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Month: May 2019

Where can I find the “no congressional do-over” clause in the constitution?

Where can I find the “no congressional do-over” clause in the constitution?

by digby

Basically the White House is saying that they will decide what the congress’s job is. Because Trump is our king, apparently:

The White House’s top lawyer told the House Judiciary Committee chairman Wednesday that Congress has no right to a “do-over” of the special counsel’s investigation of President Trump and refused a broad demand for records and testimony from dozens of current and former White House staff.

White House Counsel Pat Cipollone’s letter to committee Chairman Jerrold Nadler (D-N.Y.) constitutes a sweeping rejection — not just of Nadler’s request for White House records, but of Congress’s standing to investigate Trump for possible obstruction of justice. In his letter, Cipollone repeated a claim the White House and Trump’s business have begun making: that Congress is not a law enforcement body and does not have a legitimate purpose to investigate the questions it is pursuing.

But Cipollone stopped short of asserting executive privilege. Instead, he told Nadler he would consider a narrowed request if the chairman spells out the legislative purpose and legal support for the information he is seeking.

“Congressional investigations are intended to obtain information to aid in evaluating potential legislation, not to harass political opponents or to pursue an unauthorized ‘do-over’ of exhaustive law enforcement investigations conducted by the Department of Justice,” Cipollone wrote.

Cipollone said the release of special counsel Robert S. Mueller III’s report now makes Congress’s questions moot. He stressed that probe was “exhaustive” — the product of 2,800 subpoenas, 500 executed search warrants and 500 witness interviews — and that the president supported the report’s full release “in the interest of transparency.”

“The appropriate course is for the Committee to discontinue the inquiry,” he wrote. “Unfortunately, it appears that you have already decided to press ahead with a duplicative investigation, including by issuing subpoenas, to replow the same ground the Special Counsel has already covered.”

All of this is going to come as a surprise to the people who ran over 10 Benghazi investigations, 8 years of Whitewater investigations, including several Independent counsels and dozens of congressional probes.

I realize those we all ok because they were in pursuit of Democrats and so posed a threat to the nation. But still, it certainly shines new light on the last 40 years of our political history. Apparently, congress needed to prove to the White House that it had a purpose they approve of before they would agree to cooperate.

This is new.

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The imperial presidency in full-effect

The imperial presidency in full-effect

by digby

Uhm, this isn’t how this is supposed to work:

I guess congress should just pack its bags and go home. It is no longer operative.

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Saber rattling with Iran could go very wrong

Saber rattling with Iran could go very wrong

by digby

This is very serious. It’s Bolton’s baby and Trump is distracted watching Fox News and thinking up nicknames for his campaign rivals. But he is still the president and he could easily give the green light on a whim and Bolton and his crew could carry it out. It’s the type of “guns of August” scenario we’ve all been worried about from the moment we realized this orange miscreant was going to be president. Hopefully, this will blow over but it illustrates just how precarious the situation really is:

The State Department ordered a partial evacuation of the United States Embassy in Baghdad on Wednesday, responding to what the Trump administration said was a threat linked to Iran, one that has led to an accelerated movement of American ships and bombers into the Persian Gulf.

The department ordered “nonemergency U.S. government employees,” at both the embassy in Baghdad and the consulate in Erbil, to leave the country. The order applies primarily to full-time diplomats posted to Iraq by State Department headquarters in Washington, and an embassy statement said that visa services in Iraq would be suspended as a result. Contractors who provide security, food and other such services will remain in place for now.

Secretary of State Mike Pompeo said last week that the administration had received intelligence related to “Iranian activity” that put American facilities and service personnel at “substantial risk.” Other American officials have said the same piece of intelligence points to potential attacks by Shiite Arab militias tied to Iran against American troops in Iraq or Syria.

Iraqi officials have voiced skepticism about the threat described by the Americans, and on Tuesday, so did the British deputy commander of the American-led coalition fighting the Islamic State, or ISIS.

“No, there’s been no increased threat from Iranian-backed forces in Iraq and Syria,” Maj. Gen. Chris Ghika, speaking from Baghdad, told reporters at the Pentagon by video link. There are threats in the region to United States and coalition forces, he said, referring to “noncompliant actors” among the militias, but “there always have been.”

[The Trump administration is laying the groundwork for major military action against Iran, but it may have a hard time rallying domestic and international support.]

