The Commentariat -- December 23, 2019
Late Morning Update:
Zeke Miller of the AP: "Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell said Monday that he was not ruling out calling witnesses in ... Donald Trump's impeachment trial -- but indicated he was in no hurry to seek new testimony either -- as lawmakers remain at an impasse over the form of the trial by the GOP-controlled Senate.... 'We haven't ruled out witnesses,' McConnell said Monday in an interview with 'Fox and Friends.' 'We've said let's handle this case just like we did with President Clinton. Fair is fair.' That trial featured a 100-0 vote on arrangements that established two weeks of presentations and argument before a partisan tally in which then-minority Republicans called a limited number of witnesses. But Democrats now would need Republican votes to secure witness testimony -- and Republicans believe they have the votes to eventually block those requests."
Desmond Butler & Michael Biesecker of the AP: "In a back corner of the swank H Bar in Houston..., [Lev & Igor,] two Russian-speaking men offered a Ukrainian gas executive what seemed like an outrageous business proposal. Andrew Favorov, the No. 2 at Ukraine's state-run gas company Naftogaz, says he sat on a red leather bench seat and listened wide-eyed as the men boasted of their connections to ... Donald Trump and proposed a deal to sell large quantities of liquefied natural gas from Texas to Ukraine. But first, Favorov says, they told him they would have to remove ... Favorov's boss and the U.S. ambassador in Kyiv, the Ukrainian capital. Favorov says he hardly took the proposal at the early March meeting seriously.... What he didn't know ... was that high-ranking officials in the Ukrainian government were already taking steps to topple his boss, Naftogaz CEO Andriy Kobolyev. And two months later, Trump recalled U.S. Ambassador Marie Yovanovitch.... The gas deal sought by Lev Parnas and Igor Fruman never came to pass. But their efforts to profit from contacts with GOP luminaries are now part of a broad federal criminal investigation into the two men and their close associate, Rudy Giuliani, Trump's personal attorney.... [Lev & Igor's] campaign culminated in May, at a meeting at the Trump International Hotel in Washington that included a lobbyist with deep ties to U.S. Energy Secretary Rick Perry and a Republican fundraiser from Texas close to Donald Trump Jr." ~~~
~~~ Mrs. McCrabbie: We have to assume two things here: (1) Congressional Republicans know at least the broad outlines of these nefarious deals, and (2) they're okay with these methods of doing business and most probably are not above making similar deals themselves.
Betsy Swan of the Daily Beast: "In a detailed memo to senators, the Trump administration is fighting a bill that would punish Turkey for buying Russian missiles, arguing it would drive the countries closer together. Of note, Team Trump opposes a provision in the bill that would help Syrian Kurdish refugees immigrate to the United States. The case is laid out in a seven-page document obtained by The Daily Beast. The memo was sent by the State Department to Capitol Hill ahead of the Senate mark-up of a bill co-sponsored by Sens. Jim Risch (R-ID) and Bob Menendez (D-NJ)...."
Passing Wind. John Bowden of the Hill: "President Trump lashed out again at wind farms on Saturday, claiming that the production of wind turbines causes a large carbon footprint. During a speech to the conservative student group Turning Point USA, Trump told attendees that he 'never understood' the allure of wind power plants, according to a report from Mediaite. 'I never understood wind,' Trump said, according to Mediaite. 'I know windmills very much, I have studied it better than anybody. I know it is very expensive. They are made in China and Germany mostly, very few made here, almost none, but they are manufactured, tremendous -- if you are into this -- tremendous fumes and gases are spewing into the atmosphere. You know we have a world, right?'" Mrs. McC: As you may have noticed, Trump simultaneously "lashed out again" against the English language, presuming the speech was intended to be delivered in English. ~~~
~~~ Update: Philip Bump of the Washington Post translates Trump's remarks. ~~~
~~~ Matt Novak of Gizmodo: "... Donald Trump said a bunch of bizarre shit about windmills over the weekend at a conference in Florida for conservative college students, ranting about the size of the universe and saying 'I know windmills very much.'... Trump, whose brain is mostly just KFC gravy at this point, told college kids at the Turning Point USA conference that the Green New Deal was threatening the very existence of the country.... 'We're in a battle of survival of this nation,' Trump said before using a racial slur against Democratic Senator Elizabeth Warren in a rambling diatribe. 'When you look at these people talk, with their Green New Deal. But I don't want to knock it now, if you don't mind,' Trump said. 'I don't want to knock it. I knocked... I knocked the hell out of Pocahontas. I got her down.'"
