Friday, January 17, 2025

As attorney general nominee Pam Bondi squirms and deflects, the name of Brad Raffensperger -- who caught Trump trying to steal the 2020 election -- rises from the mist and reminds us that integrity still exists

Brad Raffensperger: The man who caught Trump trying to steal the 2020 election. (AP)
 

You might expect that a nominee to be U.S. attorney general would be able to take a fair and direct question about her would-be boss and produce an answer that indicates she has the integrity expected of someone who seeks to be our nation's chief law-enforcement officer. But we are talking about Pam Bondi here, so you would be wrong. You might expect Bondi not to go into squirmy mode, indicating she has the depth and professionalism to effectively perform as Donald Trump's AG. In fairness to Bondi, Trump himself has proven he is hopelessly corrupt, so we might be expecting too much from Bondi here. No matter how you slice it, Bondi's performance in her confirmation hearing on Wednesday suggests we probably are in for a turbulent ride on the law-enforcement front over Trump's second term as president.

How did Bondi respond to a question that she should have expected but clearly made her uncomfortable?  Malcolm Ferguson of The New Republic explains under the headline "Trump Attorney General Pick Refuses to Answer One Telling Question; Pam Bondi admitted she’s ready to spread Donald Trump’s biggest lie." Ferguson writes:

Pam Bondi tried to weasel her way out of admitting that Donald Trump lost the 2020 election, during her confirmation hearing for U.S. attorney general Wednesday.

Bondi, who received the nomination only after Matt Gaetz was canned for being a sexual predator, faced   questioning from Senator Dick Durbin regarding her past loyalty to the president-elect. 

“Ms Bondi, you are one of four Trump personal lawyers that he has already selected for top positions in the Department of Justice. You joined Mr. Trump in working to overturn the 2020 election. You repeatedly described investigations and prosecutions of Mr. Trump as ‘witch hunts,’” Durbin told Bondi.

“To my knowledge Donald Trump has never acknowledged the legal results of the 2020 election,” he continued. “Are you prepared to say under oath without reservation that Donald Trump lost the presidential contest to Joe Biden in 2020?”

“Ranking member Durbin, President Biden is the president of the United States. He was duly sworn in, and he is the president of the United States,” Bondi replied, avoiding a straightforward answer. “There was a peaceful transition of power; President Trump left office and was overwhelmingly elected in 2024.”

That is an answer of some sort, but not to the question that was put to her. Durbin clearly noticed:

Durbin then reframed the question, asking Bondi if she “had any doubts” that Joe Biden won the Electoral College in 2020.

“All I can tell you as a prosecutor is from my first-hand experience.… When I went to Pennsylvania as an advocate for the [Trump] campaign … I saw many things there. But do I accept the results? Of course I do. Do I agree with what happened? I saw so much,” Bondi rambled. “No one on either side of the aisle should want there to be any issues with election integrity in our country. We should all want our elections to be free and fair, and the rules and the laws to be followed.”

“I think that question deserved a yes or no,” Durbin bluntly replied. “And I think the length of your answer is an indication that you weren’t prepared to answer yes.”

In other words, Bondi is an election denier, and that is not a trait Americans should be looking for in an attorney general. So Durbin took his questioning in a slightly different direction, Ferguson reports:

Durbin continued. “Have you heard the recording of President Trump on January 2, 2021, when he urged the secretary of state of Georgia to quote ‘find 11,780 votes’ and declare him the winner of that state?”

“No, I’ve heard about it through clips, but no, Senator …” said Bondi.

“What was your reaction to President Trump making that call?”

The conversation in question is readily available on the Web, in various formats -- audio clip, video clip, written reports, and more. Here is a report from C-SPAN, which features U.S. Rep. Adam Schiff (D-CA) interviewing Raffensberger; (Schiff now is a U.S. senator.) Schiff's questioning of Raffensberger can be viewed at the following link. The full audio and a transcript of the phone call is available at this link.  But Bondi doesn't seem to be familiar with it? That stretches my credulity to the breaking point. So, how did Bondi react to Trump making that call? Ferguson fills us in:

Bondi stumbled a bit. “I would have to listen to the tape, Senator.”

“Well that quote that I give you is exact. He said to the Georgia secretary of state, ‘Find 11,780 votes.’

Bondi said that the call was long and the quote may have been taken out of context.

Bondi is a former lawyer for Trump, representing him during his first impeachment trial.

We learn that Bondi can evade a question. Whether she can answer one truthfully is another matter.

Thursday, January 16, 2025

If Trump and his allies (Bondi and Patel) pursue criminal prosecutions without probable cause, they might face civil actions for malicious prosecution

Sen. Mazie Hirono and Pam Bondi (C-SPAN)

Pam Bondi, Donald Trump's choice to be attorney general of the United States, answered a straightforward question yesterday in a roundabout way that suggests she would not feel bound  by the rule of law if confirmed to the position. Her answer left the impression that she is loyal to Trump but not necessarily to the U.S. Constitution, statutes, high-court opinions, or other forms of long-settled law. That might be good for Trump, but it likely would not be good for everyday Americans and our already tattered justice system.

Malcolm Ferguson, of The New Republic, describes the exchange in Bondi's confirmation that caused her to provide more insight on a sensitive subject than she probably intended. Under the headline "Trump’s Attorney General Pick Admits There Is an Enemy List After All; Pam Bondi had a very revealing exchange in her confirmation hearing about Trump’s plans to go after the “enemy within,” Ferguson writes:

Pam Bondi, Trump’s attorney general pick, revealed in her confirmation hearing Wednesday that there probably is an enemies list after all.

When asked by Senator Mazie Hirono (D-HI) about specific people who have been targeted by Republicans in the past, Bondi refused to say she wouldn’t use the Justice Department against them.

