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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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Constant Comments

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

Publisher & Editor: Marie Burns


Saturday
Apr022016

The Commentariat -- April 3, 2016

Kristen East of Politico: "Kansas Sen. Jerry Moran has reversed his position on a hearing and vote for Supreme Court nominee Merrick Garland, just a week after straying from the position of GOP leadership. The senator's office released a statement Friday clarifying Moran's position, saying the senator no longer believes hearings are a necessity." CW: Clarifying? Apparently there is clarity in chickenshit.

Joan Lowy of the AP: " A government-sponsored committee is recommending standards that could clear the way for commercial drone flights over populated areas and help speed the introduction of package delivery drones and other uses not yet possible....."

Mark Sherman of the AP: A potential "Supreme Court appeal from a Hispanic defendant in Colorado raises the prospect that a juror's comments during deliberations can be so offensive that they deprive a defendant of a fair trial ... After a jury convicted Miguel Angel Pena Rodriguez of attempted sexual assault involving teenage sisters at a Denver-area horse race track, two jurors provided his lawyer with sworn statements claiming that a third juror made derogatory remarks about Mexican men before voting guilty.... The NAACP Legal Defense and Educational Fund and the National Congress of American Indians are among the groups backing Pena Rodriguez, cataloguing examples of trials in which jurors uttered slurs or made derogatory remarks about Native American, African-American and Hispanic defendants." -- CaptRuss

Rocket Man. Christian Davenport of the Washington Post: Jeff Bezos, "the billionaire founder of Amazon.com (and owner of The Washington Post), not only announced ahead of time that his space company would launch a rocket on Saturday, but he live-tweeted it, giving his followers a play-by-play of the event, and a few inside glimpses. Saturday's liftoff from Blue Origin's launch site in West Texas was the third consecutive time the company has launched and landed its reusable New Shepard suborbital vehicle, which consists of a rocket and a capsule designed to take astronauts just past the edge of space." -- CW

Washington Murder Mystery. Steven Myers of the New York Times: "Mikhail Y. Lesin, once a player in the Kremlin's media apparatus, was found dead from 'blunt force injuries' in Washington, fueling speculation of murder." -- CW

Presidential Race

Lisa Lerer & Ken Thomas of the AP: "After a year of campaigning, months of debates and 35 primary elections, Sanders is finally getting under Clinton's skin in the Democratic presidential race. Clinton has spent weeks largely ignoring Sanders and trying to focus on ... Donald Trump. Now, after several primary losses and with a tough fight in New York on the horizon, Clinton is showing flashes of frustration with the Vermont senator -- irritation that could undermine her efforts to unite the party around her candidacy." -- CW


Bob Woodward
and Robert Costa of the Washington Post interview Donald Trump: "In his first 100 days, Trump said, he would cut taxes, 'renegotiate trade deals and renegotiate military deals,' including altering the U.S. role in the North Atlantic Treaty Organization. He insisted that he would be able to get rid of the nation's more than $19 trillion national debt 'over a period of eight years.' Most economists would consider this impossible because it could require taking more than $2 trillion a year out of the annual $4 trillion budget to pay off holders of the debt." Un-fucking-believable that he doesn't seem to understand that international trade deficits are the result of business transactions - which do not involve the government. -- CaptRuss ...

... Trump also said in the interview "that economic conditions are so perilous that the country is headed for a 'very massive recession' and that 'it's a terrible time right now' to invest in the stock market, embracing a distinctly gloomy view of the economy that counters mainstream economic forecasts." CW: Allow me to remind you that in 2011, Mr. I. Speak toMyself "predicted riots in the street and exorbitantly expensive loaves of bread due to higher oil prices and a declining dollar. But the business mogul overshot the price of bread by more than 12 times." ...

... And Then Some

Glenn Kessler of the Fact Checker at the Washington Post laments that there are only Four Pinocchios available: "Alone among Republican hopefuls, Trump has pledged not to touch entitlement spending. So unless he wants to start breaking some campaign promises, one presumes he would not seek to change the laws governing most mandatory spending. That leaves discretionary spending, which Congress votes on year after year and funds the basic functions of government, such as defense, homeland security, highways, and so forth. In the eight years of a putative two-term Trump presidency, the CBO projects a total of $10 trillion in discretionary spending. So even if Trump eliminated every government function and shut down every Cabinet agency, he'd still be $16 trillion short."

Jonathan Martin & Nate Cohn of the New York Times: "As Donald J. Trump moves closer to the Republican nomination, his unpopularity with large groups of voters suggests a potentially staggering loss in a general election.... In recent head-to-head polls with one Democrat whom Mr. Trump may face in the fall, Hillary Clinton, he trails in every key state, including Florida and Ohio, despite her soaring unpopularity ratings with swing voters." -- CW ...

... But there's this. Jackie Calmes of the New York Times: "Few people are thanking the president for low unemployment [in Indiana]. Instead, many discouraged workers are attracted to Donald J. Trump's economic message." CW: Then again, Trump is a white dude.

Ben Schreckinger & Ken Vogel of Politico: "In public, Donald Trump is standing behind embattled campaign manager Corey Lewandowski as he faces battery charges for grabbing a reporter. But behind the scenes, Lewandowski's role in the campaign is shrinking. In early March, Lewandowski ceded authority over many hiring decisions to a lower-ranking staffer. In recent days, the campaign's press office has been overruling his decisions about issuing credentials for campaign events. Going forward, Trump's just-named convention manager, Paul Manafort, is expected to take a leading role not just in the selection of delegates, but in the remaining primaries themselves, according to three people on or close to the campaign." ...

     ... CW: Not that there's anything wrong with picking as an alternate delegate a guy who is in jail awaiting trial on federal charges stemming from his part in the Cliven Bundy stand-off & also participated in the Oregon occupation of the Malheur Reserve. Lewandowski's been doing a great job!

... This Elephant Has a Very Short Memory. Joey Garrson & Dave Boucher of the Tennessean: "Donald Trump's campaign for president is accusing the Tennessee Republican Party of 'doing the bidding' of the national GOP establishment in a calculated attempt to 'steal' pro-Trump delegates and stop them from being a part of Tennessee's GOP delegation.... A Tennessee party official disputes that allegation, instead accusing Trump's camp of distorting the truth while noting Trump will still receive all delegates won from the state." CW: Apparently Trump forgot that way two days ago he admitted that his campaign wasn't doing its job of trying to "steal"/persuade convention delegates to vote for him. ...

... Jamie McGee & Joel Ebert of the Tennessean: "Tennessee Republican Party leaders voted Saturday to finalize a list of delegates to the GOP's national presidential nominating convention over fierce objections from Donald Trump backers, who accused officials of stacking the group against the real estate mogul.... As the committee began its meeting at 10 a.m.dozens of Trump supporters formed a line outside the Hillsboro Village office, voicing frustration over the fact that they weren't being allowed inside for the proceedings. [Trump supporter] Robert Swope, Metro Councilman for the 4th district..., [said] 'Trust me, there will be a war.... I want everyone to remember this moment in the Tennessee GOP because this will come back to haunt them." -- CW ...

