Trump says the U.S. is the “hottest” country in the world (apparently seeing it as one of those dancing babes at Mar-a-lago) but the world is running away as fast as it can. It’s no longer willing to put its security in the hands of the freak show run by a couple of looks-obsessed TV celebrities who are just popping off the top of their heads about global security and now they’re seeking ways to protect themselves from America’s economic leadership:
European financial stability officials are debating whether to create an alternative to Federal Reserve funding backstops by pooling dollars held by non-U.S. central banks in a bid to reduce their reliance on the U.S. under the Trump administration, five officials familiar with the matter said.
The talks, reported here for the first time, are a reaction to policies under U.S. President Donald Trump that have upended long-standing ties, put the Fed’s independence in doubt and underlined the dominant role the U.S. plays in global finance.
They have no choice. He’s going to replace the Fed chairman with a toady and do everything in his power to crash the world economy. The U.S. is becoming a hostile power.
The Fed’s facilities lend dollars to other central banks and function as a lifeline during bouts of market stress, ensuring global financial stability is maintained. Interviews with more than a dozen European central banking and supervisory officials show that they worry the facilities could be weaponized by the Trump administration.
They most certainly will be weaponized by the Trump administration. He is very stupid and has no idea what he’s doing but he loves to use whatever tools at hand to punish and manipulate countries without understanding the consequences. If he has a toady Fed Chair and the Supremes allow him to fire others, all bets are off.
In case anyone wonders if there’s any point in taking a stand only to be forced to capitulate down the road, I would invite you to consider an episode from last summer.
When Republican members of the Texas legislature passed a bill to redraw the state’s congressional map — and give the GOP five additional seats in the House of Representatives — at the behest of President Donald Trump, Democratic lawmakers fled the state to deny the GOP a quorum and delay the vote. They were threatened with arrest and handed massive fines. But in the end, they returned. The GOP not only passed the legislation, but they also exacted retribution against the Democrats.
Was it worth it? They would say yes without hesitation.
Although the Texas Democrats didn’t succeed in stopping the Republicans, their doomed strategy achieved something just as important: It brought national attention to the Machiavellian tactics the GOP was employing to maintain its congressional majority in 2026. And that has resulted in a state-by-state battle across the country that just may end up backfiring on the Republicans.
As Trump and Republicans were celebrating their great win last summer, California Gov. Gavin Newsom, a Democrat, was testing the ground to see how his state might do the same to offset what Texas had done. According to POLITICO, Newsom’s proposal was first conceived as a bluff to try to dissuade Texas legislators from going through with their plan. But once it was a fait accompli, Newsom’s administration immediately started looking at how California voters would receive the plan — and it wasn’t good. The first internal polling four months ago showed that only 38% supported it.
Like the Texas Democrats, Newsom decided to go ahead and call a special election, and then set out to sell the idea. On Nov. 4, after four months of elevating the issue, Prop 50 passed with nearly 65% of California voters in favor. The risk paid off — California’s new map will effectively cancel out the five seats Texas added, and instead of being engineered in a backroom, it was done with the explicit approval of Californians.
Last weekend, Newsom traveled to Texas to give credit where it’s due. In thanking the state’s Democrats for what they did, he said, “You woke us up. You didn’t just have your back here, you had our back in the state of California.”
Other states are now following their lead. Just before the election, Virginia Democrats signaled they are ready to redraw their congressional map, and after they decimated the GOP in the Nov. 4 election, they will soon be in a position to do it. Illinois and Maryland could soon do the same.
Despite massive pressure from the White House, including personal visits from Vice President JD Vance, Indiana Republicans are resisting their entreaties to draw new districts. In Utah on Monday, a judge rejected the state’s all-GOP map, stating that it “unduly favors Republicans and disfavors Democrats” and ruling that the state constitution requires an alternate proposal that creates a Democratic-leaning district. North Carolina’s gerrymander has been one of the few uncomplicated successes, giving the Republicans one more seat.
According to NBC News, some Republicans are getting nervous about the administration’s redistricting strategy. But Trump, who believes it to be a magic bullet, remains fully onboard. A strategist explained, “[T]he president understands intuitively, in a way that other Republicans don’t…that Democrats are always assaulting us, always, and mostly much of the Republican Party never fights back. The redistricting fight is proof that they are not that way. So this is in his DNA in a way that is not in other Republicans’ DNA.”
Daddy, then, knows best. But he may be in for a surprise.