“On Fox News, you said ... ‘The prosecutors will be prosecuted, the bad ones. The investigators will be investigated,’” Hirono said. “Is Jack Smith one of those bad prosecutors that you will prosecute as A.G.?”

Bondi pushed back, stating that she wouldn’t answer “hypotheticals.”

“I’m just asking whether you would consider Jack Smith to be one of the people,” Hirono responded. “How about Liz Cheney? How about Merrick Garland?”

Bondi would not answer—revealing that those individuals are very likely among the top targets of a Trump DOJ.

Earlier in the hearing, Bondi refused to disavow Trump’s FBI pick Kash Patel’s past comments on compiling an “enemies list.”

“Would you have hired someone to the Florida Attorney General’s Office who you knew had an enemies list?” Senator Sheldon Whitehouse asked Bondi.

“Senator, to cut to the chase, you’re clearly talking about Kash Patel,” Bondi said. “I don’t believe he has an enemies list. He made a quote on TV, which I have not heard.… He has great experience in the intel department and Department of Defense. I have known Kash, and I believe that Kash is the right person at this time for this job.

“There will never be an enemies list within the Department of Justice,” she added, a disingenuous comment given the full-throated defense of Patel.

How brazen has Patel been about his enemies list? He wrote about it in is own book, Ferguson reports:

This list comes from Patel’s own 2023 book, Government Gangsters. While he does not include a literal hit list in the book, he does attach an appendix titled, “Members of the Executive Branch Deep State.” Patel refers to this “deep state” as “a cabal of unelected tyrants” and “the most dangerous threat to our democracy” in other sections of the book. The list includes names like Bill Barr, Joe Biden, Lloyd Austin, Sally Yates, Kamala Harris, and 55 other people whom Trump considers political opponents.

Bottom line? Bondi says she supports Patel, who in turn, makes it clear that he intends to act outside the rule of law. And the law, in this instance, is simple: A criminal investigation/prosecution can be launched only upon a showing of probable cause that the defendant committed a specific crime. If the Trump administration pursues prosecutions that have no support in probable cause, Bondi, Patel, and Trump himself could find themselves in serious legal trouble -- likely in the form of actions for malicious prosecution, which can cause a wallet or purse to become considerably lighter. And even Trump is not immune from such civil claims while a sitting president.

If Bondi, Patel, and Trump have not given thought to the downsides of bringing criminal cases based on "ememies lists," I would suggest they start thinking about it now -- because it is a terrible, and flagrantly un-American, idea.

Wednesday, January 15, 2025

Jack Smith's report on Jan. 6 investigation shows Donald Trump and his MAGA thugs responded with threats, violence, witness tampering, and more

Trump supporters take over part of the U.S. Capitol (Getty)

Special Counsel Jack Smith, in his final report on the investigation of Donald Trump's election-interference case related to Jan. 6, 2021, said he considered bringing a charge under the Insurrection Act that could have brought a maximum prison sentence of 10 years and would have disqualified Trump from ever holding any office under the federal government.

Smith also said a major challenge during the investigation was persistent threats against witnesses from Trump and his allies. That, of course, raises this question: Why weren't Trump and his associates charged with witness tampering? Is that another case of the justice system letting them off the hook on a viable charge?

In a joint report at USA TODAY and the Microsoft Network (MSN), Smith consistently used language alleging that Trump acted outside the rule of law, with fraudulent intent. Smith makes it clear that he and his team could have achieved a conviction if their efforts had not been short-circuited under Department of Justice (DOJ) policy that forbids pursuing criminal actions against a sitting president -- and Trump is to be inaugurated on Jan. 20. Once Trump "won" the election on Nov. 5, 2024, Smith faced an insurmountable barrier to pursuing a prosecution. Note: I use quotation marks around the word "won" because substantial evidence points to the election being hacked to benefit Trump and steal it from Democrat Kamala Harris. A Nov. 28 post here at Legal Schnauzer provides background on the election-theft issue. In short, the focus of Smith's report might be a man who did not actually win the election, meaning the U.S. could be set to inaugurate an imposter on Jan. 20:

Several news outlets -- including Newsweek, The Economic Times, and  the New York Post are reporting that the Kamala Harris campaign team is preparing a fund to pay for a hand recount in the 2024 presidential election. The news indicates Harris is ready to join an effort, led by U.S. election- and computer-security expert Stephen Spoonamore, which is attempting to determine if Harris actually won a contest that was awarded to Donald Trump, even though Spoonamore and his team say the election appears to have been maliciously hacked to benefit Trump.  In short, the Spoonamore group is trying to determine who actually won the election and should be installed as America's next president, given signs the election was "willfully compromised."

Trump did not achieve a majority of the vote, but if the count is accurate, enough Americans went to the polls and voted for Trump -- despite his status as a convicted felon, adjudicated rapist, admitted sexual abuser (caught discussing the issue on video), and serial cheater on his wives, including bedding down a porn star while wife Melania was home tending to an infant -- that, for now, he appears to be a winner. That suggests large numbers of Americans do not recognize a despicable, unfit person when they see one -- and that could be a huge problem for our country. It also is a post for another day.

How close was the 2024 race? Here is how we summarized the popular vote in a post dated Jan. 7, 2025:  

As for Trump's "mandate," it turned out to be weak. He received 77,284,118 votes for 49.8 percent -- or less than 50 percent of the vote. Kamala Harris won 74,999,166 votes for 48.3 percent. Trump's margin of victory was 1.5 percent.

Excluding Trump's 46.2 percent in 2016, you have to go back to Grover Cleveland's 46.1 percent in 1892 (124 years) to reach such a low margin of victory. A "commanding victory"? Not even by Grover  Cleveland's standards.