... Shane Goldmacher & Kyle Cheney of Politico: Party leaders, alarmed by an intensifying backlash throughout the night, have hired extra security for the event -- which party chairman Ryan Haynes noted had been scheduled to take place in a small, unsecured conference room -- and [they consider[ed] canceling the event altogether." ...

... CW: As I wrote yesterday, Trump's preferred method of negotiation is violence or threats of violence.

Peter Montgomery in Otherwords, via Juan Cole: "There's a darker side to Trump's campaign that should disturb anyone thinking about supporting him: It's electrifying and energizing the white supremacist movement." -safari

Maureen Dowd interviews Donald Trump. "It's ridiculous how many mistakes Trump has made in rapid order to alienate women when he was already on thin ice with them -- and this in a year when the Republicans will likely have to run against a woman." Dowd doesn't make any definitive news, but there's this: Dowd: "I had to ask: When he was a swinging bachelor in Manhattan, was he ever involved with anyone who had an abortion?" Trump: "Such an interesting question. So what's your next question?" So yes. Of course. -- CW

Kathleen Parker of the Washington Post: "Donald Trump "either can't or won't think before speaking. Shooting from the hip may work on reality TV, but it's no way to run a country -- or even to broker a deal, the art of which seems to have been lost on its author." -- CW

When a huckster presidential candidate jokes about nuclear war while real POTUS works to avoid it. Ben Jacobs and Martin Pengelly in the Guardian: "Speaking at a rally in Rothschild, Wisconsin ahead of the state's primary on Tuesday, [Donald Trump] said that if conflict between Japan and nuclear-armed North Korea were to break out, 'it would be a terrible thing but if they do, they do'. 'Good luck,' he added. 'Enjoy yourself, folks.'" --safari

Annals of "Journalism," Ctd. New York Times Edition. Steve M.: "An editorial in The New York Times [Saturday] expresses anguish at the GOP establishment's decision to freeze out that nice John Kasich.... The media feels it [sic!] has a responsibility to save the Republican Party from itself.... The press blam[es] itself for the fact that Republican voters admire Donald Trump and want to watch and read about him before enthusiastically voting for him.... Beyond that, the press wants a Republican to admire." Steve reiterates why Kasich is not that admirable guy. -- CW

Senate Race

Melinda Deslatte of the AP: "Louisiana Gov. John Bel Edwards told state Democratic Party leaders on Saturday that he's backing Public Service Commissioner Foster Campbell in the U.S. Senate race, and he encouraged them to unite behind one candidate on the November ballot ... Campbell, a member of the Public Service Commission for more than a decade and a long-time state senator before that, called the governor's support 'monumental' for his campaign." Political newcomers Caroline Fayard, an attorney, and Josh Pellerin, a businessman in the oil and gas industry, have also announced they will run for the senate seat being vacated by moral reprobate David Vitter. -- CaptRuss

Beyond the Beltway

Rebecca Traister of New York Magazine, published April 1st: "On the last day of March, the New York State Legislature finalized a budget deal that included not only a promise to raise the minimum wage to $15, but also the nation's newest -- and by far its strongest and most comprehensive -- bill mandating paid-family-leave time for -- most employees. That means that New York has just become the fifth state ... to mandate paid leave. And compared to its progressive predecessors, New York's bill is startlingly robust."safari note: Elections matter y'all.

Jen Kirby and Chas Danner of NY Magazine: "Queens Bull Escapes to College, Gets Rescued by Jon Stewart ... [Stewart] and his wife run their own animal sanctuary, Bufflehead Farm, in New Jersey, and were alerted to [the bull's] plight by the Farm Sanctuary organization, who negotiated the release of the animal." -- CaptRuss

Kate Royals and Sarah Fowler of the Jackson, MS Clarion-Ledger: Mississippi "House Bill 1523, or the 'Protecting Freedom of Conscience from Government Discrimination Act,' is soon headed to Gov. Phil Bryant's desk after the House concurred with the Senate's version Friday morning." Among other nonsense, the bill protects "individuals whose sincerely held beliefs include that 'sexual relations are properly reserved' to a marriage between a man and a woman, raising questions about whether single mothers could be targeted...Bryant said he has not made a decision about the bill." -- CaptRuss

Charles Pierce of Esquire on the upcoming "shitstorm" in Wisconsin: "All morning, citizens scrambled through the freshening snow into the four local offices [in Madison]of the Wisconsin Department of Motor Vehicles. They were there to get the identification cards they will need to cast a vote on Tuesday under the state's new voter ID law that is having its shakedown cruise that day." -- unwashed. As a former Wisconsinite it's hard to believe how far the Badgers have fallen down the rabbit hole.

Way Beyond

Helena Smith of the Guardian: "Rioting and rebellion by thousands of entrapped refugees across Greece has triggered mounting fears in Athens over the practicality of enforcing an agreement already marred by growing concerns over its legality.... 'We are expecting violence. People in despair tend to be violent,' the leftist-led government's migration spokesman, Giorgos Kyritsis, told the Observer..., 'These are people [that] have fled war. They are not criminals.' With tensions on the rise in Lesbos, the Aegean island that has borne the brunt of the flows, and in Idomeni on the Greek-Macedonia frontier where around 11,000 have massed since the border's closure, NGOs warned of a timebomb in the making. Hopes of numbers decreasing following the announcement of the EU-Turkey deal have been dispelled by a renewed surge in arrivals with the onset of spring." -- CaptRuss

News Ledes


AP: "Joseph Medicine Crow, an acclaimed Native American historian and last surviving war chief of Montana's Crow Tribe, has died. He was 102. Medicine Crow died Sunday...." Read the obituary.

New York Times: "Fierce winds, snow, lightning and hail stomped across the East on Saturday and early Sunday, downing trees, damaging buildings and cutting power to more than 250,000 homes across 14 states. Among the hardest hit were New York, New Jersey and Pennsylvania, with over 35,000 homes in each state dark on Sunday afternoon."

AP: "Authorities say an Amtrak train struck a piece of construction equipment just south of Philadelphia, and some injuries are being reported. Service on the Northeast Corridor between New York and Philadelphia has been suspended.... The impact derailed the lead engine of the train." ...

     ... Washington Post Update: "Local police told affiliate NBC10 that two people had died and at least one was hurt." ...

     ... NEW Wash Po LEDE: "Two Amtrak maintenance workers were killed Sunday when a passenger train bound for Washington plowed into a backhoe machine they were operating just south of Philadelphia.... Amtrak said its scheduled trains would run in the Northeast corridor on Monday, but that riders should expect delays between Wilmington, Del., and Philadelphia."

AP: "A week after taking back the historic town of Palmyra, Syrian troops and their allies on Sunday captured another town controlled by the Islamic State group in central Syria, state media reported. The push into the town of Qaryatain took place under the cover of Russian airstrikes and dealt another setback to the IS extremists in Syria. However, an activist group that monitors the Syrian civil war said the government forces for the moment control more than half of Qaryatain but have not fully secured the town."

