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The Ledes

Tuesday, April 30, 2024

New York Times: “Eight law officers were shot on Monday, four fatally, as a U.S. Marshals fugitive task force tried to serve a warrant in Charlotte, N.C., the police said, in one of the deadliest days for law enforcement in recent years. Around 1:30 p.m., members of the task force went to serve a warrant on a person for being a felon in possession of a firearm, Johnny Jennings, the chief of police of the Charlotte-Mecklenburg Police Department, said at a news conference Monday evening. When they approached the residence, the suspect, later identified as Terry Clark Hughes Jr., fired at them, the police said. The officers returned fire and struck Mr. Hughes, 39. He was later pronounced dead in the front yard of the residence. As the police approached the shooter, Chief Jennings told reporters, the officers were met with more gunfire from inside the home.”

Public Service Announcement

The Washington Post offers tips on how to keep your EV battery running in frigid temperatures. The link at the end of this graf is supposed to be a "gift link" (from me, Marie Burns, the giftor!), meaning that non-subscribers can read the article. Hope it works: https://wapo.st/3u8Z705

The Mysterious Roman Dodecahedron. Washington Post: A “group of amateur archaeologists sift[ing] through ... an ancient Roman pit in eastern England [found] ... a Roman dodecahedron, likely to have been placed there 1,700 years earlier.... Each of its pentagon-shaped faces is punctuated by a hole, varying in size, and each of its 20 corners is accented by a semi-spherical knob.” Archaeologists don't know what the Romans used these small dodecahedrons for but the best guess is that they have some religious significance.

"Countless studies have shown that people who spend less time in nature die younger and suffer higher rates of mental and physical ailments." So this Washington Post page allows you to check your own area to see how good your access to nature is.

Marie: If you don't like birthing stories, don't watch this video. But I thought it was pretty sweet -- and funny:

If you like Larry David, you may find this interview enjoyable:


Tracy Chapman & Luke Combs at the 2024 Grammy Awards. Allison Hope comments in a CNN opinion piece:

~~~ Here's Chapman singing "Fast Car" at the Oakland Coliseum in December 1988. ~~~

~~~ Here's the full 2024 Grammy winner's list, via CBS.

He Shot the Messenger. Washington Post: “The Messenger is shutting down immediately, the news site’s founder told employees in an email Wednesday, marking the abrupt demise of one of the stranger and more expensive recent experiments in digital media. In his email, Jimmy Finkelstein said he was 'personally devastated' to announce that he had failed in a last-ditch effort to raise more money for the site, saying that he had been fundraising as recently as the night before. Finkelstein said the site, which launched last year with outsize ambitions and a mammoth $50 million budget, would close 'effective immediately.' The New York Times first reported the site’s closure late Wednesday afternoon, appearing to catch many staffers off-guard, including editor in chief Dan Wakeford. As employees read the news story, the internal work chat service Slack erupted in what one employee called 'pandemonium.'... Minutes later, as staffers read Finkelstein’s email, its message was underscored as they were forcibly logged out of their Slack accounts. Former Messenger reporter Jim LaPorta posted on social media that employees would not receive health care or severance.”

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Constant Comments

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

Publisher & Editor: Marie Burns


Sunday
May192019

The Commentariat -- May 20, 2019

Afternoon Update:

Rachel Bade, et al., of the Washington Post: "The White House on Monday blocked former counsel Donald McGahn from testifying to Congress, the latest act of defiance in the ongoing war between House Democrats and President Trump. McGahn, who Democrats hoped would become a star witness in their investigation into whether Trump obstructed justice, was subpoenaed to testify Tuesday morning. 'The Department of Justice has provided a legal opinion stating that, based on long-standing, bipartisan, and constitutional precedent, the former counsel to the president cannot be forced to give such testimony, and Mr. McGahn has been directed to act accordingly,' said White House press secretary Sarah Sanders in a statement.... The 15-page legal opinion written by Assistant Attorney General Steven A. Engel argues McGahn cannot be compelled to testify before the committee, based on past Justice Department legal opinions regarding the president's close advisers. The memo says McGahn's immunity from congressional testimony is separate and broader than a claim of executive privilege."

~~~~~~~~~~

The Trump Scandals, Ctd.

Even Computers Can Tell Trump & Kushner Might Be Crooks. David Enrich of the New York Times: "Anti-money laundering specialists at Deutsche Bank recommended in 2016 and 2017 that multiple transactions involving legal entities controlled by Donald J. Trump and his son-in-law, Jared Kushner, be reported to a federal financial-crimes watchdog. The transactions, some of which involved Mr. Trump's now-defunct foundation, set off alerts in a computer system designed to detect illicit activity, according to five current and former bank employees. Compliance staff members who then reviewed the transactions prepared so-called suspicious activity reports that they believed should be sent to a unit of the Treasury Department that polices financial crimes. But executives at Deutsche Bank, which has lent billions of dollars to the Trump and Kushner companies, rejected their employees' advice. The reports were never filed with the government.... Former Deutsche Bank employees said the decision not to report the Trump and Kushner transactions reflected the bank's generally lax approach to money laundering laws. The employees ... said it was part of a pattern of the bank's executives rejecting valid reports to protect relationships with lucrative clients." ...

... digby: "If it were anyone else I'd say they couldn't have been so stupid and arrogant as to do those kinds of shenanigans in 2016 and 2017. Obviously, with Trump and Kushner that's not operative. They are that stupid and arrogant."

Trump's (Alleged) Sex Assault Club Met Again Last Week. Maggie Haberman & Annie Karni of the New York Times: "President Trump has generally bucked the #MeToo movement, siding instead with the men who deny accusations of sexual assault or misconduct. Now, the Republican National Committee appears to be following his lead. Steve Wynn, the billionaire former casino mogul who resigned as chairman of Wynn Resorts and as finance chairman of the R.N.C. last year after The Wall Street Journal revealed allegations of sexual assault and harassment spanning decades, has recently donated hundreds of thousands of dollars to the committee. On Thursday, he was spotted by television cameras arriving at a high-dollar fund-raising dinner for Mr. Trump and the committee.... Politico reported last week that Mr. Wynn gave $248,500 to the Republican National Committee and an additional $150,000 to the National Republican Senatorial Committee in April."

New York Times Editors: "... Donald Trump has found ways to wield or dangle the pardon power in a manner that departs from any established practice and even calls into question the principles of justice that undergird it.... [His two latest full pardons demonstrate his penchant for granting] mercy for lawbreakers in the mold of disgraced politicians, media personalities and political allies who have flattered, defended or curried favor with the president. Then came news that the president may mark this Memorial Day with pardons for ... war criminals.... This month, Mr. Trump already pardoned Michael Behenna, a former Army lieutenant who was court-martialed and convicted of killing a detained Iraqi man whom he was interrogating. The American Civil Liberties Union said the pardon represented 'a presidential endorsement of murder.'... One bill before Congress, introduced by the House Intelligence Committee chairman, Adam Schiff, aims to discourage the misuse of pardons by shedding sunlight on how they are procured and processed. Pro-democracy advocates support the legislation." ...

     ... Mrs. McCrabbie: John Gramlich & Kristen Bialik of Pew Research wrote in January 2017, "Barack Obama ended his presidency having granted clemency to more people convicted of federal crimes than any chief executive in 64 years. But he also received far more requests for clemency than any U.S. president on record, largely as a result of an initiative set up by his administration to shorten prison terms for nonviolent federal inmates convicted of drug crimes." The recipients of these grants were through a rigorous DOJ vetting process. These were not Friends of Barack, & there is no reason to think Obama hoped to gain political advantage by granting clemency; indeed, Obama used his pardon power most aggressively in his second term. Obama's pardons & grants of clemency stand in sharp contrast to those Trump has offered & dangled. ...

... ** The War Crimes President*. Chas Danner of New York: "President Trump may pardon several U.S. service members who have been accused or convicted of serious war crimes, including the mass murder of civilians, the New York Times reported Saturday.... Trump is (or has been) convinced that these men are victims of injustice, rather than perpetrators of it. And it's not hard to imagine how war criminals could seem like war heroes to a president who fetishizes strength and power over the powerless.... It should also be emphasized that all of the victims of these war crimes lived in Muslim-majority countries.... The potential pardons must also be seen in the context of President Trump's rarely veiled Islamophobia and how well that has played with his base.... The pardons would also go against core principles that form the foundation of the armed services, as well as military justice.... Pardoning a series of war criminals would set a precedent for what is and is not acceptable behavior on the battlefield..., all thanks to a draft dodger who attacked a prisoner of war and a gold-star family on his way to becoming president." ...

... As Akhilleus noted in yesterday's Comments thread, Trump thinks it's A-OK to torture & kill Muslims.

Justin Wise of the Hill: "President Trump on Sunday ripped Rep. Justin Amash (R-Mich.) for saying that the president had reached the 'threshold for impeachment.'... 'Never a fan of @justinamash, a total lightweight who opposes me and some of our great Republican ideas and policies just for the sake of getting his name out there through controversy,' Trump said on Twitter.... 'He would see that it was nevertheless strong on NO COLLUSION and, ultimately, NO OBSTRUCTION,' Trump said. 'Anyway, how do you Obstruct when there is no crime and, in fact, the crimes were committed by the other side? Justin is a loser who sadly plays right into our opponents hands!'" ...

... Senator Mitt Mealy-Mouth. David Beavers of Politico: "Sen Mitt Romney on Sunday called a GOP congressman's call for impeaching ... Donald Trump 'a courageous statement' while maintaining that impeachment is not warranted based on the special counsel's report. Speaking to CNN's Jake Tapper on 'State of the Union,' Romney said, 'My own view is that Justin Amash has reached a different conclusion than I have. I respect him. I think it's a courageous statement,' the Utah Republican continued. 'But I believe that to make a case for obstruction of justice, you just don't have the elements that are evidenced in this document.'" As the headline writer at New York mag put it, "A profile in recognizing courage rather than displaying it." (No link.)

As Marcy Wheeler reminded Chris Hayes on Friday, "NO one gets that in the summer of 2017 at the same time that Trump had just met for the first time with Vladimir Putin in this crazy meeting in the G-20, he went to [Corey] Lewandowski and dictated to him [according to the Mueller] report and made him write it down and he said, '[Trump] never dictated anything to me before.' He makes him write it down and in that paper, he said go tell [Jeff] Sessions to shut down the investigation into the Russians who hacked us in 2016. He can investigate what's going to happen in 2018 and 2020, but not in 2016. That's crazy. No one knows that Trump tried to shut down the entire investigation, not just his side, but the Russian side as well." Emphasis added. Transcribed by Karoli Kuns of Crooks&Liars.


** Daniel Okrent
, in a Washington Post op-ed: Jared “Kushner's new immigration plan, aimed at reducing immigration from specific nations through the virtual elimination of what he and others have disparaged as 'chain migration,' and the simultaneous valorization of the highly educated, is simply a version of a blatantly discriminatory effort [the aristocratic senator Henry Cabot] Lodge initiated more than a century ago.... The widening streams of emigres pouring out of the impoverished lands between the Baltic and the Mediterranean had broadened to flood stage, and Lodge determined that the best way to keep them out was to make them submit to a literacy test.... Lodge's literacy test bill passed with ease. But on President Grover Cleveland's very last day in office, he struck it down with a veto, and there were not enough votes in the Senate to override.... Only with anti-European fervor spiking on the brink of World War I, and new theories of 'racial eugenics' shaping public debate, was it finally enacted over President Woodrow Wilson's second veto, in 1917.... Jared Kushner -- and Stephen Miller and President Trump -- likely know very little about Henry Cabot Lodge. But he would be proud of them." ...

... Seung Min Kim of the Washington Post: "President Trump said in an interview airing Sunday [on Fox 'News'] that he has concerns about a verification system that checks whether someone can work in the United States legally -- a tool that his namesake business began using company-wide earlier this year.... The president's comments about E-Verify draw attention back to the hiring practices of the Trump Organization, which has employed undocumented immigrants as waiters, groundskeepers and housekeepers even as Trump made battling undocumented immigration a signature issue. Trump said during his presidential campaign that his company used E-Verify and he called for it to be made mandatory.... But the Trump Organization did not begin using the system at all of its properties until January, after The Washington Post reported that about a dozen undocumented workers from Latin America had been employed at the Trump National Golf Club in Westchester County, N.Y., but were abruptly fired that month."

