends on the board of Naftogaz, Ukraine's state-owned natural gas company. "Two long-time energy executives based in Perry's home state of Texas were among those under consideration for that role, one source familiar with the administration's dealings with the company said." ~~~

     ~~~ AND you know there has to be something in this for the Trump Crime Family: "Among Perry's numerous visits with Zelenksy and other Ukraine officials in the past year was a dinner with Zelensky, Jared Kushner and other officials in June, according to a government photo taken by the U.S. of the event."

Zachary Cohen & Caroline Kelly of CNN: "A House Foreign Affairs Committee aide told CNN that 'Secretary Pompeo has failed to meet the deadline to produce documents required by the subpoena. However, the State Department has contacted the Committees on this matter and we hope the Department will cooperate in full promptly. Apart from the outstanding subpoena, we look forward to hearing from Ambassadors Sondland and Yovanovitch next week.'"

Keeping It Classy. Somebody please wake up Mitt Romney and tell him that my conversation with the Ukrainian President was a congenial and very appropriate one, and my statement on China pertained to corruption, not politics. If Mitt worked this hard on Obama, he could have won. Sadly, he choked! Mitt Romney never knew how to win. He is a pompous 'ass' who has been fighting me from the beginning, except when he begged me for my endorsement for his Senate run (I gave it to him), and when he begged me to be Secretary of State (I didn't give it to him). He is so bad for R's! -- Donald Trump, in two tweets this morning

~~~~~~~~~~

Donald Trump is attacking the sovereignty of our country. -- John Dean on CNN, Friday

Nicholas Fandos of the New York Times: "House impeachment investigators widened the reach of their inquiry on Friday, subpoenaing the White House for a vast trove of documents and requesting more from Vice President Mike Pence to better understand President Trump's attempts to pressure Ukraine to investigate his political rivals. The subpoena, addressed to Mick Mulvaney, the acting White House chief of staff, calls for documents and communications that are highly delicate and would typically be subject in almost any White House to claims of executive privilege. If handed over by the Oct. 18 deadline, the records could provide keys to understanding what transpired between the two countries and what steps, if any, the White House has taken to cover it up.... For more than six hours on Friday, the House Intelligence Committee questioned the intelligence community's independent watchdog who first fielded a whistle-blower complaint that has spurred the formal impeachment inquiry into Mr. Trump. Michael Atkinson ... had received the complaint and explained his own preliminary investigation into its validity before seeking to deliver it to Congress. 'What the inspector general said last time was, the whistle-blower pulled the fire alarm,' Representative Mike Quigley, Democrat of Illinois, told reporters. 'We have now seen the smoke and the fire.'" This is an update of a story linked yesterday afternoon.

     ~~~ Politico's story is here. The Guardian's story is here.

Uh-oh. Michael Schmidt & Adam Goldman of the New York Times: "A second intelligence official who was alarmed by President Trump's dealings with Ukraine is weighing whether to file his own formal whistle-blower complaint and testify to Congress, according to two people briefed on the matter. The official has more direct information about the events than the first whistle-blower, whose complaint that Mr. Trump was using his power to get Ukraine to investigate his political rivals touched off an impeachment inquiry. The second official is among those interviewed by the intelligence community inspector general to corroborate the allegations of the original whistle-blower, one of the people said.... Whistle-blowers have created a new threat for Mr. Trump. Though the White House has stonewalled Democrats in Congress investigating allegations raised in the special counsel's report that Mr. Trump obstructed justice, the president has little similar ability to stymie whistle-blowers from speaking to Congress." The Hill's summary of the NYT report is here.

Barr, DOJ Ignored CIA Criminal Referral of Trump re: Ukraine. Ken Dilanian of Julia Ainsley of NBC News: "Weeks before the whistleblower's complaint became public, the CIA's top lawyer made what she considered to be a criminal referral to the Justice Department about the whistleblower's allegations that ... Donald Trump abused his office in pressuring the Ukrainian president, U.S. officials familiar with the matter tell NBC News. The move by the CIA's general counsel, Trump appointee Courtney Simmons Elwood, meant she and other senior officials had concluded a potential crime had been committed, raising more questions about why the Justice Department later declined to open an investigation.... Elwood ... participated in a conference call with the top national security lawyer at the White House and the chief of the Justice Department's National Security Division. On that call, Elwood and John Eisenberg, the top legal adviser to the White House National Security Council, told the top Justice Department national security lawyer, John Demers, that the allegations merited examination by the DOJ, officials said.... A DOJ official said Attorney General William Barr was made aware of the conversation with Elwood and Eisenberg, and their concerns about the president's behavior, in the days that followed. Justice Department officials now say they didn't consider the phone conversation a formal criminal referral because it was not in written form.... A separate criminal referral came later from the Office of the Director of National Intelligence which was based solely on the whistleblower's official written complaint." (Also linked yesterday afternoon.) ~~~

     ~~~ Alex Ward of Vox: "... as NBC News explains, 'Justice Department officials have said they only investigated the president's Ukraine call for violations of campaign finance law because it was the only statute mentioned in the whistleblower's complaint.'... Now here's the kicker: The CIA's criminal referral wasn't about campaign finance law, according to NBC News. This means DOJ essentially ignored the CIA criminal referral -- which apparently included concerns that other laws besides campaign finance law may have been broken -- all because it was made over the phone." ~~~

     ~~~ Mrs. McCrabbie: I should like to point out to Bill Barr that "but it was just a phone call" and "gee, the whistleblower didn't cite all the laws Trump broke" are as valid excuses as "it's Trump being Trump" (see Ron Johnson in yesterday's Commentariat) and "Trump was only joking" (see Marco Rubio below) and "the Constitution made me do it" (Trump's latest).

Quint Forgey of Politico: "... Donald Trump on Friday defended his brazen call for foreign governments to interfere in the 2020 election by launching investigations into the Bidens, repeatedly claiming he is duty-bound to encourage such probes and insisting his motivations are apolitical. 'This is not about politics. This is about corruption,' Trump told reporters outside the White House. 'And if you look and you read our Constitution and many other things, I have an obligation to look at corruption. I have an actual obligation and a duty.'" (Also linked yesterday afternoon.) ~~~

~~~ Caitlin Oprysko of Politico: "... Donald Trump denied he would seek to tie a potential investigation into the Biden family to any trade deal with China, however he again pressed Beijing to investigate unfounded claims against his political rival. Speaking to reporters on the South Lawn of the White House Friday, Trump reiterated that he believes he has the authority as president to ask a foreign government to open investigations into anyone he suspects of being corrupt.... His comments come a day after he openly called for President Xi jinping to look into possible corruption by the Bidens, continuing to spread claims that no evidence has supported. Trump first appeared to link the two prospects speaking to reporters Thursday. The president asserted then that he and the U.S. would have the upper hand on China when high-stakes trade talks resume in Washington next week, saying he has 'a lot of options on China' and 'if they don't do what we want, we have tremendous power.'... On Friday, Trump appeared to adopt a new line of defense as he spoke with reporters, repeatedly telling them that his main motivator was rooting out corruption, rather than damaging the electoral prospects of any singular political opponent. Asked by one reporter, however, if he could name any corruption investigations he was pursuing that did not involve a political opponent, the president responded that he 'would have to look.' Moments later, unprompted, he issued his invitation for China to examine whether there was wrongdoing by the Bidens." (Also linked yesterday afternoon.) ~~~

~~~ From the Washington Post's liveblog @10:30 am ET: "In the midst of several midmorning tweets, Trump identified the purported employer of the whistleblower as the CIA. In the tweet, Trump quoted longtime Republican operative Ed Rollins from an appearance on Fox News. 'I think it's outrages that a Whistleblower is a CIA Agent,' Trump quoted Rollins as saying, misspelling 'outrageous.'" @10 am ET: "Beginning this weekend, the Trump campaign is airing more than $1 million worth of TV ads in early primary states that accuse Joe Biden and his son Hunter of corruption in Ukraine, according to Brad Parscale, Trump's campaign manager. The commercials will air in Iowa, New Hampshire, South Carolina and Nevada, Parscale tweeted." (Also linked yesterday afternoon.) ~~~

~~~ "Me! Me!" Ashley Parker of the Washington Post: During the chopper chat, Trump started out cocky (Mrs. McC: he was boasting about the lowest unemployment rate in 50 years). But he shifted "into the aggrieved alternate reality that has consumed him since House Democrats launched their impeachment inquiry.... 'I feel there was in the 2016 campaign -- there was tremendous corruption against me,' said Trump, transforming himself -- a man who has now publicly asked no fewer than three foreign countries (Russia, Ukraine and China) to look into his political opponents -- into the victim of corrupt behavior.... 'I was investigated, I was investigated, okay?' he said, before pointing at himself -- two rapid-fire taps to his right breast -- and adding: 'Me! Me!' He barked at the media that it was he who ran, he who won, he who was investigated, before accusing the assembled press: 'You won't say that, will you?'... 'I was investigated. I was investigated. And they think it could have been by U.K. They think it could have been by Australia. They think it could have been by Italy. So when you get down to it, I was investigated by the Obama administration. By the Obama administration,' he concluded, shouting now, and using both hands to point at himself, 'I was investigated.' It was unclear, exactly, to which unfounded, unproven theory Trump was referring."

One Ringy-dingy. Carol Leonnig, et al., of the Washington Post: "Starting long before revelations about Trump's interactions with Ukraine's president rocked Washington, Trump's phone calls with foreign leaders were an anxiety-ridden set of events for his aides and members of the administration, according to former and current officials. They worried that Trump would make promises he shouldn't keep, endorse policies the United States long opposed, commit a diplomatic blunder that jeopardized a critical alliance, or simply pressure a counterpart for a personal favor. 'There was a constant undercurrent in the Trump administration of [senior staff] who were genuinely horrified by the things they saw that were happening on these calls,' said one former White House official.... 'Phone calls that were embarrassing, huge mistakes he made, months and months of work that were upended by one impulsive tweet.'... In one of his first calls with a head of state, President Trump fawned over Russian President Vladimir Putin, telling the man who ordered interference in America's 2016 election that he was a great leader and apologizing profusely for not calling him sooner. He pledged to Saudi officials in another call that he would help the monarchy enter the elite Group of Seven, an alliance of the world's leading democratic economies. He promised the president of Peru that he would deliver to his country a C-130 military cargo plane overnight, a logistical nightmare that set off a herculean scramble in the West Wing and Pentagon."

Jonathan Chait: "Trump is claiming the absolute right to demand investigations of any American by any country. The president exerts unilateral control over the most powerful government on Earth. He is announcing to every foreign state that American relations with his government -- and, should he prevail, every future government -- can and will be influenced by their willingness to put their judicial or quasi-judicial systems at the disposal of his reelection campaign.... The pretext that somehow Trump is advancing the cause of good government by demanding international anti-corruption probes is a morbid joke.... He is pressing notoriously corrupt states to deliver a predetermined outcome.... The favor he is bartering for is the insinuation of guilt. And Trump himself is obviously indulging in corruption on a scale unprecedented in presidential history.... His demands are not intended to clamp down on corruption, but to cheapen the currency of the language, so that he can more easily dismiss his own gross behavior as standard procedure.... The brutally simple choice...[:] Either ... hand the president the absolute right, now and forever, to use American foreign policy as a lever to discredit their political rivals, or ... vote to impeach." (Also linked yesterday afternoon.)