Dave Wasserman, an electoral expert at the nonpartisan Cook Political Report with Amy Walter, noted on X that “[b]etween OH, KS, CA, VA and now this huge win in UT, Democrats have quietly strung together an impressive streak of victories over the past few weeks that have, surprisingly, pushed the mid-decade redistricting war closer to a draw.”
And Wasserman’s analysis isn’t accounting for a problem Republicans have heading into the midterms: The Texas redistricting that took place in Texas was largely based on the idea that Trump’s 2024 win marked a massive, permanent shift of Latino voters to the GOP column.
Latino voters are not a monolith; there are regional and cultural differences. But the recent elections indicated large numbers in New York, New Jersey and Virginia had returned to the Democratic camp, a swing that could very well be equally reflected in Texas and any other state with a large Latino population. Trump, after all, has pretty much declared war on the community, and his administration is racially profiling, brutalizing and harassing undocumented immigrants, green card holders and citizens alike. And as with every other part of the electorate, his empty promises to fix the economy have also helped to sour many on his presidency.
Even more problematic, Texas Republicans were so sure of themselves that they indulged in what the political types call “dummymandering”— diluting some of their safe seats where Trump won by large margins to ones where he would have won by less, leaving themselves vulnerable, in a wave election, to losing seats instead of gaining five. We have a long way to go, but after Nov. 4, you can be sure Republicans are starting to see that a Democratic wave next fall isn’t out of the realm of possibility.
John Eakin, a Republican consultant and data scientist, told NBC News that some Republicans are regretting their overconfidence after Trump’s 2024 victory, pointing to a recent result in a special election for a state Senate seat representing Dallas, where the Democrat was the top vote-getter — and significantly over-performed the 2024 results. “Nobody wants to go against Trump in this district map because they fear him,” Eakin said. “They’ve pushed the envelope and it’s going to come back to bite them in the a*s.”
Those Texas Democrats could have the last laugh after all.
MAGA wanted it. Trump promised it. They fell for it.
Jonathan Chait spotlights the Trump con now in play:
Some of Trump’s most devoted worshippers chose the very issue of Epstein’s misdeeds and supposed cabal of elite backers as the fantasy onto which they projected a valiant role for their hero. Trump was meant to courageously release all of the available evidence for public scrutiny.
MAGA wanted it. Trump promised it during his 2024 campaign. They fell for it.
With the House back in session, Rep. Adelita Grijalva (D-Ariz.) provided the final signature needed on the discharge petition filed in September by Republican Rep. Thomas Massie of Kentucky and backed by Democratic Rep. Ro Khanna of California.
Having failed to coerce GOP Reps. Marjorie Taylor Greene of Georgia, Nancy Mace of South Carolina and Lauren Boebert of Colorado into removing their names, Trump is lobbying furiously to strip Republican votes in the House and Senate from the bill ordering full release of the Epstein investigation records.
Tokyo Rose Garden claims the Epstein emails released on Wednesday “prove absolutely nothing other than the fact that President Trump did nothing wrong.”
Weija: Did the president ever spend hours at Jeffrey Epstein's house with a victim?
Leavitt: These emails prove absolutely nothing other than the fact that president trump did nothing wrong. pic.twitter.com/7iXl9PwUt6
Someone in the White House Press Office needs to coordinate better with the Oval Office. Trump later in the day claimed once again that the Epstein matter is a hoax. Presumably, including the emails that “prove” his innocence.
Chait offers:
Are the Epstein files suddenly real? Or are some of them real (and vindicating) and some of them fake (and incriminating)? All we know is that Trump wants us to stop talking about the subject. That’s usually what you want when the subject includes evidence that you have behaved in a manner beyond reproach.
The more President Flop Sweat and his team of propagandists struggle to cover up the Epstein investigation documents, the more public interest in seeing them will swell. Whatever it is he’s desperate to conceal — whether sexual exploitation of teens or money laundering with Russians — Trump is spinning like a dervish:
“The Democrats are trying to bring up the Jeffrey Epstein Hoax again because they’ll do anything at all to deflect on how badly they’ve done on the Shutdown, and so many other subjects,” Trump posted on Truth Social.
“Only a very bad, or stupid, Republican would fall into that trap. The Democrats cost our Country $1.5 Trillion Dollars with their recent antics of viciously closing our Country, while at the same time putting many at risk — and they should pay a fair price,” Trump continued. “There should be no deflections to Epstein or anything else, and any Republicans involved should be focused only on opening up our Country, and fixing the massive damage caused by the Democrats!”