The Pentagon’s Central Command released a statement saying that General Ghika’s comments “run counter to the identified credible threats available to intelligence from U.S. and allies regarding Iranian backed forces in the region,” and that as a result, United States forces in Iraq were “now at a high level of alert.”

Mr. Pompeo made a surprise visit to Baghdad on May 7 to brief Iraqi leaders about the threat.

On May 5, John R. Bolton, the national security adviser, issued a statement warning against any attack by the Iranian military or a “proxy” against American interests or allies. Mr. Bolton said the United States was sending the U.S.S. Abraham Lincoln carrier strike group and bombers to the Persian Gulf. Other officials later said that the strike group’s movement to that area had been previously scheduled and was merely being sped up.

On Friday, the Pentagon said it was sending another ship and a Patriot antimissile battery to the Middle East.

The order for a partial evacuation of the Baghdad embassy, which at the height of the Iraq War was the largest in the American diplomatic system, adds to the rising tensions between the United States and Iran. It is unclear when the employees being evacuated will be told they can return.

In September, Mr. Pompeo ordered a full withdrawal from the American Consulate in Basra, in southern Iraq, after a few rockets landed around the grounds of the city’s airport, where the consulate is. The rockets did not cause any injuries. For more than a year beforehand, State Department officials had debated whether to shut down the consulate to save money, and some diplomats said the evacuation of the consulate was related to that.

The Trump administration blamed Shiite militias tied to Iran for the rocket attacks in Basra. It also said that those types of militias were responsible for rocket attacks around the same time in the area of the Baghdad embassy. As in Basra, the attacks in Baghdad did not injure anyone.

Tensions with Iran have been rising since May 2018, when President Trump withdrew the United States from the 2015 nuclear deal that world powers reached with Tehran. The United States then reinstated major sanctions last November, and those have weakened the Iranian economy.

In April, the Trump administration designated an arm of Iran’s military as a foreign terrorist organization and ended waivers it had granted to eight governments to exempt them from sanctions for buying Iranian oil.

European nations are still in the nuclear deal and have urged Iran to stay committed to it, despite Mr. Trump’s provocations. Iran said last week that it would begin walking away from some of the deal’s restrictions on its nuclear activity.

Critics of the Trump administration, and of Mr. Bolton in particular, have suggested that American officials are presenting faulty intelligence to make a case for war against Iran, as the administration of President George W. Bush did in 2002 to justify the invasion of Iraq. Mr. Bolton was the under secretary of state for arms control and international security then, and he asserted that Saddam Hussein, the longtime ruler of Iraq, was trying to develop weapons of mass destruction.

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The “where there’s smoke there’s fire” gambit

The “where there’s smoke there’s fire” gambit

by digby


My Salon column this morning:

When President Trump’s new attorney general, William Barr, announced at his first congressional hearing before the Senate Judiciary Committee that he believed “spying” on Trump’s 2016 campaign “had occurred,” Democrats on the committee and many in the press seemed to be shocked. In fact, Sen. Brian Schatz, D-Hawaii, asked Barr if he’d like to use another word, suggesting that the use of such an explosive term would “cause everyone in the cable news ecosystem to freak out.” Barr declined and declared that he would be taking a look at the genesis of the investigation, saying, “I just want to satisfy myself that there were no abuse of law enforcement or intelligence powers.”

Since Trump’s incessant whining and complaining about the investigation is so common that people no longer take it very seriously, and only the most diehard right-wingers watch Fox News, a lot of people were taken aback by Barr’s use of the word “spying.” I don’t think they realized what this strategy of “investigating the investigators” really amounts to. Neither did they fully recognize that Barr was not acting in good faith but rather as a hardcore right-wing partisan.

In retrospect, that should have been obvious from the beginning, and not just because Barr sent a memo to the White House (long before he was officially being considered as attorney general) explaining that the president cannot be subject to obstruction of justice laws. I’m referring to the fact that in Barr’s previous tenure as attorney general, under George H.W. Bush, he tasked the U.S. attorney in Arkansas with digging up Whitewater dirt on then-candidate Bill Clinton during the 1992 presidential campaign.

As the legendary Gene Lyons noted in the Arkansas Times back in 2016, that U.S. attorney knew that the story was bunk as well as inappropriate and refused to proceed, telling Barr he would not be a party to such an overtly political act, and pointing out that “even media questions about such an investigation … all too often publicly purport to legitimize what can’t be proven.“ Indeed they do.

