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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A nation of sheep will beget a government of wolves. -- Edward R. Murrow

Publisher & Editor: Marie Burns


Wednesday
Aug282019

The Commentariat -- August 29, 2019

Late Morning Update:

Matt Zapotosky of the Washington Post: "Former FBI Director James B. Comey violated FBI policies in how he handled memos that detailed his controversial interactions with President Trump, the Justice Department inspector general found in a report released Thursday, both in engineering their release to the press and storing them at his home without telling the FBI. The inspector general found that the memos -- which described, among other things, how Trump had pressed Comey for loyalty and asked him about letting go an investigation into ... Michael Flynn -- were official records, and as such, Comey's treatment of them broke the rules.... On Twitter, Comey noted that the inspector general found 'no evidence' that he or his attorneys released any classified information to the media. '"I don't need a public apology from those who defamed me, but a quick message with a "sorry we lied about you" would be nice.... And to all those who've spent two years talking about me "going to jail" or being a "liar and a leaker" -- ask yourselves why you still trust people who gave you bad info for so long, including the president.'" ...

... David Shortell, et al., of CNN: "Former FBI Director James Comey violated agency policies when he retained and leaked a set of memos he took documenting meetings with President Donald Trump early in 2017, the Justice Department's inspector general said in a report released Thursday. Comey set a 'dangerous example' for FBI employees in an attempt to 'achieve a personally desired outcome,' the report states. However, the IG found 'no evidence that Comey or his attorneys released any of the classified information contained in any of the memos to members of the media.'... The inspector general's office referred the findings of its report to the Justice Department for potential prosecution earlier this summer. Prosecutors declined to bring a case, the report says." ...

... Adam Goldman of the New York Times: "President Trump and his allies are sure to use the report's conclusions to attack Mr. Comey.... The report is the latest chapter in the story of Mr. Comey, who was castigated last year as part of a broader inspector general's investigation that examined his handling of the Hillary Clinton email inquiry." ...

     ... Mrs. McCrabbie: Is the DOJ really going to prosecute Andy McCabe after letting Sanctimonious Jim off the hook?

