The Ledes

Thursday, September 19, 2024

New York Times: “A body believed to be of the suspect in a Kentucky highway shooting that left five people seriously injured this month was found on Wednesday, the authorities said, ending a manhunt that stretched into a second week and set the local community on edge. The Kentucky State Police commissioner, Phillip Burnett Jr., said in a Wednesday night news conference that at approximately 3:30 p.m., two troopers and two civilians found an unidentified body in the brush behind the highway exit where the shooting occurred.... The police have identified the suspect of the shooting as Joseph A. Couch, 32. They said that on Sept. 7, Mr. Couch perched on a cliff overlooking Interstate 75 about eight miles north of London, Ky., and opened fire. One of the wounded was shot in the face, and another was shot in the chest. A dozen vehicles were riddled with gunfire.”

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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.”

Washington Post: “An early Titian masterpiece — once looted by Napolean’s troops and a part of royal collections for centuries — caused a stir when it was stolen from the home of a British marquess in 1995. Seven years later, it was found inside an unassuming white and blue plastic bag at a bus stop in southwest London by an art detective, and returned. This week, the oil painting 'The Rest on the Flight into Egypt' sold for more than $22 million at Christie’s. It was a record for the Renaissance artist, whom museums describe as the greatest painter of 16th-century Venice. Ahead of the sale in April, the auction house billed it as 'the most important work by Titian to come to the auction market in more than a generation.'”

Washington Post: The Folger Shakespeare Library in Washington, D.C., which houses the world's largest collection of Shakespeare material, has undergone a major renovation. "The change to the building is pervasive, both subtle and transformational."

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Publisher & Editor: Marie Burns


Saturday
Jan182020

The Commentariat -- January 19, 2020

Late Morning Update:

Ha Ha, Just Kidding! Jon Swaine of the Washington Post: "A Dutch supporter of President Trump said Saturday that he supplied a Republican candidate with purported intelligence on the movements of the U.S. ambassador to Ukraine last year, taking responsibility for text messages that raised concerns the diplomat was placed under surveillance. But the supporter, Anthony De Caluwe, said in a statement that he was not involved in any surveillance of then-Ambassador Marie Yovanovitch, and that the messages were merely 'ridiculous banter' with the congressional candidate, Robert F. Hyde, who in recent days became entangled in the impeachment case against Trump. 'My engagement in this exchange with Rob is something that has no credibility,' De Caluwe said in the statement, which was emailed to The Washington Post by a spokeswoman. The spokeswoman, Karyn Turk, said that De Caluwe had never been to Ukraine and had no contacts in the country."

** Joseph Stiglitz, in Common Dreams, republished in RawStory: "It is becoming conventional wisdom that US President Donald Trump will be tough to beat in November, because, whatever reservations about him voters may have, he has been good for the American economy. Nothing could be further from the truth.... In fact, US economic performance over the past four years is Exhibit A in the indictment against relying on these indicators [of GDP and the stock market].... US life expectancy, already relatively low, fell in each of the first two years of Trump's presidency, and in 2017, midlife mortality reached its highest rate since World War II...Millions have lost their [healthcare] coverage, and the uninsured rate has risen, in just two years, from 10.9% to 13.7%.... In 2017 ... [deaths of despair, caused by alcohol, drug overdoses, and suicide] stood at almost four times their 1999 level.... If fully implemented, the 2017 tax cut will result in tax increases for most households in the second, third, and fourth income quintiles.... Making matters worse, the growth that has occurred is not environmentally sustainable[.]" --s ~~~

     ~~~ Mrs. McCrabbie: Stiglitz, a Nobel laureate in economics, is formerly chair of the President's Council of Economic Advisors.

** William Saletan of Slate: "It's hard to keep up with ... Donald Trump's scandals. One day he's covering up taxpayer-funded travel expenses for his family. The next, he's stealing money for his border wall. The next, he's being implicated by an accomplice in the extortion of Ukraine. But one horror is right out in the open: Trump is a remorseless advocate of crimes against humanity. His latest threats against Iran, Iraq, and Syria are a reminder that he's a ruthless as any foreign dictator. He's just more constrained.... But Trump's election and his persistent approval from more than 40 percent of Americans are a reminder that nothing in our national character protects us from becoming a rapacious, authoritarian country. What protects us are institutions that stop us from doing our worst." --s

Anton Troianovski of the New York Times: "President Volodymyr Zelensky, a comedian, sitcom star and political neophyte, catapulted to the presidency of Ukraine last spring on a promise of sweeping away the country's shadowy web of money and influence. Now, as Mr. Zelensky faces pressure to deliver on his promises, he is finding that actually bringing the corrupt officials and oligarchs to heel is a lot harder than satirizing them on his former TV show, 'Servant of the People.'... Further complicating an already daunting task, Mr. Zelensky has been forced to deal with the fallout from the Trump administration's pressure campaign in Ukraine...."

Reuters: "China ;is stepping up restrictions on the production, sale and use of single-use plastic products, according to the state planner, as it seeks to tackle one of the country's biggest environmental problems.... The United Nations has identified single-use plastics as one of the world's biggest environmental challenges.... [P]lastic bags would be banned in all of China's major cities by the end of 2020 and banned in all cities and towns in 2022." --s

~~~~~~~~~~

Michael Shear & Nicholas Fandos of the New York Times: "President Trump's legal defense team forcefully denied on Saturday that he abused his power by pressuring a foreign government to investigate his political rivals, making Mr. Trump's first formal response to two impeachment charges at the center of the Senate trial that begins next week. The defiant rejection of the accusations came in response to an official summons issued last week by the Senate, notifying Mr. Trump that he faces removal from office if he is convicted. In the six-page letter, his legal team denounced the impeachment case brought by House Democrats as illegitimate, driven by malice toward him and lacking a factual basis. The president's lawyers did not deny any of the core facts underlying Democrats' charges, conceding what ample evidence has shown, that he withheld $391 million from Ukraine and asked the country's president to investigate former Vice President Joseph R. Biden Jr. and his son, Hunter. But they said Mr. Trump broke no laws and was acting entirely appropriately and within his powers when he did so, echoing the president's repeated protestations of his own innocence. They argued that Mr. Trump was not seeking political advantage, but working to root out corruption in Ukraine. ~~~