But despite President Donald Trump lobbying hard to try to crush the vote, as more and more embarrassing details about his relationship with the deceased financier and sexual predator continue to trickle out, he is probably unable to stop it in the Senate either, analyst John Heilemann told MSNBC’s “Morning Joe” on Thursday.
“No Republican is going to want to be seen covering up for the most vilified pedophile in recent American history,” said anchor Joe Scarborough. “Then what are these Republican senators going to do when the White House starts saying, hey, kill the Epstein files? We want to keep them away from your voters, your constituents, the people that are going to vote for you in 2026. I don’t think it’s as open and closed of a political situation as some people are suggesting right now.”
“13 Republican senators, sitting Republican senators up for reelection,” said Heilemann. “You’ve got, in addition to that, a bunch of female Republican senators who aren’t up for reelection right now … the words of the Epstein survivors will be ringing in their ears. You have people like Joni Ernst and Thom Tillis, who both are retiring. It doesn’t take that much work to to get to even if … as Ali is reporting, if the threshold on this vote is going to be 60, it doesn’t take that much work to get you to the number.”
“If you start to put together the relatively moderate establishment Republicans, the female Republican senators, and Republican senators who are retiring and may not be totally in love with Donald Trump and kind of are looking for some way to, as they walk out the door, reclaim some of the reputation that they lost by by being overly loyal to him over the course of the first and second terms,” said Heilemann. “I don’t know, I might — maybe I’m a dreamer and obviously things are, It always turns out to be tough to get anything through the Senate on a 60-vote threshold.”
I’m still not confident that the White House won’t respond to a congressional demand to release all the Epstein documents with “the dog ate my homework.” Why should Trump start complying with the law now?
Headlines across the country declare the end of the longest government shutdown in history: 43 days. Donald Trump signed the spending package bill late Wednesday night. The deal releases funding for whatever of the government is left after MAGA Republicans had their way with it. The White House is once again open for griftness.
The legislative package includes a “minibus” of three appropriations bills providing funding through next September and keeps the rest of the government open at current levels through Jan. 30.
It includes full funding for the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, also known as food stamps, which will keep the program afloat through September. More than 40 million Americans rely on SNAP. Some people told NBC News that they ran out of food as the shutdown cut off money for the program, and the Trump administration fought in the courts against having to shift money around to fully fund it for the month of November.
The legislation also provides limited protections for federal workers who’ve been under assault since Trump’s inauguration. It reinstates thousands of government employees who were laid off during the shutdown and ensures there are no more reductions in force (known as “RIFs”), at least through the end of January. And it provides back pay for workers who were furloughed or working without pay these past six weeks.
Spike is putting it mildly. A friend of mine, 29, reports that her ACA premiums will skyrocket from “about $88/month” to “over $750/month” beginning next year, over eight and a half times. “That’s not just unaffordable, that’s cruelty,” she writes. She’ll likely go uninsured. People much older and with the greater medical needs that come with age will be put at even greater risk.
That’s not a problem for Trump and his cronies. Nor, Sen. Cory Booker reminds us, for the money men and businesses dropping contributions into the coffers of “the most corrupt administration in U.S. history.”
At least 30 individuals or companies that have collectively donated more than $116mn to Trump’s causes have received benefits or advantages from White House moves, according to FT analysis. Sometimes, the administration acted just days after donations were made.
The donors range from crypto and tech billionaires who have developed close ties to the first family and been granted access to the president, to big insurance firms, tobacco companies and even a manufacturer of bandages from human tissue. Funds were given both before and after his inauguration.
There is no evidence of bribery or illegal conduct, but the volume of favourable outcomes for donors raises the question of whether a culture of quid pro quo exists at the heart of the administration.
It’s not as if pay-for-play is not a Beltway tradition. It’s just that in Trumpish “like you’ve never seen” tradition, the grift is out in the open.
“Past administrations have confronted accusations that money buys favours,” says Bob Bauer, former White House counsel under Barack Obama. “What is unique about this presidency is the open transactionalism that characterises Donald Trump’s governance style.”
FT provides “a number of cases” where Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) investigations ended where “owners or backers have donated to Trump’s interests, sometimes soon after making their gifts.” Crypto businesses feature prominently in cases dropped by the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC).