Just Joking. Dana Milbank of the Washington Post: "As The Post's Nick Miroff and Josh Dawsey report, Trump has told his subordinates to seize private land and disregard environmental rules as they build a border wall, offering to pardon them for breaking the law. The White House response? Trump is joking. Hahahahahahaha. My sides are totally splitting. That was almost as funny as the time when ... Trump told Russia to hack into Hillary Clinton's emails. 'He was joking,' the White House said.... The Russians didn't get the joke; they began acting on Trump's request within hours, special counsel Robert Mueller found.... [Trump] and his aides have recast a series of ominous statements as jokes that the rest of us just didn't get[.]" Milbank rolls out a pretty long list.

~~~~~~~~~~

"The Age of Trump." There has never been a time in the history of our Country that the Media was so Fraudulent, Fake, or Corrupt! When the 'Age of Trump' is looked back on many years from now, I only hope that a big part of my legacy will be the exposing of massive dishonesty in the Fake News! -- Donald Trump, in a tweet last night ...

... Trump Threatens to Fire Trump Teevee. Brian Stelter of CNN: "President Trump took his complaints about Fox News, his biggest bastion of support on television, to a new level on Wednesday, claiming that the network 'isn't working for us anymore.' His tweets made explicit Trump's long-held belief that Fox belongs to him and his supporters. Despite daily cheerleading from [Fox program hosts]..., Trump suggests that the network is not sufficiently loyal to him. "We have to start looking for a new News Outlet,' he tweeted on Wednesday, inadvertently lending credence to critics' claims that Fox is akin to state-run TV.In the past Trump has promoted a much smaller conservative channel, OANN, which has positioned itself as a friendlier network to Trump." (Also linked yesterday.)...

     ... Paul Farhi & John Wagner of the Washington Post: "Trump's morning fusillade followed Fox anchor Sandra Smith's interview of Xochitl Hinojosa, the communications director for the Democratic National Committee, in which she discussed next month's Democratic presidential debate, among other things.... There are two potential interpretations of Trump's comment that 'Fox isn't working for us anymore.' One is that the president is generally disdainful of the network; the other suggests Trump believes Fox is an arm of his administration and reelection campaign." ...

     ... Justin Baragona of the Daily Beast: "Several Fox News personalities pushed back Wednesday against ... Donald Trump after he escalated his public attacks on the right-leaning outlet for its occasional anti-Trump voices.... Almost immediately after the president's tweets, Fox News senior political analyst and former news anchor Brit Hume sounded off: 'Fox News isn't supposed to work for you,' he wrote.... [Contributor Guy] Benson also said that Trump was 'working the refs,' agreeing with Axios' Sara Fischer that Trump was playing to a 'fringe culture' of rabid supporters whom the president hopes would help push Fox News to intensify its already largely pro-Trump coverage."

Mrs. McCrabbie: Donald Trump claimed in a tweet Wednesday that he is "the best thing that ever happened to Puerto Rico!" This is an example of what I meant the other day (last August 26 comment), when I wrote:

Having lost his mastery of the "best words," [Trump] is now robbing the English language of its substance.... Even when he makes a proper sentence, the words -- because they are most apt to form lies -- are just sounds an English-speaking person makes. Thus you get headlines like this one in [Monday's] WashPo: "After Trump claims first lady has 'gotten to know' Kim Jong Un, White House clarifies they've never met."

He is best at inverting word meanings: this, a climate denier becomes an "environmentalist"; "fake news" turns out to be, by the common understanding of the term, "real news." This is akin to his projections: "Crooked Hillary" is a way of deflecting the reality of "Crooked Donald"; "Sleepy Joe" is a nod to Trump's hatred of & failure to perform the work a real president does....

We know Trump is in general a destructive person, a bull in every China shop he enters. And that is true of his destruction of the Meaning of Anything & Everything. This is pathological nihilism of the first order.

John Koblin of the New York Times: "The MSNBC host Lawrence O’Donnell admitted an 'error in judgment' on Wednesday for reporting on his show the night before that President Trump had made a financial arrangement with so-called Russian oligarchs. Mr. O'Donnell said the reporting, which he had attributed to a single source on his 10 p.m. Tuesday program, 'didn't go through our rigorous verification and standards process.' 'I shouldn't have reported it, and I was wrong to discuss it on the air,' he said. Hours earlier, Mr. Trump's attorney Charles J. Harder had sent a letter to NBC demanding that the network and its parent company 'immediately and prominently retract, correct and apologize for the aforementioned false and defamatory statements.'" Thanks to Ken W. for the link. CNN's story is here. ...

     ... Mrs. McCrabbie: O'Donnell also retracted his Tuesday report at the top of his Wednesday show. We may find it ironic that Trump himself, nearly daily, publishes demonstrably "false and defamatory" official U.S. government statements (we might call them "tweets"), statements which should meet a higher standard than teevee talk-show host remarks. See also Gloria's comment in today's thread.

Caitlin Emma & Connor O'Brien of Politico: "The Trump administration is slow-walking $250 million in military assistance to Ukraine, annoying lawmakers and advocates who argue the funding is critical to keeping Russia at bay.... Donald Trump asked his national security team to review the funding program, known as the Ukraine Security Assistance Initiative, in order to ensure the money is being used in the best interest of the United States, a senior administration official told Politico on Wednesday.... The explanation isn't sitting well with lawmakers on Capitol Hill.... The delays come amid questions over Trump's approach to Russia, after a weekend in which the president repeatedly seemed to downplay Moscow's military intervention in Ukraine and pushed for Russia to be reinstated into the Group of Seven...."

John Wagner & Karen DeYoung of the Washington Post: "Former defense secretary Jim Mattis, who resigned last year after clashing with President Trump, says in a new book excerpt that 'I did as well as I could for as long as I could' and warns of the dangers of a leader who is not committed to working with allies. Mattis, who announced his resignation in December after Trump shocked American allies and overruled his advisers by announcing a withdrawal from Syria, writes in his book that he decided to depart 'when my concrete solutions and strategic advice, especially keeping faith with our allies, no longer resonated.'... In his book excerpt, published Wednesday by the Wall Street Journal, Mattis writes about the need for leaders to appreciate the value of allies without explicitly mentioning Trump...." The WashPo story is republished in Stars & Stripes. (Also linked yesterday.) ...

... Jeffrey Goldberg of the Atlantic characterizes Mattis's time working for Donald Trump: "... aides and friends say he found the president to be of limited cognitive ability, and of generally dubious character." Goldberg interviewed Mattis, but Mattis adheres to "the French concept of devoir de réserve ... 'The duty of silence. If you leave an administration, you owe some silence. When you leave an administration over clear policy differences, you need to give the people who are still there as much opportunity as possible to defend the country.... 'I had no choice but to leave,' he told me. 'That's why [my resignation] letter is in the book. I want people to understand why I couldn't stay. I've been informed by four decades of experience, and I just couldn't connect the dots anymore.'"

Cruelty Is the Essence of the Scheme (Apologies to Robert Frost)

Seung Min Kim & Mike DeBonis of the Washington Post: "Through his pardons of political allies, conservative defenders and others convicted of federal crimes, President Trump throughout his term has sent indirect signals of his willingness to help those close to him escape punishment.... Several of the 15 pardons that Trump has issued during his presidency -- a power that is nearly unchecked and that Trump has relished -- have carried with them an overtly political tone. And now, the president has entwined that message with his chief campaign promise -- by privately assuring aides that he would pardon them of any potential illegality as the administration rushes to build his vaunted border wall before he returns to the ballot next November. The notion has alarmed congressional Democrats, who had been investigating potential obstruction of justice on Trump's part.... The wall discussions are not the first time that Trump has reportedly promised a pardon to a subordinate for doing something potentially illegal...." ...

... CNN: "... Donald Trump told officials he will pardon them should they break any laws in attempting to finish construction on the wall at the US-Mexico border, initially reported by The Washington Post, citing current and former officials involved with the project." This is a video report. ...

... Paul LeBlanc of CNN: "... Donald Trump on Wednesday said he is 'seriously' considering ending US birthright citizenship despite the fact that such a move would face immediate legal challenge and is at odds with Supreme Court precedent. 'We're looking at that very seriously, birthright citizenship,' Trump told reporters outside the White House, echoing his administration's previous vow to unilaterally end the process by which babies born in the country automatically become citizens." ...

... Kicking out the Sick Kids, Ctd. Julia Ainsley of NBC News: "Without making the policy change public, [U.S. Citizenship & Immigration Services], and its parent agency, the Department of Homeland Security, has quietly rejected all requests for deferred [deportation] action, except those made by certain military members and veterans. In addition, deferred action for immigrants who arrived as children, known as 'Dreamers' under the DACA program, is protected because of ongoing litigation. WBUR-FM, Boston's National Public Radio station, was first to report that USCIS has denied medical deferred action requests, reserved for immigrants with health conditions whose lives would be endangered if they were deported. USCIS told NBC News the policy of denying deferred action now applies not only to medical cases but more generally to all deferred action requests outside of the military and DACA. Instead, applicants must apply to Immigration and Customs Enforcement.... An ICE official speaking on the condition of anonymity said ICE was blindsided by USCIS's decision to refer all immigrants applying for deferred action to them. ICE currently has no plans in place to review deferred action applications. 'ICE does not have a program for this nor do we plan to,' the official said." ...

... Kicking out Service Members' Kids. Haley Britzky of Task & Purpose: "Some children born to U.S. service members and government employees overseas will no longer be automatically considered citizens of the United States, according to policy alert issued by U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) on Wednesday. Previously, all children born to U.S. citizen parents were considered to be 'residing in the United States,' and therefore would be automatically granted citizenship under Immigration and Nationality Act 320. Now, children born to U.S. service members and government employees who are not yet themselves U.S. citizens, while abroad, will not be considered as residing in the U.S., changing the way that they potentially receive citizenship. Children who are not U.S. citizens and are adopted by U.S. service members while living abroad will also no longer receive automatic citizenship by living with the U.S. citizen adopted parents. The change was first reported by San Francisco Chronicle reporter Tal Kopan." ...

... Especially if They're Smart, Educated Kids. Tara Copp of McClatchy DC: "A federal appellate court will hear the case of a Kansas military family fighting the deportation of their adopted daughter next month.... Retired Army Lt. Col. Patrick Schreiber was deployed to Afghanistan in 2013 when a critical deadline passed for his now-adopted daughter Hyebin to be able to apply for U.S. citizenship. After he returned from his year long-deployment, Schreiber and wife Soo Jin completed their formal adoption of Hyebin. But she had just turned 17 and the U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services age limit for a foreign-born adopted child to become a naturalized U.S. citizen is 16.... Hyebin ... will have to leave the U.S. after she graduates ... this December from the University of Kansas with a degree in chemical engineering. Schreiber, who served in the military for 27 years, met his wife in Korea in the 1990s while he was deployed there. They took in Hyebin, who is Soo Jin's niece, as their own daughter when she was 15." --s ...

     ... Mrs. McC: And the upside to kicking a well-educated, highly-employable American out of the country??? ...

... Nick Martin of the New Republic: "Trump's anti-immigration policies were introduced with talk of 'rapists' and 'murderers,' but that was just a pretext to come after the rest." Martin summarizes ICE's cancelling the student visa of Ismail Ajjawi, who was awarded a scholarship to Harvard. "... there exists a sense of dark irony and disconnect between Trump's core message of 'They're not sending their best' and Ajjawi's story."

Benjamin Wittes of LawFare: "You should ... expect charges against [Andrew] McCabe to be forthcoming any day.... Why is that shocking? Because as best as I can tell, the facts available on the public record simply don't support such charges. The only visible factor militating in favor of the Justice Department charging McCabe, in fact, is that the department has been on the receiving end of a sustained campaign by President Trump demanding McCabe's scalp.... My point here is thus not to suggest that McCabe did nothing wrong. But criminal charges? At least based on what's in the inspector general's report, this is very far from a criminal case.... Trump has been on a long-term and very public campaign of attacks on McCabe.... Just look here or here or here or here or here or here or here or here or here or here or here or here..." --s

Aaron Rupar of Vox: "[T]he DOJ's position is that [Bill] Barr is essentially being forced to have his holiday party at Trump International because no other space is available in the city.... Barr -- who also served as attorney general during the George H.W. Bush administration -- has pretended to be painfully ignorant about Trump's conflicts of interest. It's worth recalling that at his confirmation hearing in January he pretended to be unaware of what the 'emoluments clause' even is.... But ... Barr has apparently learned about emoluments in the meantime, because when he's not spending money at the Trump Hotel, he's defending the president's conflicts of interest in federal court[.]" --s

** Lisa Friedman of the New York Times: "The Trump administration is set to announce on Thursday that it intends to sharply curtail the regulation of methane emissions, a major contributor to climate change, according to an industry official with knowledge of the plan. The Environmental Protection Agency, in a proposed rule, will aim to eliminate federal government requirements that the oil and gas industry put in place technology to inspect for and repair methane leaks from wells, pipelines and storage facilities. The proposed rollback is particularly notable because major oil and gas companies have, in fact, opposed it, just as some other industries have opposed the Trump administration's other major moves to dismantle climate change and other environmental rules put in place by President Barack Obama.... The new rule must go through a period of public comment and review...." Mrs. McC: I can't figure out why anyone -- well, maybe Le Pétomane -- would think releasing methane into the air was a good idea.

Julian Barnes of the New York Times: "A secret cyberattack against Iran in June wiped out a critical database used by Iran's paramilitary arm to plot attacks against oil tankers and degraded Tehran's ability to covertly target shipping traffic in the Persian Gulf, at least temporarily, according to senior American officials.... The June 20 strike was a critical attack..., officials said, and it went forward even after President Trump called off a retaliatory airstrike that day after Iran shot down an American drone." Business Insider has a summary of the NYT report here.

Presidential Race 2020

Steven Shepard of Politico: "The next televised showdown for the Democratic presidential candidates will shrink to one debate stage after only 10 of the hopefuls met the polling and fundraising criteria set by the Democratic National Committee.... The debate on Sept. 12 will mark the first time that all of the top candidates will debate together.... The 10 candidates who will be on the debate stage in Houston ... are : [former Vice President Joe] Biden (37 percent), Sen. Bernie Sanders of Vermont (21 percent), [Sen. Elizabeth] Warren (20 percent), [Sen. Kamala] Harris (17 percent), South Bend Mayor Pete Buttigieg (7 percent), Sen. Cory Booker of New Jersey (3 percent), Sen. Amy Klobuchar of Minnesota (3 percent), entrepreneur Andrew Yang (3 percent), former HUD Secretary Julián Castro (3 percent) and former Rep. Beto O'Rourke of Texas (3 percent)."

Alexander Burns of the New York Times: "Senator Kirsten Gillibrand of New York, who presented herself in the presidential race as a champion of women and families, said Wednesday that she was withdrawing from the Democratic primary after failing to qualify for a third debate next month -- a development she described as fatal to her candidacy. Ms. Gillibrand said in an interview that she would endorse another candidate in the primary but had not yet picked a favorite." Here's Gillibrand's tweet announcing the end of her candidacy. (Also linked yesterday afternoon.) The Washington Post story is here. ...

     ... Mrs. McCrabbie: Naturally, Trump found it necessary to belittle Gillibrand.