~~~ "Mr. Trump's response came shortly after the House impeachment managers formally outlined their case for Mr. Trump's removal from office, arguing in a lengthy legal filing that the Senate should convict him for abuse of power and obstruction of Congress. In the 46-page trial memorandum, the House impeachment managers asserted that beginning in the spring, Mr. Trump undertook a corrupt campaign to push Ukraine to publicly announce investigations of his political rivals, withholding as leverage nearly $400 million in military aid and a White House meeting. He then sought to conceal those actions from Congress, they said, refusing to cooperate with a House impeachment inquiry and ordering administration officials not to testify or turn over documents requested by investigators." ~~~

~~~ Darren Samuelsohn, et al., of Politico: "... Donald Trump launched his first formal attack on the House's effort to remove him from office on Saturday, calling the Democrats' impeachment case against him fatally flawed and 'constitutionally invalid' while blasting the effort as a political hit job by his adversaries. 'This is a brazen and unlawful attempt to overturn the results of the 2016 election and interfere with the 2020 election,' Trump's lawyers argued in a six-page response filed with the Senate....

"The House managers in their own opening 111-page trial brief featured a slate of evidence that has emerged in the month since the House impeached Trump on Dec. 18.... Among the new evidence the House will rely upon: a Government Accountability Office report that found Trump illegally withheld military aid from Ukraine when he failed to notify Congress of the move.... The brief also cites emails recently unearthed by national security publication Just Security, indicating the legal turmoil that Trump's hold on military aid caused inside his administration. Democrats' argument also includes one reference to Lev Parnas, the indicted associate of Trump's personal lawyer Rudy Giuliani, who turned over multiple flash drives containing evidence to the House in recent days." The article includes a reproduction of Trump's "Answer" to the charges.

Jim Acosta & Pamela Brown of CNN: "Donald Trump has appeared 'distracted' by the impeachment trial that begins on Tuesday, according to a source close to the White House who speaks to the President regularly. 'Why are they doing this to me,' the source quoted Trump as saying repeatedly, telling people around him Friday night at Mar-a-Lago that he 'can't understand why he is impeached.' Trump has been telling associates and allies around him that he wanted a 'high profile' legal team that can perform on television, the source said."

Things Fall Apart, the Senate Cannot Hold. Jonathan Chait: "By seizing on tiny gaps in the evidentiary record -- gaps that existed because Trump refused to release any testimony or documents -- [Republican Senators] denied Trump had withheld a meeting and military aid from Ukraine in order to force investigations. Since then, evidence, some pried loose by lawsuits, has dismantled those defenses. A batch of emails released in late December showed the Office of Management and Budget ordered a freeze on aid almost immediately after Trump's phone call with Ukraine's president. Then, in January, another tranche of emails found the Defense Department raising concerns about the freeze's legality. Weeks later, the Government Accountability Office deemed the freeze illegal, making moot the defense that Trump hadn't technically violated laws.... The most explosive revelations came from a trove of documents turned over by Lev Parnas, a small-time hustler who was recruited by Rudy Giuliani to help run Trump's extortion scheme." Read on. Chait does a nice job of distilling the meaning from the Parnas docs.

Franklin Foer of the Atlantic on how Lev Parnas's allegations bring the Ukraine scandal closer to the Kremlin by invoking Dmytro Firtash, the Ukrainian oligarch who represents Russian interests in Ukraine & -- tho he denies it -- is tied "to the gangster Semion Mogilevich, one of the region's most important Mafia bosses, a man the FBI placed on its Ten Most Wanted Fugitives list." Firtash himself is fighting extradition to the U.S. on bribery charges. Firtash bankrolled the Three Stooges' efforts to get dirt on Biden and, in return, Rudy Giuliani may have pleaded Firtash's case to Bill Barr. Firtash has despised Joe Biden since 2014 when then-veep Biden "promoted an anti-corruption agenda that included liberating Ukraine's energy sector from Firtash’s dominance." ~~~

     ~~~ Mrs. McCrabbie: My own conspiracy theory is that the whole Ukraine-meddling scheme was a tiny piece of Trump's desire to get in on the millions or billions of dollars to be had through corrupt Kremlin-related schemes. Getting "dirt on Biden" may have been of less interest to him than it was to Firtash, to Putin or to whoever else Trump was hoping would welcome him into the Kremlin's circle of corruption & give him a piece of the pie. This is why Trump can't grasp why he's being impeached: his true motives are different from what the Articles of Impeachment allege. He's in it for the money. Lots of money.

Breakfast at Cipriani's. Mrs. Bea McCrabbie: Although Donald Trump repeatedly asserts he doesn't know Lev Parnas and has never spoken to him, it has become clear these are lies. There are of course all those two-shots of Trump and Parnas that keep cropping up. But Trump is right that a high-profile person doesn't necessarily "know" many of the people with whom he appears in posed photos. But besides Lev's assertions in his interviews this week, Lev brought receipts. For instance, his day calendar includes a September 2019 entry, "Breakfast with President Trump in NYC." According to Joy Reid of MSNBC, Trump's official schedule showed he had a breakfast at Cipriani's NYC the same day at about the same time. NBC News notes that the breakfast took place "just days before Parnas was indicted." Could Lev have consulted Trump's schedule, then penciled in the breakfast after the fact? Maybe. Also is the latest docudump of Lev's files, there a photo of some other event in which printed place cards for "President Donald Trump" and "Lev Parnas" are placed next to each other at a table. Could Lev have mocked up the table setting? Possibly. But I doubt it. (Also linked yesterday.)

** Maureen Dowd of the New York Times: "Trump's ascent does not make it harder for women to ascend -- just the opposite.... Trump is once more doing his part to energize women voters. On Friday, we learned that the president will get help from Starr and Dershowitz for the impeachment trial in the Senate.... After playing an avenging Javert about foreplay in the Oval, Starr will now do his utmost to prove that a real abuse of power undermining Congress and American foreign policy is piffle. In 2007, he defended Jeffrey Epstein. By 2016, Starr was being ousted as president of Baptist Baylor University for failing to protect women and looking the other way when football players were accused and sometimes convicted of sexual assaults. In other words, he's a complete partisan hack.... And then there's Dershowitz, whose past clients have included such sterling fellows as Epstein, Claus von Bülow, O.J. Simpson and Harvey Weinstein.... Dershowitz has put himself on the side of an impressive pantheon of villainy in the realm of violence against girls and women."

Edward Moreno of the Hill: "Former Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein said he made the call to release to the media hundreds of text messages between two high-ranking FBI employees after they criticized then-candidate Donald Trump during the 2016 presidential race, according to new court filings the Justice Department released late Friday night. In the messages, FBI agent Peter Strzok and FBI attorney Lisa Page insulted Trump as well as Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.), expressing a preference for Hillary Clinton in the election. The messages, which were exchanged on government cellphones, also revealed that the two were engaged in an extramarital affair, which has made them the subject of public harassment as well as ridicule from the president.... Strzok and Page filed separate lawsuits against the Department of Justice (DOJ) last year, alleging that the release of their text messages violated the Privacy Act.... In the court filing Friday..., Rosenstein said he decided to release the messages because they would inevitably become public after his testimony before the House Judiciary Committee during the Mueller investigation. He said he also wanted to ensure they weren't 'cherry-picked' by members of the committee." (Also linked yesterday.)

Colby Itkowitz & David Fahrenthold of the Washington Post: "President Trump delivered a dramatic account of the airstrike that killed Iranian Maj. Gen. Qasem Soleimani, joked that he doesn't care if construction projects kill all the rattlesnakes and noted his indifference to the budget during a private dinner with deep-pocketed donors Friday night at Mar-a-Lago, according to audio files obtained by The Washington Post." A CNN story on Trump's remarks at the fundraiser is linked in yesterday's Commentariat.

Maria Cramer of the New York Times: "The National Archives and Records Administration ... apologized on Saturday for altering a photo of protesters at the 2017 Women's March that blurred out references critical of President Trump. 'We made a mistake,' began a statement the archives released on Saturday. The photo of protesters holding signs was part of an exhibit ... which examined the struggle of women to gain the right to vote.... Initially, in a statement to The [Washington] Post, an archives spokeswoman defended the decision.... By Saturday afternoon, three museum officials were seen turning around the photo display.... The display was [then] positioned so that only a blank canvas could be seen. Officials then posted a statement to the public that also apologized for the alterations.... The controversy unfolded as tens of thousands of women gathered in Washington and other cities on Saturday for the fourth Women's March." See also yesterday's Commentariat for context. The Washington Post's story of the Archives' apology is here. An AP story is here. ~~~

~~~ Philip Kennicott of the Washington Post -- a man who gets it: In "... blurring out details from protest signs in an image of the 2017 Women's March, including the name of President Trump and references to the female anatomy -- a decision the Archives publicly apologized for on Saturday -- is egregious for multiple reasons.... The Women's March ... was a march for equality, dignity and fair treatment. For many who attended, those issues were newly urgent given the man who had been inaugurated the day before. Many of the signs at the march were directed at Trump's denigrating language, his cavalier comments about groping and kissing women without their consent, his support for denying them the right to control their own bodies and the many accusations of harassment and assault.... Inequality, for women today, is ... something understood directly through their bodies.... Thus, scrubbing out references to women's anatomy in the image was ... censorship of the fundamental message of the Women's March."

Lynn Berry of the AP: "Thousands gathered in cities across the country Saturday as part of the nationwide Women's March rallies focused on issues such as climate change, pay equity, reproductive rights and immigration. Hundreds showed up in New York City and thousands in Washington, D.C. for the rallies, which aim to harness the political power of women, although crowds were noticeably smaller than in previous years. Marches were scheduled Saturday in more than 180 cities."

William Cole of the Honolulu Star-Advertiser: "On Martin Luther King Jr. Day, Monday, at Pearl Harbor, the Navy is expected to announce that a $12.5 billion aircraft carrier will be named after Mess Attendant 2nd Class Doris Miller, the first African American to receive the Navy Cross for valor for his actions on Dec. 7, 1941, when he manned a machine gun on the USS West Virginia to fire back at attacking Japanese planes.... In 1941 an African American was not allowed to man a gun in the Navy, and as far as rank was concerned, 'he could not really get above a messman level,' [Doreen] Ravenscroft[, president of Cultural Arts of Waco (Texas),] said. Miller's actions started to turn the tide, she added. 'Without him really knowing, he actually was a part of the civil rights movement because he changed the thinking in the Navy,' Ravenscroft said Friday.... Miller died on [an escort carrier] when it was torpedoed by a Japanese submarine on Nov. 24, 1943, during the invasion of the Gilbert Islands, according to the Navy."

Shane Dixon Kavanaugh of The Oregonian: "The FBI believes the Saudi Arabian government 'almost certainly' helps its citizens flee the country after they are accused of serious crimes, 'undermining the US judicial process,' according to a newly declassified document obtained by The Oregonian/OregonLive. The surreptitious action is done, in part, to spare the wealthy Persian Gulf kingdom embarrassment, the FBI said. Intelligence officials believe the flights from justice will continue without intervention by the American authorities." --s (Also linked yesterday.)

Sex, Lies, But No Videotape. Carol Rosenberg of the New York Times & the Pulitzer Center on the mysterious death of a Marine at Guantánamo Bay. The naval base's commander was involved, has been removed from his post and was convicted of six charges related to the incident in a civilian federal court. The Navy never brought charges against him. Mrs. McC: There's no indication in the story that the commanding officer murdered the Marine, nor was that a subject of the trial, but it does give you an idea that the Navy is willing to let slide some pretty bad behavior. That makes Donald Trump's pardons of four servicemen whom the services did bring charges against look all the worse.

Beyond the Beltway

Puerto Rico. Audrey McNamara of CBS News: "Puerto Rico Governor Wanda Vázquez Garced fired the island's emergency management director on Saturday, after a video showing aid sitting unused in a warehouse went viral on social media. Some of the aid has allegedly been sitting in the warehouse since Hurricane Maria struck in 2017.... Garced said in a statement that she has ordered Secretary of State Elmer Roman to conduct a 'thorough investigation into the mishandling of emergency aid in a warehouse in Ponce.'..."

