The Commentariat -- March 7, 2020
Afternoon Update:
How Low Will They Go? So Low, Can't Get Under It. Mark Mazzetti & Adam Goldman of the New York Times: "Erik Prince, the security contractor with close ties to the Trump administration, has in recent years helped recruit former American and British spies for secretive intelligence-gathering operations that included infiltrating Democratic congressional campaigns, labor organizations and other groups considered hostile to the Trump agenda, according to interviews and documents. One of the former spies, an ex-MI6 officer named Richard Seddon, helped run a 2017 operation to copy files and record conversations in a Michigan office of the American Federation of Teachers.... [Prince's sister Betsy] DeVos has been a vocal critic of teachers' unions.... Using a different alias the next year, the same undercover operative infiltrated the congressional campaign of Abigail Spanberger, then a former C.I.A. officer who went on to win an important House seat in Virginia as a Democrat. The campaign discovered the operative and fired her. Both operations were run by Project Veritas.... The Trump Foundation gave $20,000 to Project Veritas in 2015, the year that Mr. Trump began his bid for the presidency."
Michael Shear, et al., of the New York Times: "From the beginning, the Trump administration's attempts to forestall an outbreak of a virus now spreading rapidly across the globe was marked by a raging internal debate about how far to go in telling Americans the truth. Even as the government's scientists and leading health experts raised the alarm early and pushed for aggressive action, they faced resistance and doubt at the White House -- especially from the president -- about spooking financial markets and inciting panic."
David Nakamura of the Washington Post assesses Trump's performance at his CDC Atlanta visit Friday. Nakamura doesn't grade Trump, but his review reads like a "D-", at best. ~~~
~~~ Dana Milbank of the Washington Post: "Do you have a nagging medical concern?... Well, fret no more. America now has a leading medical expert -- some say the best -- who will dispense diagnoses and prognoses to all -- for free! This bold new telemedicine initiative, 'Ask Dr. Trump,' will be offered on an unpredictable but highly frequent basis to all Americans (whether they like it or not). Dr. Donald J. Trump, of course, is the pioneering scientist who first determined that climate change is a hoax and, more recently, discovered that windmills cause cancer. In between, he proved that forest fires could be contained by 'raking' and identified a previously unrecognized tropical cyclone pattern targeting Alabama. Dr. Trump acquired what he calls 'a natural instinct for science' not through formal education but because 'my uncle was a great professor at MIT for many years.' Sadly, the elder Trump didn't live to see his nephew's greatest discoveries in the medical field: The flu shot is basically 'injecting bad stuff into your body' and exercise can shorten your life. Dr. Trump used his instinctive grasp of medicine to become 'the healthiest individual ever elected to the presidency' with an innate life expectancy of 200 years." Read on.
Sharon LaFraniere of the New York Times: "Attorney General William P. Barr ... increasingly appears to be chiseling away at [Robert Mueller's investigation]. The attorney general's handling of the results of the Russia inquiry came under fire when a federal judge questioned this week whether Mr. Barr had sought to create a 'one-sided narrative' clearing Mr. Trump of misconduct.... In fact, Mr. Barr's comments then were but the first in a series of actions in which he cast doubt not just on the findings of the inquiry by the special counsel ... and some of the resulting prosecutions, but on its very premise.... Mr. Barr has assigned a federal prosecutor to investigate the [investigation] further and has suggested that the inquiry might conclude that the F.B.I. acted in bad faith.... Last month, Mr. Barr appointed another outside prosecutor to review a case that Mr. Mueller brought against the president's former national security adviser Michael T. Flynn for lying to the F.B.I. And in a second case that the Mueller team brought against Roger J. Stone Jr., Mr. Trump's longtime friend, the attorney general overruled career prosecutors to seek a more lenient prison sentence...."
A PBS Network Even Trump Would Like. Vanessa Gera of the AP: "Poland's president has signed a bill earmarking nearly 2 billion zlotys ($510 million) to fund public television and radio, broadcast outlets that have become mouthpieces for the country's right-wing government and given the president positive coverage as he campaigns for reelection. President Andrzej Duda, who hails from the ruling Law and Justice party, signed the funding bill late Friday as he campaigns for a second five-year term in a May election.... In [signing the bill], he allowed a large injection of money to go into broadcasters that were already helping his campaign." ~~~
~~~ I am excited to announce the introduction of "Fifth Avenue," an educational entertainment show for the kiddies featuring Big Eagle, Barack the Grouch & a cast of beautiful, rich white people. Today's show stars the Letter "A" for "Abercrombie." Tune in tomorrow to meet the letter "B" for "Bergdorf." And the kids won't want to miss "C" for "Cartier" -- they'll all enjoy learning to tell time the old-fashioned way with this beautiful Cartier watch with fuchsia alligator strap for only $70,800.00 (free shipping!).