Quint Forgey of Politico: "Two new polls show Joe Biden more than a dozen points ahead of his nearest rivals in the 2020 Democratic primary -- further fortifying the former vice president's front-runner status after an apparent outlier survey put his campaign on the defensive earlier this week.... A Monmouth University poll released Monday ... showed Biden, Sanders and Warren locked in a virtual three-way tie.... Patrick Murray, director of the Monmouth poll, acknowledged in a statement on Wednesday that '... the Monmouth University Poll published Monday is an outlier.'" (Also linked yesterday.) ...

... Tax Axelrod of the Hill: "President Trump trails all five Democrats who have consistently ranked in top spots in surveys of the 2020 Democratic presidential race, according to a new Quinnipiac University poll. The newest survey shows Trump falling behind former Vice President Joe Biden and Sens. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.), Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.) and >Kamala Harris (D-Calif.), each by double digits." (Also linked yesterday afternoon.)

Senate Race 2020. Emily Cochrane of the New York Times: "Senator Johnny Isakson, Republican of Georgia, announced on Wednesday that he will resign from his seat at the end of the year, citing health reasons for the decision.... He currently chairs both the Senate Select Committee on Ethics and the Veterans' Affairs Committee. His retirement sets the stage for two potentially competitive Senate races in Georgia, a state that Democrats have increasingly targeted, during a presidential election year. Mr. Isakson's colleague, Senator David Perdue, is also a Republican and up for re-election.... [Gov. Brian] Kemp [R] is expected to appoint Mr. Isakson's replacement.... A party official said that the person appointed to Mr. Isakson's seat will have to compete in a primary ahead of a special election in 2020, meaning that both Georgia Senate seats will be on the same ballot." The NPR story is here. (Also linked yesterday afternoon.)

Robert Frank of CNBC: "The rich have cut their spending on everything from homes to jewelry, sparking fears of a trickle-down recession that starts at the top.... [T]he weakest segment of the American economy right now is the very top. While the middle class and broader consumer sections continue to spend, economists say the sudden pullback among the wealthy could cascade down to the rest of the economy and create a further drag on growth. Luxury real estate is having its worst year since the financial crisis, with pricey markets like Manhattan seeing six straight quarters of sales declines." --s

Anne Barnard of the New York Times: "... after sailing across the Atlantic on an emissions-free yacht, Greta Thunberg, the 16-year-old Swedish climate activist, has disembarked in Lower Manhattan ahead of her speech next month at the United Nations Climate Action Summit. After a 15-day sail that was obsessively tracked by European news media, cheered by fellow climate activists, mocked by critics and rocked by rough waves off Nova Scotia, Greta and the boat's crew went through customs on Wednesday morning while anchored off Coney Island, Brooklyn." The NPR story is here. Thanks to unwashed for the lead. Mrs. McC: Does Greta have a visa? How did she get one? Isn't she a subversive? Why is she "invading our country"? Where was ICE when Greta "unsteadily" set foot on U.S. soil? Was she drunk? As unwashed suggested, Oh, Sweden. Blond pigtails.

Mark Hosenball of Reuters: "Two cameras that malfunctioned outside the jail cell where financier Jeffrey Epstein died as he awaited trial on sex-trafficking charges have been sent to an FBI crime lab for examination, a law enforcement source told Reuters.... The cameras were sent to Quantico, Virginia, site of a major FBI crime lab where agents and forensic scientists analyze evidence.... Epstein's lawyers Reid Weingarten and Martin Weinberg told U.S. District Judge Richard Berman in Manhattan on Tuesday they had doubts about the New York City chief medical examiner's conclusion that their client killed himself. The two cameras were within view of the Manhattan jail cell where he was found dead on Aug. 10."

Splinter: "A federal judge on Tuesday ruled in favor of Splinter, the site's managing editor, Katherine Krueger, and the site's parent company, Gizmodo Media Group, in a $100 million defamation lawsuit brought by Jason Miller, a former top spokesman for the 2016 Donald Trump presidential campaign. Miller was appointed as Trump's incoming White House communications director in December 2016 but stepped down from the role after it was reported that he had carried out an extramarital affair with another Trump campaign staffer, A.J. Delgado (who subsequently had Miller's child). He sued Splinter over the September 2018 publication of an article reporting a series of allegations laid out against him in a supplemental filing made by Delgado as part of a protracted, acrimonious child custody case." (Also linked yesterday afternoon.) ...

     ... Mrs. McCrabbie: I don't suppose Jason appreciates the irony of a would-be communications director -- that is, someone who is supposed to work with a free press -- suing the free press. I get that Jason didn't want his dirty laundry hung out on the line -- because the laundry was ever-so dingy -- but a top communications operative should certainly be aware that the press may print true things -- true not necessarily in the underlying facts, but true in that Jason's wife really did present those allegations. It's elementary.

Lee Fang of The Intercept: "Many obituaries published in recent days examine [David] Koch history of polluting the environment and political system, how the donor network he helped lead mobilized opposition to addressing climate change, transformed our election laws to allow unlimited secret spending by the very rich, and systematically fought any regulation, labor reform, or tax viewed as a threat to the corporate power elite. Yet Koch's most visible accomplishment is the current occupant of the White House -- a legacy largely unrecognized, and one that goes well beyond any other single triumph in his life.... [I]n his scorched-earth quest for unparalleled influence, Koch, perhaps unwittingly, laid the path for Trump." --s

Helen Davidson of the Guardian: "The US government knew for months that Indonesia's military was supporting and arming militias in East Timor in the lead-up to the 1999 independence referendum but continued to push for stronger military ties, declassified documents have revealed.... [T]he documents illustrated a split between the US state department concerned with the [Indonesian Army]-backed militia violence and the Pentagon striving to preserve a military relationship in the face of widespread opposition." --s

Jackie's "Colored Dressmaker." Gillian Brockell of the Washington Post: "The 1953 wedding of Jacqueline Bouvier and then-Sen. John F. Kennedy was so perfect it is still being talked about more than 65 years later.... But for Ann Lowe, who designed the bridal gown, it was a nightmare. First, the wedding dress was destroyed 10 days before the ceremony. Then the 24-year-old bride, who did not really like the gown in the first place, snubbed her. Asked who made the dress, a viral tweet remembered this week, Jackie simply responded 'a colored dressmaker.'... Lowe was essentially written out of what would have been a career-making gown for anyone else. According to [a later report], only The Washington Post's Nina Hyde reported who the designer was.... Despite her brilliance and reputation, Lowe was frequently taken advantage of by her clientele, who talked her prices down to a fraction of what they were worth. By the mid-1960s, she was tens of thousands of dollars in debt and in trouble with the IRS. Then, an 'anonymous friend' paid her back taxes, cutting her debts in half. Lowe suspected the anonymous friend was Jackie."

Beyond the Beltway

Georgia Election 2018. A One-in-a-Million Chance. Mark Niesse of the Atlanta Journal-Constitution: "To find a clue about what might have gone wrong with Georgia's election last fall, look no further than voting machine No. 3 at the Winterville Train Depot outside Athens. On machine No. 3, Republicans won every race. On each of the other six machines in that precinct, Democrats won every race. The odds of an anomaly that large are less than 1 in 1 million, according to a statistician's analysis in court documents. The strange results would disappear if votes for Democratic and Republican candidates were flipped on machine No. 3. It just so happens that this occurred in Republican Brian Kemp's home precinct...." Mrs. McC: Kemp was then Georgia's secretary of state & was "overseeing" the gubernatorial election in which he was running. Oh, wow, he won! Read on for the nitty-gritty, and implications. ...

... Kate Brumback of the AP (August 15): "U.S. District Judge Amy Totenberg, who is "overseeing a challenge to Georgia's outdated voting system" prohibited "the state from using its antiquated paperless touchscreen machines and election management system beyond this year. She also said the state must be ready to use hand-marked paper ballots if its new system isn't in place for the March 24 presidential primary election." ...

... Mississippi. Tal Axelrod of the Hill: "State officials have confirmed at least three reports of voting machines in two counties changing voters' picks in Mississippi's GOP gubernatorial primary runoff. Former state Supreme Court Chief Justice Bill Waller and Lt. Gov. Tate Reeves are currently in a runoff for the Republican nomination in the governor's race to see who will take on Democratic Attorney General Jim Hood in the November general election. Reeves led Waller in the Aug. 6 balloting by a 49-33 margin, though the race went to a runoff after no candidate hit 50 percent. The issues emerged Tuesday morning, with one Facebook user posting a video showing a touch-screen voting machine changing their selection from Waller to Reeves." ...

Way Beyond

U.K. Aamna Mohdin, et al., of the Guardian: "Within hours of Boris Johnson's decision to suspend parliament, impromptu protests were being held in major city centres across the country, including in front of the Palace of Westminster in central London.... The demonstrators described the move to suspend parliament as a coup and called for Johnson to resign. At one point, the traffic at Downing Street was at a standstill as protesters chanted 'save our democracy, stop the coup' and sang 'No one voted for Boris'." ...

... Alexander Smith of NBC News: Britain's Queen Elizabeth approved PM Boris Johnson's request "to close Parliament from early September until mid-October.... The speaker of the House of Commons, John Bercow, who was elected as a Conservative before taking up the impartial role, said such a move would be a 'constitutional outrage.'... On the opposition benches, Labour Party leader Jeremy Corbyn said in a statement that he was 'appalled at the recklessness' of the move. 'This is an outrage and a threat to our democracy,' he added." Johnson's objective is "to make it harder for lawmakers to thwart the prime minister's Brexit plans before Oct. 31, the date the U.K. is scheduled to leave the European Union." Related stories linked below. (Also linked yesterday afternoon.)

News Lede

NBC News: "Hurricane Dorian swept by Puerto Rico and the Virgin Islands on Wednesday, on track for what could be landfall as a Category 3 storm in Florida over the weekend. An 80-year-old man died in Puerto Rico when he fell from a ladder while preparing his home for the storm, police said. Few casualties and little confirmed damage were reported in the Caribbean as Dorian, which became a hurricane Wednesday afternoon, skirted Puerto Rico." The linked page has a live storm tracker.

Tuesday
Aug272019

The Commentariat -- August 28, 2019

Afternoon Update:

Alexander Burns of the New York Times: "Senator Kirsten Gillibrand of New York ... said Wednesday that she was withdrawing from the Democratic primary after failing to qualify for a third debate next month -- a development she described as fatal to her candidacy. Ms. Gillibrand said in an interview that she would endorse another candidate in the primary but had not yet picked a favorite." Here's Gillibrand's tweet announcing the end of her candidacy.

Quint Forgey of Politico: "Two new polls show Joe Biden more than a dozen points ahead of his nearest rivals in the 2020 Democratic primary -- further fortifying the former vice president's front-runner status after an apparent outlier survey put his campaign on the defensive earlier this week.... A Monmouth University poll released Monday ... showed Biden, Sanders and Warren locked in a virtual three-way tie.... Patrick Murray, director of the Monmouth poll, acknowledged in a statement on Wednesday that '... the Monmouth University Poll published Monday is an outlier.'" ...

... Tax Axelrod of the Hill: "President Trump trails all five Democrats who have consistently ranked in top spots in surveys of the 2020 Democratic presidential race, according to a new Quinnipiac University poll. The newest survey shows Trump falling behind former Vice President Joe Biden and Sens. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.), Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.) and Kamala Harris (D-Calif.), each by double digits."

Brian Stelter of CNN: "President Trump took his complaints about Fox News, his biggest bastion of support on television, to a new level on Wednesday, claiming that the network 'isn't working for us anymore.'His tweets made explicit Trump's long-held belief that Fox belongs to him and his supporters. Despite daily cheerleading from [Fox program hosts]..., Trump suggests that the network is not sufficiently loyal to him. "We have to start looking for a new News Outlet,' he tweeted on Wednesday, inadvertently lending credence to critics' claims that Fox is akin to state-run TV.In the past Trump has promoted a much smaller conservative channel, OANN, which has positioned itself as a friendlier network to Trump."

Mrs. McCrabbie: Donald Trump claimed in a tweet today that he is "the best thing that ever happened to Puerto Rico!" This is an example of what I meant the other day (last August 26 comment), when I wrote:

Having lost his mastery of the "best words," [Trump] is now robbing the English language of its substance.... Even when he makes proper sentence, the words -- because they are most apt to form lies -- are just sounds an English-speaking person makes. Thus you get headlines like this one in [Monday's] WashPo: "After Trump claims first lady has "gotten to know" Kim Jong Un, White House clarifies they've never met."

He is best at inverting word meanings: this, a climate denier becomes an "environmentalist"; "fake news" turns out to be, by the common understanding of the term, "real news." This is akin to his projections: "Crooked Hillary" is a way of deflecting the reality of "Crooked Donald"; "Sleepy Joe" is a nod to Trump's hatred of & failure to perform the work a real president does....

We know Trump is in general a destructive person, a bull in every China shop he enters. And that is true of his destruction of the Meaning of Anything & Everything. This is pathological nihilism of the first order.

John Wagner & Karen DeYoung of the Washington Post: "Former defense secretary Jim Mattis, who resigned last year after clashing with President Trump, says in a new book excerpt that 'I did as well as I could for as long as I could' and warns of the dangers of a leader who is not committed to working with allies. Mattis, who announced his resignation in December after Trump shocked American allies and overruled his advisers by announcing a withdrawal from Syria, writes in his book that he decided to depart 'when my concrete solutions and strategic advice, especially keeping faith with our allies, no longer resonated.'... In his book excerpt, published Wednesday by the Wall Street Journal, Mattis writes about the need for leaders to appreciate the value of allies without explicitly mentioning Trump...." The WashPo story is republished in Stars & Stripes.

Splinter: "A federal judge on Tuesday ruled in favor of Splinter, the site's managing editor, Katherine Krueger, and the site's parent company, Gizmodo Media Group, in a $100 million defamation lawsuit brought by Jason Miller, a former top spokesman for the 2016 Donald Trump presidential campaign. Miller was appointed as Trump's incoming White House communications director in December 2016 but stepped down from the role after it was reported that he had carried out an extramarital affair with another Trump campaign staffer, A.J. Delgado (who subsequently had Miller's child). He sued Splinter over the September 2018 publication of an article reporting a series of allegations laid out against him in a supplemental filing made by Delgado as part of a protracted, acrimonious child custody case."

Emily Cochrane of the New York Times: "Senator Johnny Isakson, Republican of Georgia, announced on Wednesday that he will resign from his seat at the end of the year, citing health reasons for the decision.... He currently chairs both the Senate Select Committee on Ethics and the Veterans' Affairs Committee. His retirement sets the stage for two potentially competitive Senate races in Georgia, a state that Democrats have increasingly targeted, during a presidential election year. Mr. Isakson's colleague, Senator David Perdue, is also a Republican and up for re-election.... [Gov. Brian] Kemp [R] is expected to appoint Mr. Isakson's replacement.... A party official said that the person appointed to Mr. Isakson's seat will have to compete in a primary ahead of a special election in 2020, meaning that both Georgia Senate seats will be on the same ballot." The NPR story is here.

Alexander Smith of NBC News: Britain's Queen Elizabeth approved PM Boris Johnson's request "to close Parliament from early September until mid-October.... The speaker of the House of Commons, John Bercow, who was elected as a Conservative before taking up the impartial role, said such a move would be a 'constitutional outrage.'... On the opposition benches, Labour Party leader Jeremy Corbyn said in a statement that he was 'appalled at the recklessness' of the move. 'This is an outrage and a threat to our democracy,' he added." Johnson's objective is "to make it harder for lawmakers to thwart the prime minister's Brexit plans before Oct. 31, the date the U.K. is scheduled to leave the European Union." Related stories linked below.