Way Beyond

U.K. BBC News: "Prince Harry and Meghan will no longer use their HRH titles and will not receive public funds for royal duties, Buckingham Palace has said. The Duke and Duchess of Sussex also said they intend to repay £2.4m of taxpayer money for the refurbishment of Frogmore Cottage, which will remain their UK family home. The couple will also no longer formally represent The Queen. The new arrangement will come into effect in spring this year. It comes after the couple earlier this month said they wanted to step back as senior royals. A statement from the Queen said following 'many months of conversations and more recent discussions' she was 'pleased that together we have found a constructive and supportive way forward for my grandson and his family'. 'Harry, Meghan and Archie will always be much loved members of my family,' the statement continued." (Also linked yesterday.) ~~~

~~~ Marrying an American Woman Can Be Hazardous to Your Royal Title. Mark Landler of the New York Times: "However civil, the agreement codifies one of the most dramatic ruptures within the British royal family since King Edward VIII abdicated the throne in 1936 to marry an American woman, Wallis Simpson. It is a spectacle that has enthralled and divided Britain, overshadowing even the country's impending departure from the European Union, and provoking conversations around the world about race, privilege and tradition.... The couple plan to spend a majority of their time outside Britain, initially in Canada but later likely in the United States as well, according to officials at the palace."

Venezuela. Anthony Faiola of the Washington Post: "Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro cast himself as the wily survivor of a dramatic, year-long struggle by the opposition at home and its allies in Washington to unseat him, and said it's now time for direct negotiations with the United States to end the political stalemate that has crippled this nation of some 30 million. In an exclusive, extensive interview with The Washington Post -- his first with a major U.S. media outlet since the day last February he abruptly pulled the plug on a Univision taping and ejected its journalists from the country -- an exuberant Maduro said he had outfoxed his opponents in Caracas and Washington, is comfortably in charge and ready to talk."

Friday
Jan172020

The Commentariat -- January 18, 2020

Late Morning Update:

BBC News: "Prince Harry and Meghan will no longer use their HRH titles and will not receive public funds for royal duties, Buckingham Palace has said. The Duke and Duchess of Sussex also said they intend to repay £2.4m of taxpayer money for the refurbishment of Frogmore Cottage, which will remain their UK family home. The couple will also no longer formally represent The Queen. The new arrangement will come into effect in spring this year. It comes after the couple earlier this month said they wanted to step back as senior royals. A statement from the Queen said following 'many months of conversations and more recent discussions' she was 'pleased that together we have found a constructive and supportive way forward for my grandson and his family'. 'Harry, Meghan and Archie will always be much loved members of my family,' the statement continued."

Edward Moreno of the Hill: "Former Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein said he made the call to release to the media hundreds of text messages between two high-ranking FBI employees after they criticized then-candidate Donald Trump during the 2016 presidential race, according to new court filings the Justice Department released late Friday night. In the messages, FBI agent Peter Strzok and FBI attorney Lisa Page insulted Trump as well as Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.), expressing a preference for Hillary Clinton in the election. The messages, which were exchanged on government cellphones, also revealed that the two were engaged in an extramarital affair, which has made them the subject of public harassment as well as ridicule from the president."

Shane Dixon Kavanaugh of The Oregonian: "The FBI believes the Saudi Arabian government 'almost certainly' helps its citizens flee the country after they are accused of serious crimes, 'undermining the US judicial process,' according to a newly declassified document obtained by The Oregonian/OregonLive. The surreptitious action is done, in part, to spare the wealthy Persian Gulf kingdom embarrassment, the FBI said. Intelligence officials believe the flights from justice will continue without intervention by the American authorities." --s

Breakfast at Cipriani's. Mrs. McCrabbie: Although Donald Trump repeatedly asserts he doesn't know Lev Parnas and has never spoken to him, it has become clear these are lies. There are of course all those two-shots of Trump and Parnas that keep cropping up. But Trump is right that a high-profile person doesn't necessarily "know" many of the people with whom he appears in posed photos. But besides Lev's assertions in his interviews this week, Lev brought receipts. For instance, his day calendar includes a September 2019 entry, "Breakfast with President Trump in NYC." According to Joy Reid of MSNBC, Trump's official schedule showed he had a breakfast at Cipriani's NYC the same day at about the same time. NBC News notes that the breakfast took place "just days before Parnas was indicted." Could Lev have consulted Trump's schedule, then penciled in the breakfast after the fact? Maybe. Also is the latest docudump of Lev's files, there a photo of some other event in which printed place cards for "President Donald Trump" and "Lev Parnas" are placed next to each other at a table. Could Lev have mocked up the table setting? Possibly. But I doubt it.

~~~~~~~~~~

They're trying to impeach the son of a bitch. -- Donald Trump, referring to himself, at an event with Louisiana State football champs yesterday, nearly a month after he was impeached

It's almost as if he's obsessing over something he doesn't understand at all. -- Mrs. Bea McCrabbie

Show Trial of the Century. Maggie Haberman of the New York Times: "President Trump plans on adding former independent counsel Kenneth W. Starr and the defense lawyer Alan Dershowitz to his legal team for his trial by the Senate, a person briefed on the plan said Friday. Mr. Starr, whose investigation into President Bill Clinton's sexual relationships led to his impeachment, will be joined by Robert Ray, who succeeded Mr. Starr as independent counsel and wrote the final report on Mr. Clinton, the person said. Rounding out the team will be Mr. Dershowitz, a Harvard Law School professor emeritus who became famous as a defense counsel for high-profile defendants like O.J. Simpson. The White House counsel, Pat Cipollone, and Mr. Trump's personal lawyer, Jay Sekulow, will lead the legal team." CNN's story is here. No mention of whether or not there will be dogs & ponies. (Also linked yesterday afternoon.) ~~~

~~~ Emily Shugerman of the Daily Beast: "Donald Trump is lawyering up for his impeachment trial with a team that looks surprisingly similar to that of billionaire pedophile Jeffrey Epstein. The president bolstered his legal team Friday with attorneys Alan Dershowitz and Kenneth Starr, who helped Epstein evade prison time in a now infamously lenient plea deal with Palm Beach prosecutors. Epstein originally faced multiple charges of soliciting and trafficking underage girls, but escaped with just 13 months of house arrest in a deal that caused Trump's Labor Secretary Alex Acosta to resign under pressure last year. A suit unveiled by Virgin Islands prosecutors this week alleges Epstein continued to traffic and abuse girls as young as 12 on his private islands until 2018, a decade after Starr and Dershowitz helped him walk free." Read on. (Also linked yesterday afternoon.) ~~~

~~~ Dershowitz Tries to Distance Himself from Trump. Aris Folley of the Hill: "Attorney Alan Dershowitz said Friday night that he will not be pocketing any money for his work on President Trump's impeachment defense team. During an appearance on 'Anderson Cooper 360,' the attorney said that the details of his payment arrangement haven't 'been discussed' yet, but added: 'If I were to be paid, all the money would go to charity...,' he said. 'I'm doing this because I strongly believe in the Constitution. I strongly oppose the impeachment. I worry about the weaponization of impeachment and it could be used in other cases.... But I'm not part of the regular team that will be making strategic decisions and participating in questions about whether there should be witnesses or not,' Dershowitz, a Harvard law professor who also opposed former President Clinton's impeachment, also clarified. 'That's going to be left to others.'"

Pompeo Speaks. Matthew Lee of the AP: "Secretary of State Mike Pompeo Friday broke nearly 72 hours of silence over alleged surveillance and threats to the former U.S. ambassador to Ukraine, saying he believed the allegations would prove to be wrong but that he had an obligation to evaluate and investigate the matter. In interviews with conservative radio hosts, Pompeo said he had no knowledge of the allegations until earlier this week when congressional Democrats released documents from an associate of ... Donald Trump's personal attorney suggesting that Marie Yovanovitch was being watched. He also said he did not know and had never met Lev Parnas...." Mrs. McC: I suspect Pompeo chose these venues because (a) no tough questions and (b) harder to tell someone is lying if you can't see his face. (Also linked yesterday afternoon.) (Also linked yesterday afternoon.)

     ~~~ Mrs. McCrabbie: Also, nice work, Mikey, in predicting the outcome of your fake investigation. No doubt the fake investigators who report to you will know on Day 1 what their "findings" will be. ~~~

~~~ Kate Riga of TPM: "Eliot Engel, chairman of the House Committee on Foreign Affairs, demanded Secretary of State Mike Pompeo's presence at an Iran hearing on Jan. 29 after America's top diplomat skipped the last one.... Engel wrote to Pompeo in a letter dated Thursday. '... I consider your testimony to be of extremely high importance and am prepared to use all legal means to ensure your attendance. I trust, however, that this will not be necessary.'" --s

Jeremy Herb & Manu Raju of CNN: "House Democrats on Friday released new documents from ... Lev Parnas ahead of the Senate trial that includes new information about the apparent surveillance of former US Ambassador Marie Yovanovitch and additional contacts between Parnas and an aide to Rep. Devin Nunes of California.... The new documents include screenshots of undated text messages that appear to show Robert Hyde, a Republican congressional candidate in Connecticut, messaging with a foreign number from Belgium, which appear to describe efforts to surveil Yovanovitch.... The Belgian country-code number sends Hyde a screenshot of an official photo of Yovanovitch. The Belgium number, whose identity is not known, writes 'My contacts are checking,' adding, 'I will give you the address next week.'... In another series of texts, the Belgian number tells Hyde..., 'Nothing has changed she is still not moving they check today again,' shortly adding, 'It's confirmed we have a person inside.' 'She had visitors,' the Belgian number texted in another exchange. The messages come after an earlier document release showed Hyde texting with Parnas about the apparent surveillance." The story contains more info on Parnas' interactions with Derek Harvey, an aide to Nunes. ~~~

