The Commentariat -- July 3, 2020
Late Morning/Afternoon Update:
The New York Times' live updates of coronavirus developments Friday are here.
Sarah Rumpf of Mediaite: "Eric Trump tweeted, and then deleted, a photo of former President Bill Clinton with Jeffrey Epstein's alleged partner-in-crime Ghislaine Maxwell, after Twitter users buried him in a deluge of photos of Maxwell appearing very chummy with his father, President Donald Trump. Eric Trump's tweet was captioned 'Birds of a feather...' and showed Clinton walking his daughter Chelsea Clinton down the aisle at her 2o10 wedding, while Maxwell is shown in the background among other wedding guests.... Twitter users responded seemingly instantaneously, posting photo after photo showing Maxwell -- and often Epstein too -- far more cozy with the current occupant of 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue."
David Rothkopf in the New York Review of Books: "If we have a president who is selfish, ignorant, venal, dishonest, racist, misogynist, and corrupt, what does it tell us that a significant minority of American citizens celebrates such a leader, while another segment of our compatriots are willing to tolerate them, at least enough to give him their votes?... We must address the root causes that enabled a man as profoundly flawed and corrupt as Trump to win high office.... Ending Trump's misrule and restoring confidence in the presidency demands the undoing of impediments to free and fair elections. That will entail root-and-branch campaign finance reform, an end to voter suppression, new defenses against foreign interference in elections, and reining in the digital disinformation engines. These are perhaps only the minimum demands for restoring American democracy."
Catie Edmondson of the New York Times: "The Senate on Thursday unanimously passed legislation to impose sanctions on Chinese officials trying to stamp out political dissent in Hong Kong, sending the measure to President Trump's desk for his signature. The passage of the bill, spearheaded by Senators Patrick J. Toomey, Republican of Pennsylvania, and Chris Van Hollen, Democrat of Maryland, comes days after Chinese leaders imposed a sweeping new security law intended to quell protests demanding free elections and greater autonomy in an escalation of Beijing's campaign to tighten its grip on Hong Kong.... The House unanimously passed the bill on Wednesday...."
Let's All Go to the Movies. Hannah Denham of the Washington Post: WalMart "will transform 160 of its store parking lots into drive-in theaters next month. Walmart is launching the program next month in partnership with Tribeca Enterprises, the New York-based media company co-founded by Robert De Niro. The locations and movie lineup will be announced on a new Walmart Drive-In website, the retailer said in a news release. It's unclear whether the movies will be new releases, but admission is free, said Walmart spokeswoman LeMia Jenkins."
Mrs. McCrabbie: Just heard on CNN that Trump went to his golf course today, and that today was the 365th day since he was sworn in that he has spent at one of his properties. That means that lazy bastard has spent a full year on vacation (or more) since being sworn in less than four years ago.
Michael Kranish of the Washington Post: "Mary L. Trump, the author of an explosive book about her uncle President Trump, asked a court to lift a restraining order against her, saying in an affidavit filed Thursday that she was misled by the family into signing a confidentiality agreement in an inheritance case two decades ago.... Mary Trump said in her affidavit that, in agreeing to the inheritance settlement, she relied on asset valuations of the family estate provided to her by Donald Trump and his siblings that she said have since been proved to be inaccurate.... She said the inaccuracy of the valuations was revealed in a 2018 investigation by the New York Times of family finances." A Daily Beast story is here.
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The Trumpidemic, Ctd.
The New York Times' live updates of coronavirus developments Thursday are here. The Washington Post's live updates for Thursday are here: "The United States reported at least 55,220 new coronavirus cases on Thursday, surpassing Wednesday's record of 52,789, previously the largest single-day total since the start of the pandemic, according to data collected by The Washington Post." (Also linked yesterday afternoon.)
How to Spend the Independence Day Weekend -- STAY HOME! Richard Fausset, et al., of the New York Times: "In the face of cases reaching disheartening new highs, and as at least 15 states set single-day reporting records this week, health officials around the country have urged Americans to scale back their holiday plans.... Skip the party. Stay home.... ~~~
[BUT. The Saboteur-in-Chief Has Other Plans.] "In South Dakota, which has had relatively few cases of the coronavirus, President Trump has organized a fireworks show Friday evening at Mount Rushmore, an event that has come under scrutiny because thousands of people are planning to attend. The National Park Service said in an email that it 'strongly' encouraged social distancing and the use of face coverings.... Gov. Kristi Noem, a Republican who plans to attend the event, told Fox News that 'we won’t be social distancing.' In Washington, D.C., the authorities are plowing ahead with a traditional July 4 celebration. Like last year, Mr. Trump will preside over that event, and federal authorities seemed to be preparing for considerable crowds...." ~~~
~~~ Know Your U.S. History: Mount Rushmore Edition. Bryan Pietsch & Jacey Fortin of the New York Times: “In the eight decades since the carving was completed, it has never been without controversy.... Native Americans have long criticized the sculpture, in part because it was built on what had been Indigenous land.... Before he was recruited to create Mount Rushmore, [Gutzon] Borglum had been involved with another project: an enormous bas-relief at Stone Mountain in Georgia that memorialized Confederate leaders.... Mr. Borglum formed strong bonds with leaders of the Ku Klux Klan and participated in their meetings.... He also espoused white supremacist and anti-Semitic ideas.... In 2016, a report from the U.S. Geological Survey found that past pyrotechnic displays had probably caused higher concentrations of a contaminant called perchlorate in the groundwater there. Mr. Trump has tweeted in support of 'BIG FIREWORKS' returning to the monument...."