~~~~~~~~~~

It's National Bed Bug Day.

I'm an environmentalist. A lot of people don't understand that. I think I know more about the environment than most people. -- Donald Trump, Monday at the G7 meeting ...

... ** Juliet Eilperin & Josh Dawsey of the Washington Post: "President Trump has instructed Agriculture Secretary Sonny Perdue to exempt Alaska's 16.7-million-acre Tongass National Forest from logging restrictions imposed nearly 20 years ago, according to three people briefed on the issue, after privately discussing the matter with the state's governor aboard Air Force One. The move would affect more than half of the world's largest intact temperate rainforest, opening it to potential logging, energy and mining projects. It would undercut a sweeping Clinton administration policy known as the 'roadless rule,' which has survived a decades-long legal assault. Trump has taken a personal interest in 'forest management,' a term he told a group of lawmakers last year he has 'redefined' since taking office." Mrs. McC: Yes, "redefined," in terms of raking forest floors (the way Trump thinks the Finns do) & now, logging & mining. ...

     ... Mrs. Bea McCrabbie: As Brett Samuels writes in the Hill, Trump's "proved" he was an environmentalist by "citing his experience filing environmental impact statements for real estate developments." Of course, the purpose of those environmental impact statements is to find some hack who will sign his name to a statement that there's no environmental impact whatsoever in filling in wetlands & cutting down virgin forests to build a water-guzzling golf course. What with the clear-cutting of the Tongass Forest, maybe Trump can build Trump Alaska Golf & Chopper Wolf Shoot Resort in the former forest. About those pesky tree stumps the loggers leave? I'm sure Jair Bolsonaro would be happy to direct a burn project. ...

... So as hurricane season begins & a tropical storm already is threatening Puerto Rico & Florida ...

... Felicia Sonmez & Maria Sacchetti of the Washington Post: "The Trump administration is transferring hundreds of millions of dollars in disaster relief funding to boost U.S.-Mexico border enforcement, prompting an outcry from congressional Democrats who panned the action as an executive overreach.... Senate Minority Leader Charles E. Schumer (D-N.Y.) called the move 'backwards and cruel.' 'Taking these critical funds from disaster preparedness and recovery efforts threatens lives and weakens the government's ability to help Americans in the wake of natural disasters,' he said." ...

Once again this Administration is flouting the law and Congressional intent to fund its extremist indefinite detention immigration policies This is reckless and the Administration is playing with fire -- all in the name of locking up families and children and playing to the President's base leading up to an election year. -- Rep. Bennie Thompson (D-Miss.), Chair of the House Homeland Security Committee ...

     ... Update. The NBC News story is here. "The allocations were sent to Congress as a notification rather than a request, because the administration believes it has the authority to repurpose these funds after Congress did not pass more funding for ICE detention beds as part of an emergency funding bill for the southwest border in June."

... MEANWHILE, Trump Telegraphs His Concern for Puerto Rico: Wow! Yet another big storm heading to Puerto Rico. Will it ever end? Congress approved 92 Billion Dollars for Puerto Rico last year, an all time record of its kind for 'anywhere.' -- Donald Trump, in a tweet, Tuesday

What? Trump Lied? So far, roughly $42 billion in federal disaster relief funding has been allocated to Puerto Rico. But only about $12 billion has actually been spent. -- Lauren Dezenski of CNN ...

... Why is Trump transferring money from FEMA to the border? Ah, re-election. ...

... Nick Miroff & Josh Dawsey of the Washington Post: "President Trump is so eager to complete hundreds of miles of border fence ahead of the 2020 presidential election that he has directed aides to fast-track billions of dollars' worth of construction contracts, aggressively seize private land and disregard environmental rules, according to current and former officials involved with the project. He also has told worried subordinates that he will pardon them of any potential wrongdoing should they have to break laws to get the barriers built quickly, those officials said.... With the election 14 months away and hundreds of miles of fencing plans still in blueprint form, Trump has held regular meetings at the White House to receive progress updates and hasten the pace.... The companies that are building the fencing and access roads have been taking heavy earth-moving equipment into environmentally sensitive border areas adjacent to U.S. national parks and wildlife preserves, but the administration has waived procedural safeguards and impact studies, citing national security concerns. 'They don't care how much money is spent, whether landowners' rights are violated, whether the environment is damaged, the law, the regs or even prudent business practices,' [a] senior [administration] official said." ...

... Christina Zhao of Newsweek: "After Donald Trump revealed that his struggling Trump National Doral Miami resort in Florida may host the G7 summit next year, the hashtag #TrumpBedBugs began trending on Monday with thousands of Americans ridiculing the president over a bug infestation at the luxury resort in 2017.... Twitter users began ridiculing the president's remarks by resurfacing a 2017 article about the Trump National Doral resort settling a lawsuit over biting bed bugs...." The story includes a photo of the back of the litigant's neck covered with what looks like bug bites & certainly could be bedbug bites. ...

... Amy Russo of Huffington Post: "... Donald Trump vehemently denied on Tuesday that bedbugs are crawling through his Doral golf resort in Florida, where he envisions holding next year's G-7 summit of world leaders. Though the hotel settled a guest's lawsuit alleging a bedbug infestation in 2017, Trump blamed suggestions of the pests on a left-wing smear. 'No bedbugs at Doral,' he wrote in a tweet. 'The Radical Left Democrats, upon hearing that the perfectly located (for the next G-7) Doral National MIAMI was under consideration for the next G-7, spread that false and nasty rumor. Not nice!'... Eric Linder, a Doral guest from New Jersey, sued the resort in 2016, alleging 'his back, face and arms were devoured by voracious bed bugs' during his stay, according to the Miami Herald. The paper published a photo showing the back of Linder's neck covered in small red welts when it reported the settlement in 2017. From 2013 to 2018, government inspectors logged 524 health code violations at the Doral, according to state records and research from American Bridge, a liberal super PAC. None of the violations mention bedbugs.... Ethics experts say the president's push to profit from the summit amounts to open corruption."

Katie Lobosco of CNN: "American farmers are still feeling the pinch from President Donald Trump's multifront trade war, but they finally got some good news this week when the President announced he struck an 'agreement in principle' on trade with Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe.... [T]he deal, which is still being finalized..., only gives them the same level of access to the Japanese market as they would have gotten if Trump had never pulled out of the Obama-era Trans-Pacific Partnership in the first place.... Trump and Abe intend to sign the agreement on the sidelines of the United Nations General Assembly in mid-September." --s ...

     ... Mrs. McCrabbie: I'm not convinced there is any "good news" for farmers here. While he was at the G7, Trump lied about the extent to which an agreement was reached, according to Abe. I'd like to know if Lobosco had a Japanese government source for confirming Abe's "intent" to sign an agreement in a few weeks.

David Enrich & Emily Flitter of the New York Times: "Deutsche Bank told a federal appeals court on Tuesday that it was in possession of some tax returns sought by congressional subpoenas issued earlier this year to President Trump, his family and his businesses.... The [Deutsche Bank] letter ... was in response to a question posed last week [by the appeals court judges] to lawyers for Deutsche Bank and Capital One, the two financial institutions that were issued subpoenas by House committees in April.... Although the identities of the people or organizations were redacted in the publicly available document, current and former bank officials have said Deutsche Bank has portions of Mr. Trump's personal and corporate tax returns for multiple years as part of the reams of financial data it has collected over its two-decade relationship with him." The CNN story is here. ...

     ... Mrs. McCrabbie: Congress wants to know why Deutsche Bank was willing to lend to Trump when other banks would not. Lawrence O'Donnell said last night he had a single source who claimed to have seen Deutsche Bank documents related to Trump's loans which showed Russian billionaires cosigned the loans. If true, that would explain why Trump wants to keep his financial information secret. David Cay Johnston, who was on O'Donnell's MSNBC show at the time said that evidence Trump was deeply-obligated to Putin-controlled oligarchs would "require Trump's removal from office."

Jonathan O'Connell & David Fahrenthold of the Washington Post: "Last month, [Attorney General William] Barr booked President Trump's D.C. hotel for a 200-person holiday party in December that is likely to deliver Trump's business more than $30,000 in revenue. Barr signed a contract, a copy of which was obtained by The Washington Post, for a 'Family Holiday Party' in the hotel's Presidential Ballroom Dec. 8. The party will feature a buffet and a four-hour open bar for about 200 people. Barr is paying for the event himself and chose the venue only after other hotels, including the Willard and the Mayflower, were booked, according to a Justice Department official. The official said the purpose of Barr's party wasn't to curry favor with the president. Barr holds the bash annually...." Mrs. McC: Right after the party, Kickback Billy will be getting right on that conflict-of-interest thing, making sure Trump doesn't use the presidency for personal profit. ...

     ... Paul Campos, in LG&$, does not seem favorably impressed: A major "point of this petty graft is for Barr to just throw it in everybody's face that he really doesn't care, do you? Barr is scum, and Ken Starr is scum for vouching for him, (as well as for a lot of other reasons), and everybody who volunteered to work for this administration should be treated as pariahs for the rest of their lives by anybody who isn't part of the ongoing destruction of public life by this immoral travesty of an administration." ...

... And How 'bout That Emoluments Clause, Billy Boy? Josh Dawsey & David Fahrenthold of the Washington Post (Aug. 26): "President Trump said Monday that he was likely to hold next year's Group of Seven summit -- the ultraexclusive annual gathering of world leaders -- at his golf resort in Doral, Fla. That decision would be an unprecedented use of American power to create private revenue for the American president. If Trump does choose Doral, he would be directing six world leaders, hundreds of hangers-on and massive amounts of money to a resort he owns personally -- and which, according to his company's representatives, has been 'severely underperforming.'... Trump said his advisers have searched the nation and decided the most suitable spot for the 2020 summit is something different: A golf club set among drab office parks near the Miami airport. It just happened to be his golf club, Trump said. 'They went to places all over the country, and they came back and they said, 'This is where we'd like to be,"' Trump said. 'It's not about me. It's about getting the right location.' He praised the club's ample parking --as if world leaders generally lost time at summits while circling the parking lot.... After he spoke, the White House's official Twitter account ... call[ed] Doral 'the location of the next [G-7] summit.'" ...

     ... Mrs. McCrabbie: I'm still looking for stories where the Justice Department tells the President* he can't do that, because Constitution. Oh, wait ...

... Alison Durkee of Vanity Fair: "Complicating Barr's decision to host a Trump hotel event of his own is the fact that as the head of the Justice Department, Barr and his attorneys are the ones defending Trump in the multiple Emoluments lawsuits focused on these hotel charges -- which could particularly be a problem if Trump gives Barr a discount on the bill.... Barr's choice of venue also doesn't help the attorney general's existing reputation as a Trump sycophant willing to show blind loyalty to his boss, whether that's through misrepresenting the Mueller report, or, now, putting some extra holiday cash in his boss's pockets.... The venue choice could also signal to those in the Trump orbit that money is an acceptable -- and, perhaps, even encouraged -- way to demonstrate the loyalty that Trump so clearly craves."