Have Saber, Will Rattle. Chas Danner of New York: "President Trump, who may be the only thing standing between the Trump administration and an elective war with Iran, threatened to 'end' the country in a tweet on Sunday.... The president's return to bluster was [likely] prompted, as most of his weekend tweets typically are, by a Fox News segment he was watching (about the escalating tensions). 'If Iran wants to fight, that will be the official end of Iran,' Trump responded. 'Never threaten the United States again!'" ...

... Mustafa Salim & Tamer El-Ghobashy of the Washington Post: "A rocket landed inside Baghdad's fortified Green Zone, which houses the sprawling U.S. Embassy, Iraqi security officials said Sunday, in an apparent warning shot to the United States amid escalating tensions with Iran. The rocket landed less than a mile from the U.S. Embassy near Iraq's parliament building and caused no injuries or serious damage, a security official said. But the timing of the launch has increased worries in Iraq that it will be drawn into a conflict between two of its closest allies, the United States and Iran."

Bo Emerson of the Atlanta Journal-Constitution: "Billionaire Robert F. Smith, who received an honorary doctorate at Morehouse College's Sunday morning graduation exercises, had already announced a $1.5 million gift to the school. But during his remarks in front of the nearly 400 graduating seniors, the billionaire technology investor and philanthropist surprised some by announcing that his family was providing a grant to eliminate the student debt of the entire Class of 2019. 'This is my class,' he said, 'and I know my class will pay this forward.' The announcement elicited the biggest cheers of the morning." Mrs. McC: Yeah, I guess so. ...

... MEANWHILE. Gillian Edevane of Newsweek: "As Vice President Mike Pence gave the Saturday morning commencement address at Taylor University -- a Christian school in Pence's home state of Indiana -- dozens of graduating seniors and faculty walked out in protest. The small demonstration came after Taylor students and members of the surrounding Upland, Indiana, community started an online petition to bar Pence from giving the address, citing concerns that it could be construed as an endorsement of ... Donald Trump's policies. Many of those who remained at the ceremony but objected to Pence's presence sported buttons that declared, 'I am Taylor Too,' which intended to show that the university houses a multitude of viewpoints in contrast to those held by the administration.... The demonstration marked a rare instance in which a member of the Trump administration was rebuffed in what many considered to be friendly territory."

Presidential Race 2020

Amy Wang of the Washington Post: "In a televised Fox News Channel town hall event Sunday, Democratic presidential candidate Pete Buttigieg defended his decision to appear on the network, days after a competitor, Sen. Elizabeth Warren (Mass.), spurned Fox as a 'hate-for-profit racket.' During an hour-long conversation with moderator Chris Wallace, Buttigieg ... called out Tucker Carlson, for saying that immigrants made the United States 'dirtier,' as well as Laura Ingraham, who once compared detention centers for migrant children to summer camps. 'There is a reason why anybody has to swallow hard and think twice before participating in this media ecosystem,' Buttigieg said.... Buttigieg also took several opportunities to criticize President Trump, who earlier in the evening had tweeted his displeasure that his preferred news network was 'wasting airtime on Mayor Pete.'" ...

     ... Mrs. McCrabbie: As you recall, Trump also chastised Fox for hosting Bernie Sanders at a townhall in April. The messages I infer are that Trump thinks (1) that he is the program director at Trump TV; or (2) more ominously (and more likely), that democratic elections are a "waste of time" & that Fox should coronate him for at least a second term, if not more. ...

... Mayor Pete Gets a Standing O at Fox. Maureen Groppe of USA Today: "Pete Buttigieg got an enthusiastic reception at a Fox News town hall Sunday where he explained the importance of restoring moral authority to the office of president and appointing judges that back reproductive rights. He also criticized ... Donald Trump over reports that he's considering pardoning service members accused of war crimes. But the response that generated one of the biggest rounds of applause was his dismissal of Trump's signature form of communication. 'The tweets are -- I don't care,' the Democratic presidential hopeful said when asked how he would deal with Trump's tweets and insults if he wins the nomination. Calling Trump's tweets a distraction from the real issues, Buttigieg said he gets that 'It's the nature of grotesque things that you can't look away.'... 'Wow, a standing ovation," [host Chris] Wallace said as the audience rose after the hour-long discussion with the South Bend, Indiana, mayor."

Laurie Penny in the New Republic (May 17): Anti-abortion "laws are not about whether a fetus is a person. They are about enshrining maximalist control over the sexual autonomy of women as a foundational principle of conservative rule. They are about owning women. They are about women as things.... The question of whether a fetus is a person is conveniently unanswerable. The question of whether a woman is a person, however, is not up for debate -- and it is female personhood, not fetal personhood, that should decide the issue of basic bodily autonomy.... The Trump regime was given the keys to the nation's capital by white evangelicals mostly on the basis of a promise to criminalize abortion. Now Republicans across the country are gleefully delivering on that promise, because they like power and want to keep it, and because it makes them feel big and tough to confiscate basic human rights from pregnant people.... The anti-choice Republican feeding frenzy comes from a deep conservative greed for social control. That's why Tony Tinderholt, the Republican Texas state representative who is sponsoring a bill to make abortion an actual capital crime -- again, so much for the 'pro-life' position -- says that the great social virtue of his proposal is to 'force' women to be 'more personally responsible' in their sexual lives.... The eventual aim here is to put women's bodies under strict and brutal state surveillance across the whole of America.... It's a race thing, too, of course, and it always has been."

Saturday
May182019

The Commentariat -- May 19, 2019

Afternoon Update:

Even Computers Can Tell Trump & Kushner Might Be Crooks. David Enrich of the New York Times: "Anti-money laundering specialists at Deutsche Bank recommended in 2016 and 2017 that multiple transactions involving legal entities controlled by Donald J. Trump and his son-in-law, Jared Kushner, be reported to a federal financial-crimes watchdog. The transactions, some of which involved Mr. Trump's now-defunct foundation, set off alerts in a computer system designed to detect illicit activity, according to five current and former bank employees. Compliance staff members who then reviewed the transactions prepared so-called suspicious activity reports that they believed should be sent to a unit of the Treasury Department that polices financial crimes. But executives at Deutsche Bank, which has lent billions of dollars to the Trump and Kushner companies, rejected their employees' advice. The reports were never filed with the government.... Former Deutsche Bank employees said the decision not to report the Trump and Kushner transactions reflected the bank's generally lax approach to money laundering laws. The employees ... said it was part of a pattern of the bank's executives rejecting valid reports to protect relationships with lucrative clients."

Justin Wise of the Hill: "President Trump on Sunday ripped Rep. Justin Amash (R-Mich.) for saying that the president had reached the 'threshold for impeachment.'... 'Never a fan of @justinamash, a total lightweight who opposes me and some of our great Republican ideas and policies just for the sake of getting his name out there through controversy,' Trump said on Twitter.... 'He would see that it was nevertheless strong on NO COLLUSION and, ultimately, NO OBSTRUCTION,' Trump said. 'Anyway, how do you Obstruct when there is no crime and, in fact, the crimes were committed by the other side? Justin is a loser who sadly plays right into our opponents hands!'" ...

... Senator Mitt Mealy-Mouth. David Beavers of Politico: "Sen. Mitt Romney on Sunday called a GOP congressman's call for impeaching ... Donald Trump 'a courageous statement' while maintaining that impeachment is not warranted based on the special counsel's report. Speaking to CNN's Jake Tapper on 'State of the Union,' Romney said, 'My own view is that Justin Amash has reached a different conclusion than I have. I respect him. I think it's a courageous statement,' the Utah Republican continued. 'But I believe that to make a case for obstruction of justice, you just don't have the elements that are evidenced in this document.'"

** Daniel Okrent, in a Washington Post op-ed: Jared "Kushner's new immigration plan, aimed at reducing immigration from specific nations through the virtual elimination of what he and others have disparaged as 'chain migration,' and the simultaneous valorization of the highly educated, is simply a version of a blatantly discriminatory effort [the aristocratic senator Henry Cabot] Lodge initiated more than a century ago.... The widening streams of emigres pouring out of the impoverished lands between the Baltic and the Mediterranean had broadened to flood stage, and Lodge determined that the best way to keep them out was to make them submit to a literacy test.... Lodge's literacy test bill passed with ease. But on President Grover Cleveland's very last day in office, he struck it down with a veto, and there were not enough votes in the Senate to override.... Only with anti-European fervor spiking on the brink of World War I, and new theories of 'racial eugenics' shaping public debate, was it finally enacted over President Woodrow Wilson's second veto, in 1917.... Jared Kushner -- and Stephen Miller and President Trump -- likely know very little about Henry Cabot Lodge. But he would be proud of them."

Bo Emerson of the Atlanta Journal-Constitution: "Billionaire Robert F. Smith, who received an honorary doctorate at Morehouse College's Sunday morning graduation exercises, had already announced a $1.5 million gift to the school. But during his remarks in front of the nearly 400 graduating seniors, the billionaire technology investor and philanthropist surprised some by announcing that his family was providing a grant to eliminate the student debt of the entire Class of 2019. 'This is my class,' he said, 'and I know my class will pay this forward.' The announcement elicited the biggest cheers of the morning." Mrs. McC: Yeah, I guess so. ...