Charles J. Gans of the AP: "Latin Jazz saxophonist Leandro 'Gato' Barbieri, who composed the Grammy-winning music for the steamy Marlon Brando film 'Last Tango in Paris' and recorded dozens of albums over a career spanning more than seven decades, has died at age 83...He earned the nickname 'El Gato,' which means 'The Cat,' in the 1950s because of the way he scampered between clubs with his saxophone.... He released 'Caliente' (1976) for the A&M label, which included his popular rendition of Carlos Santana's 'Europa.'" The sensuous "Europa" has long been one of my favorite jazz tenor sax tunes and is emblematic of Barbieri's rich and smoky style. -- CaptRuss

Friday
Apr012016

The Commentariat -- April 2, 2016

CW: Okay. You're on your own!

Mark Landler of the New York Times: "President Obama on Friday questioned Donald J. Trump's fitness for office after statements from the Republican front-runner that the United States and its allies should move away from decades of constraints on the use of nuclear weapons. 'We don't want somebody in the Oval Office who doesn't recognize how important that is,' Mr. Obama said. Speaking to reporters at the end of a summit meeting devoted to nuclear security, the president said the comments by Mr. Trump reflected a person who 'doesn't know much about foreign policy or nuclear policy or the Korean Peninsula or the world in general'": -- CW

... Harper Neidig of the Hill: "President Obama on Friday called out Turkish President Recep Erdogan, saying his policies toward journalists have been 'troubling.'" -- CW

Josh Lederman & Darlene Superville of the AP: "President Barack Obama urged global leaders Friday not to be complacent in the face of an evolving threat from terrorists who he said are eager to unleash a devastating nuclear attack. 'It would change our world,' he declared." (Also linked yesterday afternoon.)

Nelson Schwartz & Neil Irwin of the New York Times: "The 215,000 jump in payrolls in March reported by the Labor Department on Friday capped the best two-year period for hiring since the late 1990s, while the proportion of Americans in the labor force -- which had been on a downward trajectory since 2001 and an even steeper slide since 2008 -- hit a two-year high. 'It's really a best-case scenario,' said Michelle Meyer, deputy head of United States economics at Bank of America Merrill Lynch." -- CW

Sarah Wheaton of Politico: "White House Counsel Neil Eggleston ... has promised to pick up the pace [of granting presidential pardons & clemency], but so far, acceleration has been halting. That's about to change, Eggleston said on Friday at a Politico Playbook Breakfast." -- CW

** Gail Collins on abortion, contraception, Donald Trump, & Republicans' deep respect for women. "In reality, the anti-abortion movement is grounded on the idea that sex outside of marriage is a sin, and the only choice a woman should have is between abstinence and the possibility of imminent parenthood. It may be politically unwise to say that the sinner ought to pay, but she should at minimum have to carry an unwanted child to term. Look at it this way and it's easy to understand why abortion opponents have shown virtually no interest in working to make contraceptives and family planning universally available. It's the sex, at bottom, that they oppose...." -- CW

Matt Apuzzo & Alan Blinder of the New York Times: "The Obama administration is considering whether North Carolina's new law on gay and transgender rights makes the state ineligible for billions of dollars in federal aid for schools, highways and housing, officials said Friday. Cutting off any federal money -- or even simply threatening to do so -- would put major new pressure on North Carolina to repeal the law, which eliminated local protections for gay and transgender people and restricted which bathrooms transgender people can use.... Experts said such a drastic step was unlikely, at least immediately.... Gov. Pat McCrory of North Carolina had assured residents that the law would not jeopardize federal money for education." -- CW

Guardian: "Company CEOs and city officials have joined other government and business leaders in opposition to North Carolina's new law that prevents specific anti-discrimination rules for LGBT people for restroom use. The Human Rights Campaign and Equality North Carolina on Friday released the names of another 10 company executives that have signed on to a letter criticizing the law and seeking its repeal, bringing the number of names to more than 120. New executives include those from Hewlett Packard Enterprise, Qualcomm and EMC Corp." -- CaptRuss

Max Ehrenfreund & Roberto Ferdman of the Washington Post: "As many as 1 million Americans will stop receiving food stamps over the course of this year beginning on Friday, the consequence of a controversial work mandate that has been reinstated in 22 states as the economy improves. The 20-year-old rule -- which was suspended in many states during the economic recession -- requires that adults without children or disabilities must have a job in order to receive food stamps through the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program for more than three months, with some exceptions." (Also linked yesterday afternoon.)

Jennifer Bendery of the Huffington Post: Iowa teen Jake Smith, in a letter published by the Des Moines Register, asks Chuck Grassley (R-Iowa) to step down as head of the Senate Judiciary Committee. Grassley argues that President Obama cannot appoint a Supreme Court Justice because the "people" in the next presidential election must decide who gets to make the appointment. Smith reasons, "... since you, too, are in an election year, how can you possess the authority to make a decision that will affect the future of our country if 'the people have not yet spoken?"' Smith told Bendery, 'I know he's not going to read this letter from an 18-year-old and say, "Oh crap. I have to step down now," But I'm just trying to kind of match his ridiculous statements about this issue with another ridiculous statement." -- CW

Matt Zapotosky of the Washington Post: "The international hacker who allegedly accessed personal emails and photographs belonging to the family of former president George W. Bush and whose cyber-mischief revealed that Hillary Clinton was using a private email address appeared in a U.S. court for the first time Friday. Marcel Lehel Lazar -- better known by the moniker 'Guccifer' that he is said to have affixed to the materials he stole -- is charged with cyber-stalking, aggravated identity theft and unauthorized access of a protected computer in a nine-count indictment filed in 2014 in federal district court in Alexandria, Va. He was extradited to the United States recently from Romania, his home country, where he had been serving a sentence for hacking.

Lazar claimed to have compromised the email account of former Bill Clinton aide Sidney Blumenthal and released memos Blumenthal sent to Hillary Clinton. Gawker noticed that the notes were directed to a private, nongovernmental email account. The New York Times later reported that Clinton exclusively used a personal account to conduct government business. -- CW

... CW: In all of the bazillion words I've read or heard about "the damned e-mails," I never knew that a hacker was partially responsible for bringing to light Hillary's use of a private account for State business. How'd I miss that? The news (to me) is both fascinating & troubling. If a guy whose hacking "system" relies on Kabballah, numerology, the occult & Jung's archetypes, among other things, can hack the U.S. Secretary of State's e-mail account, you can bet that Israel, Russia, China & official eavesdroppers everywhere were reading her e-mails, too.

Presidential Race

Ari Berman of the Nation: "... 300,000 registered voters in Wisconsin, 9 percent of the electorate..., do not have a government-issued photo ID and could be disenfranchised by the state's new voter-ID law, which is in effect for the first time in 2016." CW: Bernie Sanders is ahead of Hillary Clinton by several points in polls of Wisconsin voters. If he loses, it's likely the voter ID law will be the reason: students are among those most likely not to have the requisite IDs.