David Lynch of the Washington Post: "The Federal Reserve should stop trying to offset the economic costs of President Trump's trade war and instead force him to bear the consequences of the most aggressive use of tariffs since the 1930s, according to the former president of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York. 'Officials could state explicitly that the central bank won't bail out an administration that keeps making bad choices on trade policy, making it abundantly clear that Trump will own the consequences,' William C. Dudley, who stepped down last year after nine years as the head of the New York Fed, wrote in an opinion column for Bloomberg. In an extraordinary broadside, Dudley said the Fed also should consider how its actions will affect the 2020 presidential election since, 'Trump's reelection arguably presents a threat to the U.S. and global economy, to the Fed's independence and its ability to achieve its employment and inflation objectives.'" (Also linked yesterday afternoon.) ...

     ... Dudley's Bloomberg opinion piece is here. (Also linked yesterday afternoon.)

Conor Finnegan & Trish Turner of ABC News: "Two U.S. senators say that they were denied visas as part of an official delegation to Russia for talks with their counterparts in the country's parliament.... Republican Ron Johnson of Wisconsin and Democrat Chris Murphy of Connecticut were scheduled to leave on their trip next week, according to aides, with stops in Ukraine, Kosovo, and Serbia as well." Related story linked yesterday. Mrs. McC: I guess we can believe Johnson over the Russian Embassy. That's a good thing. (Also linked yesterday.)

Mitch Smith of the New York Times: "A federal judge in Missouri blocked the state on Tuesday from enforcing a ban on abortions after the eighth week of pregnancy, enacted by Republican legislators this year as part of a national campaign to restrict abortion and perhaps prompt the United States Supreme Court to revisit Roe v. Wade. Senior Judge Howard F. Sachs of the Federal District Court in Kansas City, Mo., issued his ruling a day before the law was scheduled to take effect. The judge criticized lawmakers' 'hostility' to Supreme Court precedent on abortion, and said the eight-week ban stood little chance of prevailing. He also blocked other portions of the law that variously sought to ban abortions after 14, 18 or 20 weeks of pregnancy, all before a fetus becomes viable outside the womb." The NBC News story is here.

Presidential Race 2020

of CNN: "Former Vice President Joe Biden is airing a new TV ad in Iowa that highlights his continued support for the Affordable Care Act, at a time when other progressive Democratic candidates are pushing for a 'Medicare for All' approach. The minute-long ad ... draws on his personal experiences after a 1972 car accident took the lives of his wife and daughter, and badly injured his sons Hunter and Beau, as well as his late son Beau's diagnosis with brain cancer":

** "This Is Our Country, Not Theirs" -- Trump Campaign. Eric Levitz of New York: "Last Friday, Democratic congresswoman Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez argued that Republicans oppose electing presidents by a national popular vote because 'they *know* they aren't the majority' and 'rely on establishing minority rule for power.' Her Republican colleague Dan Crenshaw took exception to this tweet; not because the Texas congressman felt his party represented the preferences of a majority of Americans, but rather, because he felt it anti-American to advocate for majority rule." Levitz tears down Crenshaw's argument. Then, "In a fundraising letter, the president's campaign informed its supporters that 'Socialist Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez dialed up the crazy to a whole new level recently when she called for abolishing the Electoral College' and that 'The President is calling on you at this critical time to remind AOC and Democrats that this is our country, not theirs." ...

... ** Jamelle Bouie of the New York Times: "If there's substance behind 'We're a republic, not a democracy,' it's not as a description of American government. There's really no difference, in the present, between a 'republic' and a 'democracy': Both connote systems of representation in which sovereignty and authority derive from the public at large. The point of the slogan isn't to describe who we are, but to claim and co-opt the founding for right-wing politics -- to naturalize political inequality and make it the proper order of things. What lies behind that quip, in other words, is an impulse against democratic representation. It is part and parcel of the drive to make American government a closed domain for a select, privileged few."

Elections 2020

Hannah Trudo of The Daily Beast: "Several Democratic National Committee members have a message to their organization's top leadership: President Trump is crushing us.... Jim Zogby, who co-chairs the DNC's ethnic counsel, a group that represents people across different ethnic, racial, national origin, and religious identities, says he has been pushing Perez and other party leaders to expand its outreach to voters in the same areas that Trump successfully captured: Ohio, Michigan, Pennsylvania, and -- a Democratic sore spot in post-2016 politics -- Wisconsin. But that outreach to the committee has fallen on deaf ears.... The national party's fundraising woes continue to present a problem when up against the Republican National Committee and the Trump campaign's significant advantage, multiple members said." --s

Tony Romm of the Washington Post: "Facebook on Wednesday announced it would tighten some of its rules around political advertising ahead of the 2020 presidential election, requiring those who purchase ads touting candidates or promoting hot-button issues to provide more information about who actually paid for them. The changes seek to address a number of well-documented incidents where users placed misleading or inaccurate disclaimers on ads, effectively undermining a system for election transparency that the tech giant built after Russian agents spread disinformation on the site during the 2016 race. Facebook already requires that political advertisers verify their identities. Starting in September, though, the company will require buyers of so-called issue ads or advocates of a political candidate to include information about who is funding the ads."...

     ... The Reuters story is here. The new rule also will apply to Instagram.

Congressional Race 2020. White Nationalist "Humor." Bret Hayworth of the Sioux City Journal: "Iowa 4th District Rep. Steve King made light Tuesday of China reportedly forcing Muslim women in concentration camps to eat pork in violation of their Islamic faith. During a town hall meeting in Audubon, King recounted China's alleged crackdown against the nation's ethnic Uighur minority and other Islamic groups. The abuses, King said, include rounding up the Uighur, sterilizing their women, 'so there's no more Uighurs to be born,' and putting them on a Chinese diet, 'which includes trying to force them to eat pork.' 'That's the only part of that I agree with,' King said with a laugh. 'Everybody ought to eat pork. If you have a shortage of bacon, you can't be happy.'"


Joanna Walters
of the Guardian: "Purdue Pharma and members of the multi-billionaire Sackler family, who own the company that makes the prescription painkiller OxyContin, have offered to settle more than 2,000 lawsuits from US states and cities for between $10bn and $12bn.... [T]he opioids crisis, which has cost the lives of more than 400,000 people across the US in the last 20 years and still kills 130 through overdoses every day, according to government figures.... The New York Times reported that the settlement proposal involved the Sacklers giving up ownership of Purdue Pharma and paying $3bn of their own money towards the settlement. --s ...

     ... Mrs. McCrabbie: I suppose this is the ultimate "Capitalism Is Awesome" story. The Sacklers didn't just cheat people in the great American corporate tradition; they knowingly destroyed people's lives before killing them. ...

... MEANWHILE. Sarah Varney of the Guardian: "As the Indian government loosens its prescription opioid laws after decades of lobbying by palliative care advocates desperate to ease their patients' acute pain, the nation's sprawling, cash-fed health care system is ripe for misuse. The sheer size of India's system makes oversight difficult but presents a tantalizing opportunity for India's burgeoning pain industry and multinational pharmaceutical companies seeking new markets.... If you cannot see the direct influence of American pharmaceutical companies in India, you can detect their shadow.... [T]he business acumen propelling India toward economic prosperity has been brazenly co-opted by eager pharmaceutical companies." --s

Benjamin Weiser, et al., of the New York Times: "Judge Richard M. Berman had scheduled [a] hearing on Tuesday after federal prosecutors wrote to him last week, saying that in light of [Jeffrey] Epstein's death, they planned to drop the criminal charges against him -- a decision that requires a judge's approval.... Judge Berman said in the order that he wanted to hear from the prosecution and the lawyers who had been representing Mr. Epstein, and he also invited Mr. Epstein's accusers and their lawyers to address the court if they wished to..... One by one, the women walked up to a podium ... Tuesday...." The AP story is here. (Also linked yesterday afternoon.)

Aram Roston &  Joshua Schneyer of Reuters: "Evangelical leader and prominent Donald Trump backer Jerry Falwell Jr personally approved real estate transactions by his nonprofit Christian university that helped his personal fitness trainer obtain valuable university property, according to real estate records, internal university emails and interviews.... Now, after a series of university real estate transactions signed by Falwell, [the trainer Benjamin] Crosswhite owns a sprawling 18-acre racquet sports and fitness facility on former Liberty property.... In 2016, Falwell signed a real estate deal transferring the sports facility, complete with tennis courts and a fitness center owned by Liberty, to Crosswhite. Under the terms, Crosswhite wasn't required to put any of his own money down toward the purchase price, a confidential sales contract obtained by Reuters shows. Liberty committed nearly $650,000 up front to lease back tennis courts from Crosswhite at the site for nine years. The school also offered Crosswhite financing, at a low 3% interest rate, to cover the rest of the $1.2 million transaction, the contract shows."

Annals of "Journalism," Ctd. Bret Stephens Is a Vindictive Whiney-baby. Tim Elfrink & Morgan Krakow of the Washington Post: David Karpf, a professor at George Washington University, "took a story that bedbugs had infested the New York Times newsroom as an occasion to dig at ... the conservative columnist Bret Stephens. 'The bedbugs are a metaphor,' Karpf wrote on Monday. 'The bedbugs are Bret Stephens. The tweet got nine likes and zero retweets, Karpf said." Stephens emailed Karpf, copying GW's provost: "I'm often amazed about the things supposedly decent people are prepared to say about other people -- people they've never met -- on Twitter. I think you've set a new standard. I would welcome the opportunity for you to come to my home, meet my wife and kids, talk to us for a few minutes, and then call me a "bedbug" to my face. That would take some genuine courage and intellectual integrity on your part." "The exchange quickly went viral after Karpf posted Stephens's full email to Twitter, leading to waves of backlash against a columnist whose contrarian takes on climate change and race have prompted canceled subscriptions and pointed questions for his editors in the past.... Stephens also deactivated his Twitter account on Tuesday, writing that the platform 'is a sewer.'" (Also linked yesterday.)...

... Reed Richardson of Mediaite: "New York Times columnist and ostensible free speech champion Bret Stephens wrote a vaguely threatening email to an associate professor at George Washington University -- and cc'ed the university provost -- who had jokingly referred to the op-ed writer as a 'bedbug' on Twitter.... Stephens' over-the-top response to a Tweet that notably did not use his Twitter handle, as well as the not-so-subtle attempt to get [David] Karpf in trouble with the professor's boss at the college, seemed to run counter to the proclaimed free speech champion's disgust with thin-skinned 'PC culture' and societal 'safe spaces' where no one has a sense of humor anymore." Read on Mrs. McC: An associate professor does not have tenure; Stephens was apparently trying to get Karpf fired. See Balaban's correction in today's Comments. (Also linked yesterday afternoon.)...

Imagine being on Twitter and having the worst thing you're called in a given day is 'bedbug.' My own friends roast me harder than that. For real though, it is pretty concerning that this guy abused his position to try to get someone fired over something so insignificant - esp after creating a career defending vile language as a sacred freedom & deriding people organizing for basic human dignity as 'snowflakes.'). -- Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (Adult-N.Y.)

