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Month: July 2018

The Christian swamp

The Christian swamp

by digby

Would Jesus be a lobbyist? It seems like a stretch.

With a lineup of prayer meetings, humanitarian forums and religious panels, the National Prayer Breakfast has long brought together people from all over the world for an agenda built around the teachings of Jesus.

But there on the guest list in recent years was Maria Butina, looking to meet high-level American officials and advance the interests of the Russian state, and Yulia Tymoshenko, a Ukranian opposition leader, seeking a few minutes with President Trump to burnish her credentials as a presidential prospect back home.

Their presence at the breakfast illuminates the way the annual event has become an international influence-peddling bazaar, where foreign dignitaries, religious leaders, diplomats and lobbyists jockey for access to the highest reaches of American power.

The subculture around the breakfast was thrust into the spotlight last week with the indictment of Ms. Butina, who was charged with conspiring to act as a Russian agent. Her goals, prosecutors said, included gaining access to the breakfast “to establish a back channel of communication” between influential Russians and Americans “to promote the political interests of the Russian Federation.”

Ms. Butina’s spy-thriller-like tactics hint at the more widespread, if less sensational, international maneuvering that pervades the prayer breakfast, and the lucrative opportunities it creates for Washington’s corps of lobbyists and fixers, according to more than half a dozen people who have been involved in peddling access around the event.

Ahead of Mr. Trump’s first appearance at the breakfast last year, some of the people said, foreign politicians clamored for tickets, with some offering to pay steep fees to get into the event and the myriad gatherings on its sidelines.

This is a bipartisan scheme and it predates Trump. But the Religious Industrial Complex has been dominated by the right for a very long time. If people were using this meeting to make contacts and money, it was pretty much exclusively a way to leverage the right not the left. This is their special swamp.

It appears that foreign leaders have understood the depth of the religious industrial complex’s cynicism better than Americans for a very long time.

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It’s the women, stupid

It’s the women, stupid

by digby

That headline could apply to a whole lot of news stories but in this case, it’s about the Democratic Party:

With almost 2-1 backing from women, Democrats take a 51 – 39 percent lead in hypothetical races for the U.S. House of Representatives this year, according to a Quinnipiac University National Poll released today.

Women back Democratic candidates 57 – 32 percent, the independent Quinnipiac (KWIN-uh-pe-ack) University National Poll finds. Men are divided with 46 percent going Republican and 44 percent for Democrats. White voters are divided with 46 percent for Democrats and 45 percent for Republicans. Black voters go Democratic 78 – 16 percent and Hispanic voters back Democrats 66 – 23 percent.

The key block of independent voters backs Democratic candidates 50 – 33 percent.

American voters disapprove 66 – 27 percent of the job Republicans in Congress are doing and disapprove of Democrats in Congress 63 – 30 percent.

Mid-terms are referendums on the president. And women loathe and despise Donald Trump.

Here’s another poll:

I don’t know how many of those disapproving rural voters are women but I’d guess most of them are women too.

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Donnie Junior’s new girl is perfect for him

Donnie Junior’s new girl is perfect for him

by digby

It appears that former Fox pundit Kimberly Guilfoyle did not leave her cushy job voluntarily:

Guilfoyle’s departure was initially billed as her decision. However, as HuffPost first reported last week, multiple sources said she did not leave the network voluntarily. They said Guilfoyle was informed her time at Fox News was up following a human resources investigation into allegations of inappropriate behavior including sexual misconduct, and that her lawyers had been involved since the spring. Sources also said that despite being told she would have to leave by July, Guilfoyle repeatedly attempted to delay her exit and tried to have her allies appeal to Rupert Murdoch, the executive chairman of 21st Century Fox, the parent company of Fox News, to let her stay at the network.

This story is based on interviews conducted over the past year with 21 sources inside and outside Fox News and 21st Century Fox. All sources spoke to HuffPost on the condition of anonymity because they aren’t authorized to speak to the press, did not want to raise Guilfoyle’s ire or have signed nondisclosure agreements that prevent them from speaking to others about their experiences.

