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Month: December 2018

But Devin told us we could say whatever we wanted!

But Devin told us we could say whatever we wanted!

by digby

I wrote about this the other day for Salon. Trump’s henchmen in the House didn’t do his minions any favors by letting them lie with impunity and without immunity. Reuters reports:

Trump’s son-in-law Jared Kushner, son Donald Trump Jr, former advisers Roger Stone and Corey Lewandowski, personal aide Rhona Graff and former personal aides Hope Hicks and Keith Schiller all testified before the House Intelligence Committee while it was under control of its outgoing Republican majority.

The sources said the transcripts of those interviews will be among those sent to Mueller’s team, which is investigating Russia’s alleged interference in the 2016 presidential election and possible collusion by Trump’s campaign team.

Trump’s former personal lawyer, Michael Cohen, last week pleaded guilty to lying to two congressional committees about a proposed Trump Organization skyscraper in Moscow, including efforts to push ahead with the project even as Trump was running for president.

That guilty plea triggered speculation that Democrats would push again to have the testimony of other Trump associates reviewed.

At a House Intelligence Committee meeting in late September, Republicans rejected a proposal by Democrats that the full transcripts of interviews conducted by the committee during its own probe into allegations of Russian election interference be sent to Mueller and his team.

Republicans did vote at that meeting to send 53 transcripts to the Director of National Intelligence for declassification and eventual release.

So far, the committee has only made public the transcripts of interviews with three witnesses: former Trump campaign adviser Carter Page, private military contractor Erik Prince, and Glenn Simpson, the founder of a research firm which hired a former British spy to produce a controversial dossier on alleged links between Trump and Russia.

A spokesman for the committee’s incoming Democratic chairman, Representative Adam Schiff, said sending the transcripts to Mueller would not constitute a recommendation that criminal charges be brought, although that has also not been ruled out.

What a shame …

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Pence just can’t get Trump’s boots shiny enough

Pence just can’t get Trump’s boots shiny enough

by digby

Gabe Sherman in Vanity Fair writes that Pence may be on the way out:

On Monday, Trump hosted a 2020 strategy meeting with a group of advisers. Among the topics discussed was whether Mike Pence should remain on the ticket, given the hurricane-force political headwinds Trump will face, as demonstrated by the midterms, a source briefed on the session told me. “They’re beginning to think about whether Mike Pence should be running again,” the source said, adding that the advisers presented Trump with new polling that shows Pence doesn’t expand Trump’s coalition. “He doesn’t detract from it, but he doesn’t add anything either,” the source said. Last month, The New York Times reported that Trump had been privately asking advisers if Pence could be trusted, and that outside advisers have been pushing Nikki Haley to replace Pence. One veteran of Trump’s 2016 campaign who’s still advising Trump told me the president hasn’t been focused enough on 2020. “What he needs to do is consider his team for 2020 and make sure it’s in place,” the adviser said. “He has to have people on his team that are loyal to his agenda.”

Trump’s doubts about Pence are surprising given Pence’s frequent public encomiums and professions of loyalty. “Trump waxes and wanes on everyone,” a prominent Republican close to the White House explained. Part of what’s driving the debate over Pence’s political value is Trump’s stalled search for a chief of staff to replace John Kelly. According to a source, Kelly has recently been telling Trump that Pence doesn’t help him politically. The theory is that Kelly is unhappy that Pence’s 36-year-old chief of staff, Nick Ayers, has been openly campaigning for Kelly’s job. “Kelly has started to get more political and he’s whispering to Trump that Trump needs a running mate who can help him more politically,” the source said. (The White House did not respond to a request for comment.)

It’s hard to believe that Trump would ditch the most servile, bootlicking supplicant on his team but he doesn’t care about anyone but himself so if he’s convinced Pence is a drag on the ticket, he’ll probably have John Kelly tell him to pack up in a heart beat.

On the other hand, Pence may be just smart enough to be relieved. His career is probably dead no matter what. So why submit ourself to either a humiliating defeat or four more years of groveling mortification? It’s possible that Trump will be removed from office but Pence is so damaged the best he can hope for is to be a short term caretaker. He’s done either way.