... Scott Lemieux in LG&$ has an appropriate response to Stephens, too. His post is titled, "Today in the Robust Public Discourse With Bret 'Bedbug' Stephens." Mrs. McC: Expect a bad note from Bret, Scott. (Also linked yesterday afternoon.) ...

... Update. Rachel Frazin of the Hill: "A provost at George Washington University has invited New York Times columnist Bret Stephens to speak after a feud between the writer and a university professor went viral. Provost Forrest Maltzman invited Stephens to speak about civil discourse in the digital age in a statement tweeted out by the university. Maltzman also stood by associate professor Dave Karpf, who apparently upset Stephens when he called the columnist a 'bedbug' on Twitter amid news of possible bedbugs in the Times's newsroom. 'Professor Karpf speaks for himself and does not take direction from me,' the provost said. 'Our commitment to academic freedom and free speech are integral to GW's mission.'" Mrs. McC: Maltzman is the provost of GW, not a provost. We should all take a moment to congratulate the NYT anew for hiring Bedbug Stephens.

Way Beyond the Beltway

Never Mind. Marina Lopez & Terrence McCoy of the Washington Post: "Brazil's president Tuesday retreated from his country's initial rejection of a $22.2 million package from the Group of Seven nations to help fight fires sweeping through the Amazon rainforest. But President Jair Bolsonaro said any consideration of the aid remained tied up in his dispute with French President Emmanuel Macron -- even as officials in the fire-stricken regions spoke of negotiating directly with other countries for help if needed. Bolsonaro said he wouldn't make a final decision until Macron apologized for remarks that Bolsonaro considered a challenge to his credibility and an attack on Brazil's sovereignty. Before speaking or accepting anything from France, even if it comes from the best possible intentions, he must retract his words. Then we can talk,' he told journalists." This is an update of a story linked earlier yesterday. The NBC News story is here. Mrs. McC: Bolsonaro is definitely South America's Trump. (Also linked yesterday afternoon.) ...

... Ryan Grim of the Intercept: "Two Brazilian firms owned by a top donor to ... Donald Trump and ... Mitch McConnell are significantly responsible for the ongoing destruction of the Amazon rainforest, carnage that has developed into raging fires that have captivated global attention. The companies have wrested control of land, deforested it, and helped build a controversial highway to their new terminal in the one-time jungle, all to facilitate the cultivation and export of grain and soybeans.... The Amazon terminal is run by Hidrovias do Brasil, a company that is owned in large part by Blackstone, a major U.S. investment firm.... Blackstone co-founder and CEO Stephen Schwarzman is a close ally of Trump and has donated millions of dollars to McConnell in recent years." (Also linked yesterday afternoon.)

U.K. Jessica Elgot & Heather Stewart of the Guardian: "Boris Johnson has confirmed he has asked the Queen for permission to suspend parliament for five weeks from early September. The prime minister claimed MPs would have 'ample time' to debate Brexit, as he wrote to MPs on Wednesday, saying he had spoken to the Queen and asked her to suspend parliament from 'the second sitting week in September'. MPs will then return to Westminster on 14 October, when he said there would be a new Queen's speech, setting out what he called a 'bold and ambitious domestic legislative agenda for the renewal of our country after Brexit'. The effect of the decision will be to curtail dramatically the time MPs have to introduce legislation or other measures aimed at preventing a no-deal Brexit. Parliament is expected to sit for little more than a week from 3 September." ...

... That Went Over Well. The Guardian is liveblogging the ensuing "outrage." Mrs. McC: I suppose Trump, never one to pass up an opportunity to cheat, is already ordering unnamed "advisors" to tell him he has the power to indefinitely suspend Congress.

News Ledes

New York Times: "Tropical Storm Dorian is expected to land in Puerto Rico on Wednesday, slamming the island municipalities of Vieques and Culebra, and the Virgin Islands, before clipping the northeastern corner of Puerto Rico's big island east of San Juan, the capital. The compact storm has been maddeningly difficult to forecast, as tends to be the case with disorganized systems. As a result, Puerto Ricans have had little certainty over where, exactly, Dorian will hit." Except live updates on the linked page. ...

     ... The Weather Channel's report is here. "Tropical Storm Dorian will strike Puerto Rico and the Virgin Islands Wednesday...." The Weather Channel's front page also links to related stories. ...

     ... Update: According to MSNBC, Dorian has been upgraded to a Category 1 hurricane & could hit Florida as a Cat 3.

New York Times: Photographer "[Orlando] Suero ... died on Aug. 19 at a nursing home in Los Angeles. He was 94." The story gives advice on your best chance of espying the meteor shower. Suero chronicled the lives of stars from 1962 to the mid-1980s, as the golden age of Hollywood dipped into its twilight. He took particular delight in capturing celebrities with each other, in their element or not. But he was perhaps best known for his portraits." Includes a few of Suero's iconic photo.

Monday
Aug262019

The Commentariat -- August 27, 2019

Afternoon Update:

David Lynch of the Washington Post: "The Federal Reserve should stop trying to offset the economic costs of President Trump's trade war and instead force him to bear the consequences of the most aggressive use of tariffs since the 1930s, according to the former president of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York. 'Officials could state explicitly that the central bank won't bail out an administration that keeps making bad choices on trade policy, making it abundantly clear that Trump will own the consequences,' William C. Dudley, who stepped down last year after nine years as the head of the New York Fed, wrote in an opinion column for Bloomberg. In an extraordinary broadside, Dudley said the Fed also should consider how its actions will affect the 2020 presidential election since, 'Trump's reelection arguably presents a threat to the U.S. and global economy, to the Fed's independence and its ability to achieve its employment and inflation objectives.'" ...

     ... Dudley's Bloomberg opinion piece is here.

Conor Finnegan & Trish Turner of ABC News: "Two U.S. senators say that they were denied visas as part of an official delegation to Russia for talks with their counterparts in the country's parliament.... Republican Ron Johnson of Wisconsin and Democrat Chris Murphy of Connecticut were scheduled to leave on their trip next week, according to aides, with stops in Ukraine, Kosovo, and Serbia as well." Related story linked below. Mrs. McC: I guess we can believe Johnson over the Russian Embassy, after all.

Benjamin Weiser, et al., of the New York Times: "Judge Richard M. Berman had scheduled [a] hearing on Tuesday after federal prosecutors wrote to him last week, saying that in light of [Jeffrey] Epstein's death, they planned to drop the criminal charges against him -- a decision that requires a judge's approval.... Judge Berman said in the order that he wanted to hear from the prosecution and the lawyers who had been representing Mr. Epstein, and he also invited Mr. Epstein's accusers and their lawyers to address the court if they wished to..... One by one, the women walked up to a podium ... Tuesday...." The AP story is here.

Annals of "Journalism," Ctd. Bret Stephens Is a Vindictive Whiney-baby. Tim Elfrink & Morgan Krakow of the Washington Post: David Karpf, a professor at George Washington University, "took a story that bedbugs had infested the New York Times newsroom as an occasion to dig at ... the conservative columnist Bret Stephens. 'The bedbugs are a metaphor,' Karpf wrote on Monday. 'The bedbugs are Bret Stephens. The tweet got nine likes and zero retweets, Karpf said." Stephens emailed Karpf, copying GWU's provost: "I'm often amazed about the things supposedly decent people are prepared to say about other people -- people they've never met -- on Twitter. I think you've set a new standard. I would welcome the opportunity for you to come to my home, meet my wife and kids, talk to us for a few minutes, and then call me a "bedbug" to my face. That would take some genuine courage and intellectual integrity on your part.' "The exchange quickly went viral after Karpf posted Stephens's full email to Twitter, leading to waves of backlash against a columnist whose contrarian takes on climate change and race have prompted canceled subscriptions and pointed questions for his editors in the past.... Stephens also deactivated his Twitter account on Tuesday, writing that the platform 'is a sewer.'" ...

... Reed Richardson of Mediaite: "New York Times columnist and ostensible free speech champion Bret Stephens wrote a vaguely threatening email to an associate professor at George Washington University -- and cc'ed the university provost -- who had jokingly referred to the op-ed writer as a 'bedbug' on Twitter.... Stephens' over-the-top response to a Tweet that notably did not use his Twitter handle, as well as the not-so-subtle attempt to get [David] Karpf in trouble with the professor's boss at the college, seemed to run counter to the proclaimed free speech champion's disgust with thin-skinned 'PC culture' and societal 'safe spaces' where no one has a sense of humor anymore." Read on Mrs. McC: An associate professor does not have tenure; Stephens was apparently trying to get Karpf fired. ...

... Scott Lemieux in LG&$ has an appropriate response to Stephens, too. His post is titled, "Today in the Robust Public Discourse With Bret 'Bedbug' Stephens." Mrs. McC: Expect a bad note from Bret, Scott.

Never Mind. Marina Lopez & Terrence McCoy of the Washington Post: "Brazil's president Tuesday retreated from his country's initial rejection of a $22.2 million package from the Group of Seven nations to help fight fires sweeping through the Amazon rainforest. But President Jair Bolsonaro said any consideration of the aid remained tied up in his dispute with French President Emmanuel Macron -- even as officials in the fire-stricken regions spoke of negotiating directly with other countries for help if needed. Bolsonaro said he wouldn't make a final decision until Macron apologized for remarks that Bolsonaro considered a challenge to his credibility and an attack on Brazil's sovereignty. Before speaking or accepting anything from France, even if it comes from the best possible intentions, he must retract his words. Then we can talk,' he told journalists." This is an update of the story linked below. The NBC News story is here. Mrs. McC: Bolsonaro is definitely South America's Trump. ...

