The Commentariat -- July 12, 2020
Afternoon Update:
The New York Times' live updates of coronavirus developments Sunday are here: "More than 15,000 new cases of the coronavirus were announced on Sunday in Florida, marking the highest single-day total of known cases in any state since the start of the pandemic.... Florida also saw single-day records in the counties that include Florida's largest cities, including Miami, Fort Lauderdale, Orlando, Fort Myers, West Palm Beach, Pensacola and Sarasota."
Mrs. McCrabbie: Sorry, but this photo-op of Trump wearing a mask Saturday at Walter Reed Medical Center is ridiculous. He has to glower? He has to be in a hospital full of sick people to wear a mask? He has to be followed by an entourage of mask-wearing men in suits & military uniforms? Also, too, it's been reported staff had to beg him for a week before the hospital visit to don the mask, which includes the presidential* seal: ~~~
Justin Wise of the Hill: "President Trump late Saturday lashed out at a pair of Republican senators after they criticized his decision to commute the prison sentence of ... Roger Stone.... 'Do RINO'S Pat Toomey & Mitt Romney have any problem with the fact that we caught Obama, Biden, & Company illegally spying on my campaign? Do they care if Comey, McCabe, Page & her lover, Peter S, the whole group, ran rampant, wild & unchecked - lying & leaking all the way? NO!'"
Mariam Khan of ABC News: "House Intelligence Committee Chairman Adam Schiff, D-Calif., blasted Republicans for failing to stand up to the president and for not defending the 'rule of law,' after the president moved to commute the prison sentence of his longtime friend and former campaign adviser, Roger Stone. 'I think anyone who cares about the rule of law in this country is nauseated by the fact that the president has commuted the sentence of someone who willfully lied to Congress,' Schiff told ABC News Chief Anchor George Stephanopoulos on 'This Week' Sunday.... When asked by Stephanopoulos if Trump's action was an impeachable offense, Schiff said it would be if Trump abused the pardon power to protect himself from criminal liability. But, Schiff noted, 'If the Republicans won't even say a word, of course they're not going to vote to impeach and convict.'"
Lindsey Suggests Bob Mueller Will Pay for Writing Op-Ed. Felicia Sonmez of the Washington Post: "Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Lindsey O. Graham (R-S.C.) suggested Sunday that former special counsel Robert S. Mueller III may be invited to testify before his panel, although Graham did not give any details on the timing of any potential invitation. Graham's statement came one day after Mueller defended his office's prosecution of Roger Stone ... in a Washington Post op-ed.... In his statement Sunday, Graham suggested that he had reconsidered his position on allowing Mueller to testify in light of the former special counsel's op-ed. 'Apparently Mr. Mueller is willing -- and also capable -- of defending the Mueller investigation through an oped in the Washington Post,' Graham said. 'Democrats on the Senate Judiciary Committee have previously requested Mr. Mueller appear before the Senate Judiciary Committee to testify about his investigation. That request will be granted.'"
Mrs. McCrabbie: Here's a part I accidentally left out of my outtakes from Michael Shear's NYT interview of Elaine Duke, former acting Homeland Security secretary: "She said she was especially taken aback, during the response to Hurricane Maria's devastation of Puerto Rico, when she heard Mr. Trump raise the possibility of 'divesting' or 'selling' the island as it struggled to recover. 'The president's initial ideas were more of as a businessman, you know,' she recalled. 'Can we outsource the electricity? Can we can we sell the island? You know, or divest of that asset?' (She said the idea of selling Puerto Rico was never seriously considered or discussed after Mr. Trump raised it.)" Island Swap: Buy Greenland (white people); sell Puerto Rico (browner people).
Kevin Blackstone of the Washington Post reminds us of "the most athletic activist feat during an era in which we have come to celebrate the notion of athlete activism[:]... Bree Newsome ... scal[ing] a 30-foot flagpole on the grounds of the South Carolina State House and snatch[ing] from its truck and finial with full dishonor a Confederate flag that flapped there..., as a rebuttal to racial justice for more than half a century.... She was arrested after coming down, flag in hand. '[Physicality] was significant,' Newsome Bass [now married] said. 'Because people see me do this labor of climbing up the pole as symbolic of the struggle to dismantle a white supremacist system.' A few weeks later, South Carolina removed the flag and stuck it in a museum." Newsome, who wasn't an athlete, got a Greenpeace activist to teach her to climb a flagpole. ~~~
~~~~~~~~~~
A Reprieve for Roger
Robert Mueller, in a Washington Post op-ed, whacks Donald Trump & defends the Russia investigation & the case against Roger Stone. "... I feel compelled to respond both to broad claims that our investigation was illegitimate and our motives were improper, and to specific claims that Roger Stone was a victim of our office.... Stone was prosecuted and convicted because he committed federal crimes. He remains a convicted felon, and rightly so. Russia's actions were a threat to America's democracy.... The women and men who conducted these investigations and prosecutions acted with the highest integrity. Claims to the contrary are false." Thanks to Ken W. for the link.