That investigation didn’t proceed under Barr, but he’d set the wheels in motion for a series of pseudo-investigations that continued through all eight years of the Clinton administration. And what that U.S. attorney said was actually the point of the whole exercise. Republicans knew it didn’t matter if the investigations of the president were based upon serious suspicion of illegal activity. It was the narrative that mattered. They didn’t need to have a serious scandal like Watergate or Iran-Contra. They could the same model to leverage and pump up trivial or mundane events into major stories.

There were endless congressional hearings by the Republican majority in both houses of Congress and multiple independent counsels, all creating hysterical headlines which finally culminated in the Lewinsky affair and Clinton’s impeachment. It was a right-wing production all the way. And it was highly effective. Clinton survived but the Republicans learned this was a useful way to keep their base engaged, particularly when the driver of right-wing politics during the 1990s, talk radio, was joined by the new powerhouse, Fox News.

Barack Obama was a harder nut to crack, but Republicans did their best. When the GOP took over the Congress in 2010 it immediately trumped up the so-called IRS scandal, alleging that the agency was targeting Tea Party groups for tax audits. There was also “Fast and Furious” about the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms losing track of some guns, one of which ended up killing a federal officer. (The Second Amendment absolutists who refuse even to allow the government to track the guns of suspected terrorists never saw the irony in their hysteria about these particular guns falling into the wrong hands.)

And then there was Benghazi. That event, although tragic, was barely a blip in the history of U.S. foreign policy mishaps. But it spawned 10 investigations, six of those by Republican-controlled House committees and the others by the FBI, the State Department Inspector General and the Senate Intelligence Committee. In one of the most revealing comments ever made by a Republican official, then-House Majority Leader Kevin McCarthy, R-Calif., actually admitted that the reason they did it was purely political.

Benghazi didn’t really hurt Hillary Clinton but it pointed the way toward the notorious “email scandal” that dominated the campaign — largely due to the media’s longstanding obsession with Clinton scandals going all the way back to those heady days of Whitewater. We all know the result of that.

When Donald Trump started his term facing the most serious presidential scandal in history, however, Republicans had a problem. It was the FBI, the most revered police agency in the country, that had uncovered it, which made their usual character assassination a little bit risky. As we discovered, that didn’t stop them. They went after the FBI as if the whole bureau was full of Clintons, not sparing even a thought for what conservatives had always held out as a sacred institution. For two years the president, his Fox News supporters and Republican allies in Congress built the “deep state” conspiracy theory of the Russia investigation, which holds that the FBI was out to get Donald Trump during the campaign, and when he heroically succeeded despite it all, they set out to overthrow him in an illegal coup. (One has to wonder why, if that was so, the conspirators didn’t make sure their Russia evidence got out during the campaign. Republicans don’t seem to see that big hole in their story.)

Now that Republicans have a congenial attorney general, they are using the power of the Department of Justice against itself. In addition to the two ongoing probes into the origins of the Russia case — along with the Mueller report, which goes into these questions in great depth — Barr has announced yet another “investigation into the investigation,” as well as some kind of cross-agency inquiry with the CIA and the director of national intelligence. It’s a wonder the Department of Justice will have time to do anything else.

The effect of this isn’t necessarily to put FBI officials in jail, although that’s not out of the question. The point is to mainstream the counter-narrative. Here’s a good example of how that works:

Beyond the public relations there are serious issues at stake with all this, as Salon’s Amanda Marcotte points out in this analysis of Barr’s latest moves. And there can be no doubt about the chilling effect these investigations will have on FBI and intelligence officials throughout the government. They will think hard before they take another close look at Donald Trump’s crimes going forward.

On a political level, Republicans are running a familiar game which nobody should toss off as mere partisan warfare. It’s a crucial aspect of Trump’s re-election strategy. If they can engage the mainstream media and throw everything they have at it, they may succeed at confusing the public and convincing them that all this smoke they’re blowing means there must be a fire.

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Putting women (and others) in their places by @BloggersRUs

Putting women (and others) in their places
by Tom Sullivan

Alabama is the “Heart of Dixie.” Old time misogyny there is not forgotten.

Eric Johnson, founder of the Alabama Pro-Life Coalition that helped draft the Republican-sponsored near-total abortion ban passed Tuesday night by the Alabama Senate, told NPR the dynamic supporting Roe v. Wade had changed. “[W]e’re at the point where we need to take a bigger and a bolder step,” Johnson said.