Spencer Kimball of CNBC: “The Christian magazine that published a blistering editorial calling for ... Donald Trump's removal from office over his 'blackened moral record' has received a boost in subscribers despite a public backlash among leading evangelicals, according to the publication's editor in chief. Mark Galli, the editor in chief of Christianity Today who authored the op-ed, acknowledged to MSNBC on Sunday that the magazine has lost subscribers, but he said there has also been an outpouring of support.' A stereotypical response is "thank you, thank you, thank you" with a string of a hundred exclamation points -- "you've said what I've been thinking but haven't been able to articulate, I'm not crazy,"' Galli said of the response from supporters. 'We have lost subscribers but we've had 3 times as many people start to subscribe.'"
Amie Parnes of the Hill: "... behind the scenes in recent months, former President Obama has gone to bat for [Sen. Elizabeth] Warren (D-Mass.) when speaking to donors reluctant to support her given her knocks on Wall Street and the wealthy. And if Warren becomes the nominee, Obama has said they must throw the entirety of their support behind her. The former president has stopped short of an endorsement of Warren in these conversations and has emphasized that he is not endorsing in the Democratic primary race. But he also has vouched for her credentials, making it clear in these private sessions that he deems her a capable candidate and potential president, sources say."
David Gelles of the New York Times: "Boeing on Monday fired its chief executive, Dennis A. Muilenburg, whose handling of the company's 737 Max crisis had angered lawmakers, airlines, regulators and victims' families. The company said Dave Calhoun, the chairman, would replace Mr. Muilenburg on Jan. 13. Until then, Boeing's chief financial officer, Greg Smith, will serve as interim chief executive, the company said. The Boeing board made the decision on a call on Sunday, after a string of disastrous announcements for the company, according to two people briefed on the matter.... Mr. Muilenburg has stepped down effective immediately.Boeing has been mired in the worst crisis in its 103-year history since the crashes of two 737 Max jets killed 346 people. The plane has been grounded since March, and Boeing has faced cascading delays as it tries to return the Max to the air." The AP story is here.
Michael Schwirtz of the New York Times: "For years, members of a secret team, Unit 29155, operated without Western security officials having any idea about their activities. But an attack on an arms dealer in Sofia helped blow their cover.... Western security and intelligence officials say the Bulgaria poisonings were a critical clue that helped expose a campaign by the Kremlin and its sprawling web of intelligence operatives to eliminate Russia's enemies abroad and destabilize the West.... Russia cannot compete economically or militarily with the United States and China, so Mr. Putin is waging an asymmetric shadow war." ~~~
~~~ Mrs. McCrabbie: This cloak-and-dagger story provides an outline, BTW, of how the CIA & other Western intelligence agencies actually go after international malefactors. They do not ask the POTUS* to call up the new president of Ukraine & ask him to investigate a U.S. politician -- in exchange for $391MM in military aid.
Adam Nossiter of the New York Times: "Algeria's de facto ruler, Gen. Ahmed Gaïd Salah, who this year managed the ouster of one president and the ascent of another amid deep civil unrest, died on Monday, according to the state news agency and Algerian press reports. General Gaïd Salah's unexpected death at 79 -- his official age, though he was most likely older -- less than two weeks after the army's favored candidate was elected president, creates a power vacuum in the vast North African nation, a major oil and gas producer. A survivor from the generation that led Algeria to independence from France in the early 1960s, General Gaïd Salah was the man who increasingly blocked the demands of the popular protest movement that has rocked the country's politics since last February." A BBC story is here.
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Happily, there is no news. I guess I could post some cat videos.