Guilfoyle announced Tuesday that she had left Fox News.

She seems nice.

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Who’s Trump’s daddy?

Who’s Trump’s daddy?

by digby

According to John Bolton, Vlad’s not coming to the White House until after the “witch hunt” is over.He’s summoning his employee to Moscow instead.

Russia President Vladimir Putin on Friday said he invited President Donald Trump to Russia for another face-to-face meeting — a meeting the White House says Trump is open to.

“We are ready to invite President Trump to Moscow. He has, by the way, such an invitation, I told him about it,” Putin said in Johannesburg, South Africa, where he is there for an economic summit, NBC News reports.

The announcement comes two days after the White House announced it is delaying a second meeting between the two leaders.

White House press secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders said in a statement that: “President Trump looks forward to having President Putin to Washington after the first of the year, and he is open to visiting Moscow upon receiving a formal invitation.”

This looks like a classic dominance play to me. And I’d guess Vlad will be the big winner.

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A little too little, a little too late

A little too little, a little too late

by digby

Please. Waiting until three months before the election to call for a meeting about election security is a joke:

President Donald Trump will chair a full meeting of the National Security Council on Friday to discuss election security, two White House officials said.

National security adviser John Bolton is also hosting two Cabinet-level NSC principals committee meetings this week: one Thursday focused on Iran and one Friday on North Korea, the officials said. Bolton has come under criticism from some Trump administration officials for holding few high-level NSC meetings.

The meeting on election security comes about a week after Trump appeared to raise doubts about the intelligence community’s assessment that Russia was continuing to target the United States. He later said he believes his administration’s statements on the issue.

U.S. intelligence officials believe that Russia will try to interfere in this year’s mid-term elections, echoing their efforts to disrupt the 2016 presidential election in a bid to boost Trump.

“We have been clear in our assessments of Russian meddling in the 2016 election and their ongoing, pervasive efforts to undermine our democracy, and we will continue to provide unvarnished and objective intelligence in support of our national security,” Director of National Intelligence Dan Coats said last week after Trump seemed to side with Russian President Vladimir Putin on the subject during a press conference in Helsinki.

I’m sure they haven’t convened a meeting until now because Trump has been too busy. He has a lot of tweeting and TV watching to do.

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Sopranos only dumber

Sopranos only dumber

by digby

I’ve been noting for a while that this Cohen business has Trump even more unhinged than usual. I think that’s true. Cohen threatens the Trump Organization.

As President Donald Trump absorbed the news that Michael Cohen, his former personal attorney and notorious “fixer,” had released a secret recording of the two of them, he did what he usually does in such situations: swore and groused loudly.

Two sources who have spoken to Trump about Cohen this week said the president was furious—hurling “expletives,” per one confidant—after CNN revealed Cohen had covertly recorded at least one of their conversations. On Tuesday, the cable network published audio, provided to it by Cohen’s attorney, of Trump and his former fixer discussing purchasing the rights to former Playboy Playmate Karen McDougal’s story alleging she had an affair with Trump.

American Media Inc. (AMI), the parent company of the National Enquirer, owns the rights to the story. And David Pecker, a longtime Trump ally, helmed AMI. But, according to a source familiar with the Trump-Cohen conversation, Pecker had told Trump he was considering leaving AMI, prompting fears in Trumpland that a new leader at the company could decide to publish McDougal’s story. Such fears prompted Trump and Cohen to look into buying the rights to the story themselves, according to the source. Ultimately, Pecker stayed at AMI and Trump opted not to purchase the story rights.

Rudy Giuliani, Trump’s attorney, told The Daily Beast he had “no knowledge” of the discussion between Trump and Pecker. A spokesperson for AMI did not respond to a request for comment on the matter.