All those voting for the bill were men. All Republicans. When signed into law by Alabama’s governor, women who have abortions will face no sanction, but doctors performing them could face “10 years in prison for attempting to terminate a pregnancy and 99 years for actually carrying out the procedure,” BBC reports. The only exception is for saving the life of the mother.

The American Civil Liberties Union insisted it would challenge the law when passed, as it had past efforts by Alabama to restrict access to abortion.

During floor debate, Sen. Clyde Chambliss (R) led the effort for passage of the ban. Its purpose is, Chambliss said, “So that we can go directly to the Supreme Court to challenge Roe v. Wade.”

Observers noted he avoided speaking of emergency contraception, insisting up until a woman is “known to be pregnant,” she still has options:

Responding to a question about whether a fertilized egg at an IVF clinic counted as a “person,” Chambliss replied, “The egg in the lab doesn’t apply. It’s not in a woman. She’s not pregnant.”

Thus, a fertilized egg is not their concern if a woman is not present for men to force to give birth. The misogynistic logic is ironclad.

The Daily Beast’s Sam Stein noted the obvious: such bills have sprung up around the country since the addition of Brett Kavanaugh to the U.S. Supreme Court.

To borrow a line from Andrew Gillum: “Now, I’m not calling Mr. Kavanaugh an anti-abortionist. I’m simply saying the anti-abortionists believe he’s an anti-abortionist.”

Abortion restrictions. Photo IDs. Poll taxes. Surgically precise gerrymanders. Imprisoning asylum seekers. Police profiling and violence against black Americans. “Incel” violence. Anti-government militias. Nazis, and more.

From legal, to quasi-legal, to criminally violent actions, an old order lashes out like a cornered animal to maintain what it considers its birthright: social, legal, religious, political, and physical domination of others. Conservative leaders in Alabama and elsewhere are fighting to keep women, people of color, immigrants, religious minorities, and people of disfavored social classes in their proper places. How very American of them.

Women by the millions marching in resistance to a bigoted misogynist occupying the nation’s highest office. Women resisting generations of sexual harassment and second-class citizenship. Demanding recognition of women’s own personhood has kicked into high gear the old order’s efforts to return them to their kitchens and to the submissiveness someone else’s God intended.

Here’s a snarky message for that old order: Good luck with that.

UPDATE: After that, a palate cleanser

A pleasant reminder that all is not lost

A pleasant reminder that all is not lost

by digby

From today’s Washington Post:

“Hello Intolerant, intellectually-challenged, psychotic, socialists!

Your so-called business is in jeopardy. Rest assured this is not a threat but simply a warning that predicts your downfall. . . . When your treasonist hypocrite lowlife Obama took our nation into despair (for 8 yrs) we didn’t do or say the things you do. Get over it, before it’s too late! BTW, there are a lot more of us than there are of you.’’

I’ve been getting hate mail for almost a year now, ever since I asked White House press secretary Sarah Sanders to leave my Lexington, Va., restaurant, the Red Hen, last June.

At the time, the country was in turmoil over the Trump administration’s heinous practice of separating children from their parents at our southern border. In our tiny 26-seat restaurant, the horror felt simultaneously immediate and far away.

The Red Hen in Lexington, Va. (Daniel Lin/AP)

Faced with the prospect of serving a fine meal to a person whose actions in the service of our country we felt violated basic standards of humanity, we balked. We couldn’t do it.

I took Ms. Sanders aside and politely suggested she leave. She agreed, equally politely. She may or may not have expected this day would come, but she never showed any sign of outrage, or even much surprise. We’d drawn a line; she’d accepted it.

I’m pretty sure both of us thought that was the end of the matter.

When I awoke the next morning, social media was on fire. The incident had gone from a Facebook post to a tagged tweet to nationally trending news with the whoosh of lighter fluid to a flame.

The blowback was swift and aggressive. Within 24 hours, the restaurant’s phone line was hacked, my staff and I were doxxed, and threats to our lives and families and property were pouring in through every available channel. Protesters colonized the streets around the restaurant. Thousands of fake Yelp reviews torpedoed our ratings, and dozens of people attempted to lock up our tables with reservations they had no intention of honoring. Pundits lamented the prospect of “red restaurants” and “blue restaurants.” In less than three days, President Trump had mocked us on Twitter.