Then there are the Trump pardons. Many of those pardoned for violence against the Capitol or against the 2020 election process are not rich. In The Godfather fashion, Trump may call on them to do him a service again in 2026 or 2028. Others got their pardons after large donations to Trump’s interests. FT has a long list of those and policy favors benefiting Trump donors.
FT does not even mention the $400 million jet gifted to Trump from Qatar or the Trump Organization’s business ties with the emirate.
He’s demanding $230 million in compensation from the government he heads for alleged harms done to him by legitimately predicated investigations into his wrongdoing. The bill Trump just signed provides for payouts of as much as $1 million to eight Republican senators over their having their phone records (not phone taps) swept up in the January 6 investigation (Salon):
House Republicans are going after GOP senators who stand to collect millions of dollars courtesy of a veiled provision within a bill seeking to end the government shutdown.
The provision would give members of the Senate the ability to sue the government for obtaining their phone records without notification by the Justice Department. In 2023, the department obtained the records of several senators as part of its investigation into President Donald Trump‘s actions on Jan. 6. The provision said that those affected could receive $500,000 per violation.
House Republicans may have complained. But they still voted for the bill including the provision. Sen. Adam Schiff clarified Wednesday evening that the floor is actually $1 million and maybe more. Republican senators could be “swimming in millions of dollars” based on how the provision is written. See above as MSNBC’s Chris Hayes’s mouth hangs open at that revelation.
AOC: "It is unconscionable that what we are debating right now is legislation that will give 8 senators over $1 million a piece and we are robbing people of their food assistance and of their healthcare to pay for it. How is this even on the floor? How can we vote to enrich… pic.twitter.com/eYCJKLlJx6
But it’s not just Trump and his family. In September, a reporter asked White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt if Trump had asked the Department of Justice to quash an investigation into border csar Tom Homan’s accepting a $50,000 payoff allegedly received from undercover FBI agents.
“Well, Mr. Homan never took the $50,000 that you’re referring to, so you should get your facts straight, number one,” Leavitt replied. We still don’t know what happened to the $50,000 in the bag.
White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt revealed in amended campaign filings on Thursday that her unsuccessful 2022 congressional campaign owes more than $300,000 in unpaid debts, with Leavitt failing to disclose for years that her campaign took in hundreds of thousands of dollars in inappropriate donations and never paid the money back.
The vast majority of that debt, about $200,000, is owed as refunds to contributors who appear to have donated above the legal limits. Those excessive contributions went unreported for years — until Thursday — when Leavitt’s campaign amended every campaign filing she had ever made with the Federal Election Commission.
Leavitt’s campaign reported $326,370.50 in debt as of Sept. 30 — a balance that hasn’t changed since her campaign first disclosed the debt in January after years of failing to disclose any debt, as first reported by NOTUS.
On Halloween morning, FBI Director Kash Patel had a big announcement to make: “The FBI thwarted a potential terrorist attack,” he said in a 7:32 a.m. social-media post that referenced arrests in Michigan.
There was one problem: No criminal charges had yet been filed and local police weren’t aware of the details. Two friends of the alleged terrorists in New Jersey and Washington state caught wind of the arrests and moved up plans to leave the country, according to court documents and law-enforcement officials familiar with the investigation.
Justice Department leaders complained to the White House about Patel’s premature post, saying it had disrupted the investigation, administration officials said.
In his nine months on the job, Patel has drawn flak from his bosses in the Justice Department and from his underlings at the Federal Bureau of Investigation, where he has fired dozens of agents deemed hostile to Donald Trump or to conservative ideals.
But the Halloween announcement wasn’t the biggest controversy to envelop the director that week. Patel hit the news for taking an FBI plane to attend a wrestling event where his girlfriend, a country western singer, performed, and then to her home in Nashville. A former FBI agent, Kyle Seraphin, publicized the trip and called the taxpayer funded travel in the middle of a shutdown “pathetic.”
After that, Patel visited a Texas hunting resort called the Boondoggle Ranch, according to flight records and people familiar with the trip, which hasn’t been previously reported.
Patel’s travel has frustrated both Justice Department officials, who complained to the White House about it, and the White House itself, which had told cabinet officials months ago in writing to limit their travel, particularly if it was overseas or unrelated to Trump’s agenda, according to an administration official. Details about Patel’s trips to visit his girlfriend and an August trip to Scotland have been passed around the White House in recent days, officials said.