Flack & Flee: The Trump Presser. Morgan Chalfant & Brett Samuels of the Hill: "President Trump touted the new June jobs numbers at a hastily scheduled press briefing Thursday where he left before taking any questions." (Also linked yesterday afternoon.) ~~~
~~~ Washington Post Editors: "Mr. Trump remains in blissful denial as crisis ripples through the Sun Belt, threatening to create chaos and distress nationwide for months to come.... On Thursday, in a brief appearance before reporters, without wearing a face mask and refusing to take questions, he said, 'We have some areas where we are putting out the flames, or the fires, and that's working out well.' He went on to assert that the United States, like Europe and China, is 'getting it under control.' Some areas are suffering a 'flare up,' he acknowledged, 'and we are putting out the fires' with a strategy to 'vanquish and kill the virus.' The reality is that the virus ... is in control. Record-shattering numbers of new cases were reported Wednesday in six states.... New daily cases are increasing in 41 states compared to two weeks ago. Outbreaks and superspreader events are erupting.... Now, governors are rapidly trying to backpedal..., but it is exceedingly difficult to shift from reopening to closure again. Mr. Trump ... was characteristically only concerned with praising himself. 'We've done a historic thing,' he said, adding that he saved 'millions of lives' and now is opening up the country 'far faster than anybody thought even possible and more successfully.'" ~~~
~~~ Rachel Siegel of the Washington Post: "The U.S. unemployment rate is expected to stay above its pre-pandemic levels through the end of 2030, according to a 10-year economic report released Thursday by the Congressional Budget Office. The agency is predicting that the unemployment rate in the fourth quarter of 2030 will be 4.4 percent, down from 7.6 percent at the end of 2021 and 6.9 percent at the end of 2022.... The new projection shows the long-term impact that economists say the pandemic will have on the U.S. economy, the largest in the world. A severe disruption to production and hiring in March and April has had a jarring impact on the United States." (Also linked yesterday afternoon.)
Carol Leonnig & Josh Dawsey of the Washington Post: "Vice President Pence's trip to Arizona this week had to be postponed by a day after several Secret Service agents who helped organize the visit either tested positive for the coronavirus or were showing symptoms of being infected. Pence was scheduled to go to Phoenix on Tuesday but went on Wednesday instead so that healthy agents could be deployed for his visit, according to two senior administration officials who spoke on the condition of anonymity...." Update: A New York Times story is here.
California. Zoe Richards of TPM: "More than 40 school principals in northern California have quarantined after they were exposed to the coronavirus during an in-person meeting held by a local school district. The quarantine follows news that a pre-symptomatic individual tested positive for COVID-19 within days of a June 19 meeting held by the Santa Clara County Unified School District to to discuss school reopening plans for the fall, The San Francisco Chronicle reported Wednesday." (Also linked yesterday afternoon.)
Florida. Gary Fineout & Marc Caputo of Politico: "Florida set a new record for coronavirus cases, reporting more than 10,100 new infections as Vice President Mike Pence was to meet with Gov. Ron DeSantis Thursday to discuss the state's response to the outbreak. The mounting case numbers up the political pressure on DeSantis, a Republican, as Florida prepares to host marquee events of the Republican National Convention in late August, including Trump's acceptance speech." (Also linked yesterday afternoon.)
Texas. &
Abbott also issued a proclamation on Thursday allowing mayors and county judges to restrict outdoor gatherings of more than 10 people. But, but, but... Exceptions for masks while in public include attending church, consuming food or drink while seated at a restaurant, swimming, voting or giving a speech to a public audience."
Max Cohen of Politico: "Former presidential candidate Herman Cain announced on Thursday that he has been hospitalized with Covid-19, almost two weeks after attending ... Donald Trump’s rally in Tulsa, Okla. Cain was diagnosed with coronavirus on June 29, nine days after the president's rally, and his symptoms worsened and required hospitalization on July 1, according to a statement from his Twitter account." (Also linked yesterday afternoon.)