[Dana Milbank: The White House revoked my press pass. It’s not just me — it’s curtailing access for all journalists.]

In the days following, I tried to balance fears for the safety of my family and staff against the reality of being well-protected in a small, loving community. Overhanging it all was a sense that I’d seen this show before; don’t we all have ringside seats to the outrage circus these days? But there was plenty I couldn’t predict or assess: How likely was it, really, that the guy texting me from a Minneapolis area code was really going to come to town to set fire to our restaurant? It felt impossible to know.

When the mail started pouring in, things got weirder. For the first few days the rubber-banded bundles fit into my letter carrier’s shoulder bag. But soon he was forced to heft large white plastic totes overflowing with letters and packages up to my door.

Staring at it all made my stomach clench. It’s one thing to set filters on your email, reset your privacy settings on Instagram and block callers on your phone. It’s a whole different feeling to face a mountain of mail dwarfing your living-room sofa, not knowing which contain abuse (or worse) and which appreciation.

The realness of that mail struck me. Paper correspondence carries all the marks of genuine humans, people who feel strongly enough about the whole event that they take on all those little tasks of letter writing — tracking down paper or card, composing their thoughts, handwriting or printing it out, locating our address and getting it into the mail.

In more than 4,000 painstakingly typed letters, hastily scrawled postcards, and feces-smeared notebook pages, I was branded a racist, a bigot and a hypocrite. A victim of “Trump Derangement Syndrome.” I was an idiot, or worse, and a lousy manager. Sure, I’d 86’d Sanders, but it was my business that was going down the drain.

Yet, as I kept opening the letters, I saw a pattern. For every hateful message, there was one of gratitude. For every angry accusation that our actions were driven by the inability to accept Hillary Clinton’s 2016 loss, there was a note of thanks from someone lamenting Trump’s rollback of protections for marginalized people. What’s more, for every wish that our business die a painful death, there was a dollar bill or a generous check or an order for a gift certificate.

When we opened after a 10-day hiatus, our dining room was full. In the following weeks, people who had never been to the Shenandoah Valley traveled out of their way to eat with us. Hundreds of orders for our Red Hen spice blend poured in. And the love spread far beyond our door, as supporters sent thousands of dollars in donations in our honor to our local food pantry, our domestic violence shelter and first responders.

After nearly a year, I’m happy to say that business is still good. Better than good, actually. And besides the boost to our area charities, our town’s hospitality and sales revenue have gone up, too.

Our haters may have believed that there were more of “them” than of “us,” but it turns out we have more than enough to keep us cooking. And to everyone who might be fearful about taking a stand, I say don’t be. Resistance is not futile, for you or your business.

I’m glad to hear it.

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The Trump Putin feedback loop

The Trump Putin feedback loop

by digby

They’re so tight they are practically completing each other’s sentences:

Russian President Vladimir Putin on Tuesday praised special counsel Robert Mueller’s investigation into Russia’s interference in the 2016 U.S. elections as “objective.”

“On the whole he had a very objective investigation and he confirmed that there are no traces whatsoever of collusion between Russia and the incumbent administration, which we said was absolutely fake,” Putin said during a meeting with Secretary of State Mike Pompeo in Sochi, Russia, according to media translations.

Okaaay. But if he thinks the investigation was objective, he’s admitting his sabotage:

Mueller’s 448-page report, released to Congress and the public on April 18 after a nearly two-year investigation, provided the most comprehensive description to date of Russia’s efforts to boost Donald Trump’s campaign during the 2016 presidential election…

“Russian efforts to influence the 2016 U.S. presidential election represent the most recent expression of Moscow’s longstanding desire to undermine the U.S.-led liberal democratic order, but these activities demonstrated a significant escalation in directness, level of activity, and scope of effort compared to previous operations.”

Also, these must be objective conclusions too:

● Mueller rejects the argument that the president is shielded from obstruction laws.

●Trump, when told of appointment of special counsel Mueller, said: “This is the end of my presidency.”

● “Substantial evidence” supports Comey over Trump in account of Flynn meeting.

●Trump campaign attempted to obtain Hillary Clinton’s private emails.

● Campaign expected to benefit from stolen information released by the Russians.

● Mueller probe spawned 14 other investigations, including two unidentified cases that remain ongoing.