But you have to love this White House. No matter how much of a brown-nosing doormat you are, it’s never enough.

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Beautiful letters, great letters

Beautiful letters, great letters

by digby

“And then we fell in love, okay? No, really — he wrote me beautiful letters, and they’re great letters” — Trump on Kim Jong Un, 9/30/18

Yesterday:

New satellite images obtained exclusively by CNN reveal North Korea has significantly expanded a key long-range missile base located in the mountainous interior of the country, offering yet another reminder that diplomatic talks with the US have done little to prevent Kim Jong Un from pursuing his promise to mass produce and deploy the existing types of nuclear warheads in his arsenal.

The satellite imagery offers evidence that the Yeongjeo-dong missile base and a nearby, previously unreported site remain active and have been continuously upgraded, underscoring the reality of just how far apart Washington and Pyongyang are on the issue of denuclearization despite five months of sporadic talks.

While the base at Yeongjeo-dong has long been known to US intelligence agencies and analysts, researchers at the Middlebury Institute of International Studies at Monterey told CNN that the images reveal construction on a new facility just seven miles away from the older site that had not been previously publicly identified.

That’s working out nicely.

This too:

Sad!

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The Trumps are so dumb they might just get away with it

The Trumps are so dumb they might just get away with it
by digby

My Salon column this morning:

Recent revelations from special counsel Robert Mueller have been more intriguing than enlightening (at least so far) but they do indicate that there’s a whole lot of investigating going on. The Michael Cohen plea and sentencing memorandum, as well as the heavily redacted filing on Michael Flynn’s sentence, were full of tantalizing hints about various possible crimes in multiple jurisdictions. Perhaps the most interesting tidbits in those documents are those that indicate both Cohen and Flynn spent a massive number of hours being interviewed. As CNN’s Ron Brownstein said, “You can imagine meeting 19 times if someone was resisting you and not providing information. But if someone is cooperating, it doesn’t take 19 meetings for them to explain nothing unusual happened.” It’s clear that Cohen and Flynn have stories to tell. We only know pieces of what they are.

I can’t help but wonder whether Donald Trump and his family will be able to get away with whatever it is they’re suspected of simply because people will believe that they are just too dumb to have known better. I’m aware that’s not a legal excuse, but the future of all this is political as much as it is legal. And the great paradox of the Trump phenomenon is that while his followers believe he is a genius of epic proportions, everyone else can see that he’s monumentally stupid.

That could add up to is a reluctant acceptance that Trump can’t be held responsible for any of the things he’s suspected of doing. His voters will say that he was actually being “smart” (as he famously claimed was the reason he didn’t pay taxes), further degrading whatever standards we had for honesty and intelligence in public life. Everyone else will be stuck trying to refute the defense that he was an “outsider businessman” who didn’t know that his actions were unethical or illegal. Sure, we can all scream that that doesn’t or shouldn’t matter and that he must be held accountable regardless. But we’ll also probably have to acknowledge on some level that he was too simpleminded to understand the ramifications of his actions. He probably was.

Trump’s breathtaking arrogance in these matters might just allow him to barrel through. Take, for instance, his insistence that he has not obstructed justice but is simply “fighting back.” Surely criminals all think that they are just fighting back when they try to cover up their crimes, threaten witnesses or offer bribes. In their minds it’s self-defense. But Trump doesn’t know that he sounds like a criminal when he makes this excuse, therefore making himself look even guiltier. He thinks it’s a smart defense. Most of his followers take his word at face value and see him as heroically fighting the “deep state” on their behalf. The ones who know better see him as clever for twisting reality to frustrate his opponents, who become exasperated by his obtuse inability to understand reality.

Even Ivanka Trump, who everyone seemed to think was the smart one in the family, recently proved that she’s a chip off the old block too. When it was reported that Ivanka used a private email account for government business, the excuse was that she didn’t realize it wasn’t OK to do that. People assumed she was lying because no sentient being could have missed the scandal surrounding Hillary Clinton’s use of a private email for government business, least of all someone in Donald Trump’s family. But it’s really not unreasonable to believe that she didn’t think it would be a problem for her. After all, she and the family were meeting with various foreign businessmen and political leaders on behalf of the Trump Organization and the president-elect during the transition and saw nothing wrong with talking business during those meetings. I don’t think it occurred to them that there might be something unethical in doing that because they simply don’t understand what ethics are.