Jordain Carney of the Hill: "Sen. Mitt Romney (R-Utah) on Friday broke sharply with President Trump's call for China and Ukraine to investigate former Vice President Joe Biden, calling it 'wrong and appalling.' 'When the only American citizen President Trump singles out for China&'s investigation is his political opponent in the midst of the Democratic nomination process, it strains credulity to suggest that it is anything other than politically motivated,' Romney said in a statement, which he also tweeted out. [In a second tweet, Romney wrote,] 'By all appearances, the President's brazen and unprecedented appeal to China and to Ukraine to investigate Joe Biden is wrong and appalling.'" (Also linked yesterday afternoon.)

Excuse #2. Trump Was Only Kidding. Connor Mannion of Mediaite: When a reporter asked Sen. Marco Rubio (R-Fla.) what he thought of Donald Trump's asking China to investigate Joe Biden, Rubio said, "I don't think it's a real request, I think he did it to get you guys. I think he did it to provoke you to ask me and others and get outraged by it. Like I said, he plays it like a violin and everyone falls right into it. I don't think it's a real request." Mrs. McC: It's a great argument, of course, but I can't quite picture people falling into violins. (Also linked yesterday afternoon.)

Dana Milbank of the Washington Post: "Donald Trump is not a patriot.... Again and again, he has harmed the nation's interests to further his own.... Trump has many undesirable attributes: He lies, he chases conspiracy theories, he's racist, he abuses power, he&'s cruel. The common thread -- a unified theory of Trump, if you will -- is that the man who promised an 'America First' agenda is instead pursuing a 'Trump First' agenda. This is the Me Presidency." Milbank writes a laundry list of Trump's unpatriotic remarks & deeds. Of course the list is longer than Milbank can fit into a newspaper column.

David Frum of the Atlantic: Gerald "Ford's intact reputation enabled Congress and the country to turn the page definitively in August 1974. Nixon's most tainted appointees had been forced from office before him.... Donald Trump may not know much of this history, but he intuits its lessons. From the beginning, he has appeared determined to implicate as many members of his administration as possible in his scandal -- Vice President Mike Pence heading the list.... Pence seems to have been involved up to the eyeballs in the Ukraine plot. His team's messaging -- Yes, he pressed the Ukrainians to investigate corruption, but he never appreciated that Trump's true purpose was to pursue the Bidens -- fails the laugh test.... If the Senate ever could muster the integrity to remove Trump from office, there would be ... a vice president who participated in Trump's dirty schemes, from staying at a remote resort to direct government funds to Trump's failing Irish golf course to extorting an invaded country to fabricate political dirt to help Trump's reelection. Trump's compromised attorney general remains on the job, as does his apparently compromised secretary of state.... Pence betrayed his most important duty as vice president: Be ready to step into the nation&'s highest office should the need arise." ~~~

     ~~~ Nikki Haley Reminds Trump There's an AlterVeep Waiting in the Wings. Molly Prince of Daily Wire: "Former U.S. ambassador to the United Nations Nikki Haley praised ... Donald Trump on Friday and further commended his record on foreign policy as one that 'every American should be proud of.'" Mrs. McC: Yes, because, as Thomas Pickering -- a Republican diplomat who previously had Haley's U.N. gig -- told the AP (linked below), "We have come into a situation where not only unpredictability is the hallmark of the United States, but unreliability as well. The wisdom and judgment that the United States was known for has been diminished."

I have known former vice president Biden for 24 years, and the suggestion that he would be influenced in his duties as vice president by money for his son simply has no credibility to me. I know him as a man of integrity and dedication to our country. -- Kurt Volker, in his opening statement to the joint House committee, Thursday ~~~

~~~ Paul Sonne & Greg Jaffe of the Washington Post: "Kurt Volker, the former U.S. special representative to Ukraine, defended former vice president Joe Biden in a statement to Congress on Thursday and said he was trying to run interference on information being supplied to President Trump by former New York mayor Rudolph W. Giuliani, to secure continued U.S. support for the government in Ukraine. Volker, who as of Thursday was the executive director of the McCain Institute for International Leadership, said he did not believe allegations Giuliani has leveled against Biden, namely that Biden was influenced in his dealings with the Ukrainian leadership by his son's presence on the board of a Ukrainian gas company whose owner was being probed by authorities in Kiev. Cindy McCain, a Biden friend, chairs the McCain Institute.... Volker also pleaded ignorance of Trump's July 25 call in which he raised investigating Burisma and Biden with Zelensky, saying he received a general readout of the conversation from people who described it as a good, congratulatory call.' He said he learned the full details about the call only when it was released late last month." ~~~

     ~~~ Morgan Chalfant of the Hill: "Volker repeatedly emphasized during his remarks he did not believe the allegations against Biden to be credible.... Volker also testified that he told ... Rudy Giuliani that accusations against the former vice president and 2020 Democratic candidate were 'not credible.'" ~~~

~~~ Peter Baker of the New York Times: "The former State Department special envoy for Ukraine told congressional investigators that Rudolph W. Giuliani, President Trump's personal attorney, insisted that Ukraine specifically commit to investigate involvement in the 2016 election and a firm tied to former Vice President Joseph R. Biden Jr. During testimony behind closed doors on Thursday, Kurt D. Volker, the special envoy, said Mr. Giuliani rejected a generic draft statement that Ukraine's government had agreed to issue committing to fighting corruption generally. While Mr. Giuliani's efforts to pressure Ukraine have been known, Mr. Volker's account provides new details about how the president's personal lawyer inserted himself into foreign policy to benefit Mr. Trump politically. Mr. Giuliani 'said that in his view, the statement should include specific reference to "Burisma" and "2016,"' Mr. Volker told the investigators, according to a person who has seen the testimony.... Mr. Volker sought in his testimony to distance himself from the pressure campaign by the president and Mr. Giuliani. 'At no time was I aware of or took part in an effort to urge Ukraine to investigate former Vice President Biden,' he told investigators." (Also linked yesterday afternoon.) ~~~

~~~ Christopher Miller, et al., of BuzzFeed News: "In his prepared testimony Thursday, [Kurt] Volker said he wanted to make five key points clear: His 'efforts were entirely focused on advancing U.S. foreign policy goals with respect to Ukraine.' 'Second, in May of this year, I became concerned that a negative narrative about Ukraine, fueled by assertions made by Ukraine's departing Prosecutor General, was reaching the President of the United States, and impeding our ability to support the new Ukrainian government as robustly as I believed we should. 'Third, at no time was I aware of or took part in an effort to urge Ukraine to investigate former Vice President Biden.' Volker said that in the text messages he shared with Congress, 'Vice President Biden was never a topic of discussion.' However, the texts do explicitly mention Burisma, the Ukraine gas company where the presidential candidate's son Hunter Biden served on the board 'Fourth, while executing my duties, I kept my colleagues at the State Department and National Security Council informed, and also briefed Congress, about my actions.' Fifth and finally, I strongly supported the provision of U.S. security assistance, including lethal defensive weapons, to Ukraine throughout my tenure." The reporters elaborate on those points. The report includes a copy of Volker's opening remarks. (Also linked yesterday afternoon.)

Rachel Frazin of the Hill: "U.S. Ambassador to the European Union Gordon Sondland is expected to appear for his scheduled House deposition next week, a House committee official confirmed to The Hill.... Secretary of State Mike Pompeo ... said [State Department] officials would not show up for the depositions, although since then, one of the officials [Mrs. McC: -- Kurt Volker --] has been questioned by lawmakers. Mrs. McC: And former Ambassador to Ukraine Marie Yovanovitch has agreed to appear Oct. 11. Now read this ~~~

As I said on the phone, I think it's crazy to withhold security assistance for help with a political campaign. -- Bill Taylor, U.S. diplomat leading Ukraine Embassy [9/9/19, 12:47:11 AM]

Bill, I believe you are incorrect about President Trump's intentions. The President has been crystal clear no quid pro quo's of any kind. The President is trying to evaluate whether Ukraine is truly going to adopt the transparency and reforms that President Zelensky promised during his campaign I suggest we stop the back and forth by text If you still have concerns I recommend you give Lisa Kenna or S a call to discuss them directly. Thanks. -- Gordon Sondland [9/9/19, 5:19:35 AM] (Emphasis added.) ~~~

     ~~~ Really, Gordo? This is the message digby IDed as a CYA effort (see yesterday's Commentariat). And think about it. Who thumbs out a text like that? According to Rachel Maddow, during the 4-1/2-hour delay between Taylor's text & Sondland's, Sondland called the White House. BTW, in his chopper chat on Friday, Sondland's manufactured denial of a quid pro quo was the only part of the text exchange among Taylor, Sondland & Volker that Trump cited. Isn't that a surprise -- Mrs. Bea McCrabbie~~~