** "Soften Your Tone" and Other Bronx Cheers. Eric Levitz of New York: "On Thursday night..., [Bernie Sanders] drew 18,500 raucous supporters to St. Mary's Park in the South Bronx. Although the senator's campaign has often been portrayed as the whitest thing since sliced Wonder Bread, the crowd in Mott Haven was a rainbow coalition: Among the Caucasian Sandersistas were significant numbers of African-Americans, Latinos, Asian-Americans, and even a smattering of Hasidic Jews. BernieBros and BernieBroads were out in roughly equal numbers. The only demographic that went underrepresented was 'people who were alive when Ronald Reagan was in office.'" (Also linked yesterday afternoon.) ...

... Maryalice Parks of ABC News: "Speaking to a packed house [in] eastern Wisconsin, Sanders twice said Clinton owed his campaign an apology. 'We were not lying, we were telling the truth,' the presidential hopeful said after bringing up an incident yesterday in which an activist asked Clinton if she would stop taking money from the fossil fuel industry. Clinton responded aggressively and accused the Sanders' campaign of lying." -- CW ...

... Paul Krugman says Bernie needs to cut that out & start playing nice. He also says Clinton is raising money for down-ballot candidates which Sanders is not. CW: What he doesn't say is that Clinton's little fundraising deal with the states is a mighty sleazy scheme. It is certainly not the point in her favor that Krugman pretends it is. -- CW

...Michael Tomasky of The Daily Beast on why he's voting for Hillary: "...I vote for other people's interests...economic welfare, of course, but voting rights, rights for immigrants, all the rest. The things the Republican Party wants to yank away from people. And you know what? I actually just think that Hillary Clinton will do a better job of defending those interests than Bernie Sanders will. Nobody makes me say that. Chelsea isn't sending me secret messages. I just think it." -- unwashed

... Jeff Stein of Vox explains the hoohah over Hillary Clinton's acceptance of campaign contributions from employees of oil-and-gas companies. Hey, Bernie Sanders has a accepted a teensy number, too. -- CW

Rosie Gray of BuzzFeed: "Roger Stone, the longtime Republican political operative and current ally of Donald Trump, says he's trying to organize protests at the Republican convention in Cleveland this summer to disrupt any effort by the party to 'steal' the nomination from the frontrunner. Stone tweeted several times on Friday evening about his plans, announcing a 'Stop the Steal March on Cleveland' and calling on supporters to get to Cleveland for the convention in July. Stone told BuzzFeed News over email that he is planning '#DaysofRage,' a seeming reference to the Weatherman-organized Days of Rage protests that took place in Chicago in 1969." ...

     ... CW: According to a New York Times report (linked on the Commentariat yesterday), Trump conceded to RNC brass that his campaign had failed to mount a delegate outreach effort, which is SOP for presidential campaigns. (The whole idea of schmoozing delegates seemed to come as a surprise to Trump, which in itself is pretty amazing.) That is, candidates & their campaigns try to get committed delegates to stick with them thru multiple roll calls, to get uncommitted delegates to support them, & to get those committed to other candidates to move to them on a second roll call. But that's not the Trump plan. No, the Trump plan is "rage" & violence. If this was the only thing you knew about the great businessman & his management style, it should be enough to tell you he isn't qualified to be president.

Descent of the Zombie. Alexander Burns of the New York Times: "Donald J. Trump ... may have surrendered any remaining chance to rally Republicans strongly around him before the party's July convention in Cleveland. At a moment when a more traditional front-runner might have sought to smooth over divisions within his party and turn his attention to the general election, Mr. Trump has only intensified his slash-and-burn, no-apologies approach to the campaign.... Republicans who once worried that Mr. Trump might gain overwhelming momentum in the primaries are now becoming preoccupied with a different grim prospect: that Mr. Trump might become a kind of zombie candidate -- damaged beyond the point of repair, but too late for any of his rivals to stop him." (Also linked yesterday afternoon.) ...

     ... CW: Funniest part of Burns' article: where he turns to Newt Gingrich to provide advice on how to be presidential.

Dana Milbank: "... it's impossible to ignore a growing volume of public-opinion data showing that a large number of [Donald Trump's] supporters are indeed driven by racial animus." -- CW

Bully of Week: Trump's Hells Angels. The Daily Beast's Mak & Suebaeng are scaring me with "Donald Trump has a new line of defense in his ongoing war against protesters: hundreds, if not thousands, of pro-Trump bikers ready and willing to provide extra security at his rallies...Trump has embraced his biker supporters with gusto...'My biker friends,' Trump said during a Q&A at a recent Wisconsin Rally. His new friends aren't just fans and are now pledging to provide ad hoc security at for their new hero, using violence if necessary." (I wonder if Scott Walker will show up with truncheons on his Harley?) -- unwashed

Annals of "Journalism," Ctd. The Fourth Estate thinks about growing a pair. Jonathan Easley of The Hill: "The trio of controversies that have trailed [Donald] Trump over the last week -- dragging Ted Cruz's wife into the spotlight, his campaign manager's battery charge against a reporter and his statement on punishment for illegal abortions -- all had key media components.... 'Part of this is malice on the media's part,' said Republican strategist Ford O'Connell .. 'He's been able to outfox them at every turn, and now that he's backed into a corner you see some of the latent aggression coming out here as they try and make up for past instances where he's gotten the better of them...,' O'Connell said. 'It got away from him this week. If Trump loses the nomination, I think this is the week we'll look back on as when the bottom fell out.'" -- CaptRuss -- Could this be blood in the water that hastens a feeding frenzy?

Katherine Krueger of TPM: "Republican operative Karl Rove said Thursday that based on the GOP's current crop of candidates, the party might be better off picking a 'fresh face' for the best chance of winning the White House. 'Donald Trump excites a lot of enthusiasm,' Rove said about the Republican frontrunner. 'But he also excites a lot of anger within the Republican Party and outside of the Republican Party. And a fresh face might be the thing that could give us a chance to turn this election and win in November against Hillary.'" (Also linked yesterday afternoon.) ...

... Scott Wartman of Cincinatti.com: "Former presidential candidate Rand Paul said Friday he would still support Donald Trump if the controversial real estate tycoon ends up as the Republican nominee. Paul's statement, in response to an Enquirer reporter's question, puts him at odds with other Republicans, including Ted Cruz, John Kasich and Donald Trump. Those three candidates have backed off from earlier pledges to support the Republican nominee no matter what." CW: Yo, Karl, there's your "fresh face"! (Also linked yesterday afternoon.)