~~~~~~~~~~

The Trump Scandals, Ctd.

Glenn Thrush of the New York Times: "Representative Justin Amash, an iconoclastic Republican of Michigan who has considered a run against President Trump in 2020, became the first member of his party serving in Congress to publicly suggest that the president's conduct had reached the 'threshold of impeachment.' Mr. Amash, 39, used Mr. Trump's favorite medium -- Twitter -- to join a groundswell of Democrats who have concluded that the president's behavior, including instances of potential obstruction of justice laid out in the report by the special counsel, Robert S. Mueller III, meets the constitutional threshold of high crimes and misdemeanors. 'President Trump has engaged in impeachable conduct,' Mr. Amash wrote in a series of messages after reading the redacted version of the 448-page report. Contrary to the public statements and summaries offered by Attorney General William P. Barr, 'Mueller's report reveals that President Trump engaged in specific actions and a pattern of behavior that meet the threshold for impeachment,' wrote Mr. Amash, who has been one of the president's most outspoken Republican critics."

By Trump Standards, A Quaint Scandal. Colby Itkowitz of the Washington Post: "Seated behind a desk on Air Force One, the presidential seal over his left shoulder, President Trump shot a short video Thursday, blasting New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio's entry into the 2020 race.... Trump made the video while traveling to a fundraiser in New York.... Trump's use of taxpayer-funded transportation to post a political message raises some legal and ethics questions. But possibly the greatest crime ... is the breakdown of norms. It's entirely inappropriate, and it is against historical norms for a president to be campaigning from Air Force One,' said Paul S. Ryan ... of ... Common Cause, a nonpartisan watchdog group. 'Most presidents have had enough respect for the office to try to separate campaigning from formal duties. Donald Trump is not such a president.'" Besides being a potential campaign finance violation, "It is actually illegal under the U.S. code to use the [presidential] seal 'for the purpose of conveying, or in a manner reasonably calculated to convey, a false impression of sponsorship or approval by the Government of the United States.'" ...

     ... Mrs. Bea McCrabbie: We all know Trump is a fake president*, hence the asterisk. But -- as we find out nearly every day in one or more of a wide variety of ways -- he is so incompetent, he cannot even do a decent job of faking it.

Dahlia Lithwick of Slate: "This president is in a footrace against congressional Democrats currently seeking subpoenas, tax returns, and an unredacted Mueller report. He is in a footrace against state attorneys general seeking to forestall a pretend national emergency at the border. He is in a footrace against millions of Americans who stand to lose health insurance if the courts kill the Affordable Care Act.... And as [these cases] play out against the 2020 elections, this president is installing judges at lightning speed. He is doing that, and Senate Republicans are acceding to it, not just because he wants to turn the country into a theocracy, or a museum for lonely ethno-nationalists. He is doing it because his plan to evade judicial oversight requires that he control the refs. The faster Trump lards up the federal bench further with unqualified party operatives and loyalists, the more likely he is to draw judicial rulings in his favor. He's already bragged that he owns the Supreme Court, and that if Congress initiates impeachment proceedings he will turn there first to halt it.... With rare exceptions ... no judicial nominee is too extreme or unqualified for Senate Republicans."

Aid & Comfort to the Enemy. Frank Figliuzzi in an NBC News opinion piece: "On Monday, Attorney General William Barr, acting more like defense counsel for a cornered president than the nation's top law enforcement official, ordered a U.S. Attorney review the FBI's decision to open a counterintelligence investigation into alleged ties between Trump associates and Russia in 2016. This action, coupled with Barr's previous reckless conduct unwittingly promotes the interests of America's enemies as Barr perpetuates dangerous conspiracy theories about secret Washington cabals and FBI corruption.... When an adversary is aided in its cause by a fortuitous insider who required no energy or resources to cajole or coerce, the enemy views such serendipity as a gift. When that insider happens to be the attorney general of the United States, that gift is priceless.... Barr has become the kind of threat capable of doing severe harm; he has become a threat from within." Figliuzzi was a top FBI counterintelligence official.

Maybe the most important question to ask Bob Mueller when & if he testifies before Congress is what he thinks of Robert De Niro's impression of him:

Presidents use pardons to send messages. They recognize when a process wasn't just or when punishments were too extreme, like for some nonviolent drug cases. If this president is planning to pardon a bunch of people charged with war crimes, he will use the pardon power to send a far darker message. -- Margaret Love, former U.S. pardon attorney ...

... Pardon My War Crimes. Dave Philipps of the New York Times: "President Trump has indicated that he is considering pardons for several American military members accused or convicted of war crimes, including high-profile cases of murder, attempted murder and desecration of a corpse, according to two United States officials. The officials said that the Trump administration had made expedited requests this week for paperwork needed to pardon the troops on or around Memorial Day.... [An] official said while assembling pardon files typically takes months, the Justice Department stressed that all files would have to be complete before Memorial Day weekend, because the President planned to pardon the men then.... The fact that the requests were sent from the White House to the Justice Department, instead of the other way around, is a reversal of long-established practices.... Earlier this month, the president pardoned former Army First Lt. Michael Behenna, who had been convicted of killing an Iraqi during an interrogation in 2008."