Mrs. McCrabbie: AND I guess we'll have to mention Melanie's Covfefe-19 Memorial White House Tennis Pavillion, since Anonymous raises the matter in today's Comments: ~~~
~~~ Eliza Relman & Ellen Cramley of Business Insider: "... Melania Trump tweeted on Thursday about the construction of a new private White House tennis pavilion amid concern that the Trump administration isn't doing enough to contain the coronavirus outbreak. 'I am excited to share the progress of the Tennis Pavillion at @WhiteHouse,' she tweeted alongside photos of herself in a hard hat at the construction site. 'Thank you to the talented team for their hard work and dedication.' Critics were quick to condemn Trump's announcement.... The first lady pushed back against her critics in a tweet on Saturday morning.... 'I encourage everyone who chooses to be negative & question my work at the @WhiteHouse to take time and contribute something good & productive in their own communities,' she tweeted, adding the hashtag for her childhood wellness campaign, #BeBest."
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** Your Friday Night News Dump. Morgan Chalfant of the Hill: "President Trump on Friday announced [in a tweet] that Rep. Mark Meadows (R-N.C.) would replace Mick Mulvaney as his chief of staff. Trump announced the news in a tweet, saying he would appoint Mulvaney as U.S. special envoy for Northern Ireland." This is a developing story. ~~~
~~~ Update. The New York Times story, by Peter Baker, is here. Mrs. McC: It's surprising the Times first posted its story at 9:49 pm ET, an hour-and-a-half after Trump's tweet. NYT reporter Annie Karni said on MSNBC the other day that every time Trump announces a new hire, the paper mocks up a story about that person's dismissal (as they do for prominent, elderly people), inasmuch as it won't be long till Trump axes him. Mulvaney lasted 14 months, but only because, as Baker notes, "The president soured on Mr. Mulvaney long ago but was warned by advisers not to get rid of him until after his [impeachment] trial in the Senate...." Anyway, I hope Mulvaney enjoys Northern Ireland. I guess positions in Greenland and Mongolia were unavailable.
Thanks to Ken W. for the lead.Jonathan Lemire, et al., of the AP: "... Donald Trump's visit to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention on Friday turned into a scattershot defense of his administration's handling of the coronavirus outbreak, veering into political score-settling, exaggerations and talk harking back to his impeachment.... Trump called Washington state's governor [Jay Inslee (D)], who is dealing with the most serious outbreak in the nation, a 'snake.' He said he'd prefer that people exposed to the virus on a cruise ship be left aboard so they wouldn't be added to the count for the nation's total number of infections. And he falsely claimed that a test for the virus was available immediately to all who want it. He also suggested the accuracy of the coronavirus test was 'perfect -- like the letter was perfect.' With that, Trump was making a comparison to the July phone call with Ukraine's president that led to his impeachment.... Trump touted the ratings of his town hall this week on Fox News and mocked a CNN reporter. He cut off Health and Human Services Secretary Alex Azar as he tried to counsel Americans to be patient.... The president, while touring the CDC, talked up his ability to understand the virus, although he has repeatedly misstated how long it would take for a vaccine to be developed and available. 'I like this stuff. I really get it,' Trump said. 'People are surprised that I understand it.... Maybe I have a natural ability.'" ~~~
~~~ Mrs. Bea McCrabbie: Yes, if the Stable Genius would have just one more chat with Ben Carson, I'd feel safe having Trump cut into my skull & operate on my brain. He has a natural ability. ~~~
This video in which Trump repeatedly claims that "anybody who wants a test gets a test" is remarkable, not just because it isn't true but because of the way Trump keeps repeating the lie: ~~~
~~~ BUT the lie works, at least as far as spreading disinformation goes. The "news" team at Atlanta's Channel 11, an NBC affiliate, reported Friday that "the agency [CDC] is expected to ship out about a million tests by tomorrow." That isn't even marginally true, as Steve Kornacki of MSNBC makes clear in his report embedded above. ~~~
~~~ MEANWHILE, in the Real World. Katie Thomas, et al., of the New York Times: "President Trump claimed again on Friday that anyone who needed a coronavirus test 'gets a test.' But from Washington State to Florida to New York, doctors and patients are clamoring for tests that they say are in woefully short supply, and their frustration is mounting alongside the growing number of cases around the country. In California, where thousands are being monitored for the virus, only 516 tests had been conducted by the state as of Thursday. Washington health officials have more cases than they can currently process. And in New York, where cases have quadrupled this week, a New York City official pleaded for more test kits from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. 'The slow federal action on this matter has impeded our ability to beat back this epidemic,' the official said in a letter Friday. More than 300 cases have been confirmed, at least 17 have died, and thousands are in self-quarantine. Public health officials are warning that no one knows how deeply the virus will spread, in part because the federal government's flawed rollout of tests three weeks ago has snowballed into an embarrassing fiasco of national proportions."