...Holger Stark's essay in Der Spiegel provides a German perspective on how our lame-stream media is loosing the battle against Drumpf's successful use of social media. He concludes: "If Trump actually becomes his party's candidate or, even worse, becomes the next president of the United States of America, the damage to democracy would be significant not only because it would turn America into an autocratic nation, but because it would mean that, in this election, the principle of public scrutiny and thus democracy would have failed." -- unwashed

Beyond the Beltway

Richard Winton of the Los Angeles Times: "The knife reportedly found at the former home of O.J. Simpson is not connected to the 1994 slayings of his ex-wife Nicole Brown Simpson and Ronald Goldman, Los Angeles police confirmed Friday."

Ashley Southall of the New York Times: "A lieutenant with the New York Police Department who oversaw the arrest of an on-duty mail carrier in Brooklyn has been stripped of his gun and badge and placed on administrative duty. The police commissioner, William J. Bratton, said on Friday that Lt. Luis D. Machado would remain in the modified assignment until the internal investigation of the episode is completed.... The Postal Service's office of inspector general is investigating whether any federal laws were violated." -- CW

Way Beyond

Mathieu Rosemain of Reuters ; "Salah Abdeslam, the Paris attacks suspect who was arrested in Brussels last month, refused to blow himself up on the day of the attacks, his brother Mohamed told French news channel BFM TV ... 'There would have been more victims had I done it,' Salah Abdeslam told his brother. 'Luckily, I couldn't go through with it.'" CaptRuss: This story doesn't mention that the members of the Brussels "terrorist" cell were known to Belgian police as criminals, not as militants from the DAESH network. The crazies who are willing to blow themselves up are encouraged by those unwilling to do the same. Kinda like the right-wingers who harp on the "good guy with a gun" illogical fantasy while wanting their own Republican National Convention to be a gun-free zone. The parallels between DAESH and the American Taliban never cease to amaze me.

Thursday
Mar312016

The Commentariat -- April 1, 2016

Note to Readers: I've sent e-mails to the lucky contributors who have volunteered to do the heavy lifting here. If you volunteered & didn't get two e-mails from me this morning, please contact me via e-mail here. Either I mistyped your e-mail address, or I overlooked your generous offer. We'll go live tomorrow with contributor links & perhaps there will be a few in today's Commentariat. -- Constant Weader

Afternoon Update:

** "Soften Your Tone" and Other Bronx Cheers. Eric Levitz of New York: "On Thursday night..., [Bernie Sanders] drew 18,500 raucous supporters to St. Mary's Park in the South Bronx. Although the senator's campaign has often been portrayed as the whitest thing since sliced Wonder Bread, the crowd in Mott Haven was a rainbow coalition: Among the Caucasian Sandersistas were significant numbers of African-Americans, Latinos, Asian-Americans, and even a smattering of Hasidic Jews. BernieBros and BernieBroads were out in roughly equal numbers. The only demographic that went underrepresented was 'people who were alive when Ronald Reagan was in office.'"

Josh Lederman & Darlene Superville of the AP: "President Barack Obama urged global leaders Friday not to be complacent in the face of an evolving threat from terrorists who he said are eager to unleash a devastating nuclear attack. 'It would change our world,' he declared":

Max Ehrenfreund & Roberto Ferdman of the Washington Post: "As many as 1 million Americans will stop receiving food stamps over the course of this year beginning on Friday, the consequence of a controversial work mandate that has been reinstated in 22 states as the economy improves. The 20-year-old rule -- which was suspended in many states during the economic recession -- requires that adults without children or disabilities must have a job in order to receive food stamps through the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program for more than three months, with some exceptions."

Katherine Krueger of TPM: "Republican operative Karl Rove said Thursday that based on the GOP's current crop of candidates, the party might be better off picking a 'fresh face' for the best chance of winning the White House. 'Donald Trump excites a lot of enthusiasm,' Rove said about the Republican frontrunner. 'But he also excites a lot of anger within the Republican Party and outside of the Republican Party. And a fresh face might be the thing that could give us a chance to turn this election and win in November against Hillary.'" ...

... Scott Wartman of Cincinatti.com: "Former presidential candidate Rand Paul said Friday he would still support Donald Trump if the controversial real estate tycoon ends up as the Republican nominee. Paul's statement, in response to an Enquirer reporter's question, puts him at odds with other Republicans, including Ted Cruz, John Kasich and Donald Trump. Those three candidates have backed off from earlier pledges to support the Republican nominee no matter what." CW: Yo, Karl, there's your "fresh face"!

Descent of the Zombie. Alexander Burns of the New York Times: "Donald J. Trump ... may have surrendered any remaining chance to rally Republicans strongly around him before the party's July convention in Cleveland. At a moment when a more traditional front-runner might have sought to smooth over divisions within his party and turn his attention to the general election, Mr. Trump has only intensified his slash-and-burn, no-apologies approach to the campaign.... Republicans who once worried that Mr. Trump might gain overwhelming momentum in the primaries are now becoming preoccupied with a different grim prospect: that Mr. Trump might become a kind of zombie candidate -- damaged beyond the point of repair, but too late for any of his rivals to stop him." ...

     ... CW: Funniest part of Burns' article: where he turns to Newt Gingrich to provide advice on how to be presidential.

*****

Paul Krugman reminds us that President Obama has been a pretty, pretty good president.

Brian Fung of the Washington Post: "Federal regulators have approved a historic expansion of subsidies for the poor, fleshing out for the first time a set of Reagan-era discounts on phone service to include home Internet access. The 3-2 vote by the Federal Communications Commission Thursday will let roughly 40 million Americans on food stamps, Medicaid or other federal assistance register for and use an existing benefit worth $9.25 a month to purchase broadband service...."

Timothy Cama of the Hill: "The United States and China are pledging to sign last year's Paris climate change agreement as early as possible. President Obama and Chinese President Xi Jinping agreed Thursday that their representatives will approve the deal on April 22, Earth Day. It's also the earliest date on which countries can sign it. Though the agreement was crafted in December, it does not enter into force until 55 countries with at least 55 percent of the world's greenhouse gas emissions are on board." (Also linked yesterday.)

Nahal Toosi of Politico: "Vermont Sen. Patrick Leahy [D] and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu are in a war of words over the Democrat's request that the State Department investigate alleged human rights violations by Israeli and Egyptian security forces. Leahy and 10 House members sent a letter to Secretary of State John Kerry on Feb. 17 that lists several examples of alleged Egyptian and Israeli 'gross violations of human rights,' including extrajudicial killings, that should be examined.... Leahy's signature drew special attention because his name is on a law that conditions U.S. military aid to foreign countries on those countries' human rights records. 'In light of these reports (of suspected abuses) we request that you act promptly to determine their credibility and whether they trigger the Leahy Law and, if so, take appropriate action called for under the law,' the letter states." (Also linked yesterday afternoon.)

Clarence Williams & Moriah Balingit of the Washington Post: "The CIA left 'explosive training material' under the hood of a Loudoun County[, Virginia,] school bus after a training exercise last week, a bus that was used to ferry elementary and high school students to and from school on Monday and Tuesday with the material still sitting in the engine compartment.... CIA officials said in a statement that the material 'did not pose a danger to passengers on the bus.'" CW: Good to know.