Maggie Haberman, et al., of the New York Times: "As Mr. Trump heads to Mount Rushmore on Friday to spend the Independence Day holiday in the carved presence of presidential greatness, he is suffering through the most trying stretch of his administration thanks in large part to his self-inflicted wounds. June represented the political nadir of his three and a half years in the Oval Office, when a race in which he had been steadily trailing, but faring respectably, broke open and left him facing the possibility of not just defeat but humiliation this fall. The disconnect between the surge in coronavirus cases and Mr. Trump’s dismissive stance toward the pandemic has been particularly pronounced.... Last month’s convergence of crises, and the president’s missteps in responding to them, have been well-chronicled: his inflammatory response to racial justice protesters and his ill-considered rally in Tulsa, his refusal to acknowledge the resurgent virus or seriously address detailed reports about Russian operatives’ putting a cash bounty on American soldiers."
All the Best People, Ctd. John Hudson of the Washington Post: "President Trump’s nominee to be ambassador to Norway is facing demands that he abandon his pursuit of the diplomatic post following the unearthing of a 1994 court filing indicating his involvement in the production of a racist campaign flier against an African American politician in Georgia. According to the filing, Mark Burkhalter helped create a flier that distorted and exaggerated the features of Gordon Joyner, a candidate for county commissioner in north-central Georgia. Joyner was pictured with some features darkened, a large Afro, enlarged eyebrows and a warped eye. Joyner sued for libel, resulting in an out-of-court settlement, an apology signed by Burkhalter and three other men, and payment of an undisclosed sum. Burkhalter did not disclose his involvement in the controversy to the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, according to a letter by Sen. Robert Menendez (N.J.), the panel’s ranking Democrat, that was obtained by The Washington Post." (Also linked yesterday afternoon.)
Brad Reed of the Raw Story: “The Trump White House is trying to push the appointment of a right-wing conspiracy theorist to a key Defense Department position over the objections of top Pentagon officials. Foreign Policy reports that the White House earlier this year directed the Pentagon to hire Rich Higgins, a former Trump National Security Council official who was ousted in 2017 after he wrote an unhinged memo that claimed the investigation into Russian interference in the 2016 presidential election amounted to a 'Maoist insurgency' against ... Donald Trump. Although the White House initially backed off in the face of Pentagon resistance to hiring Higgins to be chief of staff to the under secretary of defense for policy, Foreign Policy’s sources say that 'the White House reached out again about Higgins this week … asking why the Pentagon had not begun the hiring process for him.'”
Betsy Swan of Politico: "One of the country’s most prominent U.S. attorneys is going to Washington. Richard Donoghue, who heads the Eastern District of New York, is taking over as the top deputy to Deputy Attorney General Jeffrey Rosen.... The role — officially titled principal associate deputy attorney general, or PADAG — is an important one, and typically involves working with the 93 U.S. attorneys working around the country." ~~~
~~~ Rachel Maddow thinks this move is fishy, and gosh, maybe she's right: David Shortell, et al., of CNN: The Justice Department is considering replacing the US attorney in Brooklyn with a senior department official close to Attorney General William Barr, officials briefed on the matter said.... The most recent principal associate deputy attorney general, Seth DuCharme, is now being considered by department leadership for the top role in the Brooklyn office, where he had built his career as a prosecutor.... [That is, Richard Donoghue & DuCharme would swap jobs.] In February, the Justice Department tapped Donoghue to supervise all agency investigations related to Ukraine in a move that gave Washington officials more oversight into an area of interest that had become a political minefield." ~~~
~~~ MEANWHILE. Kyle Cheney of Politico: "The former top federal prosecutor in Manhattan, who resigned last month under pressure from Attorney General William Barr, will testify to the House Judiciary Committee next week about the circumstances of his departure, according to a congressional aide. The July 9 closed-door interview will be Congress' first foray into allegations that Barr sought to remove Geoffrey Berman as U.S. attorney to assert more control over investigations that touch closely on ... Donald Trump‘s associates and personal interests."
One Military Hero Backs Another. Edward Moreno if the Hill: "Sen. Tammy Duckworth (D-Ill.) announced Thursday that she is blocking the Senate confirmation of 1,123 senior U.S. Armed Forces promotions until Defense Secretary Mark Esper confirms that he is not going to block the promotion of Lt. Col. Alexander Vindman to colonel.... She is asking for Esper to provide written confirmation that Vindman will be promoted to colonel." (Also linked yesterday afternoon.)