One of the great fallacies of American society is that you have to be smart if you have a lot of money. In the Trumps’ case we don’t actually know how much money they have, and it may not be nearly as much as Trump usually claims, They certainly have a lavish lifestyle and pretend to be fabulously wealthy and privileged, which they claim is all by dint of their brilliant business acumen. We know this is anything but the truth. Trump was born into money and actually squandered much of his father’s fortune. The kids haven’t shown much aptitude either. But they do have a gift for self -promotion, which isn’t based on brains but aggressive chutzpah, and that has allowed them to snow a lot of people, from bankers to TV executives to tens of millions of American voters.

Despite Trump’s “blue-collar billionaire” reputation, the family isn’t much different from many aristocratic dynasties. There’s a patriarch who made the money, and the generations that come after him are often a faded representation of the original. You go forward a couple more generations and it gets really obvious.

I came across a gossip item the other day about Tiffany Trump, the apparent black sheep of the family. She was in the bridal party of another heir to a great fortune: P.C. Peterson, the grandson of Peter Peterson, the late billionaire founder of the Blackstone Group and funder of right-wing causes. (P.C. had a brief stint on a Bravo reality show called “NYC Prep” a few years back, during which he made quite a splash as perhaps the most arrogant rich kid on the planet.)

Peterson married Quentin Esme Brown, the daughter of a New York real estate baron, in a Las Vegas ceremony attended by all manner of New York’s rich and shameless millennials. Brown announced the event on Instagram this way:

We have one life. Free yourself! P.S. We have never had sex. It’s pure friendship. Peter and I are not romantically involved — in fact we are still dating others and will continue to seek love in all forms — we are just each other’s hearts and wish to begin our journey towards evolution, because the more we face reality, the more we can see that there is no right or wrong.

That almost sounds like a Trump talking, except that it’s much too deep. They are incapable of getting even that philosophical.

I don’t know whether the Trumps will be able to escape the consequences of their actions. They are in the maw of the justice system now and much of their act is meaningless when it comes to facing the law. But if their crimes turn out to be mostly egregious ethical lapses coupled with a stunning lack of judgment, I won’t be surprised if they get a pass from many American voters. They are a bunch of spoiled, rich, shameless phonies who have been failing upward for two generations now. They still don’t have a clue. And that may be what saves them in the end.

… and this is now by BloggersRUs

… and this is now
by Tom Sullivan

After a Buncombe County, NC election recount in 2012, a colleague observed T-party members are convinced if they lose an election it must be because their opponents cheated. It’s almost Freudian.

On Wednesday, the North Carolina State Board of Elections confirmed it has issued subpoenas in the largest election fraud investigation in recent memory. Evidence surfaced in the NC-9 race that a team paid by Republican candidate and pastor, Mark Harris, had been illegally collecting absentee ballots from voters. Some of those ballots may have been destroyed. Harris’s campaign, Red Dome Group, and Bladen County Sheriff Jim McVicker’s campaign are a focus of state investigators.

The Board has refused to certify the results, pending a formal hearing on “claims of numerous irregularities” and “concerted fraudulent activities related to absentee mail ballots.” Harris led Democrat Dan McCready by 905 votes until Bladen County residents provided affidavits stating workers came to their doors and collected incomplete and unsealed absentee ballots.

The Board has the power to call a new election. The hearing must take place by Dec. 21.

BuzzFeed News examines the inner workings of the absentee ballot harvesting operation allegedly run by McCrae Dowless. The team tracked ballots by party and race and signed multiple ballots as witnesses:

Jessica Dowless described the scene in the small office at the intersection of two highways, where she worked on Harris’s behalf for the last two months as chaotic. One worker, she said, “was so fucking high the other day she passed out at the fucking computer.” One of the workers who collected absentee ballots from residents was a “pill head,” she said.