S.V. Date of the Huffington Post: "... Donald Trump has pushed his taxpayer-funded golf tab past $118 million on his 26th visit to Mar-a-Lago, his for-profit resort in Palm Beach, Florida, with a Saturday visit to his course in neighboring West Palm Beach. The new total is the equivalent of 296 years of the $400,000 presidential salary that his supporters often boast that he is not taking. And of that $118.3 million, at least several million has gone into Trump's own cash registers, as Secret Service agents, White House staff and other administration officials stay and eat at his hotels and golf courses.... If Trump continues golfing at the pace he has set in his first three years, he will surpass in just one term the total number of days [President] Obama spent golfing over two full terms -- despite having repeatedly criticized Obama for playing too much golf and having promised, as a candidate, that he would be too busy to play any golf at all."
Brief Encounter. John Bowden of the Hill: "President Trump briefly met with his attorney Rudy Giuliani on Saturday as Giuliani faces a federal investigation over possible campaign finance violations, Bloomberg News reported. The two men met Saturday night at Trump's Mar-a-Lago resort in West Palm Beach, Fla., where Trump spent the weekend ahead of this week's Christmas holiday. It was unclear what the two men discussed, according to Bloomberg."
Presidential Race 2020
Thomas Beaumont of the AP: "'Field of Dreams' actor Kevin Costner returned to Iowa on Sunday to go to bat for Democratic presidential candidate Pete Buttigieg, pitching the small-town mayor as someone worth listening to in the crowded lineup of White House hopefuls. 'Whether your road leads you to Pete, like mine has, that's for you to judge,' Costner, a self-described independent, told more than 1,000 people in the high school gymnasium of Indianola, a town of about 16,000 people located south of Des Moines. 'When Pete speaks of unity, it's the kind of unity I've been waiting and hoping to hear about.'" Mrs. McC: Huh. I would have guessed Costner was a John Wayne sort of jerk. Turns out he's not. Good for him and my bad.
"Libel Tourism." Why POS Devin Nunes Filed Frivolous Lawsuits in Virginia. Justin Jouvenal of the Washington Post: "The suits are part of a string of splashy defamation claims by politicians and the A-list star seeking nearly $1 billion in damages in Virginia courts this year, even though many of the cases have only loose connections to the state.... Several of the defendants -- including Twitter ... -- say the filing location is aimed at exploiting the state's weak protections for defamation defendants. Some legal experts say Virginia law allows those with deep pockets to bulldoze targets with frivolous, protracted and expensive litigation they couldn't pursue in many other states. The true goals of the suits, the defendants argue, are to stifle critics, blunt aggressive journalism and settle scores. Some deride the legal maneuvers as 'libel tourism' and see a growing trend not just in Virginia but in other states that similarly lack safeguards. The suits have prompted Virginia lawmakers to look at changing the law." ~~~
~~~ Mrs. McCrabbie: In the spirit of the season, the best thing would be to put Nunes and, say, Ken Cuccinelli or Stephen Miller in a locked room with some lethal weapons, right after telling each of them that the other made a yo-mama-type insult against the other. Let them fight it out. Gruesome & macabre? Yes. But just what the rat-bastards deserve.
Way Beyond the Beltway
Saudi "Justice." Bethan McKernan of the Guardian & Agencies: "Five men have been sentenced to death and another three face 24 years in prison for their roles in the gruesome murder of the dissident journalist Jamal Khashoggi at the Saudi consulate in Istanbul last year, the Saudi public prosecutor's office has said. All 11 people on trial were found guilty of the killing, which triggered the kingdom's biggest diplomatic crisis since the 9/11 attacks as world leaders and business executives sought to distance themselves from Riyadh. However, Saudi state television also reported the Saudi attorney general's investigation showed that the crown prince Mohammed bin Salman's former top adviser, Saud al-Qahtani, had no proven involvement in the killing, after being investigated and released without charge. Al-Qahtani has been sanctioned by the US for his alleged role in the operation. The court also ruled that the Saudi consul-general in Istanbul at the time, Mohammed al-Otaibi, was not guilty. He was released from prison after the verdicts were announced." Those convicted can appeal the verdicts. Update: The Washington Post story is here.