~~~ Devin Nunes Must Be Having Another Cow. Kyle Cheney & Andrew Desiderio of Politico: "House impeachment investigators sought Friday to pull Devin Nunes, the top Republican on the House Intelligence Committee, deeper into the Ukraine scandal at the center of ... Donald Trump's upcoming impeachment trial. A set of text messages released Friday evening by the Intelligence Committee show a top Nunes aide, Derek Harvey [Mrs. McC: who earlier worked in Trump's White House], in frequent contact with Lev Parnas.... The text messages, provided to investigators by Parnas, show Harvey in contact with Parnas throughout the spring of 2019 -- the same time Parnas was working with [Rudy] Giuliani and other Trump allies to remove the U.S. ambassador to Ukraine, Marie Yovanovitch.... The newly released text messages show Harvey asking Parnas to pursue several lines of inquiry with his Ukrainian contacts, including one regarding what Harvey calls 'rumors' about coordination between the 2016 campaign of Hillary Clinton and the Ukrainian government to dig up dirt on Trump's campaign manager Paul Manafort.... The new text messages add another layer to Nunes' potential involvement in the Giuliani-led effort to oust Yovanovitch and push the Ukrainian government to announce an investigation targeting Biden." ~~~

~~~ Take This Suit & Shove It. Marisa Iati of the Washington Post: "Rep. Ted Lieu (D) alleged in December that fellow California Rep. Devin Nunes (R) conspired with Lev Parnas ... to undermine the United States. Parnas has pleaded not guilty to violating campaign finance laws. Then a lawyer for Nunes, who is the ranking Republican on the House Intelligence Committee, sent a multi-page missive threatening to sue for damage to Nunes's reputation, Lieu tweeted. The Democratic congressman replied with a letter of his own and posted a photo of the document online. 'I welcome any lawsuit from your client and look forward to taking discovery of Congressman Nunes,' he wrote. 'Or, you can take your letter and shove it.' On MSNBC's 'Hardball' on Friday, Lieu doubled down. 'It turns out that based on text messages in the record and the amazing interview on [MSNBC's] Rachel Maddow Show that I'm right,' he said. 'Truth is a defense.'"~~~

~~~ David Knowles of Yahoo! News: "... Lev Parnas said he was giving media interviews about his role in President Trump's attempts to convince Ukrainian officials to announce an investigation into former Vice President Joe Biden because he wanted to protect himself from Attorney General William Barr.... Trump, Parnas said [to Rachel Maddow], was made more powerful 'when he got William Barr.'... On Thursday, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi also criticized Barr in harsh terms. 'Does anyone think that the rogue AG is going to appoint a special prosecutor?' Pelosi said in Washington in reference to the revelations stemming from Maddow's interview with Barr. 'No, because he's implicated in all of this. This is an example of all of the president's henchmen. And I hope that the senators do not become part of the president's henchmen.'" (Also linked yesterday afternoon.) ~~~

     ~~~ Mrs. McCrabbie: It's easy to think of Parnas as Rudy's goon or Trump's goon. But in fact, especially in understanding the structure of power, he is -- in his own way -- just as smart about it as Jonathan Chait, and Chait, IMO, is a very smart guy. ~~~

~~~ Betsy Swan of the Daily Beast: Lev "Parnas told The Daily Beast that his former friends' reaction to his arrest has strengthened his resolve to speak out. Parnas said that after he and his associate Igor Fruman were arrested at Dulles Airport on Oct. 9 and charged with campaign-finance violations, he was disappointed with [Rudy] Giuliani's silence. He said Joe diGenova and Victoria Toensing -- a Trump-friendly husband-and-wife legal team with deep and longstanding ties in Washington's conservative legal world -- also kept mum about their relationship with him. That silence, he said, left him feeling betrayed.... He noted that the trio rarely shy away from defending controversial clients and allies on TV. But in his case, Parnas said, they were silent." (Also linked yesterday afternoon.)

Betsy Swan: "A dinner with Jared and Ivanka about cannabis, a phone call from Trump Hotel with Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro, and a whole lot of theorizing about George Soros. Lev Parnas' interactions with Trumpworld, in his words, went way beyond the Ukraine influence effort. The former ally of Trump lawyer Rudy Giuliani spent more than a year embedded with some of the president's close outside allies.... He described several of them in an interview with The Daily Beast from his lawyer's office in Midtown Manhattan." --s

Michelle Goldberg: "One good thing about surrounding yourself with tawdry gangsters and grifters is that if they flip on you, you can claim they have no credibility because they're criminals.... A willingness to associate with Trump is a sign of moral turpitude, so most witnesses to his venal schemes will necessarily be compromised.... [Lev] Parnas is worth paying attention to because he's shown us, once again, what Trumpism looks like from the inside. It's part 'The Sopranos' and part, as he put it to [Rachel] Maddow, a 'cult.' The qualities that discredit Parnas are the same ones that let him fit right in."

Josh Kovensky of TPM: "One of Paul Manafort's clients in Ukraine appears to have laid the foundation for theories of Ukrainian interference in the 2016 election that are now at the heart of President Trump's pressure campaign on Kyiv, according to an FBI interview released on Friday. The interview notes say that Ukrainian politician Serhiy Lyovochkin -- Manafort's longtime client in Kyiv -- told the former Trump campaign chairman that the U.S. Embassy in Kyiv had demanded information about Manafort from a specialized anti-corruption law enforcement body. The notes came out in FOIA litigation pursued by Buzzfeed and CNN...." --s

Evan Perez & David Shortell of CNN: "Attorney General William Barr briefly attended a meeting at the Justice Department last fall between top criminal prosecutors and ... Rudy Giuliani, a department official said Friday. The meeting reveals a previously undisclosed interaction between two men the President depends on to defend him. Justice officials have sought to distance the department and Barr from Giuliani since it became clear in recent months that the former New York mayor is the subject of an investigation by Manhattan federal prosecutors. Giuliani was a part of a team of defense attorneys representing a Venezuelan client when they met with Justice Department officials."

Trump's Enemies List Is Bill Barr's To-Do List. Jonathan Chait: "No single case is egregious enough to prove bias on its own. The pattern of selective prosecution under Trump's Department of Justice, and his fanatically partisan Attorney General William Barr, has become evident in a series of cases that all resemble [the probe of Jim Comey's possible leaks, NYT story linked below]. The connecting thread is that Trump's enemies are scoured for any violation that can be found, and held to the strictest letter of the law, while his allies are given broad latitude.... In theory, there would be nothing wrong with the Department of Justice tightening up its standards of conduct. But all the evidence points to the conclusion those standards are being raised only for Trump's political enemies.... The flagrant nature of the 2016 anti-Clinton [emails!] leaks show just how unseriously the bureau has taken its rules on leaking.... The message Trump has sent to his bureaucracy is unmistakable. Political loyalists will be granted broad latitude, and displays of troublesome independence will be held to the strictest accountability." (Also linked yesterday afternoon.)

Jason Leopold, et al. of Buzzfeed: "BuzzFeed News has obtained another set of secret FBI documents from former special counsel Robert Mueller's probe that reveals what key Trump administration officials and other witnesses told investigators about Russia's interference in the 2016 election and the president's attempts to obstruct the inquiry.... Paul Manafort, Trump's former campaign chair, said he had his lawyer speak with Fox News host Sean Hannity in January 2018 because he saw Hannity as an 'outlet to the public and the White House.'... Denis Klimentov, who is associated with the New Economic School in Russia, said that when Russians learned that Carter Page ... was involved 'in the Trump campaign in July 2016, the excitement was palpable.'... Interviewing Anatoli Samochornov, the Russian translator at the 2016 Trump Tower meeting, an FBI agent asked 'if he noticed anything odd with the Russian linguists working at' the United Nations or US State Department. Samochornov 'mentioned a few individuals.' Their names are redacted." --s

Trump Cares Deeply about Your Healthcare Costs (to the Extent they Affect His Polling Numbers). Josh Dawsey & Yasmeen Abutaleb of the Washington Post: "President Trump lashed out at Health and Human Services Secretary Alex Azar for not doing enough on health care and drug pricing during a campaign meeting this week after he was briefed on polling that showed the public trusted Democrats more than Republicans on the issue, according to four people present at or briefed about the meeting." ~~~

~~~ Jonathan Swan & Caitlin Owens of Axios: "President Trump told his health secretary yesterday that he regrets getting involved in the administration's policy on vaping, according to two sources familiar with the conversation. "I should never have done that f[uck]ing vaping thing," Trump said during an impromptu call on speakerphone in an Oval Office meeting.... The administration's ban on flavored vapes is one of its most prominent health policy decisions, but trying to find a compromise between public health groups and the pro-vaping community caused massive political headaches.... The administration hasn't accomplished much on health care. Congress did not repeal the Affordable Care Act -- Trump's top priority -- and it did not address surprise medical bills, either. The administration has done very little on drug prices, and is urging the courts to throw out protections for pre-existing conditions." A New York Times story is here.

Make a Big Donation, Get a Debriefing. Kevin Liptak of CNN: "President Trump recounted minute-by-minute details of the US strike that killed Iran's top military commander during remarks to high-dollar Republican donors at his South Florida estate, according to audio obtained by CNN. Trump, speaking at a GOP fundraising dinner Friday evening, offered new details about the strike that killed Gen. Qassem Soleimani.... In his speech -- held inside the gilded ballroom on his Mar-a-Lago property -- he claimed that Soleimani was 'saying bad things about our country' before the strike, which led to his decision to authorize his killing. 'How much of this shit do we have to listen to?' Trump asked.... Trump did not describe an 'imminent threat' that led to his decision to kill Soleimani, the justification used by administration officials in the aftermath of the attack.... Trump described in detail watching remotely as Soleimani arrived at Baghdad International Airport, where he was met by Iraqi paramilitary leader Abu Mahdi al-Muhandis, the head of Kata'ib Hezbollah. Trump claimed erroneously that Soleimani was meeting "the head of Hezbollah" (the Iran-backed Lebanese militant group is separate from group led by ... al-Muhandis)." Mrs. McC: There were a lot of "sir"s in Trump's description, so we know he made up those parts.