The FBI director is required by law to take the bureau’s private plane instead of commercial flights in order to have access to secure communications. If the travel is personal, the director is required to reimburse the government for the cost of a commercial flight—typically far less than the actual costs of private-jet use.
Patel has defended his travel, dismissing his critics as “clickbait haters.” A spokesman for the bureau said the director has taken only about a dozen personal trips since assuming the role in February, and had taken steps to cut down on travel costs. In a written statement, Patel said the bureau has achieved historic success on violent crime and drug trafficking.
He’s having the time of his life:
After Patel left government, he pounced on the man he would later succeed, Chris Wray, for using a government jet for an Adirondacks holiday. “Chris Wray, hey, you don’t need a government-funded G5 jet so you can fly off to the Adirondacks for vacation,” Patel said during a September 2023 appearance on the X22 Report podcast.
That has fueled critics of Patel’s recent travel itinerary. The Justice Department’s Gulfstream G550 took nine trips to Las Vegas—where Patel lived before running the FBI—and seven others to Nashville, according to a Wall Street Journal review of flight records.
On a late October Friday, he took the FBI private jet to State College, Pa., for a Real American Freestyle Wrestling event where his girlfriend, country music singer Alexis Wilkins, was performing the national anthem. The next day, the same FBI plane traveled to Nashville.
That Sunday, the FBI jet landed in San Angelo, Texas, where Patel visited the Boondoggle Ranch, owned by the family of a Republican donor and friend of Patel’s, C.R. “Bubba” Saulsbury Jr. The plane stayed in San Angelo until Wednesday. The government was shut down, and much of the FBI workforce was working but not getting paid.
What a guy. I feel so safe.
According to the article, Trump is sometimes a little irritated but he loves the Kash loves him. So he’s not going anywhere.
The BBC is prepared to formally apologise to Donald Trump as part of its efforts to resolve his billion-dollar legal threat over its editing of one of his speeches, the Guardian understands.
The BBC’s leadership is facing a looming deadline over how to reply to Trump’s legal threat to file a case in a Florida court. It follows the editing of a Trump speech in an edition of Panorama, which was a significant factor in the resignation of director general Tim Davie and Deborah Turness, its head of news.
Trump being the defamation king is really rich considering the trashy all, insults and defamation he hurls on a daily basis at anyone who looks at his sideways. Now he’s using his personal law firm, the Department of Justice, to harass and prosecute his enemies as well.
But here we are. He’s reaching across the pond now to try to bend the BBC to his will and it looks like he’s going to succeed:
The BBC’s top executive, Director-General Tim Davie, and its news CEO, Deborah Turness, resigned Sunday amid a growing scandal over this and other alleged editorial misjudgments.
The issue has become a major story in the U.K. where Prime Minister Keir Starmer told lawmakers at the weekly Prime Minister’s Questions session in parliament on Wednesday: “I believe in a strong and independent BBC. Some would rather the BBC didn’t exist … I’m not one of them.” He added, however, that “where mistakes are made they do need to get their house in order.”
Starmer was responding to Ed Davey, the leader of the Liberal Democrat party, who asked whether the government would urge the BBC to fight Trump’s lawsuit. Davey said “a great British institution is under attack from a foreign government … Trump has underlined press freedom in America and now he’s trying to do the same here.”
Asked Tuesday night whether he would sue, Trump told Fox News: “Well, I guess I have to you know, why not? Because they defrauded the public, and they’ve admitted it.”
“I think I have an obligation to do it, because you can’t get people, you can’t allow people to do that,” he said, before comparing the action to his lawsuit against CBS for a “60 Minutes” interview with his then-presidential election rival Kamala Harris. CBS paid $16 million to settle the case.
Trump complained that the BBC’s edit of his speech “made it sound radical” when it was “a very calming speech.” The saga centers on a “Panorama” documentary that aired before last year’s election. In it, two parts of the speech were edited together to give the impression that Trump said: “We’re going to walk down to the Capitol… and I’ll be there with you. And we fight. We fight like hell.”
In fact Trump initially said: “We’re going to walk down to the Capitol, and we’re going to cheer on our brave senators and congressmen and women, and we’re probably not going to be cheering so much for some of them.” He said later: “And we fight. We fight like hell. And if you don’t fight like hell, you’re not going to have a country anymore.”