After audio of the call surfaced, the president conveyed to those close to him that he felt betrayed by Cohen. He was particularly irate at being clandestinely recorded and that audio had found its way to, of all places, CNN, a frequent target of Trump’s tweets. Trump also vented his frustration that there are apparently other tapes out there, and that he doesn’t know exactly what could be on them, or when they’ll drop in the press.

On Thursday evening that next shoe dropped, only it wasn’t in the form of an audio recording. CNN (again) reported that Cohen was willing to attest that Trump had lied when he claimed he had no prior knowledge of the infamous campaign meeting his eldest son helped organized with Russians at Trump Tower.

Giuliani denied the latest allegation to CNN and called Cohen a chronic liar. But the episode is likely to further anger the president, who has been simmering over the Cohen matter for days.

In his three most recent tweets about his former lawyer, Trump has declined to write “Michael” or “Cohen,” as he has in other tweets about him this year. The slight is not by accident, according to multiple people who have known Trump for years. The president, they say, will often stop using people’s names if he’s convinced they’re turncoats, or if he suddenly finds them big enough “losers” not worth the attention.

On Friday morning, Trump continued using this tactic, referring to his former loyalist as “he,” “him,” and “someone.”

“I did NOT know of the meeting with my son, Don jr. Sounds to me like someone is trying to make up stories in order to get himself out of an unrelated jam (Taxi cabs maybe?). He even retained Bill and Crooked Hillary’s lawyer. Gee, I wonder if they helped him make the choice!” the president posted to Twitter.

“They’re dead to each other [now],” said another source close to the president who also knows Cohen.

Trump allies are already gaming out how to, in the words of one outside adviser to the president, “bury” Cohen.

A Cohen ally brushed off the impending attacks, calling Giuliani and his associates “the gang who can’t shoot straight.”

Reached for comment, Cohen referred The Daily Beast to his lawyer Lanny Davis. Davis said Cohen is not concerned about any coming attacks from the president’s allies and surrogates. “When you’ve got truth on your side, you’re not afraid of anything,” he said. “So what are they afraid of?”

“When Michael Cohen came to me, I spent two weeks asking him about what he had done in the past for Mr. Trump and what he wanted to do in the future,” Davis continued. “I decided to represent him after hearing the answers to both of those questions and listening and watching what he was willing to say on TV to George Stephanopoulos. That’s when I made my decision. He has hit the reset button, he’s made a turn—to be on his own, speaking the truth.”

Several of Cohen’s associates have told The Daily Beast that Cohen—who for years publicly branded himself as the ultimate Trump loyalist—chose to publicize elements of his relationship with Trump once he realized that his loyalty would not be reciprocated.

Many were surprised it took him so long to realize this. The president passed over Cohen for a plum administration gig—Cohen had told friends he expected to be tapped as White House chief of staff—and displayed a nasty habit of making Cohen appear like a nuisance among peers.

Two sources with direct knowledge of Trump and Cohen’s relationship over the years tell The Daily Beast that during the 2016 presidential run, Cohen would often wander into rooms in Trump Tower where the GOP frontrunner and his senior advisers were having meetings on political strategy and other campaign-related matters. Cohen, according to these sources, would try to interject, only to have Trump tell him to leave and say they’d talk later. “Get out, Michael,” Trump ordered during one particular moment of annoyance.

Through it all, Cohen remained a committed Trump ally. But in the months after the feds raided his office, he began to feel abandoned by the president. The sense that he could be left as a potential fall-guy ultimately convinced him to go on offense.

Cohen has told associates he believes there is no going back on his latest moves, and that he expects to be finished with the president for the rest of his life.

“He has… made his peace with the loss of his friend,” one friend of Cohen assessed.

The Sopranos look like very stable geniuses by comparison.

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The week that was by @BloggersRUs

The week that was
by Tom Sullivan

And the week ain’t over yet.