Jacob Soboroff & Julia Ainsley of NBC News: "The Trump administration has identified at least 1,712 migrant children it may have separated from their parents in addition to those separated under the 'zero tolerance' policy, according to court transcripts of a Friday hearing. U.S. District Court Judge Dana Sabraw ordered the Trump administration to identify children separated before the zero tolerance policy went into effect in May 2018, resulting in the separation of over 2,800 children. Sabraw previously ordered those migrant families to be reunited, but the additional children were identified more recently when the Inspector General for Health and Human Services estimated 'thousands more' may have been separated before the policy was officially underway. Other potentially separated migrant children could still be identified. The government has reviewed the files of 4,108 children out of 50,000 so far." ...

     ... Mrs. McCrabbie: FedEx & even the U.S. Post Office keep better track of packages in transit than the DHS does of real, live human beings. Maybe they should have slapped shipping labels on these kids. What an unconscionable disgrace.

Rachel Frazin of the Hill: "U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) does not plan to send migrant families to Florida after reports about a Trump administration proposal resulted in backlash from local and state officials this week. A CBP official told The Hill on Saturday that the administration is not looking at transporting family units to Florida 'at this time' but said officials were looking at housing migrants in other areas across the country." See related story in yesterday's Commentariat.

Annals of "Journalism," Ha Ha Ha. Kevin Poulsen of the Daily Beast: "Founded and helmed by 77-year-old circuit-board millionaire Robert Herring Sr., [One America News Network] launched in 2013 as an answer to the chatty, opinionated content of mainstream cable news channels -- and a place for viewers too conservative for Fox News. Under Herring's direction the network embraced Trumpism enthusiastically starting in 2016, and in recent months the once-obscure cable news channel has been basking in a surge of attention from Donald Trump.... The segments, the interviews, the words the anchors are speaking and even the crawl at the bottom of the screen are a slurry of fake news mixed with genuine reporting; internet conspiracy theories blended with far-right rhetoric and drizzled with undiluted Kremlin propaganda." And it's a horrible place to work.

Presidential Race 2020

Maggie Astor of the New York Times: "Responding to a series of highly restrictive abortion laws aimed at overturning Roe v. Wade, several Democratic presidential candidates have called on Congress to codify abortion rights, signaling a newly aggressive approach in a debate whose terms have long been set by conservatives. Senator Cory Booker of New Jersey was first out of the gate on Wednesday, telling BuzzFeed News that if elected president, he would pursue legislation to guarantee abortion rights nationwide, superseding state restrictions, even if the Supreme Court overturned Roe. Senator Kirsten Gillibrand of New York promised the same on Thursday, and Senator Elizabeth Warren of Massachusetts came forward Friday morning with a more detailed plan. The three senators also called for repealing the Hyde Amendment, which prohibits federal funding for abortions."

Jeff Toobin: "The human costs of these new [anti-abortion] laws can scarcely be overstated. Laws have never stopped women from getting abortions; indeed, the abortion rate in countries that ban the procedure is about the same as it is in countries that allow it. But, by driving the practice underground, the new laws will increase the danger to women's health." Toobin demonstrates that the Supremes are likely to overturn Roe. First, they can't possibly hedge of the new Alabama law: "The Alabama legislators wrote their statute in a way that will make it impossible for the Justices to uphold it while still pretending that Roe is good law." Second, "Just last week, in Franchise Tax Board of California v. Hyatt, the Court's five conservatives gave a stark preview of how they regard precedents with which they disagree." ...

... ** Rebecca Traister of New York writes about why women are enraged & who deserve to be hoisted on the blunt points of that rage. And no, it isn't just the white GOP men who explain that women still are legally allowed tol get abortions before they find out they're pregnant. ...

... Carliss Chatman, in a Washington Post op-ed, argues that when a state grants full "personhood" to a fetus, the state also should give that fetus all the legal protections & benefits a "real person" gets: child support, for instance, citizenship (no deportation), a Social Security number (and benefits).

Beyond the Beltway

Georgia. Prosecutorial Discretion. Jennifer Bellamy of WXIA-TV Atlanta: "District attorneys across metro Atlanta have said they would not prosecute a woman for seeking out an abortion in Georgia under the new 'heartbeat' law, which would criminalize abortion after six weeks -- when a fetal pulse is detected. Questions about the legality of the bill have been swift from the medical and legal community about how the law would be enforced.... The Fulton County District Attorney's Office said it has no plans to prosecute women under the new law. That extends to doctors, nurses and other healthcare providers as well. He intends to follow the Roe v. Wade decision.... The same is true in Gwinnett[, Cobb and DeKalb] Count[ies]."

Way Beyond

Australia. Damien Cave of the New York Times: "Scott Morrison, Australia's conservative prime minister, scored a surprise victory in federal elections on Saturday, propelled by a populist wave -- the 'quiet Australians,' he termed it -- resembling the force that has upended politics in the United States, Britain and beyond. The win stunned Australian election analysts -- polls had pointed to a loss for Mr. Morrison's coalition for months. But in the end, the prime minister confounded expectations suggesting that the country was ready for a change in course after six years of tumultuous leadership under the conservative political coalition."

Austria. Katrin Bennhold & Christopher Schuetze of the New York Times: "Austria's chancellor called on Saturday for snap elections after the country's far-right vice chancellor resigned over a secretly filmed video from 2017 that renewed questions about whether Russia had a direct line into a government at the heart of Europe. The video showed Vice Chancellor Heinz-Christian Strache of the far-right Freedom Party promising government contracts to a woman claiming to be the niece of a Russian oligarch." ...

... Matthew Karnitschnig, in Politico, puts it more bluntly: "Turns out Russian collusion isn't a 'witch hunt hoax' after all. At least not in Austria. The country's government collapsed on Saturday after Chancellor Sebastian Kurz said he was pulling the plug on his ruling coalition after just 17 months in office. The move came barely 24 hours after the release of a bombshell video showing Heinz-Christian Strache, the far-right leader of his junior coalition partner, trying to trade public contracts for party donations from a woman he believed to be the wealthy niece of a Russian oligarch." ...

     ... Mrs. McCrabbie: You might think an incriminating videotape would be the coup de grâce we need here, but we already have more than one: Trump's asking Russia to find Hillary Clinton's e-mails (hackers went after them within five hours of the ask); Trump's telling Lester Holt he fired Comey because of the Rusher thing (and -- though no video, telling Russian diplomats the pressure was off once he fired Comey); Trump's, at Helsinki, telling the world he believed Putin's claim (over U.S. intelligence) that Russian government operatives didn't interfere in the 2016 election.

Friday
May172019

The Commentariat -- May 18, 2019

Ana Swanson & Jack Ewing of the New York Times: "President Trump on Friday said he would delay a decision on whether to impose tariffs on automobiles imported from Europe, Japan and other countries for six months, setting a tight deadline for the United States to reach trade agreements that have so far proved elusive." (Also linked yesterday.) ...