Elizabeth McLaughlin & Mark Osborne
of ABC News: "The U.S. military confirmed late Thursday that some American troops were evacuated for blast injuries sustained in Iran's ballistic missile attacks on bases in Iraq last week. Ten service members injured at Al Asad Air Base in western Iraq were flown out of the country on Wednesday, and another service member was flown out on Jan. 10. 'While no U.S. service members were killed in the Jan. 8 Iranian attack on Al Asad Air base, several were treated for concussion symptoms from the blast and are still being assessed,' said Capt. Bill Urban, spokesman for U.S. Central Command.... In the wake of the attack, which was done in retaliation for the U.S. drone strike that killed Iranian Gen. Qassem Soleimani..., Donald Trump said no one was injured.... TBI [traumatic brain injury] would not meet the threshold for the Pentagon to be notified of the injuries, and that's why the department was only told on Thursday [about the injuries], officials said." Mrs. McC: So one of the few times Trump has made an untrue statement that wasn't his fault. (Also linked yesterday.)

Lola Fadulu of the New York Times: "The Trump administration moved on Friday to roll back school nutrition standards championed by Michelle Obama, an effort long sought by food manufacturers and some school districts that have chafed at the cost of Mrs. Obama's prescriptions for fresh fruit and vegetables. The proposed rule by the Agriculture Department, coming on the former first lady's birthday, would give schools more latitude to decide how much fruit to offer during breakfast and what types of vegetables to include in meals. It would also broaden what counts as a snack." The Hill's story is here. Mrs. McC: Having wrecked nearly everything President Obama did, they're going after his wife now. Anyhow, Happy Birthday, Michelle! Can I treat you to a Big Mac & fries with a sugary drink to wash 'em down?

** In a History Exhibit, National Archives Erases Women's History. Joe Heim of the Washington Post: "The large color photograph that greets visitors to a National Archives exhibit celebrating the centennial of women's suffrage shows a massive crowd filling Pennsylvania Avenue NW for the Women's March on Jan. 21, 2017, the day after President Trump's inauguration.... Viewed from one perspective, it shows the 2017 march. Viewed from another angle, it shifts to show a 1913 black-and-white image of a women's suffrage march also on Pennsylvania Avenue. The display links momentous demonstrations for women's rights more than a century apart on the same stretch of pavement. But a closer look reveals a different story. The Archives acknowledged in a statement this week that it made multiple alterations to the photo of the 2017 Women's March showcased at the museum, blurring signs held by marchers that were critical of Trump. Words on signs that referenced women's anatomy were also blurred." Mrs. McC: I find this reprehensible. No sex words. No negativity about our Dear Leader. You girls should be more ladylike. How's "Fuck you, Archives!"? ~~~

     ~~~ Update. Here's a Hill story.

Another Trumpie Goes to Jail. Caroline Kelly & Sheena Jones of CNN: "Former New York [Congressman] Chris Collins [R] was sentenced to 26 months in prison on Friday after pleading guilty to federal charges in an insider trading case. The sentence from Judge Vernon Broderick in a New York federal court comes after Collins pleaded guilty to conspiracy to commit securities fraud and making false statements in October. Federal prosecutors on Monday recommended that Collins be sentenced to nearly five years in prison. 'You had a duty and you betrayed that duty,' Broderick said, additionally slapping Collins with a $200,000 fine and a year of supervised probation upon his release.... Collins, who was the first sitting congressman to support ... Donald Trump's bid for the White House, resigned from Congress ahead of the guilty plea. By pleading guilty, Collins avoided a broader set of charges from the superseding indictment, including securities fraud, conspiracy to commit wire fraud and wire fraud."

Presidential Election

Caitlin Oprysko of Politico: "... Donald Trump on Friday accused Democrats of trying to sabotage Sen. Bernie Sanders' presidential bid, echoing allegations from Sanders supporters during the 2016 primary. 'They are rigging the election again against Bernie Sanders, just like last time, only even more obviously,' Trump said in a pair of tweets, claiming that Democrats were using his impeachment trial beginning next week to keep Sanders off the campaign trail in the critical final weeks before the Iowa caucuses. 'They are bringing him out of so important Iowa in order that, as a Senator, he sit through the Impeachment Hoax Trial,' he continued, using derisive nicknames to accuse House Speaker Nancy Pelosi -- without evidence -- of orchestrating the timing of the trial to give former Vice President Joe Biden a boost. 'Crazy Nancy thereby gives the strong edge to Sleepy Joe Biden, and Bernie is shut out again. Very unfair, but that's the way the Democrats play the game. Anyway, it's a lot of fun to watch!'" ~~~

~~~ Annie Karni & Jeremy Peters of the New York Times: "The first version of the conspiracy theory was hatched on Twitter last Friday, Jan. 10. 'Don't rule out that the reason Pelosi hasn't sent impeachment to the Senate is to hurt Warren and Sanders, and to help Biden,' Ari Fleischer, a former White House press secretary for President George W. Bush, tapped out on his iPad. 'By timing the trial so it takes place during the Iowa lead-up, she has leverage over the liberals.'... Seven days later, Mr. Fleischer's theory ... -- for which there is no evidence -- was being promulgated by President Trump.... The evolution from online conspiracy theory to Fox News fodder to presidential talking point demonstrated how a world of conservative influencers, Republican lawmakers and online media outlets can drive disinformation through repetition and amplification. Two days after Mr. Fleischer's tweet, Representative Kevin McCarthy, the House majority leader, repeated it" on Fox News twice.... "His television commentary was then written up by Breitbart News' and the confederate Website the Federalist ran an article touting it. Then Trump tweeted it out.

Pete Williams of NBC News: "The Supreme Court agreed Friday to take up an issue that could change a key element of the system America uses to elect its president, with a decision likely in the spring just as the campaign heats up. The answer to the question could be a decisive one: Are the electors who cast the actual Electoral College ballots for president and vice president required to follow the results of the popular vote in their states? Or are they free to vote as they wish?... 'It's not hard to imagine how a single "faithless elector," voting differently than his or her state did, could swing a close presidential election,' said Mark Murray, NBC News senior political editor.... The 10th Circuit Court of Appeals in ... said electors can vote for any legitimate candidate.... States are free to choose their electors however they want, the court said, and can even require electors to pledge their loyalty to their political parties. But once the electors are chosen and report in December to cast their votes as members of the electoral college, they are fulfilling a federal function, and a state's authority has ended." The New York Times story, by Adam Liptak, is here.


Susannah Luthi of Politico: "The Supreme Court on Friday said it will revisit whether employers must guarantee free birth control coverage for their workers. It marks the third high court review of the contraception mandate stemming from Obamacare -- and the first since Justices Neil Gorsuch and Brett Kavanaugh joined the court. The provision requires employer-sponsored health plans to provide their enrollees with contraceptive coverage at no extra personal cost. Both Gorsuch and Kavanaugh considered similar cases while appellate court judges, and both showed sympathy for religious groups seeking exemptions from the requirement on moral grounds. Justices this time will review whether the birth control mandate violates religious freedom laws and whether proposed exemptions pushed by the Trump administration that have so far been blocked by lower courts can stand."

Cleve Wootson, et al., of the Washington Post: "... a Washington Post-Ipsos poll of African Americans nationwide ... [found that] while personally optimistic about their own lives, [they] today offer a bleaker view about their community as a whole. They also express determination to try to limit Trump to a single term in office. More than 8 in 10 black Americans say they believe Trump is a racist and that he has made racism a bigger problem in the country. Nine in 10 disapprove of his job performance overall. The pessimism goes well beyond assessments of the president. A 65 percent majority of African Americans say it is a 'bad time' to be a black person in America." (Also linked yesterday afternoon.)

Michael Balsamo & Jeff Martin of the AP: "Three men linked to a violent white supremacist group known as The Base were charged with conspiring to kill members of a militant anti-fascist group, police in Georgia announced Friday, a day after three other members were arrested on federal charges in Maryland and Delaware. A senior FBI national security official said police and federal agents intentionally moved to arrest the men ahead of Monday's rally because they believed some of them intended to commit violence there. It was unknown if the men arrested in Georgia planned to attend the rally in Richmond. The Base, a collective of hardcore neo-Nazis that operate as a paramilitary organization, has proclaimed war against minority communities within the United States and abroad, the FBI has said. Unlike other extremist groups, it's not focused on promulgating propaganda -- instead the group aims to bring together highly skilled members to train them for acts of violence."

Beyond the Beltway

Georgia. AP: "A computer security expert says he found that a forensic image of the election server central to a legal battle over the integrity of Georgia elections showed signs that the original server was hacked. The server was left exposed to the open internet for at least six months, a problem the same expert discovered in August 2016. It was subsequently wiped clean in mid-2017 with no notice, just days after election integrity activists filed a lawsuit seeking an overhaul of what they called the state's unreliable and negligently run election system. In late December 2019, the plaintiffs were finally able to obtain a copy of the server's contents that the FBI made in March 2017 and retained. State officials have said they've seen no evidence that any election-related data was compromised. But they also long refused to submit the server image for an independent examination." Mrs. McC: So this is Republican election officials trying to hide a hack or hacks of their system. If you're still thinking maybe Stacey Abrams really got more votes in the 2018 gubernatorial election -- an election in which her opponent Brian Kemp was "managing" the vote count -- keep on thinking. (Also linked yesterday afternoon.)

Kansas. Steve Vockrodt of The Kansas City Star: "A Kansas City area radio station can broadcast Russian state-owned media programming, the type that U.S. intelligence called a 'propaganda machine,' for six hours a day through a lease agreement struck by a local radio operator. RM Broadcasting LLC, a Florida-based company that has agreements to broadcast the Russian state media program Radio Sputnik, reached a deal on Jan. 1...The lease agreement lets RM Broadcasting air its programming from 6 to 9 a.m. and 6 to 9 p.m. seven days a week. KCXL's website, which says that it's the radio station that will 'tell you the things that the liberal media wont (sic) tell you,' lists Radio Sputnik in its morning programming." --s

Thursday
Jan162020

The Commentariat -- January 17, 2020

Afternoon Update:

Show Trial of the Century. Maggie Haberman of the New York Times: "President Trump plans on adding former independent counsel Kenneth W. Starr and the defense lawyer Alan Dershowitz to his legal team for his trial by the Senate, a person briefed on the plan said Friday. Mr. Starr, whose investigation into President Bill Clinton's sexual relationships led to his impeachment, will be joined by Robert Ray, who succeeded Mr. Starr as independent counsel and wrote the final report on Mr. Clinton, the person said. Rounding out the team will be Mr. Dershowitz, a Harvard Law School professor emeritus who became famous as a defense counsel for high-profile defendants like O.J. Simpson. The White House counsel, Pat Cipollone, and Mr. Trump's personal lawyer, Jay Sekulow, will lead the legal team." CNN's story is here. No mention of whether or not there will be dogs & ponies. ~~~