Trump repeatedly has referred to his victory as a "landslide," when he won by a whopping 1.5 percent. This is a fundamentally dishonest man, who in my view, resorts to lies and bullying because he simply cannot tell the truth. That is a theme that runs through Jack Smith's report, as the USA TODAY/MSN article makes clear. Write reporters Josh Meyer, Bart Jansen and Aysha Bagchi:

Special counsel Jack Smith, whose office indicted President-elect Donald Trump on charges of illegally trying to stay in power after losing the 2020 election, said in a bombshell final report released early Tuesday that he believed his team had amassed enough evidence to convict Trump if the case went to trial.

But Trump's election to a second term in November made it impossible for the case to go forward, Smith wrote in the 174-page report, which was dated Jan. 7 and addressed to Attorney General Merrick Garland. "The Department's view that the Constitution prohibits the continued indictment and prosecution of a President is categorical and does not turn on the gravity of the crimes charged, the strength of the Government's proof, or the merits of the prosecution, which the Office stands fully behind," Smith wrote in the report.

"Indeed, but for Mr. Trump's election and imminent return to the Presidency, the Office assessed that the admissible evidence was sufficient to obtain and sustain a conviction at trial," Smith wrote.

What about the charge Smith considered bringing under the Insurrection Act? The USA TODAY team writes:

Smith also said his team considered bringing an even more serious criminal charge against Trump – a violation of the Insurrection Act – after concluding there were "reasonable arguments that it might apply."

The Insurrection Act provides that anyone who “incites, sets on foot, assists, or engages in any rebellion or insurrection against the authority of the United States or the laws thereof, or gives aid or comfort thereto,” could be fined, imprisoned for a maximum of 10 years – and “shall be incapable of holding any office under the United States,” according to the report.

Ultimately, the special counsel’s office opted against bringing that or other potential charges.

Trump and his legal team had fought to prevent the release of the report on various grounds, including saying it would interfere with his plans to take office on Jan. 20. But late Monday night, Judge Aileen Cannon in Florida denied Trump's emergency motion to prevent its release.

Soon after, the Justice Department delivered it to Congress.

The release of the report caps an extraordinary legal saga pitting the Justice Department – and later the special counsel’s office after Trump declared his candidacy – against the former president. Investigators focused on charges that were arguably among the most serious ever levied against an elected official of Trump’s stature, including whether he took steps to essentially try to subvert the will of the voters who elected President Joe Biden in 2020, not Trump.

After Trump won the 2024 election last November, judges dismissed the charges in both cases at Smith's request, under longstanding Justice Department policy against prosecuting sitting presidents. Special counsels typically write reports explaining what their investigations revealed and the reasoning behind decisions about whether to bring charges.

Trump responded to the report's release on Truth Social, attacking Smith and the congressional committee that investigated the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the U.S. Capitol by a mob of Trump supporters:

"Deranged Jack Smith was unable to successfully prosecute the Political Opponent of his 'boss,' Crooked Joe Biden, so he ends up writing yet another 'Report' based on information that the Unselect Committee of Political Hacks and Thugs ILLEGALLY DESTROYED AND DELETED, because it showed how totally innocent I was, and how completely guilty Nancy Pelosi, and others, were," Trump wrote. "Jack is a lamebrain prosecutor who was unable to get his case tried before the Election, which I won in a landslide. THE VOTERS HAVE SPOKEN!!!"

Trump's lawyers were allowed to read the report before its release. In an exchange of letters, Trump's lawyers called it a “lawless publicity stunt” and Smith replied that they failed to dispute any facts in the report.

Trump has argued Garland appointed Smith illegitimately, which was why Judge Cannon dismissed the classified documents case. Smith had appealed her ruling, but withdrew it after Trump’s election.

Trump’s lawyers argued Smith “pillaged” the government for more than $20 million for the investigation they called "politically-motivated work.”

“Finally, the release of any confidential report prepared by this out-of-control private citizen unconstitutionally posing as a prosecutor would be nothing more than a lawless political stunt, designed to politically harm President Trump and justify the huge sums of taxpayer money Smith unconstitutionally spent on his failed and dismissed cases,” Trump’s lawyers Todd Blanche, Emil Bove, John Lauro and Gregory Singer wrote.

Smith replied that Trump basically objected to releasing the report rather than anything in it, while making “a variety of false, misleading, or otherwise unfounded claims.”

“That response fails to identify any specific factual objections to the draft,” Smith wrote.

Smith suggests that witness tampering was rampant throughout the probe, presenting a constant challenge for his team. Does this suggest America has a glorified thug set to enter the White House, one who can't, or won't, control the MAGA thugs who support him? It sure does. From USA TODAY:

“A significant challenge” Smith said he faced in prosecuting the case was dealing with the “threats and harassment” against witnesses, the judge and Justice Department staffers and that would follow Trump's posts on social media.

Trump acknowledged after the Jan. 6 attack that his supporters listen to him “like no one else.”

The pattern began when Trump would attack and seek to influence state and federal officials with false claims the 2020 election had been stolen. One unnamed witness reported “specific and graphic threats about his family” and a public official required additional police protection after Trump’s posts.

“After Mr. Trump publicly assailed these individuals, threats and harassment from his followers inevitably followed,” Smith wrote.

The day after his arraignment, Trump posted on social media: "IF YOU GO AFTER ME, I'M COMING AFTER YOU!"

The next day, one of his supporters called U.S. District Judge Tanya Chutkan’s chambers and called her a racial epithet. “If Trump doesn’t get elected in 2024, we are coming to kill you, so tread lightly,” the caller said. “You will be targeted personally, publicly, your family, all of it.”