     ... The story has been updated. New Lede: "President Trump agreed on Friday to lift tariffs on metal imports from Mexico and Canada, removing a major irritant for two important allies that in exchange agreed to stop punishing American farmers with their own taxes on pork, cheese and milk. At the same time, Mr. Trump postponed a decision on whether to impose tariffs on automobiles...."

The Trump Scandals, Ctd.

Alan Rappeport & Nicholas Fandos of the New York Times: "Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin on Friday refused to comply with a congressional subpoena to hand over President Trump's tax returns, a move that is likely to be the final step before the matter heads to the courts.... [Rep. Richard] Neal [(D-Mass), chair of the Ways & Meand Committee,] told reporters that he saw little value in trying to hold Mr. Mnuchin or Charles P. Rettig, the I.R.S. commissioner, in contempt of Congress. Instead, he said, he would go straight to the courts to try to enforce his subpoena, potentially as soon as next week. The case could take months or years to resolve.... That did not sit well among Democrats on the Ways and Means Committee, who have consistently pushed a more aggressive approach toward getting Mr. Trump's returns." ...

     ... Mrs. McCrabbie: As Lawrence O'Donnell pointed out last night, this is the most brazen of all of TrumpCo's refusals to comply with Congressional requests in that it breaks a specific, clearly-written law that no previous administrations have defied. That the refusal comes with the imprimatur of Bill Barr's Justice* Department makes it all the worse.

Barr Goes All in on Trump's FBI Conspiracy Theory. Kate Riga of TPM: "Attorney General William Barr is loyally carrying out ... Donald Trump's pet project, leaning hard into the President's tweeted screams to 'investigate the investigators' who he believes launched the Russia probe to undermine his candidacy. In a clip of an interview with Fox News, Barr said he was probing if 'government officials abused their power and put their thumb on the scale.'" (Also linked yesterday.) ...

... Veronica Stracqualursi of CNN: "Attorney General William Barr said his review into the origins of the Russia investigation could result in rule changes for the FBI's counterintelligence investigations of political campaigns. 'Government power was used to spy on American citizens,' Barr told the Wall Street Journal in an interview published Friday. 'I can't imagine any world where we wouldn't take a look and make sure that was done properly.' The attorney general also told Fox News that 'people have to find out what the government was doing during that period.'... Barr indicated he's interested in the underlying intelligence that led to the FBI's decision to launch the investigation, along with the steps officials took based off of the intelligence, the Journal reported. He cited the surveillance of anti-Vietnam War protesters in the '60s and early '70s as a reason for concern, according to the newspaper, which is something he also brought up at a recent congressional hearing.... 'I've been trying to get answers to questions and I've found that a lot of the answers have been inadequate and I've also found that some of the explanations I've gotten don't hang together, in a sense I have more questions today than I did when I first started,' Barr told Fox News." (Also linked yesterday.) ...

... Tal Axelrod of the Hill: "Former FBI Director James Comey said Attorney General William Barr is 'sliming his own department' by questioning the inception of the Justice Department's probe into Russian election interference and if the Trump campaign conspired with Moscow. 'The AG should stop sliming his own Department. If there are bad facts, show us, or search for them professionally and then tell us what you found. An AG must act like the leader of the Department of Justice, an organization based on truth. Donald Trump has enough spokespeople,' Comey tweeted Friday." ...

... Justin Baragona of the Daily Beast: "Reacting to a Fox News interview with Attorney General William Barr that included Barr essentially threatening Democrats who criticize him and justifying the president calling the Mueller probe a 'witch hunt,' Fox News anchor Chris Wallace said Friday that Trump now has a new fixer. In the interview that was aired Friday, Barr told Fox News anchor Bill Hemmer that House Democrats who have accused him of contempt of Congress are discrediting him because they're likely 'concerned about the outcome of a review of what happened during the election.' Furthermore, the attorney general said he wants to see if FBI officials 'put their thumb on the scale' during the Russia investigation.... [Wallace said,] '... he [Barr] clearly is protecting this president and advocating his point of view on a lot of these issues.... I suspect that as President Trump, who probably has watched some of this interview himself, is saying: "Finally no Jeff Sessions, Bill Barr instead."'" ...

... digby: "Basically, Barr is signaling that his 'review' is going to be favorable to Trump and that former FBI officials (and the rest of us, for that matter) should be looking over our shoulders. This new sheriff in town is is a banana republican. Bigly.... It's obvious that if anyone is counting on the FBI and the Intelligence agencies to stop any foreign interference on behalf of Trump in the next election they had better get over it. Barr is sending a clear message to the troops to lay off Trump no matter what they see." ...

... Aaron Blake of the Washington Post: "During his confirmation hearings..., [one] of [William Barr's] curious arguments got short-shrifted. It was the time he suggested there was less evidence to support a Russia-collusion investigation than there was to support some other investigations. Except some of the potential investigations he cited were largely regarded as conspiracy theories.... That William Barr is beginning to rear his head.... In a couple of new interviews, Barr leans in on the idea that ... 'various "national security" activities' were nefarious -- pretty hard.... So here we have a guy who emailed a reporter [-- Peter Baker of the NYT --] in 2017 raising questions about 'various "national security" activities.' (Note the quotation marks he himself used there, suggesting skepticism.) And He did this even before the Nunes memo came out and at a time when many in the GOP weren't embracing this kind of rhetoric. He then adopts President Trump's 'spying' rhetoric while announcing the Justice Department would look into such allegations.... And now he's calling the use of the Steele dossier both 'strange' and 'unusual,' and saying the answers he's getting aren't adding up. It sounds a lot like the guy who believed in the plausibility of this conspiracy theory even before many in his own party adopted it. And it sounds like he's gradually becoming more comfortable saying so." ...

... Mrs. McCrabbie: Maybe, to be charitable, we should consider Barr just another crazy old uncle, albeit one who is the chief law enforcement official in the country. MEANWHILE, of course, Barr's toadying to Trump is only encouraging & agitating that other crazy old uncle, the one who has an even more powerful job than Barr's:

... John Wagner of the Washington Post: "President Trump warned Friday of the possibility of 'long jail sentences' for law-enforcement and intelligence officials involved in the early stages of the investigation into possible coordination between Russia and members of his 2016 campaign. 'My Campaign for President was conclusively spied on,' Trump claimed in a morning tweet. 'Nothing like this has ever happened in American Politics. A really bad situation. TREASON means long jail sentences, and this was TREASON!'... At a Senate hearing earlier this month, FBI Director Christopher A. Wray -- also a Trump appointee -- said he had not seen any evidence that illegal surveillance was conducted on individuals associated with Trump's campaign. He also said 'spying' was not a term he would use. Trump subsequently called Wray's testimony 'ridiculous.'" (Also linked yesterday.)