Putin stepped up outreach to Trump after election.

● Special counsel team concluded Trump intended to obstruct probe in tweeting support for Manafort.

I guess that’s all good for Trump and Putin. Case closed …

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Mitch has Junior’s back

Mitch has Junior’s back

by digby

You’ll recall that Lindsey Graham went on Fox News Sunday and said this:

If I were Donald Trump Jr.’s lawyer, I would tell him, you don’t need to go back into this environment anymore. You’ve been there for hours and hours and nothing being alleged here changes the outcome of the Mueller investigation. I would call it a day.

That was a shocking thing for the Chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee to say, particularly about a Senate subpoena. Even a Fox News legal analyst was taken aback:

“I never heard of a senator saying disobey a valid lawful subpoena issued by the chairman of another Senate committee,” Napolitano said. “The subpoena, just like the one to Bill Barr, is presumed valid.”

He then said that Trump Jr. would be putting himself in serious legal jeopardy if he took Graham’s advice.

“If you can’t or don’t want to comply with it, you’ve got to challenge it in court,” Napolitano said. “You can’t just sit on it and you can’t not show. Somebody will show up with handcuffs.”

Graham has since tried to clean this up a little by saying that he meant for Junior to take the 5th (which would be totally appropriate) but that’s not what he said on Sunday. And I think there’s a different strategy at work:

If Trump Jr. refuses to honor the Senate subpoena, it could lead to a debate among Republicans over whether to hold the president’s son in contempt. The decision on such a vote would ultimately be left to Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, who had declared the investigations into the 2016 election “case closed” before news of Trump Jr.’s subpoena surfaced.

McConnell said last week in a radio interview that Trump “ought not to worry” about the subpoena against his son.

So far, most of the Republicans on the Intelligence Committee are giving Burr their support. (Cornyn, running for reelection, is the main exception.) But who knows if they would even vote out the contempt citation if Junior just tells them to pound sand. But in any case, I think we can count on Mitch to pull the plug if it gets that far. He’s pretty much already said so.


Update:
NYT is reporting that Junior will show for a limited Q and A next month. Somehow ai doubt that it will add up to much.

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QOTD: Joe Biden

QOTD: Joe Biden

by digby

I guess he wants a re-run of the Grand Bargain:

But what’s happened is, between gerrymandering and unlimited campaign spending, we found ourselves in a position where an awful lot of Republicans have become intimidated — intimidate by the president. If you notice, most Republicans — leaders, don’t lose from the left. They lose on the right. And so, for example, when we — anyway. So, I think there is not a middle ground. I wish I had known as a moderate, middle guy when I was running in Delaware all those times.

And you know anyway, I just think, there is a way — and the thing that will fundamentally change things is with Donald Trump out of the White House. Not a joke. You will see an epiphany occur among many of my Republican friends.

And it’s already beginning — in the House now, you’ve seen people that in fact were not willing to vote for any Democratic initiative, even if they agreed with it, because they didn’t want to be the odd person out if it wasn’t going to pass. There’s no use in getting politically beaten for something that’s not going to happen.

But you are seeing the talk, even the dialogue is changing.

So look, let me put it another way. If we can’t change, we’re in trouble. The nation cannot function if you can’t generate consensus under our system of separated powers, all the power moves to the executive — because then it gives excuses for them to say, I’m going to act by executive order to do something, because nothing is getting done.

That is the president and his team’s whole rationale for what they are doing.

This is pretty rambling. But it’s a terrible analysis of what’s gone on and a recipe for disaster if he really thinks it’s true.

I get that he’s going to run as the guy who can “bring us all together” and that this is an appealing theme fo a lot of people who just want all the drama to end. But it’s not reality.

Republicans are not in thrall to Trump and Trumpism didn’t come to pass simply because he came down that elevator. It’s true that the Republicans are following his agenda in lockstep but of those who don’t truly admire his leadership (there are many) they are simply following the wishes of their voters. Those voters have been radicalized over the course of many, many years. Joe Biden isn’t going to get everyone in a room and they’ll all say “whew! it’s over!”

Again, this may just be his “yes we can” message — a restoration of the fictional golden era when Tip and Ronnie shared a scotch on the Truman balcony at the end of the day. That’s just MAGA for older white liberals. I doubt the full Democratic coalition is going to fall for that. We don’t have Fox News — we’re still living in this terrifying GOP reality.

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