Peter Baker of the New York Times: "President Trump signed an $8.3 billion emergency spending bill to confront the coronavirus outbreak on Friday morning and decided to visit the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in Atlanta, reversing his decision hours earlier to skip touring the nerve center of the government's response to the health crisis." Mrs. McC: The reason Trump's visit to the CDC was on-again/off-again was because of a suspected case of coronavirus at the Atlanta center. But then it turned out the person had tested negative for the virus. Everything is going very smoothly. A Politico story is here. (Also linked yesterday.) ~~
~~~ Guardian (from the liveblog @9:50 am ET): "Trump ... reiterated his lack of worry about the spread of [coronavirus] in the US. Perhaps problematic, though is that, to many, he's coming across as casually dismissive and posturing, not measured, and reassuringly presidential. 'You have to be calm,' he said, at the White House this morning before departing to tour the tornado damage in Tennessee and just after signing an $8.3 billion emergency spending bill to deal with the virus. 'It will go away,' he said. 'We have very low numbers [of confirmed cases] compared to many countries throughout the world, our numbers are lower than almost anyone ... deaths, is it 11?' It is. 'In terms of cases, it's very very few because we have been very strong at the borders.'" (Also linked yesterday.) ~~~
~~~ John Harwood of CNN: "... Donald Trump sent a message Friday to anyone expecting major economic aid to head off a coronavirus recession: Don't hold your breath. With financial markets reeling, some economists back direct bailouts for affected workers and businesses to prevent a contraction of the already-slowing American economy. But as he signed the $8.3-billion emergency coronavirus spending bill passed by Congress -- more than triple the amount the White House had requested -- Trump waved off the idea of a new fiscal stimulus to protect America's record-breaking economic expansion, again calling on the Federal Reserve to use its monetary policy tools. 'The Fed should cut and the Fed should stimulate,' Trump told me before leaving the White House to tour tornado damage in Tennessee. And he evinced little concern about the chance of recession anytime soon, declaring, 'I think we're in great shape.'... 'We're not looking at these massive, federal, throw-money-at-people plans,' National Economic Council director Larry Kudlow told reporters. 'We are looking at timely and targeted (efforts) where we can do the most good.'"
Jonathan Chait enjoys ragging Donald Trump & Larry Kudlow for their wildly incorrect claims & prognostications on the coronavirus & its impact on the markets. (Also linked yesterday.)
Morgan Chalfant, et al., of the Hill: "Vice President Pence said Friday that 21 individuals on a cruise ship off the coast of California tested positive for the coronavirus and that the Trump administration would bring the passengers stateside this weekend. The cruise ship will be brought into a noncommercial port. Passengers will be tested for the coronavirus and then officials will quarantine and offer medical attention to those who need it. The vice president said 46 people aboard the Grand Princess cruise ship were tested for the virus. Of the 21 who tested positive, 19 are crewmembers and two are passengers, Pence said. He said 24 tests came back negative and one inconclusive. There are 3,500 people on the ship.... [Donald Trump] said he preferred those who tested positive for the virus remain on the ship in part because he didn't want the number of confirmed cases in the U.S. to spike.... 'I like the numbers being where they are,' he said. 'I don't need to have the numbers double because of one ship that wasn't our fault.'"
KGO San Francisco: "Stanford University is canceling all in-person courses for the remainder of the winter quarter due to coronavirus concerns. The school's website states, those classes will not meet in person but will move to online formats. It also says that large-group events are being canceled or adjusted." This is a live update of coronavirus-related developments in the San Francisco area. It gives you a good idea of how life is changing for residents of an area directly affected by the virus. Here's the Seattle Times' liveblog; the University of Washington & other local colleges also have cancelled in-person classes.
David Enrich, et al., of the New York Times: "The spiraling fears [of the coronavirus outbreak] have caused financial carnage. The S&P 500 index has dropped 12 percent since Feb. 19, the sharpest dive in nine years. The plunge has obliterated roughly $3 trillion in wealth. In the past two weeks, even decent days have been tinted with a scary aura. On Friday afternoon, the S&P was poised to lose more than 2 percent, before the index pared its losses amid a blizzard of buying in the moments before the closing bell."