Pamela Brown, et al., of CNN: "While he was cooperating with ... Robert Mueller's investigation, former Trump national security adviser Michael Flynn contacted at least one member of Congress who was publicly criticizing the special counsel probe, according to messages obtained by CNN. Flynn sent Twitter direct messages to Rep. Matt Gaetz, encouraging the Florida Republican to 'keep the pressure on'" It's not clear if Flynn sent additional messages to other lawmakers. 'You stay on top of what you're doing. Your leadership is so vital for our country now. Keep the pressure on,' Flynn wrote in an April 2018 message to Gaetz.... On the evening Flynn sent the message to Gaetz, the lawmaker had appeared on Fox Business' 'Lou Dobbs Tonight,' where he criticized the Mueller investigation.... Gaetz did not have a prior relationship with Flynn, [Gaetz] said. The messages raise fresh questions about Flynn's contact with politically powerful people following his guilty plea in the Mueller probe. They add to a perception that has played out in Flynn's courtroom proceedings that he has modulated between helping the special counsel and stoking Mueller's critics...."


Zolan Kanno-Youngs & Patricia Mazzei of the New York Times: "Hundreds of migrants are being flown from South Texas to holding cells in California by the Department of Homeland Security, in a move that officials said on Friday could be expanded by sending asylum seekers to processing centers throughout the United States, including the border with Canada. Customs and Border Protection officials said they began flying migrant families from overcrowded facilities in the Rio Grande Valley in Texas to San Diego on Tuesday. It is expected that as many as three flights, each carrying up to 135 migrants, will be scheduled each week. The agency also recently started flying migrants five times each week from the Rio Grande Valley to Del Rio, Tex. Nearly all of the migrants are traveling as families, including some with young children." ..

... Isaac Stanley-Becker of the Washington Post: "Florida officials are raising alarm and pressing for details about the purported intention of the Trump administration to send hundreds of immigrants a week to two heavily Democratic counties in South Florida. Customs and Border Protection has not publicly disclosed its plans. But a partial picture of a new approach to managing a record influx of immigrants at the southern border came into view on Thursday based on the accounts of local leaders in Broward and Palm Beach counties. Even allies of the president were nonplussed. The state's Republican governor, Ron DeSantis, joined federal lawmakers from Florida -- Republicans and Democrats alike -- in questioning the apparent effort to foist the immigration and asylum burden on two local jurisdictions without equipping them with the resources to house, feed, educate and protect new arrivals." ...

     ... Mrs. McCrabbie: I am totally in with Broward County Mayor Mark Bogen: "Citing the president's threat to 'send people who illegally cross the border to communities that are considered immigrant friendly,' the mayor called the plans 'inhumane.' And he issued a threat of his own, saying that the county should bring those who couldn't find shelter 'to the Trump hotels and ask the President to open his heart and home as well.' Trump's Mar-a-Lago resort is located in Palm Beach County."

Jacqueline Thomsen of the Hill: "A split federal appeals court on Friday ruled that President Trump's decision to rescind the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) program was unlawful because 'it was not adequately explained.' The 4th Circuit Court of Appeals in Virginia found that the administration's termination of the program was 'arbitrary and capricious,' in line with a prior ruling from the 9th Circuit Court of Appeals." (Also linked yesterday.)

Nick Miroff & Josh Dawsey of the Washington Post: "An attempt by President Trump's senior adviser Stephen Miller to engineer a new shake-up at the Department of Homeland Security was blocked this week by Kevin McAleenan, the department' acting secretary, who said he might leave his post unless the situation improved and he was given more control over his agency, administration officials said. The closed-door clash flared over the fate of Mark Morgan, the former FBI official the president has picked to be the new director of U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement. With Morgan eager to move into the top job at ICE, Miller on Wednesday urged the president to have Morgan installed as the new commissioner of U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) instead. McAleenan the next day told senior White House officials that he -- not Miller -- was in charge of the department, said three Trump administration officials, who spoke on the condition of anonymity to describe internal tensions one Trump aide likened to an 'immigration knife fight.' McAleenan also argued that he should make personnel decisions at his agency, or at least be involved in them, these people said, and that communication needed to improve. McAleenan met with Mick Mulvaney, the acting White House chief of staff, among others, the officials said." ...

     ... Mrs. McCrabbie: Morgan is the guy who thinks he has super-powers to look into immigrant children's eyes & determine they will become gangsters. They're all a bunch of dangerous, racist reprobates.

Mrs. McCrabbie: I'm a day late with linking the story below, but it is both funny & revealing of Trump's horrible character, so possibly worth a look. At any rate, you may remember that about a week ago, a one-time Trump ghostwriter, Charles Leerhsen, claimed that back in the day, "flipping through fabric swatches seemed at times to be [Trump's] main occupation." He did this, Leerhsen inferred, because he couldn't understand more complex business matters. So ...

Nick Miroff & Josh Dawsey report that Trump is obsessed with the appearance of the border wall/fence: "The bollards, or 'slats,' as he prefers to call them, should be painted 'flat black,' a dark hue that would absorb heat in the summer, making the metal too hot for climbers to scale, Trump has recently told White House aides, Homeland Security officials and military engineers. And the tips of the bollards should be pointed, not round, the president insists, describing in graphic terms the potential injuries that border crossers might receive. Trump has said the wall's current blueprints include too many gates -- placed at periodic intervals to allow vehicles and people through -- and he wants the openings to be smaller. At a moment when the White House is diverting billions of dollars in military funds to fast-track construction, the president is micromanaging the project down to the smallest design details. But Trump's frequently shifting instructions and suggestions have left engineers and aides confused, according to current and former administration officials. Trump has demanded Department of Homeland Security officials come to the White House on short notice to discuss wall construction and on several occasions woke former secretary Kirstjen Nielsen to discuss the project in the early morning, officials said. Trump also has repeatedly summoned the head of the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, Lt. Gen. Todd T. Semonite, to impart his views on the barrier's properties, demanding that the structure be physically imposing but also aesthetically pleasing." ...

     ... Mrs. McCrabbie: So not only is Trump micromanaging the design of the wall -- and repeatedly changing his mind about elements of that design -- he wants to make sure it physically harms desperate immigrants. What a nasty bastard.

A Very Trumpy Presidential* Address. Brett Samuels of the Hill: "President Trump on Friday railed against the use of anonymous sources in news reports about his administration, calling it 'bullshit.' The president went on a tangent during remarks to the National Association of Realtors in Washington, D.C., complaining about news coverage of his administration's approach to Iran. He disputed that he is at odds with some of his top advisers on the subject, before mocking the way some of the reports use unnamed administration officials. 'Do you ever notice they never write the names of people anymore?' Trump said. 'Everything is "a source says." There is no source. The person doesn't exist. The person's not alive. It's bullshit, OK? It's bullshit.'... While Trump claimed the media reporting has led to confusion over his plans for addressing the conflict with Iran, lawmakers in both parties have voiced frustration over the lack of information coming from the White House."