~~~ ** Epic Fail. Dumbest Senator Tries to Help Trump, but Reveals Proof of Quid Pro Quo. Andrew Prokop & Jen Kirby of Vox: Gordan Sondland, the U.S. Ambassador to the E.U., told Sen. Ron Johnson (R-Wis.) "that the Trump administration was blocking hundreds of millions of dollars in US military aid to Ukraine until the country agreed to launch investigations Trump was demanding.... Johnson [told the Wall Street Journal] that ... Sondland told him in late August that the administration was demanding Ukraine investigate 'what happened in 2016,' and that if President Trump had 'confidence' in the investigation, he'd 'release the military spending.'... [Wait, wait, there's more.] According to the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel's Molly Beck [and others]..., Johnson said in a separate interview that Trump did say he was considering withholding the aid because he wanted to find out 'what happened in 2016.' Johnson said he asked Trump whether he could tell Ukraine's president the aid was on the way anyway, to dispel the government's fears, but 'I didn't succeed.'" Emphasis added. The WSJ report is here. ~~~

~~~ ** Greg Miller, et al., of the Washington Post: "By mid-May, the U.S. relationship with Ukraine was unraveling: The U.S. ambassador had been recalled home for no apparent reason, the country's new president was anxious about U.S. support, and President Trump's personal lawyer was hawking Kiev conspiracy theories. Amid this turbulence, an unexpected figure stepped forward to assert that he was now in charge of the U.S.-Ukraine relationship. Gordon Sondland ... had no apparent standing to seize this critical portfolio, nor any apparent qualifications as a diplomat beyond the $1 million he'd given to Trump's inauguration. But when some in the White House and State Department sought to block his power grab, current and former U.S. officials said, he rebuffed their demands to know who had granted him such authority with two words: 'The president.'... Newly released texts exchanged by Sondland, Volker and other U.S. officials ... read like a government-sanctioned shakedown. Again and again, they make clear that Ukraine's new president, Volodymyr Zelensky would not get military aid or the Oval Office invitation he coveted until he committed to investigations that Trump hoped would deliver damaging information on former vice president Joe Biden and undermine the origins of the investigation into Russian interference in the 2016 election. Rather than official State Department email, the text exchanges between the diplomats took place over WhatsApp, a U.S. official said." Emphasis added. This is a longish read; it's pretty interesting. ~~~

     ~~~ Mrs. McCrabbie: One of the talking points the White House accidentally sent to Democrats last week was, "Let's be clear, there was no quid pro quo for Ukraine to get U.S. aid in exchange for looking into Biden or his son." Quite a few Republicans took to the airwaves & the hinterlands with that fiction. Indeed, after Johnson's revelatory interviews, "... Johnson's office stressed [to NBC News] that the term 'quid pro quo' was not used," as if nothing is true unless expressed in Latin. That is, "IF you smear my opponent, THEN I'll give you $400MM" is not corrupt (and in this case, illegal) because English.

Ben Fox, et al., of the AP: "The State Department has been deeply shaken by the rapidly escalating impeachment inquiry, as revelations that ... Donald Trump enlisted diplomats to dig up dirt on a political rival threaten to tarnish its reputation as a nonpartisan arm of U.S. foreign policy, former senior officials said Friday.... With Washington in tumult over the escalating impeachment inquiry, Secretary of State Mike Pompeo toured southeast Europe on Friday, trying to ignore the furor back home.... His staff steadfastly refused to comment on the latest developments in the rapidly unfolding drama, including at a briefing for reporters at his last stop of the day in Athens.... Trump has had a tense relationship with the State Department since he took office, repeatedly proposing to slash its budget, leaving key posts unfulfilled and choosing political appointees over career foreign service officers for ambassadorships to a greater degree than other recent presidents have. His ouster of U.S. Ambassador to Ukraine Marie Yovanovitch, a respected career officer, and his dismissal of her as 'bad news' in the call left many diplomats dismayed.... 'The Ukraine affair] is only the latest in a large number of very damaging things that have been done to the State Department,' said Thomas Pickering, a former U.S. ambassador to the United Nations and Russia under President George H.W. Bush. 'It represents a new low in basically ignoring and indeed punishing the people who have made a professional commitment to the country and Constitution.'"

Just a Coincidence. Rachel Frazin of the Hill: "President Trump has ordered a significant staff cut at the White House National Security Council (NSC),Bloomberg reported late Friday, citing five people familiar with the matter. Some of the individuals reportedly said that the move was part of an effort under new national security adviser Robert O'Brien, who told officials of the reduction alongside acting White House chief of staff Mick Mulvaney this week. Two people familiar with the matter told Bloomberg that the change was due to O'Brien's leadership and Trump's wish to increase agency efficiency. The news outlet noted that the NSC grew under former President Obama and about 310 people work there now. However, Bloomberg noted that the changes also come as Trump faces scrutiny over a whistleblower complaint...."

The Oranges of Trump's Ukraine Conspiracy Theory. Ben Collins of NBC News: "An anonymous post from March 2017 on the far-right 4chan message board teased a conspiracy theory that would eventually make its way to the White House. 'Russia could not have been the source of leaked Democrat emails released by Wikileaks,' the post teased, not citing any evidence for the assertion. The post baselessly insinuated that CrowdStrike, a cybersecurity firm that worked with the Democratic National Committee and had been contracted to investigate a hack of its servers, fabricated a forensics report to frame Russia for election interference.... In the years that followed the original 4chan post, at least three different but related conspiracy theories would warp and combine on the fringes of the internet, eventually coalescing around Ukraine's supposed role in helping Trump's 2016 opponent, Hillary Clinton. Ukraine wasn't originally part of the theory, but in July,

Brian Faler of Politico: "An independent watchdog at the Treasury Department is looking into how the agency handled House Democrats'; demands for ... Donald Trump's tax returns. Acting Inspector General Rich Delmar said he will investigate who was consulted on the issue and how the department came to reject Ways and Means Chairman Richard Neal's demands for the records, a decision the Massachusetts Democrat is now fighting into court." (Also linked yesterday afternoon.) ~~~

     ~~~ Update. Alan Rappeport of the New York Times: "The inspector general investigation is in response to a request from Representative Richard E. Neal of Massachusetts, the Democratic chairman of the House Ways and Means Committee, who has been leading congressional efforts to gain access to Mr. Trump's financial information.... An Internal Revenue Service whistle-blower filed a complaint over the summer claiming that senior Treasury officials tried to exert improper influence over the [mandatory] audit [of Trump's tax returns]. According to a government official familiar with its contents, it claims that political appointees in the Treasury Department were pressuring I.R.S. officials to ignore the requirement to scrutinize Mr. Trum's returns. A person familiar with the complaint said the allegations did not directly implicate [Treasury Secretary Steven] Mnuchin."


No Poor People Allowed. Maria Sacchetti
of the Washington Post: "The White House late Friday issued a proclamation saying it would deny visas to immigrants who 'will financially burden' the U.S. health-care system starting Nov. 3, demanding that foreign nationals prove that they have insurance or can cover their own health care costs before entering the United States." This is a brief breaking story at 10 pm ET Friday. Update: The BuzzFeed News story is here. ~~~

~~~ Scott Bixby of the Daily Beast: "A U.S. Customs and Border Protection official reportedly refused to allow a reporter through customs on Thursday unless he answered the repeated question 'You write propaganda, right?' in the affirmative, at least the third such incident involving harassment of a journalist by a passport official this year. Ben Watson, a news editor at Defense One, was returning to the United States from a reporting assignment in Denmark when a USCBP official, after asking whether Watson was carrying any undeclared foods, inquired into his profession. When Watson responded that he worked in journalism, the official began repeatedly badgering him into 'admitting' that he writes propaganda, Watson wrote of his experience."

Let Them Eat Dirt. Lola Fadulu of the New York Times: "The Agriculture Department moved again this week to cut spending on food stamps, this time proposing changes that would slice $4.5 billion from the program over five years, trimming monthly benefits by as much as $75 for one in five struggling families on nutrition assistance. The latest plan would cut benefits for 19 percent of households on the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, commonly called food stamps, while increasing benefits for 16 percent. Almost 8,000 households would lose benefits entirely. Those cuts would be concentrated in cold northern states that would be most affected by a change in the way heating costs are calculated. The number of families losing benefits is a tiny percentage of the nearly 40 million people who receive benefits, and even $4.5 billion over five years is a trim for a program that cost $68 billion in 2018 alone. But the latest move is the third time the Trump administration has moved to cut food stamps. In December, the Agriculture Department said it sought to place more stringent work requirements on the program. In July, the administration proposed a rule that would strip more than three million people of their benefits. The public comment periods for both those proposals have ended, and final rules are expected soon."

Lying to the Old Folks on Our Dime. Annie Karni & Abby Goodnough of the New York Times: "President Trump on Thursday delivered a campaign-style speech to an audience of elderly voters, pitching a new executive order that aims to improve private Medicare plans as the responsible alternative to the 'Medicare for all' policies supported by some of his Democratic political opponents. 'Standing in solidarity with our nation's seniors, I declare once again that America will never be a socialist country,' Mr. Trump told a crowd at the Villages in Florida, the country's largest retirement community, where the population is overwhelmingly white and conservative and where many residents are veterans.... But while Mr. Trump's speech suggested that the Democratic proposals for expanding coverage put retirees' access to health care in grave danger, the plans would not actually diminish their benefits.... Mr. Trump's speech, delivered from behind a lectern with a presidential seal, was billed as an official White House event and his travel was not paid for by his campaign. But it was almost indistinguishable in much of its content from the remarks Mr. Trump delivers at his 'Make America Great Again' rallies." (Also linked yesterday afternoon.)

the president tells audience in the east room that john adams - 'no. 6' - was the first president to live in the white house. john adams, for what it's worth, was our nation's second president -- Justin Sink, in a tweet

Some of Sink's Twitter followers stood up for Trump: One said Trump probably doesn't know there were two Presidents Adams. Another was worried: "wait until he hears about grover cleveland!" And a third explained why Trump was absolutely right: "John Adams wore #6 for his high school football team." -- Mrs. Bea McCrabbie

Update: Trump made the remark at an event for young African Americans -- so, ya know, teaching our kids good. And, apparently, he's using a stale lesson plan: David Smith of the Guardian: "Oddly, Trump made the same mistake at the same event last year.

CORRECTION. I'VE BEEN SNOPED! Mrs. Bea McCrabbie: On September 24 & 25, I embedded a tweet with a photo of men climbing over a border wall. The Twitter-user wrote, "... Mexicans have turned Trump's wall into a tourist attraction & are playing a game to see who can climb it the fastest, no ladders or ropes needed. The record is 45 seconds" Trump, in a visit to his wall, had claimed on September 18 that the government had invited 20 "world-class mountain-climbers" to try to scale various border-fence prototypes, and that his "was the one that was hardest to climb." So I found the tweet pretty hilarious (and dismaying, considering all the money that was going to waste on the supposedly-unscalable wall). Well, the tweet and the photo were bunk. ~~~

     ~~~ Dan MacGuill of Snopes (Sept. 24): "... the video footage and still images used to contradict and ridicule the president's claim that 'this wall can't be climbed' were either captured in 2016, before construction began on Trump's long-promised border fence, and even before he became president, or at a section of fencing that is clearly, visibly different from the one the president showed off in September 2019.... [The tweet I republished] showed a stretch of fencing at San Ysidro, California, captured by NBC News in November 2018 ... [and] was clearly different from the one unveiled by Trump in September 2019." Mrs. McC: I apologize. I definitely should have checked Snopes before posting that tweet. ~~~

~~~ Brooke Seipel of the Hill (Oct. 4): "A rock climber plans to hold a border wall climbing competition after President Trump recently declared a new section of his border wall with Mexico 'impossible to climb,' according to a new report from climbing magazine Rock and Ice. Rick Weber -- a 75-year-old retired engineer, and active rock climber certified by American Mountain Guide Association as a Single Pitch Instructor -- writes that he has built a replica of an 18-foot tall section of steel border wall and has invited rock climbers to compete in the climb on Oct. 11 and 12.... Some professionals told The Daily Beast last month that [Trump's] claim was 'preposterous.' Jesse Grupper, a gold medalist in this year's USA Climbing Sport & Speed Open National Championships, said he 'never heard of any climbers ever being recruited to try and climb a border wall.' Weber wrote in the post announcing his competition that 'no one in our climbing community knows any of these 20 mountaineers.'"

Presidential Race 2020

Ali Vitali of NBC News: "Sen. Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass., has raised $24.6 million during the past three months, her campaign said Friday, beating her last quarter haul of $19.1 million and quadrupling her $6 million total from the first quarter of the year. The announcement comes as Warren, who has eschewed high-dollar events in favor of targeting small-dollar donations -- continues to solidify her place at or near the top of the Democratic presidential field in both polling and fundraising. She was outpaced only by fellow progressive Sen. Bernie Sanders -- who leads the pack with $25.3 million raised in the third quarter -- and dwarfed the fundraising totals announced Thursday by former Vice President Joe Biden's campaign. Biden raised $15.2 million in the third quarter." (Also linked yesterday afternoon.) ~~~

~~~ Ed Kilgore of New York: "At the moment, you could say the Democratic race remains dominated by the Big Three of Warren, Biden, and Sanders (in whatever order you choose to rank them), with fundraising dominating by a Big Four (those three plus Pete Buttigieg, who raised $24 million in the third quarter and $19 million in the fourth). Everyone trailing these candidates in either metric needs to make a move soon as voters prepare to vote." (Also linked yesterday afternoon.)

Adam Kelsey, et al., of ABC News: "The health issue that led to Sen. Bernie Sanders' hospitalization on Tuesday night in Las Vegas has been diagnosed as a heart attack.... A joint statement from the physicians who treated Sanders, Arturo E. Marchand Jr. and Arjun Gururaj, said Sanders suffered from a myocardial infarction and was transferred to Desert Springs Hospital Medical Center. 'The Senator was stable upon arrival and taken immediately to the cardiac catheterization laboratory, at which time two stents were placed in a blocked coronary artery in a timely fashion. All other arteries were normal,' they said. 'His hospital course was uneventful with good expected progress.... Sanders left Desert Springs Hospital on Friday, walking out on his own. The senator waved to reporters and said he felt 'great, great, thank you' before climbing into an awaiting SUV." The New York Times story is here.