If you don't think Trump's lies are a danger to your health, there's this: ~~~
~~~ Brad Heath of Reuters: "Democrats are about twice as likely as Republicans to say the coronavirus poses an imminent threat to the United States, according to a Reuters/Ipsos poll conducted this week. And more Democrats than Republicans say they are taking steps to be prepared, including washing their hands more often or limiting their travel plans."
Aaron Rupar of Vox: "During his Fox News town hall on Thursday night..., Donald Trump said he planned to propose cuts to government benefit programs like Medicare and Social Security in his second term. The White House spent the hours that followed trying to walk those comments back.... Host Martha MacCallum pointed out that 'if you don't cut something in entitlements, you'll never really deal with the debt.'... Oh, we'll be cutting,' [Trump] said.... Press secretary Stephanie Grisham responded on Twitter to a story from the Daily Beast about how Democrats like Joe Biden were already messaging on Trump's entitlement comments.... 'Fake news -- POTUS was taking about cutting deficits, NOT entitlements,' Grisham tweeted. On Friday morning, Trump himself weighed in. 'I will protect your Social Security and Medicare, just as I have for the past 3 years. Sleepy Joe Biden will destroy both in very short order, and he won't even know he's doing it!' he tweeted. Around that same time, White House counselor Kellyanne Conway was on Fox News denying that Trump said what he said...."
** Zolan Kanno-Youngs of the New York Times: "A union representing federal asylum officers said on Friday that a Trump administration policy that diverts migrants at the southwestern border to Guatemala unlawfully sends a vulnerable population to a country 'in which their lives and freedom directly threatened.' In an amicus brief filed in Federal District Court in Washington, a union representing 700 asylum and refugee officers with United States Citizenship and Immigration Services said the deal with Guatemala violates international treaty obligations by deporting migrants to a country where they are likely to face persecution. Under the asylum deal, initially described as a 'safe third country agreement,' the administration can deport migrants at the southwestern border seeking safety in the United States to Guatemala to seek refuge there.... In the brief, the asylum officers said enforcing the policy violated their oath. The State Department's own country condition reports on Guatemala warn about rampant gang activity and high levels of violence."
Spencer Hsu & Ann Marimow of the Washington Post: "House Democrats asked a federal appeals court in Washington on Friday to reconsider enforcing a congressional subpoena for President Trump's former White House counsel Donald McGahn. The request comes after a divided panel of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit found that the courts have no authority to resolve the separation-of-powers dispute between the White House and Democrats in Congress. Lawyers for ... Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) want a full complement of judges on the appeals court to overturn the ruling from a three-judge panel of the same court. If last week's ruling stands, it means McGahn can defy the subpoena from the House Judiciary Committee."
Josh Gerstein of Politico: "A federal judge in Washington has ordered the National Security Agency to turn over to her a memo that details an unusual conversation in which ... Donald Trump pleaded with former NSA chief Adm. Mike Rogers to take action to rebut news reports about collusion between the Trump campaign and Russia. U.S. District Court Judge Colleen Kollar-Kotelly said in a ruling Friday that she needs to read the memorandum -- written by Rogers’ deputy, Rick Ledgett -- in order to decide whether it can be entirely blocked from release in response to a Freedom of Information Act lawsuit.... The Justice Department has argued that the entire memo is classified and exempt from disclosure under a form of executive privilege, because the document describes a confidential conversation between the president and a top adviser. The watchdog group pressing for the memo's release, the Protect Democracy project, contends that the privilege was waived after special counsel Robert Mueller included a summary of the conversation in his report that was published last year. Kollar-Kotelly said it is simply too hard for her to resolve those issues without seeing the memo herself."
Presidential Race
Misogynist-in-Chief Says Warren Is "Mean," Lacks Talent. Caitlin Oprysko of Politico: "... Donald Trump on Friday shot down questions about whether sexism grounded the presidential campaign of Elizabeth Warren.... 'I think lack of talent was her problem,' Trump told reporters at the White House when asked about the role sexism played in her demise. 'She had a tremendous lack of talent. She was a good debater. She destroyed Mike Bloomberg very quickly like it was nothing. That was easy for her but people don't like her.' But Trump then employed language likely to strike Warren's defenders as an example of the very gender-coded criticism her male opponents have not faced. 'She is a very mean person and people don't like her. People don't want that,' the president argued. Trump then claimed that 'people like a person like me, who is not mean.'" (Also linked yesterday.)