~~~ Emily Shugerman of the Daily Beast: "Donald Trump is lawyering up for his impeachment trial with a team that looks surprisingly similar to that of billionaire pedophile Jeffrey Epstein. The president bolstered his legal team Friday with attorneys Alan Dershowitz and Kenneth Starr, who helped Epstein evade prison time in a now infamously lenient plea deal with Palm Beach prosecutors. Epstein originally faced multiple charges of soliciting and trafficking underage girls, but escaped with just 13 months of house arrest in a deal that caused Trump's Labor Secretary Alex Acosta to resign under pressure last year. A suit unveiled by Virgin Islands prosecutors this week alleges Epstein continued to traffic and abuse girls as young as 12 on his private islands until 2018, a decade after Starr and Dershowitz helped him walk free." Read on.

Pompeo Speaks. Matthew Lee of the AP: "Secretary of State Mike Pompeo on Friday broke nearly 72 hours of silence over alleged surveillance and threats to the former U.S. ambassador to Ukraine, saying he believed the allegations would prove to be wrong but that he had an obligation to evaluate and investigate the matter. In interviews with conservative radio hosts, Pompeo said he had no knowledge of the allegations until earlier this week when congressional Democrats released documents from an associate of ... Donald Trump's personal attorney suggesting that Marie Yovanovitch was being watched. He also said he did not know and had never met Lev Parnas...." Mrs. McC: I suspect Pompeo chose these venues because (a) no tough questions and (b) harder to tell someone is lying if you can't see his face.

Trump's Enemies List Is Bill Barr's To-Do List. Jonathan Chait: "No single case is egregious enough to prove bias on its own. The pattern of selective prosecution under Trump's Department of Justice, and his fanatically partisan Attorney General William Barr, has become evident in a series of cases that all resemble [the probe of Jim Comey's possible leaks, NYT story linked below]. The connecting thread is that Trump's enemies are scoured for any violation that can be found, and held to the strictest letter of the law, while his allies are given broad latitude.... In theory, there would be nothing wrong with the Department of Justice tightening up its standards of conduct. But all the evidence points to the conclusion those standards are being raised only for Trump's political enemies.... The flagrant nature of the 2016 anti-Clinton [emails!] leaks show just how unseriously the bureau has taken its rules on leaking.... The message Trump has sent to his bureaucracy is unmistakable. Political loyalists will be granted broad latitude, and displays of troublesome independence will be held to the strictest accountability." ~~~

~~~ David Knowles of Yahoo! News: "... Lev Parnas said he was giving media interviews about his role in President Trump's attempts to convince Ukrainian officials to announce an investigation into former Vice President Joe Biden because he wanted to protect himself from Attorney General William Barr.... Trump, Parnas said [to Rachel Maddow], was made more powerful 'when he got William Barr.'... On Thursday, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi also criticized Barr in harsh terms. 'Does anyone think that the rogue AG is going to appoint a special prosecutor?' Pelosi said ... in reference to the revelations stemming from Maddow's interview with Barr. 'No, because he's implicated in all of this. This is an example of all of the president's henchmen. And I hope that the senators do not become part of the president's henchmen.'" ~~~

     ~~~ Mrs. McCrabbie: It's easy to think of Parnas as Rudy's goon or Trump's goon. But in fact, especially in understanding the structure of power, he is -- in his own way -- just as smart about it as Jonathan Chait, and Chait, IMO, is a very smart guy. ~~~

~~~ Betsy Swan of the Daily Beast: Lev "Parnas told The Daily Beast that his former friends' reaction to his arrest has strengthened his resolve to speak out. Parnas said that after he and his associate Igor Fruman were arrested at Dulles Airport on Oct. 9 and charged with campaign-finance violations, he was disappointed with [Rudy] Giuliani's silence. He said Joe diGenova and Victoria Toensing -- a Trump-friendly husband-and-wife legal team with deep and longstanding ties in Washington's conservative legal world -- also kept mum about their relationship with him. That silence, he said, left him feeling betrayed.... He noted that the trio rarely shy away from defending controversial clients and allies on TV. But in his case, Parnas said, they were silent."

Elizabeth McLaughlin & Mark Osborne of ABC News: "The U.S. military confirmed late Thursday that some American troops were evacuated for blast injuries sustained in Iran's ballistic missile attacks on bases in Iraq last week. Ten service members injured at Al Asad Air Base in western Iraq were flown out of the country on Wednesday, and another service member was flown out on Jan. 10. 'While no U.S. service members were killed in the Jan. 8 Iranian attack on Al Asad Air base, several were treated for concussion symptoms from the blast and are still being assessed,' said Capt. Bill Urban, spokesman for U.S. Central Command.... In the wake of the attack, which was done in retaliation for the U.S. drone strike that killed Iranian Gen. Qassem Soleimani..., Donald Trump said no one was injured.... TBI [traumatic brain injury] would not meet the threshold for the Pentagon to be notified of the injuries, and that's why the department was only told on Thursday [about the injuries], officials said." Mrs. McC: So one of the few times Trump has made an untrue statement that wasn't his fault.

Cleve Wootson, et al., of the Washington Post: "... a Washington Post-Ipsos poll of African Americans nationwide ... [found that] while personally optimistic about their own lives, [they] today offer a bleaker view about their community as a whole. They also express determination to try to limit Trump to a single term in office. More than 8 in 10 black Americans say they believe Trump is a racist and that he has made racism a bigger problem in the country. Nine in 10 disapprove of his job performance overall. The pessimism goes well beyond assessments of the president. A 65 percent majority of African Americans say it is a 'bad time' to be a black person in America."

Georgia. AP: "A computer security expert says he found that a forensic image of the election server central to a legal battle over the integrity of Georgia elections showed signs that the original server was hacked. The server was left exposed to the open internet for at least six months, a problem the same expert discovered in August 2016. It was subsequently wiped clean in mid-2017 with no notice, just days after election integrity activists filed a lawsuit seeking an overhaul of what they called the state's unreliable and negligently run election system. In late December 2019, the plaintiffs were finally able to obtain a copy of the server's contents that the FBI made in March 2017 and retained. State officials have said they've seen no evidence that any election-related data was compromised. But they also long refused to submit the server image for an independent examination." Mrs. McC: So this is Republican election officials trying to hide a hack or hacks of their system. If you're still thinking maybe Stacey Abrams really got more votes in the 2018 gubernatorial election -- an election in which her opponent Brian Kemp was "managing" the vote count -- keep on thinking.

~~~~~~~~~~

I JUST GOT IMPEACHED FOR MAKING A PERFECT PHONE CALL! -- Donald Trump, in a tweet, yesterday

It's almost as if he's obsessing over something he doesn't understand at all. -- Mrs. Bea McCrabbie

Michael Shear & Nicholas Fandos of the New York Times: "The Senate formally opened the impeachment trial of President Trump on Thursday, bracing for a grave and deeply divisive debate over his fate as senators swore to deliver' impartial justice' and installed Chief Justice John G. Roberts Jr. to preside over a proceeding with little precedent. In a somber ceremony that initiated only the third presidential impeachment trial in the nation's history, Chief Justice Roberts vowed to act 'according to the Constitution and the laws.' He then administered the same, 222-year-old oath of impartiality to the senators, setting in motion the final stage of a process that has roiled a polarized Congress, and could shape the outcome of the 2020 elections, along with Mr. Trump's legacy."