Dowless, whose husband is distantly related to McCrae Dowless, described herself as a “housewife [who] needed a part-time job” and said she was one of about six employees. She often worked six days a week tallying the number of Democrats and Republicans who had recently voted. However, she explained, there were times when she did not quite understand what she was doing or what the grand purpose was.

She did say, though, that campaign workers delivered sealed absentee ballots from the homes of people who requested them to McCrae Dowless’s office — though North Carolina law forbids third parties from handling those ballots.

McCrae had “wads and wads of cash,” for paying workers and even bought one woman a car to use after a week in the office, Jessica Dowless told BuzzFeed. Public records show the Bladen County Republican Executive Committee paid Jessica Dowless $240 and McCrae Dowless $940. WSOC-TV Charlotte reports the Harris campaign paid Red Dome more than $428,000. The North Carolina political consultant group in turn hired Dowless.

Dallas Woodhouse, executive chairman of the North Carolina Republican Party, spoke gravely of the issue of election fraud in 2016 during recounts of a close race between Republican incumbent governor Pat McCrory and Democrat Roy Cooper:

“Should the election board find that these are absentee ballot mills, with the purpose of fraudulent voting, those people should go to jail,” he told the radio show [This American Life]. “They should spend the first term of the Trump administration behind bars.”

Now Woodhouse sings a different tune and accuses Democrats of trying to steal the NC-9 election. From the Washington Post:

“We think they have abused their discretion and violated the statute,” Woodhouse said of the bipartisan election board on Nov. 27, the day it declined to certify Harris as the victor. “This will inevitably end up in court. The fact of the matter is Mark Harris won the race. He got more votes.”

On Twitter, he pointed to a culprit: “The democrats decided not to certify the results,” he wrote, “and everyone know[s] it.”

It is a familiar play from an old playbook, “Admit nothing, deny everything, launch counterattack.” Roger Stone’s playbook.

North Carolina is the pointed end of Republican efforts nationally to restrict access to voting to quell a supposed epidemic of voter fraud for which there is no evidence.

Nationally, the specter of voter fraud has also become a fixation for Republicans. But many of the prominent party officials who have complained about supposed voting issues, such as Sen. Marco Rubio (Fla.), House Speaker Paul D. Ryan (Wis.) and Kansas Secretary of State Kris Kobach have remained silent about the investigation in North Carolina. President Trump, who has made unsupported conspiracy theories and unfounded claims about fraudulent votes a hallmark of his presidency, also has said nothing about the issue in the state.

You really should read the whole BuzzFeed story.

No snitching on Trumpie

No snitching on Trumpie

by digby

Via Slate:

The newest big thing for our law-and-order tough-on-crime president is complaining that prosecutors can use charges against lower-level criminal figures to elicit testimony against higher-level figures—and praising convicted fraud enthusiast Paul Manafort for resisting the tactic:

Trump elaborated on this stop-snitching message in an interview that aired Wednesday morning on Fox News:

“This whole thing about ‘flipping,’ they call it … they get 10 years in jail and they flip on whoever the next highest one is, or as high as you can go. It almost ought to be outlawed—it’s not fair. … It’s called flipping and it ought to almost be illegal.”

This is, of course, a common prosecutorial pratice in the American legal system and one which Trump no doubt fully supports when it’s used against people of color and poor people. Trump is just a Mafia Don kvetching about his own people turning on him in order to save themselves. He demands loyalty but will stab one of his henchmen in the back on a moments notice if he needs to. And they know it.

Here’s his top adviser on the subject a while back:

And today:

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“Yeah, but I won’t be here”

“Yeah, but I won’t be here”

by digby

Here’s an interesting narcissistic rebuttal to Keynes’ famous quip “in the long run we’ll both be dead:”

Since the 2016 presidential campaign, Donald Trump’s aides and advisers have tried to convince him of the importance of tackling the national debt.

Sources close to the president say he has repeatedly shrugged it off, implying that he doesn’t have to worry about the money owed to America’s creditors—currently about $21 trillion—because he won’t be around to shoulder the blame when it becomes even more untenable.