... Ryan Grim of the Intercept: "Two Brazilian firms owned by a top donor to ... Donald Trump and ... Mitch McConnell are significantly responsible for the ongoing destruction of the Amazon rainforest, carnage that has developed into raging fires that have captivated global attention. The companies have wrested control of land, deforested it, and helped build a controversial highway to their new terminal in the one-time jungle, all to facilitate the cultivation and export of grain and soybeans.... The Amazon terminal is run by Hidrovias do Brasil, a company that is owned in large part by Blackstone, a major U.S. investment firm.... Blackstone co-founder and CEO Stephen Schwarzman is a close ally of Trump and has donated millions of dollars to McConnell in recent years."

~~~~~~~~~~

Marina Lopez & Terrence McCoy of the Washington Post: "Brazil will reject a donation of $22.2 million to help fight the fires that have swept across the Amazon because it was not involved in the decision-making process, the country's ambassador to France said Tuesday. 'We refuse the aid because we see interference. [It's] help we did not ask for,' Luís Fernando Serra told French national television, adding that the terms of the offer were too 'ambiguous.' The decision escalates an international spat between Brazil's right-wing president Jair Bolsonaro and the European countries led by French President Emmanuel Macron, who have pledged to fight the Amazon fires but condemned Bolsonaro's lack of commitment to the environment. On Monday, Bolsonaro -- a climate change skeptic -- questioned the aid's 'colonial mentality.'" The BBC News story is here.

Idiot Abroad

** Michael Birnbaum & Philip Rucker of the Washington Post: "President Trump capped days of advocacy on behalf of Russian President Vladimir Putin by announcing ... Monday that he intends to invite the leader to the Group of Seven summit in 2020, which Trump will host in an election year amid warnings that Russia is actively trying to interfere again in the U.S. presidential election.... Trump said Putin would be welcome and even expressed sympathy for the awkwardness the Russian leader might feel over his banishment.... Trump's extraordinary promotion of Putin proved to be the most tense disagreement over three days of contentious meetings at this year's G-7 in the French oceanside resort town of Biarritz. The U.S. leader's wish to restore Russia's legitimacy was in keeping with his long-standing role as a Putin cheerleader and apologist, but it was coolly received by other leaders at the gathering.... [The dinner Saturday night] went off the rails when Trump blasted leaders for not including Russia.... The pushback against him was delivered so passionately that the U.S. president's body language changed as one leader after another dismissed his demand.... Having such a forceful advocate for an authoritarian leader inside the room of democracies profoundly shaped the overall tone of the summit, one senior official said.” ...

... Inae Oh of Mother Jones: Trump's advocacy for Putin at his press conference "... follow a statement from European Council President Donald Tusk on Saturday when he categorically rejected the suggestion to invite Russia back. 'Under no condition can we agree with this logic,' Tusk said in a press conference." ...

... Jonathan Chait: "Trump mentioned Obama 18 times, repeating his charge that his predecessor was to blame for Russia's invasion of his neighbor. He repeatedly used the passive voice to describe Putin's invasion: 'It was sort of taken away from President Obama ... It was annexed during President Obama's term .. Crimea was annexed during his term.' Putin got no blame for invading a neighbor. Instead Trump gave him credit for outsmarting Obama.... It is a completely Orwellian spectacle for the president working to undo the response to Russia's attack blame the president who helped impose it for the invasion itself.... Remarkably, Trump's performance behind closed doors managed to go even farther [than his public comments] in pleading Putin's case."

Toluse Olorunnipa, et al., of the Washington Post: "A global summit between President Trump and other leaders ended [in Biarritz, France,] without significant progress on any of the world's most pressing issues, laying bare the widening gulf between the United States and other nations as they struggle to address issues like trade and climate change. French President Emmanuel Macron said leaders at the Group of Seven summit agreed to endorse just a one-page document of issues and then to continue working on a variety of other challenges that have proved elusive, including trade imbalances, climate change and Iran, among other things.... [Emmanuel Macron] said that the three days of talks here had a 'lot of tension and we had a lot of conflicts,' but he considered it a success that they were even able to produce a one-page document." (Also linked yesterday afternoon.) ...

Mrs. McCrabbie: After skipping the climate-change meeting, Trump said at his press conference he was an environmentalist. Oddly, the room did not break out in derisive laughter. I guess the world's press is accustomed to Trump's whoppers. ...

... From the Guardian's liveblog: "Throughout his press conference, Trump avoided offering details on a number of pressing issues, including the climate crisis, Iran and his trade war with China. On combating climate change, Trump dubiously argued that confronting the crisis would threaten the country's economy. 'I feel the US has tremendous wealth ... I'm not going to lose that wealth on dreams, on windmills - which, frankly, aren't working too well,' Trump said. He added, 'I think I know more about the environment than most.'... When asked about inviting Vladimir Putin to the G7 summit, Trump repeated the falsehood that the Russian president was previously excluded from the gathering because he 'outsmarted' Barack Obama. PBS Newshour's Yamiche Alcindor responded by correcting Trump that Putin was actually excluded after annexing Crimea, but the president stood by his original position. He also mentioned that he was sure Alcindor, who is black, did 'like' Obama.... One of the few matters where he did elaborate was on his Florida resort, Trump National Doral Miami, hosting the 2020 G7 summit. He went on at length about how the resort's 'magnificent buildings' and proximity to the airport made it the perfect site, while dismissing out of hand any implication that he could personally profit from holding the summit there." (Also linked yesterday afternoon.) ...

     ... Ed Mazza of the Huffington Post: "Even some of Trump's biggest supporters called him out over the obvious conflict of interest [of holding the 2020 G7 meeting at his Doral resort], including Rick Santorum, the former Republican senator from Pennsylvania. The two-time GOP presidential candidate said on Monday that Trump shouldn't use his own property to host next year's summit, calling it a 'violation of the law.... Walter Shaub, a former director of the Office of Government Ethics, called for an investigation into 'the very real possibility that a corrupting influence tainted the procurement process' for selecting Doral.... The Washington Post reported in May that Doral was in 'steep decline'; the club's net operating income had plunged 69% over two years."

... Zeke Miller & Darlene Superville of the AP: "Brushing off concerns about global economic instability..., Donald Trump defended the way he is trying to squeeze a trade deal out of China on Monday, saying it's a style that worked for him as a businessman. Trump was challenged on a negotiating style in which he praises Chinese President Xi Jinping one day and castigates him the next. Allies are complaining that that's contributing to instability problems for them and other nations, a reporter noted at a news conference closing out Trump's participation in the Group of Seven summit. Sorry, it's the way I negotiate,' he said. The president said layers of U.S. tariffs have hurt China so badly that it will have no choice but to make a trade deal with the United States. His trade war has been blamed for a global economic slowdown and has sown fears of an economic recession in the U.S.... 'What's bad for the world economy is uncertainty,' Macron said, speaking in English. 'The quicker an agreement is arrived at, the quicker that uncertainty will dissipate.'" Mrs. McC: Flailing around, lying, backtracking, threats, recriminations, etc., are such excellent negotiation tactics. (Also linked yesterday afternoon.) ...

... Felicia Sonmez of the Washington Post: "President Trump on Monday claimed that first lady Melania Trump has 'gotten to know' North Korean leader Kim Jong Un prompting the White House to clarify that the two have never met. Trump made the comment at a news conference at the Group of 7 summit in Biarritz, France.... 'President Trump confides in his wife on many issues including the detailed elements of his strong relationship with Chairman Kim -- and while the First Lady hasn't met him, the President feels like she's gotten to know him too,' [Stephanie] Grisham said."; Mrs. McC: Grisham is spokesperson for both Donald & Melanie. I'm betting she issued this release "soon after" Trump made his false claim at the direction of Melanie Trump. Here's Politico's story. ...

... Josh Dawsey of the Washington Post analyzes Trump's remarks at Monday's press conference: "... for 68 minutes in a seaside auditorium, he offered a lens into his unorthodox mind, a range of false or dubious statements, and the myriad ways he has changed the presidency in 31 months.... He attacked former president Barack Obama's intellect while defending Putin for annexing part of Crimea -- a move that drove Russia's expulsion from what was then called the G-8.... Trump admitted no blunder in his escalating trade fight with China, even as his flummoxing moves have rattled the markets and his own aides.... His assertion that China is itching to strike a compromise has been contradicted by multiple reports and Chinese officials.... When Trump asked Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin to back him up, Mnuchin would only say there had been 'communication,' avoiding the word 'call.'... Although he said French President Emmanuel Macron asked his permission to invite Iran's foreign minister to the G-7, Macron said that he simply 'informed' Trump in advance of his plan and that it was Macron's idea alone. At length, he boasted about his private properties.... He offered an unproven claim ... that the presidency has cost him $3 billion to $5 billion."

Mrs. McCrabbie: I think safari has found out what Trump was doing while the Amazon burned. Of course Trump didn't have time to go to a meeting about the climate-change hoax! ...

... Ben Mathis-Lilley of Slate: While "Donald Trump was in France for the G-7 summit..., [he] appeared to be self-soothing online. In one four-hour stretch on Sunday, Trump did nine consecutive reposts of tweets from the right-wing group Judicial Watch.... The topics he shared included a conspiracy theory about Rep. Ilhan Omar's personal life and various paranoid claims about the deep state, one of which featured a video involving, yes, Hillary Clinton's emails.... The Judicial Watch fixation was part of a Sunday/Monday spree — again, while he was supposed to be at a series of huge meetings -- during which he posted or retweeted others' posts 46 times." --s

Paul Krugman: "The 'very stable genius' in the Oval Office is, in fact, extremely unstable, in word and deed. That's not a psychological diagnosis, although you can make that case too. It's just a straightforward description of his behavior. And his instability is starting to have serious economic consequences..... Unstable, unpredictable trade policy ... suggest[s to businesses] that [they] should postpone [their] investment plans.... So everything gets put on hold -- and the economy suffers.... At that point you might expect an intervention from the grown-ups in the room -- but there aren't any.... Protectionism is bad; erratic protectionism, imposed by an unstable leader with an insecure ego, is worse."

Megan Specia of the New York Times: "President Hassan Rouhani of Iran said on Tuesday that he would not sit down for a meeting with President Trump until Washington had lifted all of its economic sanctions against Iran. His comment came a day after President Emmanuel Macron of France said he would try to arrange a meeting between Mr. Trump and Mr. Rouhani in the next few weeks, in an attempt to ease the strained relationship between their countries. Mr. Trump said he was open to the idea if the Iranians were 'good players.' Mr. Rouhani responded in kind." NPR's story is here.


Quint Forgey
of Politico: "... Donald Trump on Monday dismissed as 'ridiculous' a report that he proposed detonating nuclear bombs inside hurricanes to weaken the storms before they make landfall along U.S shorelines. 'The story by Axios that President Trump wanted to blow up large hurricanes with nuclear weapons prior to reaching shore is ridiculous,' Trump tweeted.... 'I never said this. Just more FAKE NEWS!'" Reporters Jonathan Swan & Margaret Talev said they stood by every word their story. Mrs. McC: According to the Axios report, Trump brought up the matter during at least two formal meetings. I doubt Everybody But Trump is lying. (Also linked yesterday afternoon.)

Alan Rappeport of the New York Times: "American farmers have become collateral damage in a trade war that Mr. Trump began to help manufacturers and other companies that he believes have been hurt by China's 'unfair' trade practices. More than a year into the trade dispute, sales of American soybeans, pork, wheat and other agricultural products to China have dried up as Beijing retaliates against Mr. Trump’s tariffs on Chinese imports.... For months, farmers have remained resolute, continuing to pledge support to a president who says his trade policies will help the agricultural industry win in the end. While there are few signs of an imminent blue wave in farm country, a growing number of farmers say they are losing patience with the president's approach and are suggesting it will not take much to lose their vote as well." Yahoo! News published a similar story August 25.

