May 19, 2017


Robert S. Mueller III, a former F.B.I. director under Presidents George W. Bush and Barack Obama, was chosen to oversee the inquiry amid escalating pressure. CreditChristopher Gregory/The New York Times



RAISING THE STAKES: Justice Dept Names Former FBI Director Robert Mueller As Special Counsel for Russia Investigation.

  • Finally, we have a special counsel to investigate Trump’s ties to Russia and attempts to interfere with the FBI: former FBI Director Robert Mueller. Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein appointed Mueller (who led the bureau from 2001 to 2013) late Wednesday. ...
  • In his order, Rosenstein states, “If the Special Counsel believes it is necessary and appropriate, the Special Counsel is authorized to prosecute federal crimes arising from the investigation of these matters.” [DocumentCloud / Department of Justice
  • The appointment came as some Republicans started to turn on Trump, following the revelation late Tuesday that the President asked FBI Director James Comey to halt an investigation into former national security adviser, Michael Flynn.
  • House Oversight Committee Chair Jason Chaffetz sent a letter to the FBI's acting director requesting "all memoranda, notes, summaries, and recordings referring or relating to any communications between Comey and the President," saying that the New York Times's report about the Flynn request "raise[d] questions as to whether the President attempted to influence or impede the FBI's investigation as it relates to Lt. Gen. Flynn." [House Oversight Committee
  • Chaffetz then clarified that he is willing to use his subpoena power to get the memo where Comey recorded that Trump tried to interfere. [Washington Post / Amber Phillips] ...
  • If Mueller concludes that Trump has committed a crime, impeachment would be the logical next step....Mueller would certainly,... have the power to indict aides to Trump.
Donald Trump is pictured. | AP Photo
President Donald Trump is doing nothing to hide his hurt at the way he feels he is being mistreated. | AP Photo




In the short-term, politically, this newest development might give Republicans and the White House a little bit of breathing room. They can offer support for the special counsel to deflect many of the difficult and important questions that remain unanswered. But, in truth, the long-term danger to Trump’s presidency from the Russia scandal is greater today than it was yesterday.
As long as Mueller’s probe drags on, a huge dark cloud will hang over the White House. Who knows just how high up this investigation might go? Or, very hypothetically at this point, who in the Trump orbit might turn state’s witness if offered a deal to avoid jailtime? And Mueller is respected enough (more on that below) that any attempt to neuter him, or even just rein him in, could lead to a Constitutional crisis. In that way, Trump just lost a little more control over the fate of his presidency.
...Mueller is also empowered to probe possible attempts to stymie his investigation. That language gives him leeway to interpret his mandate broadly if he chooses. It also might mean he goes after people who leaked classified information related to the bureau’s Russia investigation. He can continue his work however long he wants, and he is broadly “authorized to prosecute federal crimes arising from the investigation.” That means this could last for years – potentially through the president’s 2020 reelection campaign. 
The Wall Street Journal’s editorial board, primarily concerned with advancing conservative tax reform though Congress, says Rosenstein made a “mistake” by “bending to political pressure” and worries it will hinder the GOP agenda: “These expeditions rarely end well for anyone … Mueller will be under pressure to bring criminal indictments of some kind to justify his existence. He’ll also no doubt bring on young attorneys who will savor the opportunity to make their reputation on such a high-profile investigation. … He is highly attuned to the political winds. As they say in Washington, lawyer up.”
“The risk is that you lose control of your agenda,” added Robert Luskin, a Washington white-collar attorney who represented Karl Rove in the Plame investigation, as well as a pair of Clinton senior officials during Whitewater. “It’s an enormous distraction. It’s an energy suck. As long as the clouds hang over a presidency it becomes much more difficult to get anything else done.”  [Terrific news!--Esco]
The leaders of the Senate and House committees conducting their own inquiries pledged last night to move forward, setting up a complex landscape of potentially conflicting investigations — and competing goals. ...Democrats cheered the news, but many also said that there still needs to be an independent investigation. 
The Washington Post Editorial Board says the special counsel should not let Congress off the hook and makes an important point about what an independent investigation can do that Mueller cannot: “The special counsel’s job is only to look for criminal behavior and, if he finds any, to prosecute the wrongdoers. His job is not to inform the public or to pass judgment on actions that may have been unwise, inappropriate or unethical — but did not violate the law. … A full accounting is likely to emerge only if Congress appoints a special commission like the one that investigated the 9/11 attacks.”
Alex Wong/Getty