It was a bad edit but frankly didn’t change the fact that Trump pumped up that crowd, told them to go to the Capitol and said he’d be there with them. “Fight like hell” is a figure of speech but in that environment it was actual fighting words. If Trump had ever had to stand trial for his attempted coup, I think any jury would have understood exactly what happened there.
The BBC did edit it improperly although it’s very hard to say that it adds up to a billion dollars worth of damages. If the suit goes forward I’d really love to see that trial.
Meanwhile, it appears the BBC is under siege for “liberal bias” generally which just figures. That seems to be the way of things. I watch quite a bit of BBC and it does not have a liberal bias. I don’t think Britain really understands what that might look like. But with Donald Trump on their tails and people at the top resigning, it’s possible they’ll end up pushing it to become more like Fox News. The Murdochs will no doubt be pleased. So will Donald Trump.
Some bizarre stuff going down in the Oval these days. After spraying the Syrian president with his Trump Fragrance he then asks him how many wives he has. pic.twitter.com/S0ywlUy7Fz
I’m assuming he may have literally killed American troops in Iraq, something that would have had the right wing in a full blown hysteria not all that long ago. Today, they don’t care. In fact, they are happy to see their Dear Leader calling his a good friend and spraying him with perfume in the oval office.
We should never, ever, in a million years take these assholes seriously about anything except their desire for power again. It’s literally all they care about.
President Donald Trump has engaged in many televised rants since he entered politics. In fact, most of his appearances could be classified as such. But one of the most stunning he’s ever given came in his Nov. 2 “60 Minutes” interview with Norah O’Donnell. Trump spoke in his usual stream of consciousness style, but there was one extended riff that was substantially cut in the televised version and was only evident to those who read the full transcript published by CBS or watched the full interview that Trump eventually posted online. Fittingly, it focused on retribution against his enemies.
O’Donnell barely got a word in edgewise as she tried to pin him down on one simple question: Did he order the criminal investigations into former FBI Director James Comey, New York Attorney General Letitia James and former National Security Adviser John Bolton?
After minutes of obfuscation, Trump answered that he hadn’t ordered them to be investigated because their guilt was so obvious to the “honest people” he has working for him — a lie which was gently fact-checked by “60 Minutes” by showing Trump’s apparently accidental Truth Social post telling Attorney General Pam Bondi it was time to make a move. Within days, the Department of Justice indicted Comey. James and Bolton soon followed.
In the interview, Trump railed against all three, repeatedly calling Comey a “dirty cop” and James a “dishonest person,” while suggesting that Bolton is crazy. The president brought up his two impeachments, referred to Democrats as “scum” and recounted a bizarre story about then-House Speaker Nancy Pelosi learning that his infamous call with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy had been taped. “She said, ‘You made me go into this mess,’” Trump claimed. “She screamed at all these people that made her do it, bad people like Schiff, et cetera, et cetera. So what happened is, she went nuts and just to conclude, and they said, ‘Let’s do it anyway.’”
In fact, Pelosi actually resisted impeaching Trump until the transcript emerged. (There was no tape of the call.) She told an interviewer that, at that point, “what the president did vis-a-vis the president of Ukraine just removed all doubt that we had to act.”
Trump sounded like a Mafia don throughout this part of the interview, even saying that he “beat the rap.” The entire exchange was chilling, and it’s both unfortunate and telling that CBS News — now under the leadership of Bari Weiss, who is notorious for promoting right-wing views — did not air that portion.
From the moment he announced his third presidential bid, Trump made it clear he was bent on revenge. His intentions were never secret. In fact, he famously proclaimed “I am your retribution” to ecstatic crowds throughout the 2024 campaign — and he meant it.
Notably, though, the cases brought by his Justice Department against Comey, James and Bolton do not involve the so-called crimes Trump has repeatedly named, such as filing false changes, making up evidence and tampering with witnesses. If they are such corrupt, dishonest officials, one would have thought the department would have followed Trump’s specifications to the letter. Instead, Comey and James were indicted on picayune charges that appear to have little merit, and Bolton was charged with the crime for which Trump himself was investigated.
Last week, MSNBC’s Ken Dilanian reported that the department is actively investigating another of Trump’s designated enemies, former CIA Director John Brennan, over the 2017 Russia probe — which was already investigated by John Durham, a special counsel appointed in 2020 by Trump’s own Attorney General Bill Barr. (Durham found no wrongdoing.) Another target, Sen. Adam Schiff, D-Calif., has been in Trump’s crosshairs since his first impeachment, in which Schiff served as a House manager. The senator is reportedly being investigated for mortgage fraud, but the prosecutors can’t find enough evidence to indict.