Today's Factoid. Richard Wolf of USA Today: "Long before they made headlines, President Obama's embattled Supreme Court nominee and Donald Trump's beleaguered campaign manager had a legal altercation over a gun. Merrick Garland was one of three federal appeals court judges who denied Corey Lewandowski's effort to get his pistol back after his arrest in 1999 for carrying it into a House office building. Garland, who is under fire from gun-rights groups for two other rulings that supporters say have been misrepresented, was joined in ruling against Lewandowski in 2003 by two conservative judges."

Annals of "Journalism," CTD. Charles Pierce: A few days ago, the WashPo published a story about the FBI investigation into Hillary Clinton's e-mails (linked on the Commentariat), which claimed 147 agents were dedicated to the investigation. [CW: After the Internets went nuts,] the Post published a correction saying the number of agents was fewer than 50. Turns out the number may be more like 12. "That 'lawmaker briefed by FBI director James Comey' [who gave the post the 147 figure] is obviously a ratfcker with an agenda that has nothing to do with anything except political sabotage. That, by the way, is a helluva story."

Presidential Race

Rep. Don Young (R-Alaska) at a Congressional hearing on energy issues in 2011. He's perfectly normal, people.Beware Hillary & Bernie: Judd Legum of Think Progress: "Congressman Don Young (R-AK) ... told WFQD on Wednesday that ... Republicans [should support] whoever is the [GOP] nominee.... Young goes on to earnestly explain that Sanders or Clinton would mandate 'when to get up, what to eat, what you are thinking, what school you are going to go to and what you are going to believe.'... While Young is not a fan of Trump, he has participated in a style of bombastic, factually unencumbered and incendiary commentary that has paved the way for his rise." CW: Young has been Alaska's only representative in the House since 1973. I hope Hillary will order me to get up later & think about chocolate cake.

Alexander Cohen of the Center for Public Integrity, in Politico: "... Hillary Clinton has collected more money than any other candidate in the 2016 race from employees tied to the 50 largest contractors with the Department of Defense -- at least $454,994 in campaign funds over a 14-month period ending in February.... Clinton's haul is ... only one-third higher than the amount defense contractors gave to the campaign of Vermont Senator Bernie Sanders.... Despite advocating steep cuts in defense spending, Sanders' campaign has accepted at least $310,055 in defense-related donations -- more than any Republican presidential candidate -- since the start of the 2016 campaign cycle." Cohen has some suggestions as to why defense contractors like Democrats better.

Hillary Loses It. Harper Neidig of the Hill: "Hillary Clinton on Thursday accused Bernie Sanders's campaign of lying about her in a heated exchange with an environmental activist. 'I am so sick of the Sanders campaign lying about me. I'm sick of it,' the visibly angry Democratic presidential hopeful said, pointing a finger in a woman's face, in a video posted by Greenpeace":

... Nolan McCaskill of Politico: "According to a fact check [by FactCheck.org]. it is true that Clinton's campaign hasn't accepted donations directly from the industry -- doing so would violate campaign law -- and she hadn't gotten contributions from PACs affiliated with the industry, either. But she has received more than $330,000 from oil and gas industry employees. Sanders' campaign said Thursday evening that Clinton has relied heavily on donations from oil and gas lobbyists.... Eva Resnick-Day, the activist who questioned Clinton on Thursday, works with Greenpeace USA, an organization that has tracked Clinton receiving more than $4.5 million in funding this cycle -- in the form of her campaign and allied super PAC -- from lobbyists, bundlers and donors with ties to the industry. Greenpeace tallied 57 fossil fuel lobbyists who have given to Clinton -- 43 gave the maximum $2,700 contribution to her campaign, and 11 bundled $1.1 million." ...

... Abby Phillip of the Washington Post: "... [Eva] Resnick-Day [of Greenpeace] said in an interview with The Washington Post that she has no ties to the Sanders campaign and has not committed to any candidate in the race.... Resnick-Day said Greenpeace has asked all of the presidential candidates to sign a pledge to reject money from the fossil-fuel industry and to pursue campaign finance reform. Sanders has signed the pledge but Clinton has not." ...

... Sara Jerde of TPM: "Sanders had tied Clinton to Wall Street and the fossil fuel industry earlier in the day at a rally in Wisconsin, according to local TV station WGRZ." ...

... Greg Sargent takes an on-the-one-hand/on-the-other-hand approach to the Clinton-Sanders tiff. CW: But, hey, what about all that defense-contractor money, Hillary & Bernie?

Nick Gass of Politico: "Bernie Sanders broke his monthly fundraising record in March, pulling in more than $44 million, his campaign announced Friday following the midnight filing deadline with the Federal Election Commission."

Ben Kamisar of the Hill: "The Washington D.C. City Council will meet as early as next week for an emergency vote after a mistake by the city's Democratic Party threatened to leave Bernie Sanders off the presidential primary ballot in June. NBC News4 is reporting that D.C. council member and Democratic Party Chairwoman Anita Bonds will propose emergency legislation to ensure Sanders's name makes it on the ballot after the party accidentally submitted its slate to the Election Board late. Hillary Clinton also appeared on the late submission, but only Sanders received a challenge over the error."

Rebecca Fishbein of the Gothamist: "Ben & Jerry's founders Ben Cohen and Jerry Greenfield love fellow native Brooklynite and Vermont transplant Bernie Sanders so much, they made him his own ice cream, a mint chocolate chip flavor where 'all the chips have somehow floated to the top.' And lucky fans of ice cream and single-payer healthcare alike [could] get a taste of 'Bernie's Yearning' [Thursday] -- both Ben and Jerry [were] in [New York City's] Union Square handing out free sundaes starting at 5 p.m...."

Josh Barro of Business Insider: "Republicans would be screwed without racist voters.... A healthy chunk of Republican voters don't have a broad objection to big government, but an objection to big government for the wrong people.... Trump correctly realized he could win this kind of white Republican voter by becoming a demented version of Richard Nixon, turning the dial up on ethnocentric appeals ('they're rapists,' 'Islam hates us') and turning the dial down on the government-slashing (no Social Security cuts....

Nick Gass: "A political accountability group backed by Hillary Clinton supporters this week filed a complaint to the Justice Department alleging that Donald Trump illegally promised Ben Carson a position in his administration in exchange for his endorsement, according to a document provided to Politico on Thursday. 'It has recently come to light that Mr. Donald Trump may have willfully offered Dr. Ben Carson an appointment to his administration should he become president in return for supporting his candidacy in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 599,' wrote Brad Woodhouse, the head of the David Brock-backed American Democracy Legal Fund. The letter is dated March 29 and addressed to Raymond Hulser, the head of the Justice Department's Public Integrity Section." After suggesting in an interview that there was a quid pro quo in his talks with Trump, Carson later denied it.