“Those attacks had ‘real-time, real-world consequences,’ exposing ‘those on the receiving end’ to ‘a torrent of threats and intimidation’ and turning their lives ‘upside down,’” Smith wrote.

Smith's report provides the fullest description yet about the investigation that led to two federal indictments against Trump before both cases were dismissed. Smith's team previously released a 165-page summary of the election case in October that included revelations such as Trump allegedly saying "so what?" when Vice President Mike Pence had to be taken to a secure location during the Capitol attack on Jan. 6, 2021.

Now Smith has written a final two-volume report, including the newly released volume about how Trump allegedly conspired to overturn the 2020 election. The other volume, which is focused on the former president’s alleged mishandling of classified documents after leaving the White House, has not been released publicly because Trump's co-defendants still face charges in that case.

In an  appeals filing, Trump's lawyers described the report as “nothing less than another attempted political hit job which sole purpose is to disrupt the Presidential transition and undermine President Trump’s exercise of executive power.”

Smith resigned from the Justice Department on Friday. Trump had said he would fire Smith upon assuming office and that Smith "should be in jail."

Smith argued in the report that it was important to bring the election-interference prosecution against Trump in order to protect the United States' electoral process. He alleged that Trump tried to obstruct the country's system for collecting, counting, and certifying the 2020 election results "through fraud and deceit."

"Protecting the well-established American tradition of a peaceful transfer of power weighed in favor of prosecution," Smith wrote.

Smith also defended the prosecution by arguing that Trump endangered the right to vote and have that vote counted. Trump, he said, urged state officials to disregard the true majority of votes in their states, pressured Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger to "find" more than 11,000 votes, and pushed then-Vice President Mike Pence to throw out the electoral certificates that reflected millions of citizens' votes.

"An additional factor meriting Mr. Trump's prosecution therefore was the need to vindicate and protect the voting rights of these and all future voters," the report states.

Trump also engaged in threats and encouraged violence against those he perceived as his opponents, according to the report, which said 140 law enforcement officers were assaulted on Jan. 6, 2021, with some suffering "significant physical injuries."

Trump, Smith suggested, had fueled that violence by telling his supporters in a speech that day – ahead of the attack on the Capitol – to go there and "fight like hell."

"The people who took Mr. Trump at his word formed a massive crowd that broke onto restricted Capitol grounds and into the building, violently attacking law enforcement officers protecting the Capitol and those inside," Smith wrote.

Trump was indicted in Washington, D.C., for allegedly conspiring to overturn the 2020 election with baseless claims of widespread fraud. He was also charged with obstructing Congress from counting Electoral College votes on Jan. 6, 2021, when a riot of his supporters at the Capitol temporarily halted the count.

Trump pleaded not guilty in both cases and maintained his innocence.

“I defeated deranged Jack Smith," Trump said Tuesday. “We did nothing wrong."

Trump asked Garland not to release the report. His lawyers argued the dismissal of charges represented “Trump’s complete exoneration" and that the report would “perpetuate false and discredited accusations.”

Trump joined a court request by his co-defendants in the documents case, Walt Nauta and Carlos De Oliveira, to block its release. Nauta and Carlos De Oliveira argued Smith's work “promises to be a one-sided, slanted report” that has “a single purpose: convincing the public that everyone Smith charged is guilty of the crimes charged."

But Garland released the report "in furtherance of the public interest" regarding a "significant matter," according to department lawyers who fought for its release: Brian Boynton, principal deputy assistant attorney general; Markenzy LaPointe, U.S. attorney in southern Florida; and Mark Freeman, a lawyer in the civil division.

The report doesn't cover Trump's other federal case in Florida. Trump was charged with unlawfully retaining national defense documents after leaving the White House at the end of his first administration. FBI agents found more than 100 classified documents during a search of Mar-a-Lago in August 2022.

Garland plans not to release Smith's volume on classified documents until the charges are resolved against Nauta and De Oliveira. The second volume will be available for review by the top Republican and Democratic lawmakers on the House and Senate Judiciary Committees, government lawyers said.

Trump joined a court request by his co-defendants in the documents case, Walt Nauta and Carlos De Oliveira, to block its release. Nauta and Carlos De Oliveira argued Smith's work “promises to be a one-sided, slanted report” that has “a single purpose: convincing the public that everyone Smith charged is guilty of the crimes charged."

Smith, a former war crimes prosecutor, noted Trump's attacks on him and his team of prosecutors in a letter to Garland that accompanied the report, in which he disclosed that some of them had been threatened.

“The intense public scrutiny of our Office, threats to their safety, and relentless unfounded attacks on their character and integrity did not deter them from fulfilling their oaths and professional obligations,” Smith said of his team. “These are intensely good people who did hard things well. I will not forget the sacrifices they made and the personal resilience they and their families have shown over the last two years.”

Smith, who insisted on having an extremely low-profile throughout the course of the case, also vehemently denied Trump’s claims that it was politicized.

“While I relied greatly on the counsel, judgment, and advice of our team, I want it to be clear that the ultimate decision to bring charges against Mr. Trump was mine. It is a decision I stand behind fully,” Smith wrote in his letter to Garland.

“It is equally important for me to make clear that nobody within the Department of Justice ever sought to interfere with, or improperly influence, my prosecutorial decision making,” Smith wrote. “And to all who know me well, the claim from Mr. Trump that my decisions as a prosecutor were influenced or directed by the Biden administration or other political actors is, in a word, laughable.”

You can read the full Smith Report at the following link.