Omertà. Sharon LaFraniere & Mark Mazzetti of the New York Times: "Months before F.B.I. agents arrived in darkness at his Florida home to take him into custody, Roger J. Stone Jr. promised ..., 'I will never roll on Donald Trump'.... The president's decision on Friday to commute Mr. Stone's prison sentence for impeding a congressional inquiry and other crimes was extraordinary because federal prosecutors had suspected that Mr. Stone could shed light on whether Mr. Trump had lied to them under oath or illegally obstructed justice. Even Mr. Stone suggested a possible quid pro quo, telling a journalist hours before the announcement that he hoped for clemency because Mr. Trump knew he had resisted intense pressure from prosecutors to cooperate.... Mr. Trump repeatedly praised Mr. Stone and others for refusing to aid the investigation. In a December 2018 tweet, he singled out Mr. Stone for resisting 'a rogue and out of control prosecutor,' adding, 'Nice to know that some people still have "guts!"'" Mrs. McC: The relationship between Trump & Stone is an exemplar of how the Mafia & other crime organizations operate.
Jesse Byrnes & Tal Axelrod of the Hill: "GOP Sen. Mitt Romney (Utah) on Saturday sharply condemned President Trump's commutation for ... Roger Stone.... 'Unprecedented, historic corruption: an American president commutes the sentence of a person convicted by a jury of lying to shield that very president,' Romney tweeted Saturday morning.... Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.) tweeted Friday before the commutation was announced that 'in my view it would be justified' for Trump to intervene, saying, 'This was a non-violent, first-time offense.'" (Also linked yesterday afternoon.) ~~~
~~~ Zach Brendza of the Pittsburgh Tribune-Review: "Sen. Pat Toomey [R-Pa.] calls President Trump's commutation of Roger Stone's sentence a 'mistake.'" Mrs. McC: Toomey's "criticism" was mighty mealy-mouthed.
Emma Newburger of CNBC: "Attorney General William Barr spoke with ... Donald Trump about Roger Stone and recommended against granting him clemency, an administration official told NBC News. Other White House officials were also opposed to Trump's decision due to fears of political blowback, including Chief of Staff Mark Meadows, according to a person familiar with the matter. Another person familiar with the matter told NBC that advisors told the president that granting Stone clemency 'was a big mistake.' The official also said that the Department of Justice had nothing to do with the president's decision to commute Stone's sentence.... Barr had previously said that Stone's prosecution was 'righteous' and the sentence was fair, and defended his decision to oppose a stricter sentence for Stone."
"Worse Than Nixon." Jeffrey Toobin of the New Yorker: "... Nixon never gave a pardon, or commuted a sentence, of anyone implicated in the Watergate scandal. But, on Friday night, Donald Trump commuted the prison sentence of Roger Stone.... William Barr ... had already overridden the sentencing recommendation of the prosecutors who tried the case -- a nearly unprecedented act.... But Barr's unseemly interference ... was somehow not enough for the President.... The only trace of shame in Trump's announcement was that he delivered it on a Friday night -- supposedly when the public is least attentive.... The Stone commutation isn't just a gift to an old friend -- it is a reward to Stone for keeping his mouth shut during the Mueller investigation. It is, in other words, corruption on top of cronyism.... One of the touchstones of authoritarian political cultures is the use of the criminal-justice system to reward friends and punish enemies." (Also linked yesterday.)
Max Boot of the Washington Post: "... what makes Trump the worst president ever is not simply that he is colossally incompetent. It is that he is also thoroughly corrupt. It is hard to think of a single major decision he has made for the good of the country, rather than for his own advantage.... While seeking vengeance against those who spoke the truth about his ugly machinations, Trump has sought to reward those who broke the law on his behalf.... He is not just the worst president ever; he keeps getting worse."