Larry Buchanan & Alicia Parlapiano in the New York Times on "how votes for Trump could become delegates for someone else. The rules for how Republican delegates are selected -- which differ in every state -- could end up turning votes for one candidate into delegates who will support another candidate at the convention." ...

... NEW. Kyle Cheney & Ben Schreckinger of Politico: "If Trump heads into the convention without the magic number of 1,237, already more than a hundred delegates are poised to break with him on a second ballot, according to interviews with dozens of delegates, delegate candidates, operatives and party leaders."

David Smith & Molly Redden of the Guardian: "Donald Trump was facing the biggest crisis of his bid for the White House on Thursday, after his comment that women should be punished for having an abortion produced a fierce backlash from both left and right.... In what was described as the worst week of his campaign so far, his team swung into damage-limitation mode. Spokesperson Katrina Pierson told CNN his initial comments were a 'simple misspeak' and said Trump did not support penalising women for having abortions, even if they were illegal.... [Ted] Cruz has voted to approve several abortion bans with no exception for rape victims, and [John] Kasich has signed 16 abortion restrictions as governor of Ohio, including a measure to ban abortion after 20 weeks."

Alex Isenstadt of Politico: "With a looming loss in Wisconsin vastly increasing the odds of a contested convention, [Donald] Trump trekked to Capitol Hill to meet with Republican National Committee Chairman Reince Priebus, with whom he has had a lukewarm relationship.... He also convened a meeting with members of his newly established foreign policy team and rolled out his U.S. House Leadership Committee." ...

     ... Update. Maggie Haberman & Jonathan Martin of the New York Times: "Outwardly, Donald J. Trump called it a 'unity meeting' -- a closed-door session in Washington on Thursday involving his own inner circle and the Republican National Committee's high command. Inside, however, it was more of a clearing of the air, according to three people briefed in detail on the discussion. And the candid remarks included some by Mr. Trump directed at his own team. There was plenty of tension to defuse...." ...

     ... digby: "I'm a little disappointed. The Great Negotiator should have emerged from any meeting with the RNC giving him the nomination by acclamation, amirite? Shouldn't Preibus have come out and stood behind Trump at a press conference like the newest Trump butler?"

... Catherine Rampell of the Washington Post: "Remember the Republican 'autopsy' report from the 2012 campaign, the GOP's 100-page investigation into why it lost the last presidential election and what it had to do to resurrect itself? Donald Trump has essentially set fire to that report. He's done the exact opposite of almost every recommendation Republican analysts said the party needed to adopt if the party wanted to survive."

Zeke Miller of Time: "Donald Trump's announcement that he no longer stands by a pledge to support the GOP has thrown his hold on South Carolina's 50 delegates in doubt. The Palmetto State was one of several that required candidates to pledge their loyalty to the party's eventual nominee in order to secure a slot on the primary ballot. Though Trump won all of the state's delegates in the Feb. 20 primary, anti-Trump forces are plotting to contest their binding to Trump because of his threat on the pledge Tuesday."

John Cassidy of the New Yorker: "Some of the Republicans trying to prevent [Donald Trump] from becoming the Party's Presidential nominee believe that they're finally making progress.... The Never Trump folks are harrying the front-runner constantly. With the spotlight on him, the cracks in his candidacy are becoming all too visible.... He is still in a strong strategic position and remains the firm favorite, even as cracks are showing."

** The Banana Republic of Trump. Brian Beutler muses on the various ways a Trump presidency might play out. Well-worth reading. CW: What struck me, though Beutler doesn't directly mention it, is how our governmental institutions offer little protection against a single unstable individual -- if the electorate first gives him/her the means to do so -- could take over & destroy the entire system. It's a flawed system, one that's easily exploited by people of bad faith. This isn't a surprise; it's been evident at least since Newt Gingrich became Speaker of the House. (Also linked yesterday.)

We're Still Checking. Toby Eckert of Politico: "Donald Trump's campaign released a letter from his tax attorneys Wednesday night saying Trump's personal tax returns 'have been under continuous examination by the Internal Revenue Service since 2002,' a reason the GOP presidential candidate has cited for not releasing his returns. The March 7 letter from Sheri A. Dillon and William F. Nelson says audits of Trump's returns for 2009 'and forward' are ongoing and says all of the audits are 'consistent with the IRS' practice for large and complex businesses.'" (Also linked yesterday afternoon.) ...

     ... CW: What is "consistent with IRS practices" is that the agency will repeatedly audit an individual whose earlier audits have found the taxpayer had underpaid his taxes. This letter doesn't help Trump except with his base; rather, it suggests he consistently cheats on his taxes. Big surprise.

Back to the Future. Michael Barbaro of the New York Times: "Bookended by advertisements for Trojan condoms and Malibu Ultra Light cigarettes, [a 1990] interview in Playboy magazine is a remarkably prophetic document.... Donald J. Trump sat down with Glenn Plaskin, a celebrity columnist, and ... enumerated a grievance-filled economic agenda, a searing denunciation of weak-kneed American leadership and a keen understanding of his appeal to blue-collar Americans that uncannily resemble the White House campaign he is waging today...." (Also linked yesterday.)

Nolan McCaskill: "Donald Trump won't be able to mount a third-party bid for president if he loses the Republican nomination, Ted Cruz said Thursday. 'He doesn't have the option of running as a third-party [candidate],' the Texas senator told Wisconsin radio host Charlie Sykes. 'Quite a few states across the country have what are called sore-loser laws, that once you run as a Republican and lose, you don't get to then turn around and file on the ballot as an independent, so that will not be an option available to him.'" ...

... CW: If Politico had better reporters, they would have rebutted Cruz in their story. Ballotpedia, ca. October 2015: "Some states bar candidates who sought, but failed, to secure the nomination of a political party from running as independents in the general election. Ballot access expert Richard Winger has noted that, generally speaking, 'sore loser laws have been construed not to apply to presidential primaries.' In August 2015, Winger compiled a list of precedents supporting this interpretation. According to Winger, 45 states have sore loser laws on the books, but in 43 of these states the laws do not seem to apply to presidential candidates. Sore loser laws apply to presidential candidates in only two states: South Dakota and Texas." ...

     ... CW Update: McCaskill wrote to me, "It seems like there's a bit of a split on the application of the laws, though. Someone tweeted me a story from Conservative Review after it contacted every state, and 15 said they have sore-loser laws that apply to presidential candidates. Here's a link to that: https://www.conservativereview.com/commentary/2016/03/trump-independent-bid-all-but-impossible But I certainly agree with your point that it would have enhanced the story to have more context regarding the veracity of Sen. Cruz's claim." Now I feel bad for dissing his reporting."

Dave Weigel of the Washington Post: "With growing confidence about a big potential win in Wisconsin, Sen. Ted Cruz (R-Tex.) is trying to discredit Ohio Gov. John Kasich's campaign before it gets to more favorable ground. In interviews this week, Cruz has repeatedly invoked the RNC's rule 40b, which allows candidates to be nominated only if they've won total delegate majorities in eight states or more. That rule, hastily written in 2012 after then-Rep. Ron Paul of Texas nearly grabbed enough wins to be nominated, is now favored by allies of both Cruz and Donald Trump as a way of making Kasich -- or any establishment 'savior' -- irrelevant." ...