 

Monday, January 13, 2025

As Donald Trump pressures Senate Republicans for quick confirmations, Democrats push back over signs of cutting corners on probes of controversial nominees

 

Pete Hegseth (right) at the heart of a confirmation storm (ABC)

Democrats in the U.S. Senate are pointing to gaps in information provided by the FBI on at least one of Donald Trump's most controversial nominees to a cabinet position. One senator is flat-out calling it a cover-up of damaging information about Pete Hegseth, Trump's nominee to head the Department of Defense. Hegseth and other nominees are expected to undergo confirmation hearings this week. The New York Times (NYT) and Raw Story (RS) have a joint report under the headline "'Appearance of a cover-up': Senate Dem raises alarm over missing FBI info on Trump nominee." Tom Boggioni writes: 

Multiple Democratic senators are pointing with alarm at what they believe are gaps in information provided by the FBI on one of Donald Trump's most controversial Cabinet nominees.

According to a report from The New York Times, the slim information provided on Fox News personality Pete Hegseth , chosen to be the president-elect's secretary of defense, does not include examinations of information they have been provided directly.

Hegseth is facing a slew of questions over accusations of sexual assault , excessive drinking and financial improprieties while heading up several veterans organizations.

 From a report  by The NYT's Karoun Demirjian:

The top members of the Senate Armed Services Committee were briefed late Friday afternoon (1/10/25) on the findings from the F.B.I.’s background check of Pete Hegseth, President-elect Donald J. Trump’s pick to serve as defense secretary, according to two people aware of the briefings.

Senator Roger Wicker, Republican of Mississippi and the chairman of the armed services panel, and Senator Jack Reed of Rhode Island, its top Democrat, each huddled separately with transition team officials on Friday for more than an hour, according to a person familiar with the briefings, who spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss sensitive proceedings. The transition team commissioned the background check.

It is traditional for only the chair and ranking member of panels on the findings from an F.B.I. background check of Cabinet nominees. During the sessions, the senators were able to review the findings and ask questions about them, but were not given copies of a report to share with their colleagues.

Since the results of the F.B.I.’s probe have not been shown to other members of the committee, several Democrats on the panel expressed concerns that they might not have relevant information for Mr. Hegseth’s confirmation hearing on Tuesday (1/14/25).

With only days to go before Mr. Hegseth’s confirmation hearing, it appears increasingly unlikely that other senators on the panel will be shown that information before querying him about his fitness to run the Pentagon.

Rank-and-file Democrats have been up in arms about the lack of access, saying it is necessary for them to review the F.B.I.’s findings.

“I need to see his F.B.I. background check, we need to see his financial disclosures,” Senator Tammy Duckworth, Democrat of Illinois, said. “And we need to know about any other potential lawsuits he might be facing, any other allegations he might be facing.”

Public reports have documented accusations that Mr. Hegseth committed sexual assault, mismanaged the veterans’ nonprofits he ran and was frequently publicly intoxicated. Mr. Hegseth has said that the sexual assault allegation arose from a consensual encounter. He also told reporters last month that he was “a different man than I was years ago,” describing his evolution as “a redemption story.”

According to The NYT report, Democrats on the committee believe there are additional allegations that should appear in the pages of an F.B.I. background check, to inform their questioning. That belief is based in part on information they have gleaned from individuals who have quietly approached Senate offices to divulge information about Mr. Hegseth."

Referring to outside information he has received, Sen. Richard Blumenthal (D-CT) stated, “Damning is an understatement,” and suggested he feels what he has seen so far gives the "appearance of a cover-up." 

With hearings closing in this week, a partisan fight has escalated, according to The NYT. The controversy has reached a high boil as Republicans face pressure from the Trump administration for quick confirmations, while Democrats say corner are being cut in order to please the incoming president. From The Times report:

A quiet but bitter partisan clash is underway on Capitol Hill over President-elect Donald J. Trump’s choices for key cabinet posts, as Republicans face immense pressure to fast-track confirmations and Democrats charge that they are cutting corners on vetting for critical administration jobs.

The feud is coming to a head as senators are planning a crowded schedule of confirmation hearings next week, with more than a dozen planned and more possible ahead of Mr. Trump’s inauguration on Jan. 20.

Republican senators who attended a private planning session with Mr. Trump at the Capitol on Wednesday evening said that he urged them to stay united behind his picks after some Republicans have expressed their own reservations about certain candidates. Some have also sided with Democrats in insisting that senators must be allowed to review F.B.I. background checks and other pertinent material on the nominees before passing judgment.

Those at the Republican meeting said Mr. Trump made a special appeal for Pete Hegseth, his choice for defense secretary, who is scheduled to appear before the Armed Services Committee on Tuesday (1/14/25). They said he singled out Mr. Hegseth, a former Fox News personality and military veteran, by name in a sign of the importance he is placing on the confirmation.

But Democrats on the committee have begun raising objections about a potential lack of access to background materials such as an F.B.I. report on Mr. Hegseth, who settled a civil case with a woman who accused him of sexual assault, and has faced allegations of sexual harassment, drinking on the job and financial mismanagement. Democrats say the F.B.I. report on Mr. Hegseth might be shared only with the top Republican and Democrat on the panel, a break with normal procedures in which committee members are generally allowed access to such reports.

Some have also demanded to see financial and other records for veterans advocacy groups that Mr. Hegseth was overseeing when they ran into financial trouble, raising questions about his management skills when he is in line to run a department with an $849 billion budget and close to three million employees.

“They are stonewalling us,” Senator Richard Blumenthal, Democrat of Connecticut, said about the Republican resistance to providing Democrats the documents they seek about Mr. Hegseth. “Without putting too fine a point on it, they think they can blow us off.”

Democrats had generally withheld their fire on many of Mr. Trump’s candidates and the confirmation process for a time, preferring to allow Republicans to quarrel among themselves about the qualifications and backgrounds of some of the president-elect’s choices. But as the hearings have grown closer, they have become more outspoken and critical of how Republicans are handling the process.