The Comey case looks to be in real trouble. The U.S. Attorney for the Eastern District in Virginia resigned in protest over the pressure to indict Comey without evidence, followed by others who were either fired or resigned. Last week the judge in the case admonished the acting U.S Attorney Lindsey Halligan — one of Trump’s former personal lawyers — in what was apparently a train wreck of a procedural hearing. The government, according to the judge, appeared to be “indicting first, investigating later” — a damning assessment.
Bondi, though, remains determined to follow the president’s orders for revenge.
All of this is taking place as the Justice Department is purging lawyers and FBI agents they see as enemies of Trump. Dozens of experienced prosecutors and investigators are gone, leaving the department a hollowed out shell of its former self. “The cumulative damage done to the once-respected Justice Department is so profound that it may not regain any semblance of its former self in our lifetimes, warn career law enforcement officials,” investigative journalist Carol Leonning wrote in an Oct. 30 guest essay for the New York Times. “It’s impossible to discount as hyperbole the alarm that these longtime civil servants are sounding from inside the house.”
Leonnig is the author, with Aaron C. Davis, of “Injustice: How Politics and Fear Vanquished America’s Justice Department,” which revealed that Trump was “destabilizing the institution’s foundations — and weakening its resolve with his brand of bare-knuckle attacks” throughout his first term. During the Biden administration, Attorney General Merrick Garland’s gentlemanly leadership, which aimed to restore all the genteel norms and rules of the pre-Trump era, resulted in delaying necessary investigations, empowering Trump’s comeback and laying the groundwork for his ability to “beat the rap,” as well as his campaign of retribution.
The president’s enemies list grows every day. Speaking at a Federalist Society event last Friday, Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche — another of Trump’s former personal attorneys — urged young conservative lawyers to sign up for the administration’s “war” against “rogue activist judges” who are “more political, or certainly as political, as the most liberal governor” or district attorney. Evidently, the administration would now like the purge to extend to the courts.
Donald Trump has always sought vengeance; it’s fundamental to his warped worldview. He always believed the Justice Department should be his own personal law firm engaged in helping him do it. He’s gotten his wish.
Does Donald Trump have enough blankets for his coverup?
My first post this morning (below) already mentioned the Epstein files and Donald Trump’s efforts at coverup. But just before I posted, this dropped:
🚨BREAKING: Oversight Dems have received new emails from Jeffrey Epstein’s estate that raise serious questions about Donald Trump and his knowledge of Epstein’s horrific crimes.
Read them for yourself. It’s time to end this cover-up and RELEASE THE FILES. pic.twitter.com/A5XgOHj2Jq
Democrats on the House Oversight Committee released email exchanges between Jeffrey Epstein, Ghislaine Maxwell and author Michael Wolff discussing Donald Trump.
In one email, apparently sent by Epstein to Maxwell, the convicted sex offender wrote: “I want you to realize that that dog that hasn’t barked is [T]rump..” A victim “spent hours at my house with him, he has never once been mentioned, police chief. etc. im 75% there,” Esptein added.
In response, Maxwell wrote: “I have been thinking about that…”
Trump has repeatedly emphasized that their friendship dissolved in the early 2000s and has called the renewed interest in the Epstein files a “hoax” cooked up by the Democrats.
Trump did not send or receive any of the emails and has not been accused of any wrongdoing. The Independent has requested comment from the White House. He has said publicly that he had a falling out with Epstein because the disgraced financier “stole” young women working at his Mar-a-Lago spa too many times — including Giuffre.
But a 2019 email from Epstein to Wolff suggests that Trump knew about Epstein’s “girls.”
“Of course he knew about the girls as he asked ghislaine to stop,” Epstein wrote in January before his death in August.
In a third email exchange, Wolff advises Epstein that CNN plans to ask him about his relationship with Trump. Epstein asks for advice on how to answer. Wolff replies the next afternoon:
“I think you should let him hang himself. If he says he hasn’t been on the plane or to the house, then that gives you a valuable PR and political currency. You can hang him in a way that potentially generates a positive benefit for you, or, if it really looks like he could win, you could save him, generating a debt. Of course, it is possible that, when asked, he’ll say Jeffrey is a great guy and has gotten a raw deal and is a victim of political correctness, which is to be outlawed in a Trump regime.”