Adam Goldman of the New York Times: "Federal prosecutors in Washington appear to be in the final stages of deciding whether to seek an indictment of Andrew G. McCabe, the former deputy F.B.I. director and a frequent target of President Trump, on charges of lying to federal agents, according to interviews with people familiar with recent developments.... An indictment of a former top F.B.I. official is extremely rare and would be the latest chapter in the saga of Mr. McCabe, who was fired last year over the issue now under criminal investigation -- whether he failed to be forthcoming with internal investigators examining the F.B.I.'s dealings with the news media.... Prosecutors may face headwinds if a case were to go to trial. One prosecutor quit the case and has expressed frustration with how it was being managed, according to person familiar with her departure, and a key witness [Lisa Page] provided testimony to the grand jury that could hurt the government's case." Law & Crime has a related post here.

Will Sommer of the Daily Beast: "... Rudy Giuliani promoted discredited conspiracy theories about murdered Democratic National Committee staffer Seth Rich on Twitter early Monday morning, further fueling the baseless speculation that has anguished Rich's grieving family. Giuliani quote-tweeted a tweet from conspiracy theorist Matt Couch, whose fevered claims about Rich's 2016 murder provoked a defamation lawsuit from Rich's brother.... In text messages with The Daily Beast, Giuliani insisted his tweet wasn't meant to promote any conspiracy theories but merely to ask questions about Rich's murder, which has remained unsolved." (Also linked yesterday afternoon.)

Dave Levinthal of the Center for Public Integrity: "Federal Election Commission Vice Chairman Matthew Petersen announced his resignation [Monday]. This means the agency that enforces and regulates the nation's campaign finance laws will effectively shut down -- something that hasn't happened since 2008 -- because it won't have the legal minimum of four commissioners to make high-level decisions. [The full contingent is six commissioners, half from each major party.] Petersen's resignation, first reported by the Washington Examiner, will throw the FEC into turmoil for weeks -- and perhaps months -- as the nation enters the teeth of 2020 presidential and congressional elections.... Trump in September 2017 nominated Petersen to a federal district judgeship, but Petersen withdrew in December 2017 after a disastrous confirmation hearing -- and has remained at the FEC until now.... The president of the United States alone has the power to nominate commissioners to the six-member FEC. Trump has so far made a single nomination: Trey Trainor, a Trump-supporting Texas attorney and Republican. Trump first nominated Trainor to the FEC in September 2017. Since then, Trump has twice renominated Trainor after the U.S. Senate failed to grant Trainor a confirmation hearing."

Lawsuits Can Be Funny (as long as you're not one of the litigants):

Devin's Lawyer Has a Cow. Lisa Needham of ShareBlue: "Earlier this year, [Rep. Devin] Nunes [R-Calif.] sued Twitter for a staggering $250 million, claiming the site broke the law by allowing two parody accounts — @DevinNunesMom and @DevinCow — to say mean things about him on Twitter. He did this even though the accounts are clearly parodies, which are protected by the First Amendment.... Nunes also named Republican strategist Liz Mair in the suit. When filing the suit, Nunes stated that the tweets were so mean that 'no human being should ever have to bear and suffer in their whole life.'... [In court, Nunes's attorney Steven] Biss told the court that giving Mair and the parody accounts Twitter access at all was akin to negligently giving them a gun. This is a particularly odd stance given Nunes's 'A' rating from the NRA and his full-throated defense of the right of everyone to carry guns, no matter how much harm they do.... Next, Biss asked the judge, 'What if you set a fire on your property and I told you it was choking my baby? You should have to put it out.'... About 20 supporters of the @DevinCow account showed up [at court] wearing cow-themed t-shirts, cow ears, and toting stuffed animals and signs."

Felicia Sonmez of the Washington Post: "Sen. Ron Johnson (R-Wis.) said Monday that he was denied a visa to Russia for a visit as part of a bipartisan congressional delegation next week.... Johnson sits on the Senate Foreign Relations Committee and is chairman of the panel's subcommittee on Europe and regional security cooperation. His office noted Monday that Johnson supported several pieces of legislation aiming 'to hold Russia accountable for its aggression in Ukraine and its targeting of dissidents.' In a statement published on Twitter early Tuesday, the Russian Embassy in Washington said the senator never asked it for a visa and hadn't informed the mission about his plans to visit." Here's the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel's story. Mrs. McC: Hard to know whom to believe here.

Presidential Race 2020

Monmouth U. Polling Institute: "Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders [20%], Massachusetts Sen. Elizabeth Warren []20%, and former Vice President Joe Biden [19%] are currently bunched together in the national Democratic presidential preference contest. Movement in the latest Monmouth University Poll -- positive for Warren and Sanders, negative for Biden -- suggests the 2020 presidential nomination process may be entering a volatile stage. The poll results also suggest that liberal voters are starting to take a closer look at a wider range of candidates, while moderates are focusing on those with the highest name recognition." The poll "has a +/- 5.7 percentage point sampling margin of error" & a small sample of only 298 registered voters. Mrs. McC: That is, theoretically, Biden could be at about 25% & Warren & Sanders at about 14%. So far, this poll is an outlier.

Ben Schreckinger of Politico: "Joe Biden's younger brother [James Biden] told potential business partners that the former vice president would help their firm land business with court systems and would incorporate their health care model into his 2020 presidential campaign, according to new allegations made in a court filing in Tennessee.... The allegations come in sworn declarations made by executives at firms suing Biden's brother that were filed in federal court on Friday. They do not allege any wrongdoing by Joe Biden or indicate that the former vice president ha knowledge of his brother's alleged promises." --s

Matt Taiibi of Rolling Stone tries to explain Trump's appeal to rubes: "Two and a half years into his presidency, Trump has already staked a claim to a role in history usually reserved for hereditary monarchs at the end of a line of inbreeding.... Much of America loves its Mad King.... Ten years ago, an African American won the White House in a landslide; today, the president is somewhere between a Klansman and Jimmy the Greek.... We've gone from Trump being skeptical of Obama's citizenship to musing about 'very fine' neo-Nazis to a Twitter version of 'Go back to Africa.'... The average American likes meat, sports, money, porn, cars, cartoons, and shopping. Less popular: socialism, privilege-checking, and the world ending in 10 years. Ironically, perhaps because of Trump, Democratic Party rhetoric in 2020 is relentlessly negative about the American experience. Every speech is a horror story about synagogue massacres or people dying without insulin or atrocities at the border.... America's upper classes and their proxies in government and media have no capacity for self-reflection, and will make asses of themselves in a fight. This is where Trump makes his living, getting people who should know better to rise to his bait.... Trump offers permission to occupy the statistical American mean: out of shape, suffering from gas, poorly read, anti-intellectual, treasuring things above meaning, and hiding an awful credit history." Thanks to Keith H. for the link.

Congressional Races 2020

Politico: "Rep. Sean Duffy (R-Wis.) will resign from Congress at the end of September, the most recent in a string of Republicans who have decided against running for re-election. Duffy, who was elected in 2010 during a GOP wave, said he and his wife are expecting a child in late October who will 'will need even more love, time, and attention due to complications, including a heart condition.'" (Also linked yesterday afternoon.)

James Arkin of Politico: "Massachusetts Rep. Joe Kennedy confirmed Monday he's considering running for Senate next year, setting up a potential blockbuster Democratic primary against Sen. Ed Markey." Mrs. McC: This is stupid; Kennedy should run for President Elizabeth Warren's unexpired Senate term. (Massachusetts' Republican governor will certainly seat a Republican, & -- tho the Massachusetts legislature keeps changing the terms of filling unexpired Senate terms to suit its political interests -- there would be a Senate election before 2024, when Warren's current Senate term ends. (Also linked yesterday afternoon.)


Amanda Coletta & Robert Barnes
of the Washington Post: "Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg on Monday made her first public appearance since completing radiation treatment for her latest bout with cancer.... The 86-year-old justice received an honorary degree [at the University at Buffalo's law school] in the morning and regaled a packed performing arts hall in the evening.... Ginsburg was escorted across the stage at the Kleinhans Music Hall on Monday night and earlier in the day at the university. But she spoke with a clear, strong voice at both events...." Here's the Buffalo News story. Mrs. McC: Seldom has so much been riding on one frail body & one strong mind.

Carol Leonnig & Matt Zapotosky of the Washington Post: "At least one camera in the hallway outside the cell where authorities say registered sex offender Jeffrey Epstein hanged himself earlier thi month had footage that is unusable, although other, clearer footage was captured in the area, according to three people.... The footage is considered critical to [DOJ & FBI] inquiries, and the revelation of an unusable recording is yet another of the apparent failures inside the Metropolitan Correctional Center, the short-staffed Bureau of Prisons facility in downtown Manhattan that held Epstein." A Business Insider story is here.

Berkeley Lovelace of CNBC: “An Oklahoma judge on Monday ruled against Johnson & Johnson in the state's opioid case, forcing the company to pay $572 million in the first ruling in the U.S. holding a drugmaker accountable for helping fuel the epidemic. Calling the opioid crisis an 'imminent danger and menace,' District Judge Thad Balkman said, 'the state met its burden that the defendants Janssen and Johnson & Johnson's misleading marketing and promotion of opioids created a nuisance as defined by [the law],' including a finding that those actions compromised the health and safety of thousands of Oklahomans.... The ruling, which J&J intends to appeal, says that the company and subsidiary Janssen repeatedly downplayed the risks of addiction to opioids, training sales representatives to tell doctors the risk was 2.6% or less if the drugs were prescribed by a doctor. Physicians who prescribed a high amount of opioids were targeted as 'key customers.'" ...

     ... The New York Times story, by Jan Hoffman, is here. A related NYT story, also by Hoffman, is here.

Will Sommer: "The conservative op-ed website Quillette announced Monday night that controversial right-wing writer Andy Ngo is leaving his job as an editor at the site.... Ngo ... became a celebrity on Fox News and other pro-Trump media outlets after he was attacked by left-wing demonstrators at a Portland political rally in June. Ngo then became prominent as an opponent of political violence, with most of his criticism aimed at the left. But footage taken by an undercover liberal activist in May and described on Monday by the Portland Mercury showed Ngo witnessing activists from the far-right group Patriot Prayer planning a violent confrontation at a bar associated with left-wing activists. Ngo never reported on what he had seen the Patriot Prayer members planning, and some of the people involved in the attack at the bar now face felony riot charges.... Quillette editor-in-chief Claire Lehmann insisted ... that Ngo's exit had nothing to do with the ... undercover footage[.]" --s

Way Beyond the Beltway

China/Hong Kong. Andrew Higgins of the New York Times: "Across the border from Hong Kong, the Chinese Communist Party screams its presence with banners and slogans on nearly every street. Yet in the former British colony, where China's ruling party confronts what it calls a 'life and death' struggle against a turbulent protest movement, it is invisible: It is not registered and has no publicly declared local members. But in Hong Kong, this officially nonexistent organization is in the vanguard of defending Chinese rule in the face of its biggest public resistance since the authoritarian leader Xi Jinping came to power in 2012. The party, operating in the shadows through individuals and organizations, is driving an increasingly firm pushback against the antigovernment protests, now in their 12th week."

News Lede

New York Times: "As Tropical Storm Dorian drew closer on Tuesday, Puerto Rico braced for the possibility that it would not just sideswipe the island but perhaps make landfall there. The authorities, acting under a state of emergency, closed schools early and prepared emergency shelter for tens of thousands of people." ...

     ... The Miami Herald story is here. The Herald has a hurricane tracker here, but it doesn't appear it's being updated. Consult the Herald's front page for links to the latest.