Quinta Jurecic & Benjamin Wittes of Lawfare: "... the predictable nature of Trump's action should not obscure its rank corruption. In fact, the predictability makes the commutation all the more corrupt, the capstone of an all-but-open attempt on the president's part to obstruct justice in a self-protective fashion over a protracted period of time.... Trump publicly encouraged Stone not to cooperate with Robert Mueller's investigation, he publicly dangled clemency as a reward for silence, and he has now delivered. The act is predictable precisely because the corrupt action is so naked.... According to newly unsealed material in the Mueller report, [Stone is] a person who had the power to reveal to investigators that Trump likely lied to Mueller -- and to whom Trump publicly dangled rewards if Stone refused to provide Mueller with that information.... Trump clearly knew about and encouraged Stone's outreach to WikiLeaks, the unredacted report shows. Yet in written answers the president provided to Mueller's office..., Trump insisted that he did not recall ... any discussions with Stone of WikiLeaks." (Also linked yesterday afternoon.)
David Frum of the Atlantic: "The amazing thing about the Trump-Stone story is how much of it happened in the full light of day.... Stone told the journalist Howard Fineman why he lied and whom he was protecting. 'He knows I was under enormous pressure to turn on him. It would have eased my situation considerably. But I didn't.' You read that, and you blink. As the prominent Trump critic George Conway tweeted: 'I mean, even Tony Soprano would have used only a pay phone or burner phone to say something like this.' Stone said it on the record to one of the best-known reporters in Washington. In so many words, he seemed to imply: I could have hurt the president if I'd rolled over on him. I kept my mouth shut. He owes me." (Also linked yesterday afternoon.)
With the economy in the tank & millions of Americans out of work, the Lincoln Project -- with a little help from Trump -- obliterates Trump's only remaining campaign theme: the Nixonian, racist "law and order" dog-whistle:
Cohen's Re-imprisonment Unconstitutional. Ryan Goodman of Just Security: "On Thursday morning, Michael Cohen ... was returned to prison.... Cohen's reimprisonment followed his apparently being caught on camera at a NYC restaurant in violation of conditions of home confinement.... However..., as the New York Times' Maggie Haberman described, 'Cohen imprisonment wasn't related to NY Post photo of him at restaurant. When he went to switch from furlough to home confinement, he had to sign papers saying no media or publishing a book, which he refused to sign.'... I asked some of the country's leading First Amendment law experts for their views about the agreement Cohen was told to sign.... They are almost uniform in decrying the condition placed on Cohen by the Bureau of Prisons, an agency under William Barr's Justice Department.... Former Provost of the University of Chicago and Professor Geoffrey R. Stone calls the government's action 'patently unconstitutional.' Robert Corn-Revere says it is 'an obvious violation of his First Amendment rights.' The ACLU's Vera Eidelman writes that it is 'almost certainly unconstitutional.' Laura R. Handman ... writes that the government's action is a 'profound affront to the First Amendment ... all the more so when the content of what he would share would likely be ... information that is particularly vital to an informed public as they decide whether the President merits re-election.' Jameel Jaffer, Executive Director of the Knight First Amendment Institute at Columbia University..., also not[ed] 'this gag order is to suppress speech about the president, which is speech at the core of the First Amendment's concern.'"
The New York Times' live updates for coronavirus developments Saturday are here. (Also linked yesterday afternoon.)
Dennis Romero & Austin Mullen of NBC News: "The United States saw another record day for new coronavirus cases, surpassing 70,000 for the first time, according to an NBC News tally Friday.... Sunbelt states experiencing surges including California, Florida, Texas and Georgia contributed to the record tally. California reported 7,798 new cases Friday, and state officials said they're considering releasing about 8,000 inmates from a prison system battered by the virus. In South Florida, NBC Miami reported [t]hat seven area hospitals have no intensive care beds available as a result of being inundated with virus patients." (Also linked yesterday afternoon.)
Eileen Sullivan & Erica Green of the New York Times: "Federal materials for reopening schools, shared the week President Trump demanded weaker guidelines to do so, said fully reopening schools and universities remained the 'highest risk' for the spread of the coronavirus. The 69-page document, obtained by The New York Times and marked 'For Internal Use Only,' was intended for federal public health response teams to have as they are deployed to hot spots around the country. But it appears to have circulated the same week that Vice President Mike Pence announced that the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention would release new guidelines, saying that the administration did not want them to be 'too tough.' It is unclear whether Mr. Trump saw the document, nor is it clear how much of it will survive once new guidance is completed.... And as Mr. Trump and Education Secretary Betsy DeVos were trying to pressure local schools to comply with their reopening vision, the document was expressly saying the federal government should not override local judgment."