... AP: "Ted Cruz's presidential campaign is trying to knock opponent John Kasich off Montana's primary by questioning signatures the Ohio governor's campaign submitted to qualify for the ballot - another subplot in the unfolding political drama to derail Donald Trump's presidential bid." (Also linked yesterday afternoon.)

Tom Jensen of Public Policy Polling: "PPP's newest national poll finds that Mitt Romney and Paul Ryan wouldn't exactly be the solution to the GOP's Donald Trump problem.... Romney is incredibly unpopular nationally now- his 23/65 favorability rating is even worse than the 29/63 Trump comes in at. Clinton (45/32) and Sanders (48/31) each lead Romney by double digit margins. Ryan would trail Clinton 44/39 and Sanders 45/38, numbers not terribly dissimilar to how Trump polls against each of them."

Beyond the Beltway

Jesse McKinley & Vivian Yee of the New York Times: "Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo and state legislative leaders announced on Thursday that they had reached a budget agreement that would raise the minimum wage in New York City to $15 by the end of 2018, but initiate slower increases elsewhere, even in the city's wealthy suburbs. For Mr. Cuomo, the wage agreement came with clear concessions, as some lawmakers outside the city won a softer phase-in period. Long Island and Westchester County will not reach a $15 wage for nearly six years; areas north of Westchester are assured only of reaching $12.50 by 2021."

AP: "A federal judge has overturned Mississippi's ban on allowing same-sex couples to adopt. US district judge Daniel Jordan, in a preliminary injunction issued Thursday, ruled for four couples who had sued, saying the ban is unconstitutional after recent US supreme court decisions legalizing gay marriage and benefits for gay couples."

Liam Dillon & Patrick McGreevy of the Los Angeles Times: "In a move that puts California at the forefront of efforts to raise wages for low-income workers across the country, the Legislature approved a sweeping plan Thursday to raise the minimum wage to $15 an hour over the next six years, boosting the future paychecks of millions of the state's workers. The Senate voted 26 to 12 -- with loud cheers of [Si se puede' from the gallery above -- to give final approval and send the measure to Gov. Jerry Brown's desk less than one week after a legislative compromise. Brown will sign the wage hike into law in Los Angeles on Monday."

Richmond Times-Dispatch: "Virginia State Police Superintendent W. Steven Flaherty said Thursday night that a state trooper shot by a man at Richmond's Greyhound bus station has died from his wounds.... [The shooter] was then fatally wounded as two troopers returned fire. Two civilians were injured in the gunfire that erupted about 2:45 p.m."

Amber Phillips of the Washington Post: "Anyone who has doubts about the importance of journalists in 2016 need [sic!] be acquainted only with the reporting team at AL.com, the largest statewide news organization in Alabama. The group's reporters cracked open a scandal involving their governor's alleged infidelity last week and have been covering the unpredictable fallout aggressively ever since.... Alabama lawmakers, led by Republicans, are looking at ways to impeach [Gov. Robert Bentley (R)] or set up a recall.... The story stretches far beyond sex, though. It's also connected to an ethics trial of the House speaker and a shadowy nonprofit that paid [Bentley paramour Rebekah] Mason's communications firm about $320,000 at the time of her resignation. As AL.com reporter Leada Gore said: 'It's got every part of a scandal you could want.'"

Nathaniel Rich in the New York Times Magazine: "Over the course of 4 months, 97,100 metric tons of methane quietly leaked out of a single well into California's sky. Scientists and residents are still trying to figure out just how much damage was done."

Patrick McGeehan of the New York Times: "A new round of testing has found high levels of lead in water at more schools in Newark, including at least two charter schools, according to results the school district released on Thursday. Nearly a quarter of the water samples collected in the school buildings tested last week had lead concentrations above 15 parts per billion, which is the federal Environmental Protection Agency's threshold for taking action."

What's the Matter with Kansas?, Ctd. Erik Eckholm of the New York Times: "... in Kansas. Gov. Sam Brownback and other conservative Republicans have expressed outrage over State Supreme Court decisions that overturned death penalty verdicts, blocked anti-abortion laws and hampered Mr. Brownback's efforts to slash taxes and spending, and they are seeking to reshape a body they call unaccountable to the right-tilting public. At one point, the Legislature threatened to suspend all funding for the courts. The Supreme Court, in turn, ruled in February that the state's public schools must shut down altogether if poorer districts do not get more money.... Partisan conflict over courts has erupted in many of the 38 states where justices are either directly elected or, as in Kansas, face periodic retention elections...."

Susan Svrulga of the Washington Post: "The George Mason School of Law will be renamed in honor of the late U.S. Supreme Court Associate Justice Antonin Scalia.... The university announced Thursday that it has received $30 million in combined gifts to the George Mason Foundation to support the law school, the largest gift in the university’s history.... Twenty million dollars came from an anonymous donor, and $10 million came from the Charles Koch Foundation.... Leonard A. Leo..., who was close with Scalia and his family, was approached by a donor who asked that the university name the law school in honor of the late justice, and offered a $20 million donation." CW: I'll bet it will be one of those "slower-track" schools Scalia liked so much. ...

... Elie Mystal of Above the Law: "Good lord. You are deemphasizing the name of a founding father to honor a man who fetishisized the beliefs held at the founding? A guy who didn't go there, or have any connection to the school, who wouldn't have hired a George Mason law student as a bathroom attendant, much less a Supreme Court clerk? That's the guy you are renaming your law school after? Your Twitter hashtag is now #ASSLaw (Antonin Scalia School of Law). Who was in second place, Donald Trump?" ...

... Gabrielle Bluestone of Gawker: "'By and large,' Scalia told an American University of Law student in 2009, 'I'm going to be picking from the law schools that basically are the hardest to get into. They admit the best and the brightest, and they may not teach very well, but you can't make a sow's ear out of a silk purse. If they come in the best and the brightest, they're probably going to leave the best and the brightest, OK?' At the time, American was ranked 45th. George Mason is currently ranked 45th." CW: Yup. Slower-track.

News Ledes

Bloomberg: "Employment in the U.S. climbed and wages picked up in March, signs of labor-market durability in the face of lethargic global growth. The 215,000 gain in payrolls followed a revised 245,000 February advance, a Labor Department report showed Friday. Average hourly earnings increased 0.3 percent from a month earlier, while the jobless rate crept up to 5 percent as more people entered the labor force."

Washington Post: "In several Latin American nations hit hard by the Zika epidemic, the transmission of the virus appears to have peaked, with the number of infections declining in recent weeks...."

Hill: "The State Department issued a new travel warning on Syria to U.S. citizens Thursday, saying that 'fighting still persists' and advising against visiting the war-torn country." CW: Drat! Here I was planning a nice visit to Damascus with a side trip to Palmyra.