~~~ Mrs. Bea McCrabbie: Sadly, Roberts -- as expected -- wore a plain judicial robe, unlike his predecessor William Renquist, who had gold stripes sewed to sleeves of his robe. His inspiration: "one worn by the Lord Chancellor in a local production of Gilbert & Sullivan's Iolanthe,: which Renquist had seen. Of his experience in overseeing the impeachment trial, Renquist riffed on a line from "When Britain Really Ruled the Waves" in Iolanthe: "I did nothing in particular, and I did it very well." One might think Renquist thought the Clinton impeachment and trial amounted to a grand farce -- one that unfortunately lacked appropriate musical accompaniment. ~~~

~~~ AP: "The Senate is one man short on the opening day of ... Donald Trump's impeachment trial. Republican James Inhofe is back in Oklahoma 'to be with a family member facing a medical issue,' his office says. Inhofe says he'll return to Washington in time for the start of opening arguments on Tuesday."

Peter Baker of the New York Times: "... as senators formally convened on Thursday as a court of impeachment in the case of Donald John Trump, new revelations were still emerging and important questions remained unanswered. The latest interviews by Lev Parnas..., as well as documents released by House investigators, only reinforced the reality that there is more still to be learned.... Underscoring the fluidity of the story was the release on Thursday of a damning new report by the independent Government Accountability Office. [story & document linked below]... And the recent offer to testify by John R. Bolton, the president's former national security adviser who privately denounced the geopolitical 'drug deal' orchestrated by Mr. Trump's other advisers, only underlines that many of the key players in the tale of intrigue have yet to publicly disclose what they know.... It is clear the Senate is opening a trial in a far different position than it did in 1868 when it determined [Andrew] Johnson's fate or in 1999 when it considered charges against [Bill] Clinton...."

~~~ Nicholas Fandos & Michael Shear of the New York Times with live updates (Thursday): "For the second time in two days, the seven House members who will serve as prosecutors made a solemn march through the Capitol to the Senate chamber, this time to formally announce the charges against President Trump and initiate only the third presidential impeachment trial in American history....

"Representative Adam B. Schiff of California, the lead impeachment manager, said his team would consider whether to press the Senate to call Lev Parnas to testify once the trial begins.... Speaker Nancy Pelosi said Thursday that Lev Parnas, the Soviet-born businessman who says President Trump was fully aware of efforts to dig up damaging information that would help him in the 2020 election, would be 'a credible witness'during the impeachment trial, though she stopped short of saying he should testify.

"It was a straightforward question being put to nearly every Republican senator in the Capitol on Thursday: Should the Senate consider new evidence as part of the impeachment trial? But when Manu Raju of CNN, a well-respected congressional reporter, put it to Senator Martha McSally of Arizona, the first-term Republican who is up for re-election this fall went on the attack. 'You're a liberal hack,' she said. 'I'm not talking to you. You're a liberal hack.'" Mrs. McC: I've seen Raju on CNN many times. He's a straight reporter, not a "liberal hack." (Also linked yesterday. There are numerous updates to liveblog since first linked.) ~~~

~~~ Charlie Nash of Mediaite: "CNN anchor Wolf Blitzer condemned Sen. Martha McSally (R-AZ) for calling CNN senior congressional correspondent Manu Raju a 'liberal hack' on Thursday -- describing the attack as 'disgusting.'... [Blizter said to Raju on air,] 'Instead of answering a fair question, she simply called you a "liberal hack." It was disgusting, it was awful. She should know better. Certainly, you're one of the most respected congressional reporters up on Capitol Hill.'" ~~~

~~~ Greg Sargent of the Washington Post: Instead of being ashamed and embarrassed that she snapped at Raju without cause, McSally is fundraising off video of the incident. Sargent calls this "beyond pathetic. Note that it is now seen as 'liberal' to merely ask a Republican senator whether she feels any obligation to consider the full set of facts...."

Jordain Carney of the Hill: "Sen. Susan Collins (R-Maine) said on Thursday that it's 'likely' she would support calling witnesses after the initial phase of the impeachment trial but has not yet made a decision on any particular individual. 'While I need to hear the case argued and the questions answered, I tend to believe having additional information would be helpful. It is likely that I would support a motion to call witnesses at that point in the trial just as I did in 1999,' Collins said in a statement, referring to the Clinton impeachment trial." ~~~

     ~~~ Ed Kilgore of New York: "As the impeachment trial of Donald Trump begins, a lot of attention is being paid to Senator Susan Collins of Maine, who has made a lot of ambivalent noise about possibly cooperating with Democrats on allowing new evidence and witnesses to appear during the trial, against the wishes of her party leader, Mitch McConnell. Now comes news from Morning Consult that as her moment of truth approaches, Collins has displaced McConnell as the senator with the highest disapproval rating back home[.]" As Kilgore points out, Collins is losing ground from all sides, so no matter what she does re: impeachment, she can't please everyone.

Dahlia Lithwick of Slate assesses Republican Senators' approach to impeachment. She focuses on McConnell & Collins, but she doesn't let others off the hook.

Animal House. I smell a rat here. The guy is crooked as a snake. -- Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-Trump), commenting on new evidence provided by Lev Parnas, yesterday on Fox "News"

"But He Didn't Commit a Crime!" -- Another Faulty Trump Defense Topples. Emily Cochrane of the New York Times: "The Trump administration violated the law in withholding security assistance aid to Ukraine, a nonpartisan federal watchdog agency said on Thursday.... The Government Accountability Office said the White House&'s Office of Management and Budget violated the Impoundment Control Act when it withheld nearly $400 million for 'a policy reason,' even though the funds had been allocated by Congress. The decision was directed by the president himself, and during the House impeachment inquiry, administration officials testified that they had raised concerns about its legality to no avail.... The White House budget office promptly rejected the report's conclusions.... Senator Chris Van Hollen, Democrat of Maryland..., on Thursday called the G.A.O. report a 'bombshell legal opinion.' It 'demonstrates, without a doubt, that the Trump Administration illegally withheld assistance from Ukraine and the public evidence shows that the president himself ordered this illegal act,' he wrote on Twitter." Thanks to Ken W. for the link. Politico's report is here. (Also linked yesterday.) ~~~

     ~~~ The GAO's decision report is here, via Politico. (Also linked yesterday.) ~~~

~~~ Aaron Blake of the Washington Post: "The GOP has made the idea there was no crime a central argument in its impeachment defense of President Trump. The articles of impeachment, Republicans argue, don't actually accuse Trump of a specific, statutory criminal act, so the process is illegitimate. This, of course, ignores that you don't need a crime to impeach. But that strained argument was just severely undermined. The Government Accountability Office ruled Thursday the Trump administration's withholding of aid to Ukraine violated the law, because Trump can't use his policy priorities to supersede the constitutional power of the purse that Congress enjoys.... [In his decision,] GAO general counsel Thomas H. Armstrong delivers rebukes to Trump and his administration, saying it has failed to abide by the law, failed to substantiate its actions and failed to cooperate by providing the necessary documentation.... Now [impeachment managers] can plausibly argue Trump took an illegal action here as part of his pressure campaign on Ukraine." (Also linked yesterday.)

Ashley Parker, et al., of the Washington Post: "The rapid sequence of events in mid-May marks one of the earliest known moments when [Rudy] Guiliani's shadow campaign to pressure Ukraine to launch investigations that would benefit Trump inextricably merged with official U.S. foreign policy -- and, if [Lev] Parnas's account is accurate, appeared to move the levers of the American government. In the process, the vice president was dangled as a bargaining chip -- perhaps unwittingly -- to exert leverage over a foreign government, according to Parnas.... Text messages and other documents released by the House this week, as well as congressional testimony during the impeachment inquiry, corroborate the timeline that Parnas detailed in interviews with MSNBC and CNN about the episode -- and show how a rogue operation engineered by Giuliani began subsuming official U.S. policy.... While Giuliani emphasized his Ukraine trip was intended for Trump' personal benefit, Parnas said he went to Ukraine empowered to invoke core powers of the U.S. government -- military aid, official travel, a White House visit -- to force the Ukrainians' hand.... [Parnas told Giuliani he had failed in his attempt to get a commitment from a top Zelensky aide to get a statement that Ukraine would investigate Biden.] Pence's top Russia adviser, Jennifer Williams, said she was surprised the following morning to receive a call from an assistant to Pence's chief of staff informing her that preliminary plans for Pence to travel to Ukraine for the inauguration had been canceled, she later testified to Congress." ~~~

~~~ Marshall Cohen of CNN: "Lev Parnas, an associate of Rudy Giuliani, told CNN that he witnessed ... Donald Trump telling a top aide that the US ambassador to Ukraine should be fired.... 'In the conversation, the subject of Ukraine was brought up,' Parnas said. 'And I told the President that our opinion that (Ambassador Yovanovitch) is badmouthing him -- and that she said that he's gonna get impeached -- something like that....' Parnas continued, 'and his reaction was, he looked at me, like, got very angry, and basically turned around to (then-White House aide) John DeStefano, and said, "Fire her. Get rid of her."' It was of several instances when Trump attempted to fire then-Ambassador Marie Yovanovitch, Parnas told CNN's Anderson Cooper in the latest installment of a wide-ranging interview that aired Thursday night." Mrs. McC: Here are the videos of the interviews CNN has made available:

Mrs. McCrabbie: In yesterday's Comments, I noted that Lev was following the old mob script of retaining a lawyer "recommended" by the boss -- in this case, John Dowd, who represented Trump during Mueller's investigation -- and that this arrangement usually did not work out well for the accused. In the second part of his interview with Rachel Maddow, which aired Thursday night, Lev elaborates on this. The full episode is here, though unavailable @5:45 am. (You have to have a cable teevee "subscription" to view it.) The Hill has an abbreviated report on Parnas' description of Parnas' relationship with Dowd. It supports my supposition. In the interview (but not in the Hill report), Parnas said that Dowd called Jay Secolow, another of Trump's personal attorneys, while at a meeting with Parnas, and they told him not to testify to the House Intel Committee because Parnas had "three-way [attorney-client] privilege" regarding his interactions with Trump via Giuliani. Former prosecutor Barbara McQuade, appearing on Lawrence O'Donnell's show said that was plausible, just as prosecutors could not force a lawyer's secretary to testify about what he knew about the lawyer's client. ~~~

~~~ Here is video of Parnas explaining to Maddow how Trump kept trying to fire Yovanovitch. Yes, yes, it's a comic horror story (thanks for the phrase to Dwight Garner's review of the Rucker-Leonnig book, linked below).

American Oversight (via digby): "We lined up the newly released Parnas messages with the records we obtained from the State Department through FOIA litigation, as well as other records and reports. The timeline is troubling.... Many of the messages between [Lev] Parnas and Robert Hyde, a Trump donor who was apparently assisting Parnas in Ukraine, were sent in late March 2019 -- dates when [Rudy] Giuliani was in touch with Sec. of State Mike Pompeo, according to records we obtained." The report includes the details. (Also linked yesterday.)

I don't know him at all, don't know what he's about, don't know where he comes from. -- Donald Trump, regarding Lev Parnas, to reporters, Thursday ~~~

~~~ David Jackson of USA Today: "... Donald Trump and aides sought Thursday to distance him from a Soviet-born businessman who said Trump knew all about efforts to pressure Ukraine into investigating U.S. political rival Joe Biden.... 'I don't believe I've ever spoken to him,' Trump told reporters about Lev Parnas.... In an interview with CNN, Parnas said that every time Trump denies knowing him, 'I'll show him another picture. He's lying.'"

Stephen Colbert's monologue is not only funny but helpful as he includes tidbits of impeachment news I haven't linked:

** Where's Mikey? Jennifer Hansler of CNN: "Secretary of State Mike Pompeo has maintained a persistent silence as stunning new evidence has emerged suggesting the former ambassador to Ukraine may have been illegally surveilled before she was forced out of her job by ... Donald Trump. The State Department has not publicly commented on any developments in the more than 36 hours since a new tranche of documents revealed that former US Ambassador to Ukraine Marie Yovanovitch may have been monitored at the behest of associates of ... Rudy Giuliani. The lack of a response is even more striking following a Thursday morning announcement that Ukrainian authorities have launched a criminal probe into that potential surveillance -- before any such announcement from the US government." ~~~

~~~ There's This. Allan Smith & Tom Winter of NBC News: "The FBI paid visits to Republican congressional candidate Robert Hyde's Connecticut home and business on Thursday, a senior law enforcement official said. The agent's visits came days after the House Intelligence Committee released texts Hyde sent an associate of Rudy Giuliani..., suggesting that he had Marie Yovanovitch, then the U.S. ambassador to Ukraine, under surveillance.... Connecticut Republican Party Chairman J.R. Romano asked Hyde to end his campaign, saying his 'antics' were a distraction."

MEANWHILE, at "Justice." Adam Goldman of the New York Times: "Federal prosecutors in Washington are investigating a years-old leak of classified information about a Russian intelligence document, and they appear to be focusing on whether the former F.B.I. director James B. Comey illegally provided details to reporters, according to people familiar with the inquiry. The case is the second time the Justice Department has investigated leaks potentially involving Mr. Comey, a frequent target of President Trump, who has repeatedly called him a 'leaker.' Mr. Trump recently suggested without evidence that Mr. Comey should be prosecuted for 'unlawful conduct' and spend years in prison. The timing of the investigation could raise questions about whether it was motivated at least in part by politics.... Mr. Trump has repeatedly pressured the Justice Department to investigate his perceived enemies. In 2018, he told the White House counsel at the time, Donald F. McGahn II, to prosecute [Hillary] Clinton and Mr. Comey. Mr. McGahn refused...." TPM has a summary report here. ~~~

     ~~~ Mrs. McCrabbie: That "could raise questions" construction, which reporters commonly use, is a cop-out. Obviously, the matter does raise questions, or the report probably would not have made the front page of the New York Times. Indeed, Goldman goes on to name some of the questions the investigation raises.

Philip Rucker & Carol Leonnig of the Washington Post in a WashPo excerpt from their new book A Very Stable Genius, describe a July 2017 meeting with Trump at the Pentagon that did not go as planned. The meeting was supposed to be a tutorial on U.S. foreign relations for the stunningly ignorant, impulsive & brash president*: "Rather than getting him to appreciate America's traditional role and alliances, Trump began to tune out and eventually push away the experts who believed their duty was to protect the country by restraining his more dangerous impulses." By the end of the meeting, Trump had worked himself up into "one of his rages. He was so angry that he wasn't taking many breaths. All morning, he had been coarse and cavalier, but the next several things he bellowed went beyond that description. They stunned nearly everyone in the room, and some vowed that they would never repeat them.... 'I wouldn't go to war with you people,' Trump told the assembled brass.... 'You're a bunch of dopes and babies.'" ~~~

~~~ Dwight Garner of the New York Times reviews A Very Stable Genius: "... this taut and terrifying book is among the most closely observed accounts of Donald J. Trump's shambolic tenure in office to date.... It reads like a horror story, an almost comic immorality tale.... Throughout he is misinformed and confused while at the same time utterly certain of himself."

Spencer Ackerman & Asawin Suebsaeng of the Daily Beast: "More than a month after requesting information from the Department of Justice about the president's decision to give clemency to convicted or accused war criminals, two Senate Democrats [-- Patrick Leahy (Vt.) and Sheldon Whitehouse (R.I.) --] continue to be stonewalled by the administration.... The lack of answers from the Justice Department, which is supposed to play a key role in pardon reviews, is likely to fuel allegations that Trump recklessly decided on a round of clemency that has disgusted many in the military community.... The two senators cited a department manual instructing the pardon office to review 'all petitions' for clemency and 'in every case' prepare recommendations. They referred to the pardon office as an 'institutional safeguard' against abuse of a broad presidential authority."


Ryan Browne & Geneva Sands
of CNN: "The Pentagon received a Department of Homeland Security request Wednesday to build and pay for hundreds of additional miles of border wall on the southwest border, according to the Department of Defense. The request is for roughly 270 miles of border barrier and other infrastructure to be built in areas that are considered drug corridors, a mix of rural and urban areas, a senior Department of Defense official told CNN. Because the request is to ostensibly help combat drug smuggling, the Pentagon will be allowed to construct these barriers under its pre-existing '284' counter drug authority, which allows the Defense Department to build barriers, lighting and roads for the purpose of countering drug trafficking, according to the official.... In order to pay for hundreds of miles of additional border wall, the Defense Department will likely have to divert funds from other military accounts in order to provide adequate funding, something it did previously to pay for $2.5 billion of wall that was authorized via the counter drug account.... The reprogramming of money from various military accounts into the counter-drug account to fund the border wall proved controversial among many lawmakers on Capitol Hill who threatened to strip the Pentagon of its ability to move money in the future."

Sabrina Rodriguez of Politico: "The Senate on Thursday overwhelmingly passed ... Donald Trump's signature trade deal with Mexico and Canada, helping him fulfill a 2016 campaign promise in a rare bipartisan vote. It's a big win for the president going into his reelection campaign, as he seeks to prove that his disruptive trade agenda is delivering results. But it'll take years of costly work before American workers and businesses begin to benefit from the new trade pact with Mexico and Canada, which passed the Senate in a 89-10 vote.... Some Democrats, including Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer and Sens. Kamala Harris of California, Cory Booker of New Jersey and Bernie Sanders of Vermont, voted against the pact for not doing enough to protect American jobs or address environmental issues.... The USMCA will not go into full effect until Canada approves the pact when its House of Commons reconvenes in late January." (Also linked yesterday.)

Timothy Williams of the New York Times: "Virginia on Wednesday became the 38th state to approve the Equal Rights Amendment, a symbolic victory for those who for generations have been pushing for a constitutional guarantee of legal rights regardless of sex. Virginia's decision does not seal the amendment's addition to the United States Constitution. A deadline for three-quarters, or 38, of the 50 states to approve the E.R.A. expired in 1982, so the future of the measure is uncertain, and experts said the issue would likely be tied up in the courts and in the political sphere for years. But the symbolism of the action in Virginia was significant after a struggle that had been raised, hard fought and, at times, forgotten over nearly 100 years.... Women packed the galleries of the State Capitol as the debate unfolded.... Some members of the House of Delegates, which for the first time in its 401-year history is led by a woman, Eileen Filler-Corn, brought their young daughters to witness the vote." The Hill's story is here. (Also linked yesterday.)

Beyond the Beltway

Virginia. Timothy Williams, et al., of the New York Times: "A sense of crisis enveloped the capital of Virginia on Thursday, with the police on heightened alert and Richmond bracing for possible violence ahead of a gun rally next week that is expected to draw white supremacists and other anti-government extremists. Members of numerous armed militias and white power proponents vowed to converge on the city despite the state of emergency declared by Gov. Ralph Northam [D], who temporarily banned weapons from the grounds of the State Capitol.... The unease increased after the F.B.I. announced the arrest on Thursday of three armed men suspected of being members of a neo-Nazi hate group, including a former Canadian Army reservist, who had obtained weapons and discussed participating in the Richmond rally. The men were linked to The Base, a group that aims to create a white ethnostate, according to the F.B.I." Mrs. McC: Um, the "gun-rights" rally is scheduled for Martin Luther King, Jr., Day. Just a coincidence, I guess. The Daily Beast has a story about the arrests.