Trump-Russia news roared in like a California wildfire last night. News broke from CNN that former Donald Trump attorney Michael Cohen is prepared to tell special counsel Robert Mueller that Trump knew in advance about his campaign’s infamous June 9, 2016 Trump Tower meeting with Russian emissaries offering dirt on Hillary Clinton. “Sources” say. CNN did not elaborate. NBC News followed up, saying its reporters had confirmed the story via “a knowledgeable source.” Also unnamed.

CNN reported:

Cohen alleges that he was present, along with several others, when Trump was informed of the Russians’ offer by Trump Jr. By Cohen’s account, Trump approved going ahead with the meeting with the Russians, according to sources.

To be clear, these sources said Cohen does not have evidence, such as audio recordings, to corroborate his claim, but he is willing to attest to his account.

The credibility of the news source or sources has yet to be verified. One item to note, however. The byline on the original CNN report includes Carl Bernstein.

The rest of the night was pundits and panels chomping on what it meant for Trump and the Mueller investigation. Lanny Davis, one of Cohen’s lawyers, declined to comment. Rudy Giuliani, Trump’s attorney, told CNN, “I expected something like this from Cohen—he’s been lying all week, he’s been lying for years.” Cohen, who Giuliani described in May as “an honest, honorable lawyer,” has no credibility, Giuliani argued. Former U.S. attorney Andy McCarthy argued on Fox News, “Look, I don’t think that it’s bad if campaigns are turning to foreign governments for dirt. It’s not collusion. It’s not something that’s impeachable; it’s icky, but that’s what this is.”

The ever-shifting Trump Tower story line has arrived at the final fallback, Josh Marshall replied: “Collusion is awesome.”

It was a dizzying 24 hours worth of news Adele Stan summarized in over a dozen tweets. In addition to the CNN scoop, here are a few:

One missing story is this minor development:

The special counsel, Robert S. Mueller III, is scrutinizing tweets and negative statements from the president about Attorney General Jeff Sessions and the former F.B.I. director James B. Comey, according to three people briefed on the matter.

Several of the remarks came as Mr. Trump was also privately pressuring the men — both key witnesses in the inquiry — about the investigation, and Mr. Mueller is examining whether the actions add up to attempts to obstruct the investigation by both intimidating witnesses and pressuring senior law enforcement officials to tamp down the inquiry.

In his morning tweets on the Cohen story from CNN, the sitting president denies everything.

Hold on tight for the Friday night news dump.

* * * * * * * * *

For The Win 2018 is ready for download. Request a copy of my county-level election mechanics primer at tom.bluecentury at gmail.

Stormy was set-up

Stormy was set-up

by digby

Shocking, I know, but it turns out that Trump-loving police officers set up Trump’s nemesis Stormy Daniels:

In an exclusive investigation, the Advocate has obtained emails from a whistleblower from inside the Columbus Police Department that outline the arrest of Stormy Daniels earlier this month may have been pre-planned days before she ever arrived in town.

Columbus Police arrested the adult entertainer — who claims to have had an affair with then-private citizen Donald Trump in 2006 — on July 12. Police said that Daniels violated an Ohio law by “touching” club-goers, who were actually undercover VICE officers. The charges were dismissed 12 hours later after Daniels hired Columbus defense attorney Chase Mallory. Columbus City Attorney Zach Klein said the elements were not met in the charges and that is why the cases were tossed out. Columbus Police Chief Kim Jacobs apologized and called it a “mistake.”

Within hours of her arrest, Daniels’ personal attorney Michael Avenatti called it a political hit-job and vowed to investigate.

A whistleblower from the City of Columbus contacted the Advocate with numerous emails between several high-ranking Columbus police detectives and VICE officers.

Inside the emails are news clippings discussing Daniels’ planned appearance in Columbus, pictures of Daniels with President Donald Trump, videos of her dancing, and even a map to the club where she would be performing, all sent days before she would pull into town on her tour bus.