At the same time, influential allies of Mr. Trump, including Elon Musk, have stepped up a pressure campaign directed at Republicans. They are trying to get lawmakers to quickly confirm his chosen candidates without acquiescing to Democratic demands to slow their consideration over demands for paperwork or findings by the F.B.I., an agency that many conservatives do not trust.

“Unacceptable,” Mr. Musk posted on his social media site in response to a conservative post that criticized Republicans for “playing games” with Mr. Trump’s cabinet picks by abiding by longstanding Senate committee rules about vetting.

Mr. Hegseth met on Wednesday with Senator Jack Reed of Rhode Island, the senior Democrat on the Armed Services Committee, who said the conversation between the two did “not relieve my concerns about Mr. Hegseth’s lack of qualifications and raised more questions than answers.”

Other Democratic members of the committee said the Trump transition had not made Mr. Hegseth available for meetings with them and told them that such sessions could not occur before Jan. 20, well after the hearing when Mr. Trump assumes office and Republicans could be pressing for confirmation.

Senator Tammy Duckworth, Democrat of Illinois and a combat veteran serving on the panel, said she and others were entitled to information about Mr. Hegseth’s finances, given his history.

“Is he somebody that is blackmailable?” Ms. Duckworth asked. “I don’t know. But I should be able to know if I’m going to have to vote for him for secretary of defense.”

Democrats jumped on the disputes as a way to raise questions about the Republican approach.

“Republicans choosing to rush nominees is quickly becoming a pattern,” Senator Chuck Schumer, Democrat of New York and the minority leader, said on the Senate floor on Thursday. “It’s hard not to wonder what are the Republicans trying to hide about these nominees from the American people.”

Democrats are limited in their ability to derail any disputed nominations, which require only a majority vote for confirmation, though they can erect procedural roadblocks and slow the process.

In recent meetings, Mr. Schumer has urged the Democrats on the committees with the most contentious nominees to take a double-barreled approach: Use the sessions to showcase contrasts between the policy goals of the parties while pulling back the curtain on the nominees in the hopes of breaking off at least four Republicans to provide the votes to defeat them or force them to withdraw.

Friday, January 10, 2025

U.S. Supreme Court, which almost always sides with Donald Trump, finally refuses to protect him, paving the way for him to be sentenced as a convicted felon

 

Trump exits after a rare loss before SCOTUS (Getty)

The six conservative justices on the U.S. Supreme Court (SCOTUS) have been Donald Trump's best friends, making a string of dubious rulings that culminated in Trump's "victory" in the 2024 election -- even though an objective reading of the U.S. Constitution (14th Amendment, Section 3) makes it clear Trump was disqualified from being on the ballot due to his actions as an insurrectionist on Jan. 6, 2021. But Trump's cozy relationship with the high court did not save him yesterday as the justices refused to delay his sentencing in the New York hush-money case involving Stormy Daniels. Trump's sentencing is expected to go forward as planned today, securing his place as the first convicted felon to become president. How did the SCOTUS ruling unfold in the case where Trump was found guilty on 34 counts of falsifying business records? Avery Lotz and April Rubin, of Axios, explain. Under the headline "Supreme Court denies Trump's effort to stop hush money sentencing," they write:

The Supreme Court on Thursday denied President-elect Trump's request to delay his Friday sentencing in his criminal hush money case.

Why it matters: Though Trump faces no jail time for his 34 felony convictions, the Supreme Court's decision is the final blow to his efforts to sideline his sentencing just days before he returns to the White House.

  • The sentencing will formalize his status as the only living president to be convicted of a crime.

What he's saying: Trump said on Truth Social Thursday evening he appreciated the "time and effort" the Supreme Court had taken "in trying to remedy the great injustice done to me," as he complained about presiding Judge Juan Merchan and his prosecution in the New York case.

  • "For the sake and sanctity of the Presidency, I will be appealing this case, and am confident that JUSTICE WILL PREVAIL," he said, indicating he will appeal the sentencing.

What was Trump's goal in taking this issue to the nation's high court, other than trying to buy time? Lotz and Rubin write:

Catch up quick: Trump turned to the Supreme Court in an 11th-hour attempt to halt proceedings in the case while his presidential immunity appeals play out.

  • "Forcing President Trump to prepare for a criminal sentencing in a felony case while he is preparing to lead the free world as President of the United States in less than two weeks imposes an intolerable, unconstitutional burden on him that undermines these vital national interests," Trump's team wrote in their appeal to the Supreme Court.
  • His attorneys further contended that presidential immunity should extend to presidents-elect in the "brief but crucial" time before they take office.

In finally refusing to alter the law to protect Trump, SCOTUS administered  a rare kick in the teeth for the president-elect. Here is how the court's vote broke down:

State of play: The 5-4 decision by the conservative-majority court all but ensures that Trump's sentencing continues as planned for Friday.

  • Chief Justice John Roberts and Amy Coney Barrett, whom Trump appointed to the high court, sided with the liberal justices in making the decision.

Zoom in: Trump's sentencing will place a "relatively insubstantial" burden on his responsibilities as president-elect, the Supreme Court said.

  • Merchan has indicated that he'd impose a sentence of "unconditional discharge."

Perhaps the most clear-eyed statement on the outcome, illuminating the weak nature of Trump's case, came from New York District Attorney Alvin Bragg:

Zoom out: District Attorney Alvin Bragg argued in a Thursday filing to the Supreme Court that there is "no basis for such intervention" to take the "extraordinary step" of halting sentencing before the court's final decision.

  • The "defendant makes the unprecedented claim that the temporary presidential immunity he will possess in the future fully immunizes him now, weeks before he even takes the oath of office," Bragg wrote of Trump's stay request.