Nicole Perlroth of the New York Times: "Iranian hackers have been targeting the email accounts of at least one presidential campaign, as well as those of American journalists and current and former United States government officials, according to Microsoft. In a report released on Friday, Microsoft said the hackers, with apparent backing from Iran&'s government, made more than 2,700 attempts to identify the email accounts of current and former government officials, journalists covering political campaigns and accounts associated with one major presidential campaign. Microsoft would not name the campaign." Mrs. McC: Iran, if you're listening, I hope it's Trump's campaign you're set on hacking. (Also linked yesterday afternoon.) ~~~

     ~~~ Mrs. McCrabbie: The story has been updated just for me: "Though the company would not identify the presidential campaign involved, two people with knowledge of the hacking ... said it was President Trump'." Thanks, Ken W.!

Beyond the Beltway

Florida Justice. Jessica Campisi of the Hill: "A 21-year-old Florida man [-- Deandre Somerville --] who overslept for jury duty was sentenced to jail for 10 days.... During his hearing, Circuit Civil Judge John Kastrenakes said the trial [Someville missed] had been delayed by 45 minutes because of Somerville, whose conduct 'impeded the due administration of justice.' Kastrenakes convicted Somerville of direct criminal contempt, handing him a 10-day jail sentence as well as 12 months probation, 150 hours of community service and an order to write an apology letter, Fox 6 reported.... Somerville's public defender appealed the sentence, and a judge on Friday lowered his sentence to three months probation and 30 hours of community service." So Somerville, who previously had no criminal record, has one now.

     ~~~ Mrs. McC: Did I mention Somerville is black and Kastrenakes is white? But I'm sure that has nothing to do with the conviction. I was wondering if criminal contempt of court was a felony. According to Florida attorney Damian Zimmerman, "... criminal contempt is actually not a misdemeanor or a felony. Technically, it falls into the category of 'common law crimes.'... Under Florida law, contempt can be punished by a fine of $500 and between 6-12 months in jail depending on if a jury verdict was involved. 12 months is equivalent to the maximum sentence for a first degree misdemeanor. Check out Florida statute 775.02 and Rule of Criminal Procedure 3.830."

Way Beyond

John Leicester & Eileen Ng of the AP: "With subway services shut down, the wearing of face masks criminalized at rallies and Hong Kong's leader reaffirming her determination not to let rioters get the upper hand, anti-government protests that have shaken the city diminished in intensity Saturday but didn't stop. Marchers still came out to defy the new ban on face coverings that the government of the semi-autonomous Chinese territory says have made the identification of violent protesters difficult for police Shielded under umbrellas, many wearing masks, several hundred demonstrators clogged a thoroughfare in the central business district, carrying a yellow banner marked 'Glory to Hong Kong' and shouting, 'Hong Kong, resist!' Scattered gatherings of protesters in masks popped up elsewhere, too, with some holding hands in a human chain. But protester numbers Saturday afternoon appeared down from previous weekends when tens of thousands flooded the streets."

Thursday
Oct032019

The Commentariat -- October 4, 2019

Afternoon Update:

Barr, DOJ Ignored CIA Referral. Ken Dilanian of Julia Ainsley of NBC News: "Weeks before the whistleblower's complaint became public, the CIA's top lawyer made what she considered to be a criminal referral to the Justice Department about the whistleblower's allegations that ... Donald Trump abused his office in pressuring the Ukrainian president, U.S. officials familiar with the matter tell NBC News. The move by the CIA's general counsel, Trump appointee Courtney Simmons Elwood, meant she and other senior officials had concluded a potential crime had been committed, raising more questions about why the Justice Department later declined to open an investigation.... Elwood ... participated in a conference call with the top national security lawyer at the White House and the chief of the Justice Department's National Security Division. On that call, Elwood and John Eisenberg, the top legal adviser to the White House National Security Council, told the top Justice Department national security lawyer, John Demers, that the allegations merited examination by the DOJ, officials said.... A DOJ official said Attorney General William Barr was made aware of the conversation with Elwood and Eisenberg, and their concerns about the president's behavior, in the days that followed.... A separate criminal referral came later from the Office of the Director of National Intelligence, which was based solely on the whistleblower's official written complaint."

Nicholas Fandos of the New York Times: "The chairmen of three House committees on Friday requested documents from Vice President Mike Pence for the impeachment inquiry into President Trump, asking him to turn over a wide-ranging batch of material that could shed light on Mr. Trump's pressure campaign on Ukraine, and any role that Mr. Pence played in it. In a letter to Mr. Pence, the chairmen asked for a lengthy list of documents detailing the administration's dealings with Ukraine, to be produced by Oct. 15. It came as House Democratic leaders were readying a subpoena for the White House for a vast trove of documents in the inquiry, which is investigating attempts by Mr. Trump and his administration to pressure Ukraine's president to help dig up dirt on his political rivals." The Guardian's story is here.

Brian Faler of Politico: "An independent watchdog at the Treasury Department is looking into how the agency handled House Democrats' demands for ... Donald Trump's tax returns. Acting Inspector General Rich Delmar said he will investigate who was consulted on the issue and how the department came to reject Ways and Means Chairman Richard Neal's demand for the records, a decision the Massachusetts Democrat is now fighting into court."

Quint Forgey of Politico: "... Donald Trump on Friday defended his brazen call for foreign governments to interfere in the 2020 election by launching investigations into the Bidens, repeatedly claiming he is duty-bound to encourage such probes and insisting his motivations are apolitical. 'This is not about politics. This is about corruption,' Trump told reporters outside the White House. 'And if you look and you read our Constitution and many other things, I have an obligation to look at corruption. I have an actual obligation and a duty.'" ~~~

~~~ Caitlin Oprysko of Politico: "... Donald Trump denied he would seek to tie a potential investigation into the Biden family to any trade deal with China, however he again pressed Beijing to investigate unfounded claims against his political rival. Speaking to reporters on the South Lawn of the White House Friday, Trump reiterated that he believes he has the authority as president to ask a foreign government to open investigations into anyone he suspects of being corrupt.... His comments come a day after he openly called for President Xi jinping to look into possible corruption by the Bidens, continuing to spread claims that no evidence has supported. Trump first appeared to link the two prospects speaking to reporters Thursday. The president asserted then that he and the U.S. would have the upper hand on China when high-stakes trade talks resume in Washington next week, saying he has 'a lot of options on China' and 'if they don't do what we want, we have tremendous power.'... On Friday, Trump appeared to adopt a new line of defense as he spoke with reporters, repeatedly telling them that his main motivator was rooting out corruption, rather than damaging the electoral prospects of any singular political opponent. Asked by one reporter, however, if he could name any corruption investigations he was pursuing that did not involve a political opponent, the president responded that he 'would have to look.' Moments later, unprompted, he issued his invitation for China to examine whether there was wrongdoing by the Bidens." ~~~

~~~ From the Washington Post's liveblog @11:45 am ET: "Speaking to reporters at the White House on Friday, Trump said he didn't know if he had ever asked a foreign leader to investigate a person who wasn't his political opponent, though he said he had a right to do so.... Reporters asked him several times if that included enlisting Russian President Vladimir Putin's help, but Trump ignored the question." @10:30 am ET: "In the midst of several midmorning tweets, Trump identified the purported employer of the whistleblower as the CIA. In the tweet, Trump quoted longtime Republican operative Ed Rollins from an appearance on Fox News. 'I think it's outrages that a Whistleblower is a CIA Agent,' Trump quoted Rollins as saying, misspelling 'outrageous.'" @10 am ET: "Beginning this weekend, the Trump campaign is airing more than $1 million worth of TV ads in early primary states that accuse Joe Biden and his son Hunter of corruption in Ukraine, according to Brad Parscale, Trump's campaign manager. The commercials will air in Iowa, New Hampshire, South Carolina and Nevada, Parscale tweeted."

Trump Was Only Kidding. Connor Mannion of Mediaite: When a reporter asked Sen. Marco Rubio (R-Fla.) what he thought of Donald Trump's asking China to investigate Joe Biden, Rubio said, "I don't think it's a real request, I think he did it to get you guys. I think he did it to provoke you to ask me and others and get outraged by it. Like I said, he plays it like a violin and everyone falls right into it. I don't think it's a real request." Mrs. McC: Sure, it's a great argument, but I can't quite picture people falling into violins.

Jordain Carney of the Hill: "Sen. Mitt Romney (R-Utah) on Friday broke sharply with President Trump's call for China and Ukraine to investigate former Vice President Joe Biden, calling it 'wrong and appalling.' 'When the only American citizen President Trump singles out for China's investigation is his political opponent in the midst of the Democratic nomination process, it strains credulity to suggest that it is anything other than politically motivated,' Romney said in a statement, which he also tweeted out."

Jonathan Chait: "Trump is claiming the absolute right to demand investigations of any American by any country. The president exerts unilateral control over the most powerful government on Earth. He is announcing to every foreign state that American relations with his government -- and, should he prevail, every future government -- can and will be influenced by their willingness to put their judicial or quasi-judicial systems at the disposal of his reelection campaign.... The pretext that somehow Trump is advancing the cause of good government by demanding international anti-corruption probes is a morbid joke.... He is pressing notoriously corrupt states to deliver a predetermined outcome.... The favor he is bartering for is the insinuation of guilt. And Trump himself is obviously indulging in corruption on a scale unprecedented in presidential history.... His demands are not intended to clamp down on corruption, but to cheapen the currency of the language, so that he can more easily dismiss his own gross behavior as standard procedure.... The brutally simple choice...[:] Either ... hand the president the absolute right, now and forever, to use American foreign policy as a lever to discredit their political rivals, or ... vote to impeach."