Columbus Vice Detective Shana Keckley
The bulk of the emails that the whistleblower provided are from the email account of Detective Shana Keckley. Keckley was one of the lead-arresting officers the night that the “sting” operation went down.

“It is clear that Keckley and her fellow officers were there because of Stormy and only because of Stormy,” the whistleblower told the Advocate in an interview.

Police said that Daniels was caught up in an investigation into human trafficking and prostitution the night she was arrested, but the emails released draw questions as to if Keckley and others targeted Daniel.

This may seem trivial. But when cops start acting on their own to set-up Trump’s critics we are looking at a potentially very big problem. It’s not ok.

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Yes, it’s getting worse

Yes, it’s getting worse

by digby

Bolton isn’t actually doing a good job as National Security adviser? Say it ain’t so…

National security adviser John Bolton’s effort to simplify the administration’s decision-making process is frustrating Secretary of State Mike Pompeo and Defense Secretary James Mattis and causing confusion about the United States’ position on major issues including Russia, according to officials familiar with the situation.

Mattis has gone so far as to draft a letter to Bolton requesting that he hold more gatherings of agency and department chiefs “to smooth the bubble” on thorny issues ranging from U.S. policy in Syria to North Korea, according to one senior administration official. In particular, senior officials are concerned about the dearth of “principals committee” meetings scheduled by Bolton, officials say. Principals committee meetings are traditionally key forums for relevant Cabinet bosses to prepare and recommend policy options for the president.

Of special concern is the U.S. relationship with Russia, especially since Trump’s July 16 meeting with Russian President Vladimir Putin with only translators present. Officials across U.S. agencies have been trying to figure out what Trump and Putin discussed. Russian officials, meanwhile, have taken advantage of the U.S. confusion to make a series of announcements about what they say Trump and Putin agreed upon. Bolton did not convene any principals committee meetings to discuss the Trump-Putin summit ahead of time, and hasn’t held any such meetings on the issue since the event took place.

[…]

“He doesn’t want to ‘meeting’ an issue to death,” said one White House official. “He wants to make the bureaucratic process more efficient so that decisions can be made at the principals level.”

But across the U.S. national security establishment, there’s a growing sense of a breakdown in the policy process since Bolton took over the National Security Council on April 9.

“The rest of the government doesn’t really know what the policy is. There’s no record, there’s no decision form. There’s nothing out there to fall back on,” said Ivo Daalder, a former U.S. ambassador to NATO who is now president of the Chicago Council on Global Affairs. “Countries that we deal with don’t really know what our policy is because people in the government don’t know.”

What could go wrong?

Bolton is a very dangerous person and he may be doing this on purpose to keep the power and decision making close to himself.

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Too extreme even for Paul Ryan

Too extreme even for Paul Ryan

by digby


Insanity:

House Republican members of the conservative Freedom Caucus introduced articles of impeachment against Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein on Wednesday — the latest salvo in an ongoing back-and-forth between some in the GOP over the Justice Department’s handling of the Russia probe.

The 11 lawmakers accuse the Department of Justice of “intentionally withholding embarrassing documents and information,” and allege the agency hid investigative information from Congress, abused the Federal Intelligence Surveillance Act and failed to comply with subpoenas, according to a statement.

It took him a while but he finally spoke up:

House Speaker Paul Ryan (R-Wisc.) said Thursday that he agrees the Justice Department should comply with congressional requests for information related to the Russia investigation, but that Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein’s slow-walking of documents does not warrant impeachment, Politico reports.

“I don’t think we should be cavalier with this process or this term. Number two, I don’t think this rises to the level of high crimes and misdemeanors, which is a really high standard.”
— Speaker Paul Ryan.

Big of him.

Jim Jordan announced that he’s running to be Speaker after Ryan steps down. Apparently, being accused of enabling sexual abuse of college athletes is no impediment to GOP leadership. But then, look at the president … the entire GOP is led by sexual abusers.

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