If Trump's argument to the court sounds preposterous, that's because it is -- and Alvin Bragg deserves props for spelling that out to the public. How did we get here? Lotz and Rubin provide background:

Flashback: A New York jury found Trump guilty on 34 counts of falsifying business records last year, making him the first-ever former U.S. president to be a convicted felon.

  • But the Supreme Court's ruling that presidents have immunity for "official acts" gave Trump legal ammunition in his numerous attempts to see the case tossed or postponed.
  • His federal criminal cases crumbled after his presidential win, and his Georgia case remains frozen in limbo.

Thursday, January 9, 2025

Could Trump's obsession with Greenland spark war between U.S. and its NATO allies? Does our president-elect know what he's doing in foreign affairs?

(Instagram)

Donald Trump's obsession with the United States taking over Greenland, perhaps via the use of military force, could lead to war with America's NATO allies, according to an op-ed piece by Steve Benen at MSNBC and Yahoo! News. Do Americans think that would be a good idea, considering the pivotal role NATO has played in maintaining peace and stability in Europe -- especially during the Cold War, by acting as a deterrent to Soviet aggression. 

Now we have a president-elect who seems blissfully unaware that he could spark such a war and the devastation it would wreak. Maybe Trump simply does not care if a NATO war breaks out, assuming that his usual bullying tactics will ensure that peace prevails. But a dreadful conflict is a real possibility, as Benen explains under the headline "When Trump directs veiled threats at a NATO ally, it’s a problem":

As this week got underway, Donald Trump turned his attention anew to one of his stranger priorities. “Greenland is an incredible place, and the people will benefit tremendously if, and when, it becomes part of our Nation,” the president-elect wrote by way of his social-media platform. “We will protect it, and cherish it, from a very vicious outside World.”

A day later, the Republican’s oldest son appeared at a local gathering in Greenland, at which point the president-elect called in to extend his regards by way of speaker phone. “You’re so strategically located,” he said.

Soon after, Trump held a press conference at Mar-a-Lago, where he said something new and unexpected about one of his territorial targets. NBC News reported:

During a free-wheeling news conference at his Mar-a-Lago resort in Florida, Trump was asked by a reporter if he could assure the public that he would not use military coercion against Panama or Greenland, a goal he has floated in recent weeks. ‘No, I can’t assure you on either of those two, but I can say this, we need them for economic security,’ Trump said.

What is the status of Greenland at the moment? Benen provides important background:

While Greenland is currently a semi-autonomous territory of the Kingdom of Denmark, the Republican went on to tell reporters that he’s skeptical of the geopolitical relationship. “People really don’t even know that Denmark has any legal right to it, but if they do, they should give it up because we need it for national security,” the president-elect added.

It was bizarre when Robert O’Brien, Trump’s former White House national security advisor, appeared on Fox News last week and seemed to make a veiled threat toward Denmark — a longtime friend of the United States and a NATO ally.

But it was vastly worse to see the president-elect do the same thing.

When Trump was asked to rule out the use of military coercion as part of his pursuit of the island, what he should’ve said was obvious: “Of course the United States isn’t going to use the military.” Except he said nothing of the kind, refusing to offer any such assurances.

Benen sees signs that this is more than a case of Trump being Trump -- or Trump not knowing what he's doing, although it's likely he doesn't know what he's doing. Benen writes:

While I’m mindful of the fact that the Republican is full of bluster and nonsense on a nearly daily basis, and it’s generally wise not to invest too much energy into any one comment, Trump’s yearslong fixation on Greenland is quickly evolving past the point of silly tweets. As The Washington Post’s Aaron Blake summarized:

[H]e just left open using a military threat against a NATO ally. ... And NATO rules require an attack on any member to be treated as an attack on them all. That’s certainly no small thing, even if it’s just Trump being Trump.

Did Americans go to the polls on Nov. 5 and vote for an imperialistic presidency and a chaotic foreign policy? I don't recall those topics being discussed much during the campaign. In fact, my sense was that Trump planned to be an isolationist, staying out of other countries' problems; now he seems to be doing his best to create problems. Was he truthful with voters? My guess is "probably not." Is this a case of "The Orange Turd" kicking the MAGA faithful in the shins? Benen writes:

The rhetoric, Blake added, was “the latest ratcheting up of Trump’s increasingly imperialistic entreaties.”

To the extent that Trump and his MAGA “movement” are distinct from the traditional Republican Party and its priorities, there are a handful of differences worth appreciating. The president-elect and his followers are more hostile toward American institutions than the traditional GOP, more conspiratorial, more reflexively nativist, more invested in a specific leader, more amenable to an authoritarian vision, and more overt in their rejection of democratic norms and election results they don’t like.

But perhaps most importantly, MAGA and the Republican Party diverge wildly when it comes to foreign policy.

What implications do such a divergence have for Americans, many of whom seem to have put their full faith in Trump, and likely see no signs of problems brewing on the international stage? Does it make sense to trust Trump to keep the peace? Absolutely not, Benen writes:

In recent generations, the GOP has embraced what is often referred to as a “muscular” foreign policy, rooted in international interventions, enormous Pentagon spending, support for alliances and low thresholds for use of military force. Trump and Trumpism ostensibly embrace a different kind of vision, in which the United States is highly reluctant to engage militarily abroad while expressing hostility toward international partnerships.

The pitch, at least at a superficial level, is intended to present Trump as a “man of peace” and an opponent of “endless wars.” Gone are the days of Bush, Cheney, Reagan and their embrace of American militarism, the argument goes. Under Trumpism, the U.S. will no longer be the world’s police force.

Oddly enough, even some ostensible liberals express occasional sympathy for Trump precisely because they perceive him as some kind of “dove” on matters of international affairs.