"The Kiddie Tax." Erica Green of the New York Times: "A little-noticed provision in President Trump's sprawling new tax law is treating middle- and low-income college students as if they are trust-fund babies, taxing sizable financial aid packages at a rate first established 33 years ago to prevent wealthy parents from funneling money to their children to lower their tax burdens. Higher-education leaders are calling on Congress to fix the provision, which drastically raised the tax rate on so-called unearned income for children with assets and young adults in school. Students with large financial aid packages are finding their nontuition assistance for items such as room and board taxed by as much as 37 percent, even if their family income tax rates are much lower.... [The provision also is] hitting tribal funds dispensed to Native American children and young adults, and the families of service members who died in combat, some of whom saw hefty tax bills for their children's survivor benefits this past spring.... Republicans now say they did not anticipate that it would raise taxes on low-income scholarship winners.... After unanimously opposing the law..., [Democrats] are likely to demand a price for getting Republicans out of a political jam. Any fix would need to roll back some provisions of the law, Democrats say."

Catie Edmondson of the New York Times: "A major investigation into sexual abuse at Ohio State University found no hard evidence that coaches like Jim Jordan, now a prominent Republican in Congress, knew of a team doctor's rampant sexual misconduct. But the 182-page report released on Friday said dozens of other coaches acknowledged that rumors of the doctor's predatory behavior were rife. Mr. Jordan, a former assistant wrestling coach who has denied knowing of the abuse or hearing any locker-room talk about it, claimed complete vindication on Friday.... The actual findings, however, were more ambiguous than that. The report said that the university physician, Richard H. Strauss, was 'infatuated' with the wrestling team and timed his workouts so he could shower with the wrestlers.... '... the Investigation Team received allegations from numerous student-athletes indicating that they talked about Strauss's inappropriate genital exams and complained about Strauss&'s locker-room voyeurism directly to -- or in front of -- O.S.U. coaching staff.' Wrestlers who worked with Mr. Jordan in the late 1980s and early 1990s continue to say that he did know of Dr. Strauss's predatory behavior, and his claims of exoneration rankled some wrestlers. 'How can he be vindicated? What he's doing now is throwing salt in the wound,' said Dunyasha Yetts, a wrestler at the university in 1992 and 1993, who was one of the first and most outspoken victims to come forward." Related story linked below.

Presidential Race 2020

Alice Ollstein of Politico: "Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.) on Thursday unveiled a series of steps to defend abortion rights and reproductive health care, citing strict new curbs on abortion recently imposed in states including Alabama. The plan relies heavily on Congress to pass laws that protect access to reproductive health services, including policies blocking states from interfering a health provider's ability to give care. Warren would call on Congress to pass laws enshrining the right to an abortion that would preempt any state attempt to ban the procedure or impose onerous regulations on abortion providers. She would also push for the repeal of the Hyde amendment, a long-time prohibition on federal funding for abortion and sign executive orders rolling back recent Trump administration moves aimed at cutting Planned Parenthood out of the Title X family planning program."

Lachlan Markay & Sam Stein of the Daily Beast: "Hawaii Rep. Tulsi Gabbard's campaign for the Democratic presidential nomination is being underwritten by some of the nation's leading Russophiles.... Gabbard is one of her party's more Russia-friendly voices in an era of deep Democratic suspicion of the country over its efforts to tip the 2016 election in favor of ... Donald Trump. Her financial support from prominent pro-Russian voices in the U.S. is a small portion of the total she's raised. But it still illustrates the degree to which she deviates from her party's mainstream on such a contentious and high-profile issue."

Anyone But Trump. Daniel Strauss & Stephanie Murray of Politico: "Vermont Gov. Phil Scott [R] signaled support for former Massachusetts Gov. Bill Weld over ... Donald Trump in the 2020 Republican primary. Scott, during his weekly news conference Thursday, was asked whether he would prefer Weld, the only declared Republican primary challenger to Trump, over the incumbent president. 'Oh sure,' Scott said. But the Vermont governor said he wasn't ready to formally endorse any Republican and that he hoped Maryland Gov. Larry Hogan or Massachusetts Gov. Charlie Baker would consider jumping into the primary."

Beyond the Beltway

The March of the States to Subjugate Women Continues. ...

Louisiana. Melinda Deslatte of the AP: Louisiana Gov. John Bel Edwards, a Democrat "who has repeatedly bucked national party leaders on abortion rights, is about to do it again. He's ready to sign legislation tha would ban the procedure as early as six weeks of pregnancy, before many women know they are pregnant, when the bill reaches his desk. Louisiana's proposal, awaiting one final vote in the state House, would prohibit abortion after a fetal heartbeat is detected, similar to laws passed in Kentucky Mississippi, Georgia and Ohio that aim to challenge the U.S. Supreme Court's 1973 Roe v. Wade decision that legalized abortion. Alabama has gone even further, enacting a law that makes performing abortions a felony at any stage of pregnancy with almost no exceptions." ...

... Missouri, Etc.  Elisha Fieldstadt of NBC News & the AP: "Missouri's Republican-led House passed a bill banning abortions at eight weeks of pregnancy with an exception for medical emergencies but not for rape or incest. Republican Gov. Mike Parson is likely to sign the bill, following the governors of Alabama, Georgia and several other states who have also recently signed stringent abortion legislation. 'Until the day that we no longer have abortions in this country, I will never waiver in the fight for life,' Parson said during a rally Wednesday. Under the bill, which passed in the House by 110 to 44, doctors who perform an abortion after the eight-week cutoff could face five to 15 years in prison. Women who receive abortions would not be criminally penalized. Missouri's Republican-led Senate passed that state's bill, called Missouri Stands With the Unborn, by a vote of 24-10 on Thursday morning." (Also linked yesterday.)

Ohio. Victor Mather of the New York Times: "Ohio State said Friday that an investigation had confirmed -- in voluminous details gleaned from hundreds of interviews -- that a team doctor had sexually abused at least 177 men, including many varsity athletes, while working for the university in the 1970s, '80s and '90s. The university also revealed that dozens of Ohio State officials, including more than 50 athletic department staff members, were aware of the doctor's actions during his nearly two-decade tenure yet did not act to stop them. In a 182-page report issued on Friday, Ohio State detailed how the doctor, Richard H. Strauss, had groped students, required them to strip unnecessarily during examinations, and asked intimate questions about sexual practices under the guise of providing medical treatment."

News Lede

New York Times: "Herman Wouk, whose taut shipboard drama 'The Caine Mutiny' lifted him to the top of the best-seller lists, where he remained for most of a career that extended past his 100th year thanks to page-turners like 'Marjorie Morningstar,' 'Youngblood Hawke' and the World War II epics 'The Winds of War' and 'War and Remembrance,' died early Friday at his home in Palm Springs, Calif. He was 103."