Jordain Carney of the Hill: "Sen. Mitt Romney (R-Utah) will vote to subpoena a former consultant linked to Burisma Holdings, as part of a GOP probe into Hunter Biden and the Ukraine gas company." (Also linked yesterday.) Update: A Washington Post story is here.
Veronica Stracqualursi & Annie Grayer of CNN: "A man was kicked out of Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders' rally in Arizona after he unfurled a Nazi flag during the Democratic presidential candidate's speech. The appearance of a Nazi flag at the Sanders campaign event Thursday night was widely denounced on social media, sparked outcry and prompted calls for security.... Sanders communications director Mike Casca told CNN that the Vermont senator did not see the flag.... Later in the night, the crowd wrestled away 'Trump' banners from protesters, who were also escorted out of the rally, according to footage from CNN affiliate KNXV.... Sanders addressed the flag incident on Friday, telling reporters, 'I will simply say this, and I speak not only as a Jewish American, I think I can speak for the families of some 400,000 American troops who died fighting Nazism, fighting fascism. That is, it is horrific. It is beyond disgusting to see that in the United States of America. There are people who would show the emblem of Hitler and Nazism.'"
"Warren's Exit Interview Was a Warning for the Dirtbag Left." Zack Beauchamp of Vox: In "Sen. Elizabeth Warren's campaign exit interview with Rachel Maddow, aired Thursday night..., Warren showed palpable anger with the online Sanders army's treatment of her and other progressives.... Maddow asked about Sanders's disavowal of his supporters' attacks on her, and Warren seemed not to find it very persuasive.... From Warren's point of view, it might seem like Sanders is speaking out of both sides of his mouth: vaguely disavowing online anger in public statements while his campaign reaches out and appeals directly to the people purveying it.... Online anger and abuse may not filter down to the ordinary voter directly, but it shapes the way Democratic Party elites see the Sanders campaign.... If Sanders's fans are really serious about helping their guy, they need to think carefully about whether what they're doing is actually working." ~~~
~~~ Mrs. McCrabbie: There's no reason to think Sanders' dirtbag brigade gives a flying fuck about effective governance and issues. Their point is to show off their "power" with crude insults & bullying. Many fascist movements have been at least theoretically left-wing or populist. This is something Bernie has refused always to understand.
Sarah Smarsh in a New York Times op-ed: "Consider every moment, since the dawn of woman, when a female aspired but to no avail. She asked to attend school but was denied. She raised her hand but wasn't called on. She applied but wasn't hired. She enlisted but wasn't deployed. She created but wasn't credited. She ran but wasn't elected. Imagine the sadness and frustration of every such instance as a spark, their combined energy the size of many suns. That is the measure of grief and fury I felt rise inside me as I watched Elizabeth Warren's bid for the Democratic nomination wane."
Mrs. McCrabbie: As Joy Reid pointed out in a discussion on MSNBC Thursday night, it's not entirely surprising that Americans elected a black male president before they elected a female president: as Reid said, "Black men got the vote in the U.S. 50 years before women did." (Paraphrase. It was 55 years, but you get the point.)
Trump Campaign Brings Another Frivolous Lawsuit. Matt Shuham of TPM: "The Trump campaign's lawsuit spree against major media outlets continued Friday, with a third suit in 10 days alleging unfair coverage. After suing The New York Times last week and The Washington Post on Tuesday -- both over pieces from opinion writers -- the President's reelection organization sued CNN Friday in federal court in Georgia, alleging 'a systematic pattern of bias against the Campaign.'... CNN's libel against the Trump campaign, the suit alleged, came from a a nine-month-old op-ed from Larry Noble, the law professor and former Federal Election Commission general counsel who's a vocal critic of President Trump."
Bill & Hillary Decide This Is a Good Time to Remind Voters Democratic Men Treat Women Badly, Get Impeached, Too. Neil Vigdor has the New York Times' story. Dan Merica writes CNN's story. Thanks, Billary! Stay relevant! Whacha got planned for late October? (Also linked yesterday.)
News Lede
The New York Times' live updates of developments in the coronavirus epidemic are here. "Officials across the United States reported 308 cases of coronavirus and 17 deaths as of Friday, with Florida reporting the first deaths on the East Coast. The number of infections does not count the 21 people who have tested positive aboard a cruise ship off California, the Grand Princess. Florida officials reported on Friday night that there had been two deaths in the state related to the coronavirus. Both of the people who died had traveled internationally, they said. More tests are planned after 21 cases are found on the cruise ship. On the East Coast, a cluster has emerged in New York State. All but a few of its 33 confirmed cases as of Friday were linked to a New Rochelle man. More than 2,700 people are under some form of quarantine in New York City."