The idea has long been difficult to take seriously. We are, after all, talking about a Republican who’s spent years advocating for U.S. missile strikes into Mexico and eyeing the possible use of military force in Iran. It’s hardly the stuff of isolationism.

But those who want to see Trump as a champion of peace really ought to know better by now. The charade has unraveled. A leader willing to make veiled threats at a NATO ally as part of a wildly unnecessary imperialistic pursuit is not a leader who can be counted on for responsible restraint on matters of foreign policy.

Wednesday, January 8, 2025

Trump's Mar-a-Lago press conference makes Greenland front-page news, but expect the president-elect to continue whitewashing the facts of Jan. 6

(Twitter/Donald Trump)

Do some Americans still have doubts about whether Donald Trump's mind has become so unhinged that he now is unfit to serve as president? Anyone who has doubts should watch video or read news accounts of Trump's press conference yesterday at Mar-a-Lago It's the one where Trump refused to rule out using military force to take over Greenland or the Panama Canal. The Web is filled with reports about the nutty statements that spewed from Trump's mouth, with one Congressman using words like "bananas" and "insane" to describe them. One journalist called it a rambling preview of Trump's second 'chaotic stream of consciousness presidency.' A number of journalists charitably used terms like 'wacky" to describe them. One such journalist was Bill Kristol, a former Republican who now is a Never Trumper and writes for The Bulwark, producing some of the best accounts I've seen of the Bizarro World that Trump has come to inhabit.

Focusing on Trump's efforts to block release of Special Counsel Jack Smith's reports regarding his criminal investigations of the president-elect, Kristol writes under the headline "Release Jack Smith's Report; The outgoing administration shouldn’t play along with the whitewashing of January 6th." Kristol begins with this introduction:

You can never really tell which of the wacky ideas that Trump spins up will end up forgotten in a few days and which will lodge like a splinter in his brain forever. During his first term, “We’re gonna buy Greenland” seemed like it belonged to the former category. Now, it seems he’s making it a top administration priority.

“I am hearing that the people of Greenland are ‘MAGA,’” Trump wrote yesterday. “My son, Don Jr, and various representatives, will be traveling there to visit some of the most magnificent areas and sights. Greenland is an incredible place, and the people will benefit tremendously if, and when, it becomes part of our Nation. We will protect it, and cherish it, from a very vicious outside World. MAKE GREENLAND GREAT AGAIN!”

Kristol then gets to the meat of his piece, and it is serious stuff:

Donald Trump’s lawyers have demanded that Attorney General Merrick Garland block the release of Special Counsel Jack Smith’s report on his two investigations, one on Trump and January 6th, the other on Trump’s handling of the classified documents he took with him to Mar-a-Lago.

The attorney general will surely refuse Trump’s demand. Justice Department regulations require special counsels to submit reports explaining their legal decisions at the end of their investigations. Just as Garland last year released Special Counsel Robert Hur’s report on President Joe Biden’s handling of classified documents, he’ll make public—with appropriate redactions—Smith’s report on Trump. (For that matter, we can also expect the attorney general to release special counsel David Weiss’s final report on his investigation of the now-pardoned Hunter Biden.)

Trump’s demand that Smith’s report be suppressed is a useful reminder that he really hates truthful accounts of January 6th, even if—especially if—they are based on testimony under oath from many different individuals, including many who worked for him. Recall Trump’s fear and loathing of the House January 6th Committee.

The loathing is, I suppose, easily understandable. Politicians don’t like scrutiny. And they especially don’t like criticism. And those who’ve gone so far as to commit sordid and likely criminal acts don’t like to see their disreputable behavior exposed.

But one senses that in addition to the hatred and the loathing, there’s an element of fear. Why?

Trump won. Smith’s report won’t change that. And in any case, his entire propaganda machine is ready to attack the report as the product of a biased Biden Justice Department and a Trump-hating special prosecutor. The report will have no immediate effect on public opinion, nor on the successes or failures of the opening days of Trump’s presidency.

 (Actually, if someone shows the guts to get to the bottom of evidence -- generated mostly by election-integrity expert Stephen Spoonamore and his allies -- that the the 2024 election was hacked in order to ensure a Trump "victory," something about the outcome might change, especially if Kamala Harris asserts her rights to a hand recount. Back to Bill Kristol and the issue of Donald Trump's apparent fear. ):

Kristol provides a history lesson on the importance of making sure whitewashed history remains whitewashed:

In the mid-twentieth century, Southern segregationists could have chosen simply to defend their policies as appropriate for then-current circumstances. They did make such arguments. But they also understood that in politics, present legitimacy depends on past origins. It was important to advocates of 20th century policies of racial discrimination that those policies were defended against the backdrop of the nobility of the Southern effort in the “War Between the States,” the depredations of Reconstruction, and the historic legitimacy of states’ rights.

So Trump too will continue to seek to rewrite the history of January 6th. He’ll pardon those who stormed the Capitol. He’ll fill the ranks of his administration with January 6th truthers. His administration will attack those, from Liz Cheney to Jack Smith, who’ve sought to hold him accountable. Trump’s more respectable apologists won’t go all the way with him in celebrating January 6th, but they’ll ignore or minimize or excuse what happened.

In a sense, the release now of Smith’s report will simply signify the failure of the effort, over the last four years, of accountability and truth-telling about January 6th. It will be the last gasp, for now, of a lost cause.

But, as T.S. Eliot remarked, “there is no such thing as a Lost Cause because there is no such thing as a Gained Cause. We fight for lost causes because we know that our defeat and dismay may be the preface to our successors’ victory.”

Who knows if or when such a victory will come? But if American politics is ever to return to a condition of civic and political health, it will need to embrace an honest account of January 6th.

Which is why we need the release of the special counsel’s report.