Shayna Jacobs of the Washington Post: "Manhattan prosecutors are attempting to revive their criminal case against President Trump's former campaign chairman Paul Manafort, arguing in a filing made public Thursday that they have legal standing to bring the indictment even though a state court judge dismissed it six months ago on double jeopardy grounds. Manafort, 71, was charged in New York State Supreme Court with mortgage fraud, but his lawyers argued last year that the case too closely mirrored his 2018 federal conviction on bank fraud charges. The case was brought by Manhattan District Attorney Cyrus Vance Jr. and widely seen as an attempt to guarantee that Manafort would still serve prison time should Trump move to pardon him. Justice Maxwell Wiley tossed it in December. The district attorney’s office filed its appeal in April. It public disclosure was delayed by the coronavirus pandemic." Thanks to Ken W. for the link.
Teo Armus of the Washington Post reports on this lovely white Michigan woman pulling a gun on a black woman and her daughter in a shopping area parking lot. Thanks to RockyGirl for the link. (Also linked yesterday afternoon.) The story has been updated, with Ben Guarino added to the byline: "Oakland County prosecutor Jessica R. Cooper charged the woman who drew the gun and the man who drove the van with one count each of felonious assault.... The married couple held Michigan concealed pistol licenses. Both the man and woman were armed."
Presidential Race
Brad Reed of the Raw Story: “A new report from Vanity Fair’s Gabriel Sherman describes ... Donald Trump as 'down in the dumps' and anxious about being remembered as a one-term 'loser.' One Republican described as'“close to the White House' tells Sherman that the president’s heart does not appear to be in the 2020 campaign, especially after his big comeback rally in Tulsa, Oklahoma spectacularly blew up in his face when he spoke before an arena that wasn’t even filled to half capacity. And Sherman’s sources say that the president may not even get to make up for the Tulsa debacle with his planned Republican National Convention rally in Jacksonville, Florida later in the summer, especially after the city mandated that residents wear face masks when using indoor public spaces.... Read the whole report here.”
Michelle Goldberg of the New York Times: “A lot of Republicans are acting puzzled about Donald Trump’s re-election pitch. 'He has no message,' one Republican source told Reuters.... [But] Trump does indeed have a re-election message, a stark and obvious one. It is 'white power.'... Trump understands that he became a significant political figure by spreading the racist lie that Barack Obama was really born in Kenya.... Trump sees clearly — more clearly than most of his party — that racism is the main thing he has to offer.” ~~~
~~~ Goldberg lists a remarkable number of racist things Trump has said or done in just the past week or so. Here's one: “On Tuesday, Trump tweeted that he was considering scrapping an Obama-era housing regulation that required localities to address illegal patterns of residential segregation. He claimed that the initiative, which his administration had already put in limbo, was having a 'devastating impact on these once thriving Suburban areas.' The message to his white supporters seemed clear enough: Trump is going to fight to stop people of color from coming to your neighborhood.”
Alabama Senate Race. Josh Gerstein of Politico: “A sharply divided Supreme Court stepped in on Thursday night to block a judge’s order requiring Alabama to allow some curbside voting and lift absentee-ballot witness requirements for the Republican Senate primary runoff set to take place on July 14. The justices voted, 5-4, along ideological lines to block the lower-court ruling, allowing Alabama to carry out the election under its usual rules.... Experts said the most likely explanation was a 2006 Supreme Court precedent viewed as discouraging late changes to voting procedures because of the possibility for voter confusion.... 'Supreme Court majority is not siding with voters, even during (especially during) a pandemic. This is a big deal,' Rick Hasen, a University of California law professor, wrote on Twitter. In the Alabama runoff set to take place later this month, former Sen. Jeff Sessions is facing Tommy Tuberville, a former Auburn football coach.”
Josh Gerstein & Kyle Cheney of Politico: "The Supreme Court has all but doomed House Democrats' efforts to obtain former special counsel Robert Mueller's grand jury evidence before the November elections. The justices agreed Thursday to consider whether the House should be given permission to access the grand jury secrets contained in Mueller’s final report, as well as its underlying evidence. That decision, despite two lower court rulings supporting access to the secret information, ensures that no final decision will be rendered before voters decide whether to grant Trump a second term." (Also linked yesterday afternoon.)
was arrested by the FBI on Thursday on charges she helped procure underage sex partners for financier Jeffrey Epstein. An indictment made public Thursday said Maxwell, who lived for years with Epstein and was his frequent travel companion on trips around the world, facilitated Epstein’s crimes by 'helping Epstein to recruit, groom, and ultimately abuse' girls as young as 14. It also said she participated in the sexual abuse.” Update: A New York Times story is here. (Also linked yesterday afternoon.)
British socialite Ghislaine Maxwell