Yasmeen Abutaleb, et al., of the Washington Post: "... as the Trump administration has strayed from the advice of many of its scientists and public health experts, the White House has moved to sideline [Anthony] Fauci, scuttled some of his planned TV appearances and largely kept him out of the Oval Office for more than a month even as coronavirus infections surge in large swaths of the country. In recent days, the 79-year-old scientist and director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases has found himself directly in the president's crosshairs. During a Fox News interview Thursday with Sean Hannity, Trump said Fauci 'is a nice man, but he's made a lot of mistakes.'... Fauci has found other ways to get his message out, from online Facebook chats to podcasts and print media interviews. And in recent days, with coronavirus cases slamming hospitals in the South and West, he has been frankly critical of the U.S. response -- and implicitly, of the president." There's a rich bit about the White House's cancelling Fauci's network TV appearances after Fauci displeased King Donald.
Americans Subsidizing Hate. Roger Sollenberger of Salon: "Organizations listed as hate groups by the Southern Poverty Law Center (SPLC) received millions of dollars in government-backed Paycheck Protection Program (PPP) loans, according to data from the Small Business Administration. The Center for Media and Democracy was the first to report on the loans, which went to six nonprofits for a total of somewhere between $2,350,000 and $5,700,000.... The largest loan went to the American Family Association, which was allotted between $1 million and $2 million to support 124 jobs.... Between 2013 and 2017, the group reported combined revenues in excess of $105 million.... The SPLC listed AFA as a hate group in 2010 after former top official Bryan Fischer blamed gay men for the Holocaust.... Right-wing activist David Lane posted an article Tuesday on the AFA website calling antifa and Black Lives Matter an 'alliance between the two devils of Nazism and communism.'" --s ~~~
~~~ Mrs. McCrabbie: Worth remembering: those millions are more gifts than loans: if the organizations meet (or claim to meet) certain criteria, the loan amounts are forgiven.
A Grieving Young Woman Speaks Truth to Power. Marisa Iati of the Washington Post: "When her father died of covid-19 last month, Kristin Urquiza minced no words assigning blame. Mark Urquiza, 65, should still be alive, his daughter wrote in a scathing obituary, published Wednesday in the Arizona Republic. 'His death is due to the carelessness of the politicians who continue to jeopardize the health of brown bodies through a clear lack of leadership, refusal to acknowledge the severity of this crisis, and inability and unwillingness to give clear and decisive direction on how to minimize risk,' she wrote. The searing tribute encapsulates the fury of critics who say governments a multiple levels are failing at their most basic duty: keeping citizens safe. The obituary also nods at the outbreak's disproportionate impact on black and Hispanic communities, which have experienced higher rates of coronavirus-related hospitalization and death. Among the leaders whom Kristin Urquiza feels failed her father, a Mexican American resident of Phoenix who worked in manufacturing, are Arizona Gov. Doug Ducey (R) and the Trump administration. Ducey, she said, 'has blood on his hands' for beginning to reopen the state in early May, roughly three weeks before new infections started to rise quickly."
Michael Shear of the New York Times interviews Elaine Duke, the acting secretary of Homeland Security in 2017. "Ms. Duke's most lasting legacy is likely to be the memo she signed -- under pressure -- to end [DACA]. Her decision not to cite any specific policy reasons was at the heart of the Supreme Court's ruling, which said the Trump administration had failed to substantively consider the implications of terminating the program's protections and benefits. Ms. Duke said she did not include policy reasons in the memo because she did not agree with the ideas being pushed by [Stephen] Miller and [Jeff] Sessions: that DACA amounted to an undeserved amnesty and that it would encourage new waves of illegal immigration.... Ms. Duke [-- a Republican --] is the latest in a series of senior officials who have gone public to describe -- often in vivid, behind-the-scenes detail -- their discomfort and sometimes shock at the inner workings of the Trump presidency.... She described an administration that is often driven by ideology instead of deliberation, values politics over policy and is dominated by a president who embraces 'hate-filled, angry and divisive' language."