Peter Baker of the New York Times: "The former State Department special envoy for Ukraine told congressional investigators that Rudolph W. Giuliani, President Trump's personal attorney, insisted that Ukraine specifically commit to investigate involvement in the 2016 election and a firm tied to former Vice President Joseph R. Biden Jr. During testimony behind closed doors on Thursday, Kurt D. Volker, the special envoy, said Mr. Giuliani rejected a generic draft statement that Ukraine's government had agreed to issue committing to fighting corruption generally. While Mr. Giuliani's efforts to pressure Ukraine have been known, Mr. Volker's account provides new details about how the president's personal lawyer inserted himself into foreign policy to benefit Mr. Trump politically. Mr. Giuliani 'said that in his view, the statement should include specific reference to "Burisma" and "2016,"' Mr. Volker told the investigators, according to a person who has seen the testimony.... Mr. Volker sought in his testimony to distance himself from the pressure campaign by the president and Mr. Giuliani. 'At no time was I aware of or took part in an effort to urge Ukraine to investigate former Vice President Biden,' he told investigators." ~~~

~~~ Christopher Miller, et al., of BuzzFeed News: "In his prepared testimony Thursday, [Kurt] Volker said he wanted to make five key points clear: His 'efforts were entirely focused on advancing U.S. foreign policy goals with respect to Ukraine.' 'Second, in May of this year, I became concerned that a negative narrative about Ukraine, fueled by assertions made by Ukraine's departing Prosecutor General, was reaching the President of the United States, and impeding our ability to support the new Ukrainian government as robustly as I believed we should. 'Third, at no time was I aware of or took part in an effort to urge Ukraine to investigate former Vice President Biden.' Volker said that in the text messages he shared with Congress, 'Vice President Biden was never a topic of discussion.' However, the texts do explicitly mention Burisma, the Ukraine gas company where the presidential candidate's son Hunter Biden served on the board. 'Fourth, while executing my duties, I kept my colleagues at the State Department and National Security Council informed, and also briefed Congress, about my actions.' Fifth and finally, I strongly supported the provision of U.S. security assistance, including lethal defensive weapons, to Ukraine throughout my tenure." The reporters elaborate on those points. The report includes a copy of Volker's opening remarks.

Lying to the Old Folks on Our Dime. Annie Karni & Abby Goodnough of the New York Times: "President Trump on Thursday delivered a campaign-style speech to an audience of elderly voters, pitching a new executive order that aims to improve private Medicare plans as the responsible alternative to the 'Medicare for all' policies supported by some of his Democratic political opponents. 'Standing in solidarity with our nation's seniors, I declare once again that America will never be a socialist country,' Mr. Trump told a crowd at the Villages in Florida, the country's largest retirement community, where the population is overwhelmingly white and conservative and where many residents are veterans.... But while Mr. Trump's speech suggested that the Democratic proposals for expanding coverage put retirees' access to health care in grave danger, the plans would not actually diminish their benefits.... Mr. Trump's speech, delivered from behind a lectern with a presidential seal, was billed as an official White House event and his travel was not paid for by his campaign. But it was almost indistinguishable in much of its content from the remarks Mr. Trump delivers at his 'Make America Great Again' rallies."

Nicole Perlroth of the New York Times: "Iranian hackers have been targeting the email accounts of at least one presidential campaign, as well as those of American journalists and current and former United States government officials, according to Microsoft. In a report released on Friday, Microsoft said the hackers, with apparent backing from Iran's government, made more than 2,700 attempts to identify the email accounts of current and former government officials, journalists covering political campaigns and accounts associated with one major presidential campaign. Microsoft would not name the campaign." Mrs. McC: Iran, if you're listening, I hope it's Trump's campaign you're set on hacking.

The Oranges of Trump's Ukraine Conspiracy Theory. Ben Collins of NBC News: "An anonymous post from March 2017 on the far-right 4chan message board teased a conspiracy theory that would eventually make its way to the White House. 'Russia could not have been the source of leaked Democrat emails released by Wikileaks,' the post teased, not citing any evidence for the assertion. The post baselessly insinuated that CrowdStrike, a cybersecurity firm that worked with the Democratic National Committee and had been contracted to investigate a hack of its servers, fabricated a forensics report to frame Russia for election interference.... In the years that followed the original 4chan post, at least three different but related conspiracy theories would warp and combine on the fringes of the internet, eventually coalescing around Ukraine's supposed role in helping Trump's 2016 opponent, Hillary Clinton. Ukraine wasn't originally part of the theory, but in July, Trump floated CrowdStrike's name during a call with the president of Ukraine as just one piece of a convoluted conspiracy accusation.... To even people who have followed these theories closely, Trump's call felt detached from any sense of logic.... This omnibus conspiracy theory has been frequently referred to on far-right blogs, Fox News and recently by the president as the Democrats' 'insurance policy,' a reference to the supposed setup as a way to impeach the president if Trump were to win the election."

Ali Vitali of NBC News: "Sen. Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass., has raised $24.6 million during the past three months, her campaign said Friday, beating her last quarter haul of $19.1 million and quadrupling her $6 million total from the first quarter of the year. The announcement comes as Warren, who has eschewed high-dollar events in favor of targeting small-dollar donations -- continues to solidify her place at or near the top of the Democratic presidential field in both polling and fundraising. She was outpaced only by fellow progressive Sen. Bernie Sanders -- who leads the pack with $25.3 million raised in the third quarter -- and dwarfed the fundraising totals announced Thursday by former Vice President Joe Biden's campaign. Biden raised $15.2 million in the third quarter." ~~~

~~~ Ed Kilgore of New York: "At the moment, you could say the Democratic race remains dominated by the Big Three of Warren, Biden, and Sanders (in whatever order you choose to rank them), with fundraising dominating by a Big Four (those three plus Pete Buttigieg, who raised $24 million in the third quarter and $19 million in the fourth). Everyone trailing these candidates in either metric needs to make a move soon as voters prepare to vote."

~~~~~~~~~~

From "No Collusion!!!" to Pro-Collusion

The Alliterative Actuality. We're way past parody. Irony is irreclaimable. Farce is fucked. Burlesque is buried, and caricature has been kicked off the train.... We're in the midst of tragedy and travesty. Truly. -- Akhilleus, in today's Comments

As the President of the United States, I have an absolute right, perhaps even a duty, to investigate, or have investigated, CORRUPTION, and that would include asking, or suggesting, other Countries to help us out! -- Donald Trump, in a tweet last night ~~~

 

~~~ But I swear by the Constitution I shall only exercise my absolute right when I see it will help me, Donald Trump. And if I force those other Countries to produce fake charges against my opponents, then like always I made a Great Deal. -- Mrs. Bea McCrabbie

Ukraine Case Proved. China Case Opened. I would think that if they were honest about it, they'd start a major investigation into the Bidens. It's a very simple answer. They should investigate the Bidens ... and by the way, likewise, China should start an investigation into the Bidens. Because what happened to China is just about as [bad as] what happened with Ukraine. -- Donald Trump, to reporters Thursday ~~~

~~~ Eileen Sullivan of the New York Times: "President Trump on Thursday publicly called on China to investigate a political rival, former Vice President Joseph R. Biden Jr., in an extraordinary presidential request to a foreign country for help that could benefit him in the 2020 election. 'China should start an investigation into the Bidens,' Mr. Trump said Thursday as he left the White House to travel to Florida where he was expected to announce an executive order on Medicare.... Mr. Trump made the comments about China ahead of the latest round of trade talks, which are set to take place next week. 'We're going to have a meeting with them, we'll see,' Mr. Trump said of the talks. 'I have a lot of options on China. But if they don't do what we want, we have tremendous power.'... Mr. Trump on Thursday said he had not personally asked President Xi for assistance. 'But it's certainly something we can start thinking about because I'm sure that President Xi does not like being under that kind of scrutiny.'" Sullivan includes background on the right-wing theory that Joe Biden helped his son in an investment involving the state-owned Bank of China. The AP story is here. (Also linked yesterday.) ~~~

~~~ Kylie Atwood, et al., of CNN: "When ... Donald Trump suggested -- without prompting -- that China should investigate Joe Biden and his son..., the move startled Chinese officials, who say they have little interest in becoming embroiled in a US political controversy. And it amounted to the latest extraordinary effort by Trump to openly request political assistance from foreign governments. Thursday's comments weren't the first time Trump has injected Biden into his relationship with China.... During a phone call with [President] Xi [Jinping] on June 18, Trump raised Biden's political prospects as well as those of Sen. Elizabeth Warren, who by then had started rising in the polls, according to two people familiar with the discussion. In that call, Trump also told Xi he would remain quiet on Hong Kong protests as trade talks progressed. The White House record of that call was later stored in the highly secured electronic system used to house a now-infamous phone call with Ukraine's President.... After this story published, Warren ... [tweeted], 'Trump can say what he wants about me, but it's outrageous that any president would sell out the people of Hong Kong behind closed doors. The public must see the transcript of Trump's call with Xi. And we need a leader who will stand up for our values.'"

Washington Post Editors: "It's hard to know where to begin in describing the gross impropriety of Mr. Trump's behavior. But we'll start with facts: The allegations that the president is suggesting Ukraine and China should investigate are manifestly false.... Mr. Trump is seeking to call attention to Hunter Biden's business involvement with foreign partners who were probably hoping to trade on his family name. That's unseemly -- but no more so than the business favors obtained by Mr. Trump's own children from China and other countries.... That a request for a foreign investigation of a U.S. citizen would come directly from the president, in the absence of any legitimate U.S. probe, is a blatant violation of that citizen's rights and of the U.S. rule of law." ~~~

~~~ New York Times Editors: "Mr. Trump seems to be operating on the assumption that the more shameless his assault on democratic norms and laws, the more he can get away with. This is not how the system works, no matter how fervently Mr. Trump's Republican defenders may wish it so." ~~~

     ~~~ Got the Memo. Molly Beck of the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel: "U.S. Sen. Ron Johnson [R-Wis.] said Thursday there's nothing improper about ... Donald Trump's call on Chinese officials to investigate his top political rival in his 2020 re-election bid.... Johnson reiterated Thursday the Democrats' characterization of a phone call Trump made to Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky misrepresents its significance. 'I look at that transcript and I go, it's Trump being Trump,' Johnson said." Mrs. McC: "Trump being Trump" is the GOP's go-to answer to many of Trump's illegal or inappropriate acts. It's similar to shrugging off a mob hit with, "It's Gotti being Gotti." More on Johnson linked below.

     ~~~ Ignored the Memo. Joseph Morton of the Omaha World-Herald: "Sen. Ben Sasse, R-Neb., took issue Thursday with ... Donald Trump urging China to investigate former Vice President Joe Biden and his son's business dealings there. 'Hold up: Americans don't look to Chinese commies for the truth,' Sasse said in a written statement to The World-Herald. 'If the Biden kid broke laws by selling his name to Beijing, that's a matter for American courts, not communist tyrants running torture camps.'"

~~~ ** Adam Edelman of NBC News: "When asked ... whether he had asked China to investigate the Bidens, Trump replied, 'I haven't. But it's certainly something we could start thinking about,' he said. 'The guy got kicked out of the Navy and all of the sudden he's getting billions of dollars. You know what they call that? A pay-off,' he added.... Trump, seeking to expand his corruption accusations against the Bidens beyond Ukraine, has in recent days repeatedly accused Hunter Biden of using a 2013 trip on Air Force Two with his father, then the vice president, to procure $1.5 billion from China for a private equity fund he had started. Prior to Thursday, Trump had not called for investigation of the matter. Despite Trump's accusations, there has been no evidence of corruption on the part of the former vice president or his son.... Hunter Biden's spokesman ... told NBC News previously that Hunter Biden wasn't initially an 'owner' of the company and has never gotten paid for serving on the board. He said Hunter Biden didn't acquire an equity interest in the fund until 2017, after his father had left office. And when he did, he put in only about $420,000 -- a 10 percent interest. That puts the total capitalization of the fund at the time at about $4.2 million -- a far cry from the $1.5 billion that Trump has alleged. Trump also said Thursday that he still wants Ukraine to conduct 'a major investigation' into Joe and Hunter Biden." Emphasis added. (Also linked yesterday.) ~~~

~~~ Zack Beauchamp of Vox: "The Ukraine stuff alone here is terrible for Trump. The White House has claimed that the call to Ukraine was about expressing concerns about corruption there; now Trump seems to be openly admitting that his call was really just about his desire for the Ukrainians to go after Biden. But the China thing takes it to a whole new level.... The core of the argument for impeachment is that Trump is inappropriately wielding the power of the presidency to solicit foreign interference in the 2020 election. That is literally what he did Thursday, with not one but two different foreign leaders, on camera and in front of reporters. The president's theory seems to be that he can get away with this if he's brazen enough because it won't generate the same level of outrage as if it's done in secret and covered up." ~~~