The friction came to a head in early 2017 when senior officials offered Trump charts and graphics laying out the numbers and showing a “hockey stick” spike in the national debt in the not-too-distant future. In response, Trump noted that the data suggested the debt would reach a critical mass only after his possible second term in office.

“Yeah, but I won’t be here,” the president bluntly said, according to a source who was in the room when Trump made this comment during discussions on the debt.

I don’t really care about deficits much either, especially when they grow as a result of an economic downturn. That’s how the economy is managed to avoid as much human misery as possible. But consciously exploding the deficit in good times is actually a Republican trick going way back, even if Trump is taking it to extremes. They do this to hamper progressive programs when they inevitably take over to clean up the GOP’s messes. Their goal is to deconstruct the welfare state whenever possible and one way to do that is to sabotage the economy and then hold vital programs hostage to the deficits they caused. And they can blame the Democerats for doing it! So much winning.

Trump has a completely different motive, of course. He just wants to be Santa Claus for his cult and doesn’t care what happens to the country in any case. It’s all about him. But his needs and desires dovetail nicely with traditional GOP goals in this case so they are fine with it.

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Mainstream Republican bigots o’ the day

Mainstream Republican bigots o’ the day

by digby

News about them seems to be clustered in Texas this week, but we know they’re everywhere, right?

The first time Shahid Shafi ran for a seat on the city council in Southlake, Tex., in 2011, advisers assured him a Muslim in post-9/11 America who spoke with an accent and emigrated from Pakistan would never win an election in Texas.

It’s a story that Shafi, a Republican trauma surgeon, likes to tell because he didn’t believe them. He won the Southlake City Council seat on his second try, in 2014, has since served as a delegate to multiple Texas GOP conventions and, in July, was appointed vice chairman of the Tarrant County Republican Party, located in Fort Worth.

But that’s when his religion somehow became a problem again — in the eyes of some Republican colleagues.

Shafi hadn’t held the position in the North Texas county for more than a couple of days before a precinct chairwoman urged Darl Easton, chairman of the Tarrant County Republican Party, to “reconsider” appointing Shafi to a leadership role, a request that was soon echoed by several other precinct chairs.

“The only reason she had was because he was a Muslim,” Easton told The Washington Post. “That was the only reason she gave.”

Since then, that precinct chairwoman, Dorrie O’Brien, and a small group of her supporters have put forth a formal motion to remove Shafi as vice chairman because of his religion, a motion that is slated for a vote Jan. 10. To Easton, who opposes the measure, the move is an embarrassment to the Republican Party. And to Shafi, it amounts to exactly what he believed did not exist in the United States when he arrived here 28 years ago: a religious test.

Apparently some of the other Texas Republicans have said this is wrong. But it sounds as though it’s a lot like when Paul Ryan denounces Trump’s disgusting behavior: tepidly and feaarfully. They know their voters approve. Which is disgusting. But they do.

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Sherrod Brown keeping it real

Sherrod Brown keeping it real

by digby

I don’t know if Brown is going to run. He says he’s thinking about it. But I think he explains the populist worldview in a very compelling, down to earth, non-abstract way that can appeal to people across ideological lines. I hope he runs. I think he will add something important to the political conversation and if he takes fire I would happily vote for him.

*Standard disclaimer that I am not endorsing anybody. This is going to be a brutal primary with lots of different voices and while I’m not looking forward to the fight, I do hope the various factions of the Party are well represented. If it’s going to be a fight, I want it to be a fair one.

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Can you see what’s wrong with this picture?

Can you see what’s wrong with this picture?

by digby

One of these things is not like the other:

I noted on twitter that everything that was said in the sulogies for President Bush today sounded like a rebuke to Trump. I’m sure they weren’t meant that way. This was different than the Mccain funeral. But nonetheless it’s unavoidable. What people say in any eulogy simply cannot be applied to our current President and everyon who hears those words can’t help but be struck by it.

I honestly can’t imagine his funeral. Maybe they’ll hold a MAGA rally and have the family shout “lock her up” instead of hymns and prayers. I don’t know what else they could do.

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