Chantal da Silva of Newsweek: "The U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agency is set to launch a six-week 'Citizens Academy' course on immigration enforcement, which will include [six days of training over a six-week period starting in September] ...for citizens on how to arrest undocumented immigrants.... Included in the course would be training in 'defensive tactics, firearms familiarization and targeted arrests.... Speaking with Newsweek on Thursday..., Chicago Congressman Jesús 'Chuy' García said he was disturbed by the program, which he fears will lead to racial profiling, surveillance and potential violence.'... As a member of Congress, García had thought a program like this would have been brought to lawmakers' attention prior to its rollout, but it never was." --s ~~~
~~~ Mrs. McCrabbie: Absolutely horrifying. I wouldn't be surprised if Trump turned the "graduates" of his "Citizens Academy" into troops to defend him when he loses the election and refuses to leave the White House.
Jeremy Schwarz & Perla Trevizo of The Texas Tribune & Propublica: "[Tommy Fisher, president of North Dakota-based Fisher Industries, t]he builder of a privately funded border wall along the shores of the Rio Grande, agreed to an engineering inspection of his controversial structure, which experts say is showing signs of erosion that threatens its stability just months after the $42 million project was finished.... On Wednesday, U.S. District Judge Randy Crane instructed attorneys to work out details of the inspection and to come to an agreement about fixes for a part of the 3-mile fence that violates a treaty with Mexico by deflecting too much water during floods." --s
Sopan Deb of the New York Times: "On Monday, the W.N.B.A. announced that its upcoming season would be 'dedicated to social justice with games honoring the Black Lives Matter movement.' It did not seem to be a relatively controversial or surprising message, considering how engaged W.N.B.A. players have been in the movement, which has also drawn support from a wide range of corporations and even the most controversy-averse sports leagues, like the N.F.L., since the killing of George Floyd in May. But the expression -- and the movement it supports -- bothered at least one W.N.B.A. owner, who also happens to be a sitting senator in the midst of a difficult campaign for her seat. Senator Kelly Loeffler, Republican of Georgia, is a co-owner of the Atlanta Dream and has been vocally criticizing the Black Lives Matter movement and the league's embrace of it. Loeffler is now facing widespread denunciations from players around the league. The W.N.B.A. commissioner, Cathy Engelbert, released a statement this week distancing the league from Loeffler. Now, the league is grappling with questions about whether an owner who appears to be fundamentally opposed to the league's stated values can remain in her position."
Presidential Race
Maureen Dowd compares the characters of Joe Biden & Donald Trump. Joe wins.
Fox "News" Execs Shocked & Horrified They Had a Racist on Staff. Aidan McLaughlin of Mediaite: "Fox News brass condemned the 'horrendous and deeply offensive racist, sexist and homophobic comments' secretly made by Tucker Carlson's lead writer in an internal memo sent to employees Saturday. CNN reported Friday evening that Fox News writer Blake Neff posted shockingly racist and sexist posts anonymously on an internet message board for years. The posts coincided with his time as the top writer of highly rated prime time show Tucker Carlson Tonight. Neff resigned from his position in response to CNN's reporting.... [The executives] added that Carlson will address the controversy on his show Monday night. The Fox News host did not address the CNN report on his show Friday -- though he took a vague shot at CNN."
Way Beyond the Beltway
Russia. Mary Ilyushina of CNN: Russian whistleblowers, environmental groups and reporters have exposed a huge Arctic oil spill near "the Siberian city of Norilsk, where six weeks ago a huge fuel tank at a power plant ruptured, spilling thousands of tons of diesel into the river.... The owner of the plant, the Nornickel metals giant, says the spill was quickly contained, and the damage limited." The spill has received rare public attention, including from Vladimir Putin. --s
News Lede
CNN: "Twenty-one people were injured after an explosion and fire on board a ship at the US Naval Base in San Diego, US Navy officials said. 'Seventeen Sailors and four civilians are being treated for non-life threatening injuries at a local hospital,' the US Navy said in a statement. The sailors on the USS Bonhomme Richard had 'minor injuries' from the fire and were taken to a hospital, Lt. Cmdr. Patricia Kreuzberger told CNN earlier Sunday. All of the crew is off the ship and accounted for, according to a tweet from the US Pacific Fleet Naval Surface Forces Sunday afternoon. Firefighters battled a three-alarm fire on the ship Sunday morning, SDFD's Mónica Muñoz said. Several different agencies worked to fight the blaze."