~~~ Jonathan Chait: "Donald Trump is being impeached for using his office to pressure foreign countries to investigate his political rivals. It is not clear Trump understands that, because he simply continues committing this offense in broad daylight.... Of course, Trump has started a trade war with China, and has personal control over the tariffs he imposes, which gives China a strong financial incentive to placate him. Trump was not shy about reminding the Chinese of this juxtaposition[.]" (Also linked yesterday.) ~~~

~~~ Susan Glasser of the New Yorker: "On Thursday morning, Trump appeared to dispense with excuses altogether, no longer even bothering to contest the charge that he leaned on Ukraine to investigate Biden and his son Hunter. How do we know this? Because Trump did it again, live on camera, from the White House lawn.... You could practically hear the collective gasp in Washington. Republicans had spent days denying what Trump had more or less just admitted to.... Twitter wags immediately began wondering if the President had just committed the nation's first act of self-impeachment. On CNN, a chyron read 'TRUMP ADMITS TO VERY OFFENSE DEMS LOOKING TO IMPEACH OVER.'... Hillary Clinton tweeted, 'Someone should inform the president that impeachable offenses committed on national television still count.'" ~~~

~~~ The Threat to China Proves the Threat to Ukraine. Aaron Blake of the Washington Post: "This might be Trump's most problematic request of this sort, for a number of reasons.... This one has the potential for a really corrupt appearance. The chief reason for that: Trump is currently engaged in a trade war with China.... China could very logically now believe that further escalations [of Trump's trade war] might be tied to whether it takes the actions Trump wants. Any future decisions could be colored accordingly.... Even if you set aside the trade war, this is still a U.S. president suggesting that a foreign country do something that is transparently geared toward his own reelection bid.... Trump has intermittently argued -- however implausibly -- that his effort to get Ukraine to launch investigations is about rooting out corruption in that country; his now-public request of another investigation involving the Bidens makes clear what this is really about." (Also linked yesterday.)

** Ukraine May Do Trump a Favor, After All.* Andrew Kramer of the New York Times: "Ukraine's top prosecutor said on Friday that he would review several important cases previously handled by his predecessors, including a criminal case involving the owner of a natural gas company that employed a son of former Vice President Joseph R. Biden Jr.... It raises questions of whether Ukraine was, in effect, bowing to public and private pressure from the president of the United States, on which it has depended on for millions of dollars in aid. The prosecutor general, Ruslan Ryaboshapka, said he intended to review 15 cases in all, and mentioned several high-profile investigations of wealthy Ukrainians, including the owner of the natural gas company, Burisma Holdings, where Mr. Biden's son Hunter served on the board until earlier this year.... Mr. Ryaboshapka told journalists at a briefing in Kiev on Friday: 'The prosecution service is beyond politics. We are conducting an audit of all cases, including those which were investigated by the previous leadership of the prosecutor's office.'" ~~~

     ~~~ * Mrs. McCrabbie: It is possible this is a stall tactic. Ryaboshapka could either slow-walk the investigation into Burisma by burying it among 14 other investigations that just take forever to review. Or he could investigate Burisma's owner & ignore Hunter Biden's role altogether.

** White House Promotes Trump's/Barr's Abuse of Power. Meagan Vasquez of CNN: "The White House removed a section of its daily public newsletter on Thursday that suggested ... Donald Trump had instructed the Justice Department to launch an investigation into former Vice President Joe Biden and his family. The newsletter language, which was first reported by the Daily Beast, [Mrs. McC: DB story is firewalled] had said on Wednesday: 'This year President Trump has asked Ukraine to fully cooperate with the Justice Department's investigation into the actions of former Vice President Joe Biden and his family in Ukraine. According to the Daily Beast, the paragraph was altered by early Thursday to say the President 'has asked Ukraine to fully cooperate with any Justice Department's investigation into the actions of former Vice President Joe Biden and his family in Ukraine.' And later Thursday, the paragraph was deleted from the October 2 newsletter page before the entire webpage was updated with the next day's newsletter issue." ~~~

     ~~~ Mrs. McCrabbie: Tuesday night, I posited that maybe mike pence missed the import of Trump's ask of Zelensky "because Trump's solicitation was just one more commonplace corruption transaction too routine to notice." That seems more likely now. Everyone left in the regime -- from the veep on down to the people who put out the daily newsletter -- is so warped by Trump's bad behavior that his corrupt or unconstitutional misdeeds are either okay or so great they should be advertised.

Rebecca Ballhaus, et al., of the Wall Street Journal: "President Trump ordered the removal of the ambassador to Ukraine after months of complaints from allies outside the administration, including his personal lawyer Rudy Giuliani, that she was undermining him abroad and obstructing efforts to persuade Kyiv to investigate former Vice President Joe Biden, according to people familiar with the matter.... State Department officials were told this spring that [Marie] Yovanovitch's removal was a priority for the president, a person familiar with the matter said. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo supported the move, an administration official said. Ms. Yovanovitch was told by State Department officials that they couldn't shield her from attacks by the president and his allies.... In an interview, Mr. Giuliani told The Wall Street Journal that in the lead-up to Ms. Yovanovitch's removal, he reminded the president of complaints percolating among Trump supporters that she had displayed an anti-Trump bias in private conversations.... She was recalled at least three months before the end of the customary three-year diplomatic tenure. Mr. Giuliani told the Journal that when he mentioned the ambassador to the president this spring, Mr. Trump 'remembered he had a problem with her earlier and thought she had been dismissed.' Mr. Giuliani said he subsequently received a call from a White House official -- whom he declined to identify -- asking him to list his concerns about the ambassador again. Mr. Giuliani said he gave Mr. Pompeo a nine-page document dated March 28 that included a detailed timeline of the Bidens' dealings in Ukraine and allegations of impropriety against Ms. Yovanovitch, including that she was 'very close' to Mr. Biden." Mrs. McC: Again, I don't know why I was able to link to this firewalled article. TPM has a story summary here.

Trump & Co. Plan to Assert There's No Impeachment Inquiry. Alayna Treene & Margaret Talev of Axios: "The White House is planning to send Speaker Nancy Pelosi a letter as soon as Friday arguing that President Trump and his team can ignore lawmakers' demands until she holds a full House vote formally approving an impeachment inquiry, 2 sources familiar with the letter tell Axios.... Trump wants to force House Democrats in vulnerable races to be on the record if they favor pursuing impeachment, these sources tell us.... Several White House lawyers spent a good chunk of their Thursday reviewing the language in the letter, expecting that it could find its way before a judge. Meanwhile, Pelosi maintains that there 'is no requirement under the Constitution, under House Rules, or House precedent that the whole House vote before proceeding with an impeachment inquiry,' as she stated in a Thursday letter to the House's Republican Leader, Kevin McCarthy."

U.S. "Diplomats" Tried to Coerce Ukraine to Help Trump's Re-election Campaign

     ~~~ ** Update. Josh Lederman of NBC News: "Text messages given to Congress show U.S. ambassadors working to persuade Ukraine to publicly commit to investigating ... Donald Trump's political opponents and explicitly linking the inquiry to whether Ukraine's president would be granted an official White House visit.... [The text messages [U.S. envoy Kurt] Volker provided to House investigators yesterday] ... offer the fullest picture to date of how top diplomats and [Rudy] Giuliani sought to advance Trump's goal of getting the Ukrainians to investigate both meddling in the 2016 election and Vice President Joe Biden's son, Hunter Biden.... Volker and U.S. Ambassador to the European Union Gordon Sondland -- both political appointees -- repeatedly stressed the need to get the Ukrainians to agree to the exact language that [Ukraine President Volodymyr] Zelenskiy would use in announcing an investigation, the texts indicate.... The whistleblower complaint said multiple U.S. officials had been 'deeply concerned' about Giuliani's interference in U.S.-Ukraine relations. The whistleblower reported that the officials had said both Volker and Sondland 'had spoken with Mr. Giuliani in an attempt to "contain the damage" to U.S. national security.' But the text messages show Volker and Sondland playing an active role in advancing Trump's goal of forcing a Ukrainian investigation [of the Bidens & supposed Ukraine interference in the 2016 presidential election].... In fact, the only U.S. official included in the text messages who pushes back is a career diplomat, William Taylor, who became the top U.S. diplomat in Ukraine after Trump pulled Ambassador Marie Yovanovitch out of her post earlier this year."

** Here's a readout of the text messages, provided to ABC News by a House committee.

The Shakedown Letter. Ken Vogel & Michael Schmidt of the New York Times: "Two of President Trump's top envoys to Ukraine drafted a statement for the country's new president in August that would have committed Ukraine to pursuing investigations sought by Mr. Trump into his political rivals, three people briefed on the effort said. The drafting of the statement marks new evidence of how Mr. Trump's fixation with Ukraine began driving senior diplomats to bend American foreign policy to the president's political agenda in the weeks after the July 25 call between the two leaders. The statement was drafted by Gordon D. Sondland, the United States ambassador to the European Union, and Kurt D. Volker, then the State Department's envoy to Ukraine, according to the three people who have been briefed on it.... The statement was written with the awareness of a top aide to the Ukrainian president, as well as Rudolph W. Giuliani.... It is unclear if the statement was delivered to Volodymyr Zelensky, the Ukrainian president, but no statement was released publicly under his name.... The statement would have committed Ukraine to investigating the energy company Burisma, which had employed Hunter Biden.... And it would have called for the Ukrainian government to look into what Mr. Trump and his allies believe was interference by Ukrainians in the 2016 election in the United States to benefit Hillary Clinton.... Mr. Sondland and Mr. Volker believed that Mr. Giuliani was 'poisoning' Mr. Trump's mind about Ukraine and that eliciting a public commitment from Mr. Zelensky to pursue the investigations would induce Mr. Trump to more fully support the new Ukrainian government...." ~~~

     ~~~ Mrs. McCrabbie: One might take with a grain of salt Volker's & Sondland's reported motives for drafting the statement.

John Hudson, et al., of the Washington Post: "The former U.S. special envoy for Ukraine told House investigators on Thursday that he warned ... Rudolph W. Giuliani, that Giuliani was receiving untrustworthy information from Ukrainian political figures about former vice president Joe Biden and his son, according to two people familiar with his testimony.... [Kurt] Volker's testimony offers the first inside account of the Trump administration's efforts to press for a Ukrainian investigation into Trump's political rival.... Volker also said that he and other State Department officials cautioned the Ukrainians to steer clear of U.S. politics. Getting involved, he said he told them, would open the nation up to allegations that they were interfering in an election and could be detrimental to Ukraine long-term, according to these two individuals.... Volker faced hours of questioning Thursday from members of the House committees leading an impeachment inquiry into Trump, the first of five former and current State Department officials to testify as part of the probe." (Also linked yesterday.)

Here are earlier stories, based on a portion of the text messages Volker turned over to Congress yesterday:

     ~~~ Crazy Quid Pro Quo. Katherine Faulders & Conor Finnegan of ABC News: "In newly disclosed text messages shared with Congress, the top U.S. diplomat to Ukraine writes to a group of other American diplomats that 'I think it's crazy to withhold security assistance for help with a political campaign.' The exchange, provided by former U.S Special Envoy to Ukraine Kurt Volker as part of his closed-door deposition before multiple House committees Thursday, shows what appears to be encrypted text messages he exchanged with two other American diplomats in September ... just days before the White House released the military assistance to Ukraine..... In the exchange..., the concerns are expressed by Bill Taylor, the top U.S. diplomat to Ukraine. Gordon Sondland, the United States Ambassador to the European Union, responds to Taylor..., 'Bill, I believe you are incorrect about President Trump's intentions. The President has been crystal clear: no quid pro quo's of any kind. The President is trying to evaluate whether Ukraine is truly going to adopt the transparency and reforms that President Zelensky promised during his campaign,' Sondland says. Sondland then suggests to the group take the conversations off line, typing, 'I suggest we stop the back and forth by text.'... In a separate thread between Sondland and Volker directly, the two diplomats discussed contacts with Ukrainian officials and requests for them to open an investigation. They appear to be drafting language for Ukrainian officials to announce an investigation into 'the problem of interference in the political processes of the United States, especially with the alleged involvement of some Ukrainian politicians.'" (Also linked yesterday.) ~~~

     ~~~ digby: "It appears that discussion happened as the new of Trump blackmailing Ukraine was dribbling out. I presume that Trump's factotum Sondland also knew this was bubbling up when he made that very obvious CYA comment." Mrs. McC: digby's supposition, written before publication of the full set of text messages, is backed up by later reporting. Worth noting: Sondland's main job qualification was a $1MM+ donation to Trump's inaugural committee. Andrea Mitchell has questioned how he got in the loop in the first place: Sondland is ambassador to the European Union, and Ukraine is not an E.U. member. ~~~

     ~~~ Update. Call Me. Nicholas Fandos, et al., of the New York Times: "The texts ... come from a series of early September exchanges. The texts among Mr. Volker, Mr. Sondland and Mr. Taylor portray Mr. Taylor as a diplomat deeply skeptical of the Trump administration's approach to Ukraine, flabbergasted that the military assistance had been cut off -- and firmly believing that the White House was asking for Ukraine to begin political investigations in return for the aid being released -- a charge at the heart of the impeachment investigation.... 'As I said on the phone, I think it's crazy to withhold security assistance for help with a political campaign,' Mr. Taylor wrote on Sept. 9 to Mr. Volker and [Mr.] Sondland.... [Here's where Sondland gave his CYA response & said to quit texting.]... Roughly a week earlier, on Sept. 1, Mr. Taylor had asked Mr. Sondland, 'Are we now saying that security assistance and WH meeting are conditioned on investigations?' Mr. Sondland replied simply, 'Call me.'"

Philip Bump of the Washington Post: "It's generally not a good sign when a government official sends a written message questioning the propriety of an action and another official replies by suggesting they talk on the phone.... While the released text messages aren't comprehensive (representing' only a subset of the full body of the materials,' according to the letter accompanying the messages) and don't directly implicate Trump..., [they contain,] in two suggestive moments, specifically the sort of don't-document-this responses that imply an awareness of lines being crossed. 1. There's an explicitly stated quid pro quo.... 'Heard from White House,' [Kurt Volker] wrote [to Andrey Yermak, an adviser to President Zelensky], 'assuming President Z convinces trump he will investigate / "get to the bottom of what happened" in 2016, we will nail down date for visit to Washington.'... 2. The U.S. helped shape a statement from Ukraine mentioning the Biden probe.... 3. There's a strong suggestion that military aid was used as leverage -- and hints at an attempt to hide that. By the end of August, the Ukrainians had learned that the United States is withholding military aid, a decision made by Trump before the July 25 call.... 'Are we now saying that security assistance and WH meeting are conditioned on investigations?' [Bill] Taylor asked [on Sept 1]. 'Call me,' [Gordon] Sondland replied. And their conversation on that central point was not recorded."


Huh. Ben Lefebvre & Theodoric Meyer
of Politico: "Energy Secretary Rick Perry is expected to announce his resignation from the administration by the end of November, according to three people familiar with his plans. Perry, who had been Texas' longest serving governor before joining ... Donald Trump's Cabinet in 2017, has largely avoided the controversies that felled others in the administration. But his travels to Ukraine have lately embroiled him in the impeachment inquiry engulfing Trump and his inner circle, even though two of the people called the scandal unrelated to Perry's departure, which they said he has been planning for several months.... Perry has drawn scrutiny because he led the U.S. delegation to Ukrainia President Volodymyr Zelensky's inauguration in May, a visit that came as the administration was trying to determine whether the new leader would be amenable to Trump's demands.... No evidence has emerged that Perry was directly involved with Trump's attempt to drum up an investigation of his political opponent, but Sen. Bob Menendez (D-N.J) earlier this week sent a letter to Perry requesting information about his activities and interactions there.... Perry, a frequent traveler to Eastern Europe as pitchman for U.S. energy exports, was also a subject in the subpoena that House Democrats served to ... Rudy Giuliani earlier this week. The subpoena includes a demand for documents and other communications involving Perry and [Giuliani.]... A second subpoena expected to be issued this week will seek details of conversations between acting White House chief of staff Mick Mulvaney and Perry...."

Thanks to MAG for the artwork. BTW, the " Wah! Wah! Wah!" script here is called Kremlin.MEANWHILE, in Finland. Rick Noack of the Washington Post: "Wednesday's roller coaster news conference with President Trump and Finnish President Sauli Niinisto elicited ridicule and some concern in Finland, where many celebrated their leader on Thursday for enduring with dignity what they largely described as a Trump monologue. Coming from a nation that ranks second on the World Press Freedom Index -- compared with the United States, which ranks 48th -- stunned Finnish reporters described to their readers back home a 'circus' and parallel reality in the White House. Finnish newspaper Hufvudstadsbladet offered a blunt summary of the meeting: 'Niinistö's visit was overshadowed by Circus Trump - President Niinisto asked Trump to safeguard US democracy.'... [At the press events], Niinisto largely looked on in silence. Photos of his bewildered face quickly circulated online. But when Trump began responding to a question addressed to Niinisto, he interrupted: 'I think the question is for me.' In what Finnish commentators suggested was a subtle dig at Trump, Niinisto at one point also said: 'Mr. President, you have here a great democracy. Keep it going on.' (Trump appeared to interpret that remark as praise.)" (Also linked yesterday.) ~~~

     ~~~ Mrs. McCrabbie: I'm surprised the Finns had time to focus on the bilateral meetings. It's autumn, the leaves are falling, and they should all be out raking & vacuuming the forest floors.

Dumbest Senator Forgot He Agreed with Joe Biden in 2016. Andrew Kaczynski & Em Steck of CNN: "A newly unearthed letter from 2016 shows that Republican senators pushed for reforms to Ukraine's prosecutor general's office and judiciary, echoing calls then-Vice President Joe Biden made at the time. CNN's KFile found a February 2016 bipartisan letter signed by several Republican senators that urged then-Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko to 'press ahead with urgent reforms to the Prosecutor General's office and judiciary.' The letter ... further undercuts a baseless attack made by ... Donald Trump and his allies that Biden pressured the Ukrainian government to fire then Prosecutor General Viktor Shokin to stop investigations into a Ukrainian natural gas company that his son, Hunter Biden, sat on the board of.... The 2016 letter ... was signed by Republican Sens. Rob Portman, Mark Kirk and Ron Johnson, as well as Democratic Sens. Dick Durbin, Jeanne Shaheen, Chris Murphy, Sherrod Brown, and Richard Blumenthal and focused on longstanding issues of corruption in Ukraine and urged reforms of the government.... Johnson signed onto a letter with Iowa Sen. Chuck Grassley last week to Attorney General Bill Barr asking him to investigate, in part, allegations surrounding Biden and Ukraine." (Also linked yesterday.) ~~~

     ~~~ Update: Sure enough, the Milwaukee Journal reports (linked above), "Johnson said ... [Thursday] he didn't remember the letter."

Donnie, Rudy & Other Shady Characters. Josh Rogin of the Washington Post: In May, "months before an intelligence community whistleblower accused President Trump's lawyer Rudolph W. Giuliani of digging for dirt on former vice president Joe Biden in Ukraine, many in that country knew what he was up to and some were talking about it publicly. One Ukrainian oligarch in particular, a figure close to President Volodymyr Zelensky, [-- he owned the TV station that distributed Zelensky's comedy show --] claims to have first-hand knowledge of Giuliani's activities because, he says, Giuliani's business associates [Lev Parnas and Igor Fruman] tried to rope him into the scheme. When this Ukrainian business tycoon, Ihor Kolomoisky, rejected Giuliani's request for help, Giuliani attacked him on Twitter and called for him to be investigated. Kolomoisky then gave an on-the-record interview on Ukrainian television in which he predicted that Giuliani was soon going to be the center of a 'big scandal' in the United States.... Kolomoisky is no innocent. In addition to being accused of extensive financial crimes, the Ukrainian-Jewish billionaire also stands accused of using quasi-military forces on behalf of his PrivatBank to corruptly take over other companies." ~~~

     ~~~ Nancy LeTourneau of the Washington Monthly has more on Giuliani's clients (or something) Parnas & Fruman. After citing part of a July BuzzFeed News profile of these guys, LeTourneau writes, "Given that these two men are not only fraudsters, but bad fraudsters, it might seem surprising that last year they began pumping big dollars into the coffers of Trump super PACs and Republican campaigns. For example, in May 2018, a company owned by Parnas and Fruman, Global Energy Producers, made a $325,000 donation to America First Action, a political action committee supporting Trump's re-election. ABC News reported that 'the company has no listed office address or phone number, no announced deals or contracts, and a bare bones one-page website that features only a countdown clock that long ago ticked down to zeros.'" Despite this, some unknown entity dropped $1.26MM in an account of a company Parnas owned. A few days later, Parnas made a $325K donation to America Trump Action, a U.S. PAC supporting Trump's re-election. And a few days after that, Donnie Junior posed for a photo with Parnas & Fruman at the Beverly Hills Polo Lounge. ~~~

~~~ Speaking of Junior.... Aaron Rupar of Vox: "... if anyone should sit out trying to exploit the [Hunter Biden] situation it is the Trump children.... The hypocrisy and irony of [Donald Junior & Eric Trump speaking out against Hunter's "conflict of interest"] -- pushed by an arm of the Trump campaign despite Eric and Don Jr.'s (broken) promise to stay out of politics so conflicts of interest could be avoided between their father and the family business they now manage on his behalf -- is truly staggering.... They themselves are guilty of everything they're accusing the Bidens of -- and then some.... Just hours before [Junior & Eric appeared on Fox 'News' to criticize Hunter Biden], Forbes reported that Eric and Don Jr. have sold more than $100 million of the family's real estate since the January 2017 inauguration -- including a $3.2 million deal in the Dominican Republic last year that is 'the clearest violation of their father's pledge to do no new foreign deals while in office.'"

Joshua Green of Bloomberg: "To understand how Trump wound up the target of a House impeachment inquiry, it's first necessary to understand why he was so obsessed with finding dirt on Biden.... The notion ... was first aired in a 2018 book, Secret Empires ... by conservative author Peter Schweizer.... Schweizer, [same author of Clinton Cash] an editor at Breitbart News, is the president of the Government Accountability Institute (GAI) [with Steve Bannon being GAI founding chairman], a nonprofit group whose board chairwoman and major donor is Rebekah Mercer, a prominent Trump supporter and benefactor of right-wing causes.... [T]he impact of Secret Empires [after publication] landed almost exclusively in conservative media.... The information needs to be legitimized -- or 'weaponized,' to use Bannon's term -- through the mainstream press. This requires patience, restraint, and ... sophistication.... Impatient to advance a story he believed would damage Biden, Trump tapped Giuliani, who told the New York Times in May that he was going to Kiev, the Ukrainian capital, to push the new government to investigate the Bidens." --s

Twitter Finally Polices Trump -- A Little (or Liddle). Jacey Fortin of the New York Times: "In a tweet on Wednesday, President Trump addressed his social media followers with four words, all caps: 'LOOK AT THIS PHOTOGRAPH!' Under that was a video showing Chad Kroeger, the lead singer of the Canadian postgrunge rock band Nickelback, holding a framed picture of former Vice President Joseph R. Biden Jr., his son Hunter Biden and a Ukrainian businessman. The video, which Twitter had removed by Thursday morning, is from the music video for 'Photograph,' a 2005 Nickelback single. In the song's original video, Mr. Kroeger holds up an old picture of himself and a friend as he sings: 'Look at this photograph/Every time I do it makes me laugh....'... Mr. Trump used an altered version of that footage, and he was far from the first to do so. The Nickelback meme is more than a decade old, and you can find multiple versions online...." ~~~

~~~ Alex Hern of the Guardian: "A video posted by Donald Trump has been removed from Twitter after a copyright claim by the rock band Nickelback."

David Corn of Mother Jones: "The story of the most profound betrayal a president can commit has vanished from the national discourse.... Last Friday night, the Washington Post published a stunning article reporting that during an Oval Office meeting in May 2017, Trump told Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov and then-Russian ambassador Sergey Kislyak that Trump was unconcerned about Moscow's attack on the 2016 presidential election.... Trump telling the Russians he did not care about the attack ... would mark a dereliction of his primary duty as president: to protect the nation.... On Wednesday, when asked if Moscow would target the coming US election, Russian leader Vladimir Putin joked, 'I'll tell you a secret: Yes, we';ll definitely do it.' And he added in a stage whisper, 'Just don't tell anyone.'" --s

Jeff Stein, et al., of the Washington Post: "An Internal Revenue Service official has filed a whistleblower complaint reporting that he was told at least one Treasury Department political appointee attempted to improperly interfere with the annual audit of the president or vice president's tax returns, according to multiple people familiar with the document. Trump administration officials dismissed the whistleblower's complaint as flimsy because it is based on conversations with other government officials. But congressional Democrats were alarmed by the complaint, now circulating on Capitol Hill, and flagged it to a federal judge. They are also discussing whether to make it public.... The whistleblower is a career IRS official.... Key parts of the complaint remain under wraps in part because of strict privacy laws that prevent the disclosure of any details related to the filing of tax returns." (Also linked yesterday.) The Week has a summary of the WashPo report.

Most normal, well adjusted people, even under great stress are able to hold it together in public for something important, even if they go into their office and start throwing stuff afterward. Not Trump. He can't even walk down the hall without screaming at the walls. -- Akhilleus, in yesterday's Comments

Trump is Constitutionally and constitutionally unfit. George Conway in the Atlantic: "... you don't need to be a mental-health professional to see that something's very seriously off with Trump -- particularly after nearly three years of watching his erratic and abnormal behavior in the White House.... He's also incapable of consistently telling the truth.... Simply put, Trump's ingrained and extreme behavioral characteristics make it impossible for him to carry out the duties of the presidency in the way the Constitution requires.... [The Framers intended that], while carrying out his official duties, a president has to put the country, not himself, first; he must faithfully follow and enforce the law; and he must act with the utmost care in doing all that." Conway goes into a long riff on Trump's narcissism, sociopathy and more briefly, cognitive decline. "When you line up what the Framers expected of a president with all that we know about Donald Trump, his unfitness becomes obvious.... Now that the House of Representatives has embarked on an impeachment inquiry, one of the most important judgments it must make is whether any identified breaches of duty are likely to be repeated. And if a Senate trial comes to pass, that issue would become central as well to the decision to remove the president from office. That's when Trump' behavioral and psychological characteristics should -- must -- come into play. From the evidence, it appears that he simply can't stop himself from putting his own interests above the nation's." Thanks to Anonymous for the link. This is quite a long piece and worth reading. (Also linked yesterday.)

     ... Mrs. McCrabbie: You can bet Conway knows more about Trump's "erratic & abnormal behavior" than the rest of us do: his wife Kellyanne must have told him a basketful of doozies. However, he sticks to the public record. And there is a massive amount of there there to back up Conway's assertions.

Martyn Mclaughlin of The Scotsman: "The Trump Organisation's plans for a major expansion of its flagship Scottish resort by building swaths of housing and luxury villas have been thwarted, further jeopardising efforts by the US president's company to stem multimillion pound losses at its most prestigious overseas property.... Since he acquired it in 2014, Turnberry's parent firm has run up four consecutive years of losses, amounting to nearly £33m. It is also reliant on £107m in interest free loans provided by the 73-year-old." --s


Hamed Aleaziz
of Buzzfeed: "The Trump administration is planning to enable immigration officers to begin collecting DNA samples from undocumented immigrants who are being detained, officials said Wednesday. The move will likely anger civil liberties and immigrant advocates who argue the government should not draw sensitive personal information from people without being tied to a specific crime.... Proposed regulations are not immediately enacted and require a 60-day public comment period." --s The New York Times story is here.

Garance Burke & Martha Mendoza of the AP: "Sheltering migrant children has become a growing business for the Florida-based government contractor [Comprehensive Health Services Inc.], as the number of minors in government custody has swollen to record levels over the past two years.... The children, many in matching black pants and gray sweatshirts, are officially under the custody of the federal government. But a joint investigation by The Associated Press and FRONTLINE has found that the Trump administration has started shifting some of the caretaking of migrant children toward the private sector and contractors instead of the largely religious-based nonprofit grantees that have long cared for the kids." --s

David Shepardson & David Lawder of Reuters: "The Trump administration slapped 25% tariffs on French wine, Italian cheese and single-malt Scotch whisky — but spared Italian wine, pasta and olive oil -- in retaliation for European Union subsidies on large aircraft. The U.S. Trade Representative's Office released a list of hundreds of European products that will get new tariffs, including cookies, salami, butter and yogurt - but in many cases applied to only some EU countries, including German camera parts and blankets produced in the United Kingdom. The list includes UK-made sweaters, pullovers, cashmere items and wool clothing, as well as olives from France and Spain, EU-produced pork sausage and other pork products other than ham, and German coffee. The new tariffs are to take effect as early as Oct. 18.... The main target of the U.S. tariffs is Airbus aircraft made in the EU, which face 10% levy that could hurt U.S. airlines such as Delta (DAL.N) that have billions of dollars of Airbus orders waiting to be filled." (Also linked yesterday.) ~~~

     ~~~ Reuters doesn't say so, but Jen Kirby of Vox explains why: "The United States is imposing $7.5 billion in tariffs on imports from the European Union starting October 18 basically because the World Trade Organization said it could. These taxes against the EU stem from a 15-year battle over aviation subsidies that long predates the tariff-happy Trump." Mrs. McC: Sorry I forgot to link these stories earlier. (Also linked yesterday.)

Presidential Race 2020

Michael Grynbaum & Tiffany Hsu of the New York Times: "CNN rejected a pair of provocative ads from President Trump's re-election campaign on Thursday, saying the 30-second spots deriding the House Democrats' impeachment inquiry -- one deeming the effort 'nothing short of a coup' -- contained inaccuracies and unfairly attacked the network's journalists.... The Trump ads were recently posted online as part of what the campaign said was a multimillion-dollar advertising buy on national cable stations and digital platforms. One, 'Biden Corruption,' repeats unsubstantiated allegations about former Vice President Joseph R. Biden Jr.'s activities in Ukraine.... CNN said it had also rejected another Trump ad, 'Coup,' which presents the impeachment inquiry as an effort 'to undo the election, regardless of facts,' and accuses House Democrats of 'fabricating evidence.'... CNN said it had agreed to carry a third commercial submitted by the Trump campaign, which focuses on the president's accomplishments in office." ~~~

~~~ MEANWHILE. Ali Breland of Mother Jones: "... Donald Trump is taking advantage of a Facebook exemption that allows politicians to lie in advertisements to spread disinformation about former Vice President Joe Biden's 2015 diplomatic trip to Ukraine. Even though the ads contain misinformation, a Facebook spokesperson says they did not violate their company's advertising policy because of carveout for politicians. The ads, which both include the false claim that Biden's son Hunter was under investigation during the vice president's Ukrainian trip, are accompanied by a video with a narrator voicing each ad's text over a backdrop of ominous music and grainy footage." ~~~

~~~ Michael Calderone of Politico: "Joe Biden's presidential campaign is urging Fox News not to run a Trump 2020 campaign advertisement it claims 'spreads false, definitively debunked conspiracy theories.' In a letter to Fox News and Fox Business general counsel Lily Claffee, Biden campaign manager Greg Schultz wrote that the ad 'falsely states' that 'Biden offered Ukraine $1 billion to fire the prosecutor investigating a company affiliated with his son.' There is no evidence to support the claim that the former vice president intervened in Ukraine to benefit his son, who was on the board of a Ukrainian energy company.... 'We are not in the business of censoring ads from candidates on either side of the aisle,' a Fox News spokesperson said in a statement to Politico."


David Badash
of Alternet: "Donald Trump's top religion advisor Dr. Robert Jeffress has some news for the millions of Democratic voters who happen to be Christians: You are not. Dr. Jeffress, who sits on President Trump's Evangelical Advisory Board and even led a private pre-inauguration sermon for the Trump and Pence families hours before the president was sworn in..., on Monday ... declared that the god Democrats actually 'worship is the pagan god of the Old Testament, Moloch.'... Jeffress has condemned Judaism, Catholicism, Islam, and various forms of Christianity including Mormonism as not 'true' religions." --s

Richard Oppel of the New York Times: "MGM Resorts International has agreed t pay up to $800 million to settle lawsuits from victims of the October 2017 mass shooting in Las Vegas that left 58 people dead and hundreds of others injured. The killer, Stephen Paddock, holed up inside his room on the 32nd floor of the Mandalay Bay hotel, which MGM owns, and then fired into the crowd at a country music festival below. It was the deadliest mass shooting in modern American history. One of the lawyers for the victims, Robert Eglet, said on Thursday the settlement would be in the range of $735 million to $800 million and would resolve 'substantially all' of the lawsuits and claims against MGM related to the massacre." The CNN story is here. (Also linked yesterday.)

Beyond the Beltway

Michael Birnbaum of the Washington Post: "European policymakers said Thursday that a new Brexit proposal from British Prime Minister Boris Johnson was unworkable, heightening the prospects of a chaotic British departure from the European Union within weeks. Although leaders, politicians and negotiators did not dismiss Johnson's plan out of hand, they made clear the current offer would not win support from the 27 countries that need to sign off on any withdrawal deal, and they were downbeat about it serving as the basis for serious negotiations. British negotiators plan to visit Brussels again Friday. The Guardian's liveblog, which covers this development, is here. (Also linked yesterday.)

News Ledes

CNBC: "Unemployment hit a fresh 50-year low in September even though nonfarm payrolls rose by just 136,000 as the economy nears full employment, the Labor Department reported Friday. The jobless rate dropped 0.2 percentage points to 3.5%, matching a level it last saw in December 1969. A more encompassing measure that includes discouraged workers and the underemployed also fell, declining 0.3 percent points to 6.9%, matching its lowest in nearly 19 years and just off the all-time low of 6.8%."

New York Times: "Diahann Carroll, who more than half a century ago transcended racial barriers as the star of 'Julia,' the first American television series to chronicle the life of a black professional woman, died on Friday at her home in West Hollywood, Calif. She was 84."