IF YOU DON’T KNOW MUELLER:
-- He brings to this role a proven willingness to take on a sitting president. From a nicely-turned profile by Matea Gold, Rosalind Helderman and Tom Hamburger: “In a high-drama episode in 2004, he and then-Deputy Attorney General Comey [who remains his friend] were preparing to resign from their positions if President Bush reauthorized the National Security Agency’s warrantless wiretap program without changes. Bush backed down. Former colleagues said the ex-Marine Corps officer and former U.S. attorney, who was sworn in as FBI director a week before the 2001 terrorist attacks, is uniquely suited to the task. A former deputy attorney general who later did a stint prosecuting homicide cases in Washington, Mueller is a known as a no-nonsense, relentless prosecutor with a deep reverence for the rule of law. ‘The most devastating thing that can happen to an institution is that people begin to shade and dissemble,’ he told Washingtonian magazine in 2008.”
The former director has demonstrated an impressive, lifelong commitment to public service. Some quick biographical details: “Mueller grew up in Philadelphia and went to St. Paul’s School, the elite prep school in New Hampshire, where he played hockey with John F. Kerry … At Princeton, he was inspired to join the Marine Corps by a former student who died in Vietnam … He led a rifle platoon in Vietnam, eventually receiving numerous commendations, including the Purple Heart and the Bronze Star. After graduating from the University of Virginia Law School, Mueller worked for a dozen years as an assistant U.S. attorney in San Francisco and Boston. Mueller succeeded William Weld as U.S. attorney in Boston and then went to Washington in 1989 as an assistant to Attorney General Richard L. Thornburgh, eventually rising to be chief of the criminal division. During his tenure, he worked on high-profile cases such as the prosecution of former Panamanian dictator Manuel Antonio Noriega and the terrorist bombing of Pan Am Flight 103.”
Win McNamee/Getty Images
THE STORY BEHIND THE STORY – ROD SAVES HIMSELF:
-- Rosenstein’s 6 p.m. announcement that Mueller has agreed to take on the duties of special counsel seemed timed, at least in part, to take some of the sting out of what is sure to be a contentious visit to the Hill today. Behind closed doors, he will give a classified briefing to the full Senate at 2:30 p.m. today about the firing of Comey, and he’ll return to brief House members tomorrow morning at 10 a.m.
He took charge of overseeing the Russia probe after Attorney General Jeff Sessions recused himself because he had given false testimony to Congress about his contacts with the Russians.
Rosenstein, a Republican, was appointed U.S. attorney for Maryland by Bush in 2005. But the state’s Democratic senators, Ben Cardin and Barbara Mikulski, asked Barack Obama to keep him onboard for the past eight years. With hundreds of hyper-ambitious liberals who would have killed for the U.S. attorney posting in a lawyer-heavy state like Maryland, his staying power in the Obama years was truly remarkable. This is how he got confirmed as deputy A.G. three weeks ago by a vote of 94-6, an unusual show of support in this polarized moment.
But last week Rosenstein squandered all the goodwill he had earned from the left over the years by writing the thin-gruel memo justifying Comey’s termination...That raised a host of questions about Rosenstein’s independence and judgment.
Making matters worse for him, the White House made a strategic decision to blame the Comey firing on Rosenstein as much as possible. Sources told The Post last week that Rosenstein threatened to resign if West Wing aides kept insisting publicly that the president acted only because of his recommendation.
Rosenstein, who grew accustomed to positive press coverage over the years, was buffeted by a relentlessstorm of negative commentary from the elite mediaand the legal trade press for the past eight days....“Former colleagues said Rosenstein’s move (last night) may help restore his battered reputation among current and former government lawyers,” 
Members of President Trump's staff depart from Air Force One together upon Trump's arrival at Joint Base Andrews in Maryland Wednesday. (Kevin Lamarque/Reuters)
WEST WING INTRIGUE:
-- THE TOUGHEST GIG IN WASHINGTON RIGHT NOW? WORKING FOR TRUMP. “As [Trump] has grown increasingly angry and frustrated with his White House staff, the beleaguered targets of his ire have a quietly roiling gripe of their own — their boss, the president himself," Ashley Parker and Abby Phillip report: “In the nine days since he fired [Comey], Trump has lurched through a series of crises of his own making … And in his wake remain his exhausted aides and deputies, the frequent targets of Trump’s wrath as they struggle to control an uncontrollable chief executive and labor to explain away his stumbles. Some White House staffers have turned to impeachment gallows humor. Other mid-level aides have started reaching out to consultants, shopping their resumes. And at least one senior staffer has begun privately talking to friends about what a post-White House job would look like …
“For many White House staffers, impromptu support groups of friends, confidants and acquaintances have materialized, calling and texting to check in, inquiring about their mental state and urging them to take care of themselves. [One operative said] ...that any savvy White House staffer should be keeping a diary. ‘The real question is: How long do you put up with it?,’ this person said. ‘Every one of those people could get a better paying job and work less hours.’”
How do aides deal with the president's short-attention span? "National Security Council officials have strategically included Trump’s name in ‘as many paragraphs as we can because he keeps reading if he’s mentioned,’ according to one source," per Reuters’ Steve Holland and Jeff Mason. ...
Former Trump campaign manager Corey Lewandowski
Former Trump campaign manager Corey Lewandowski, pictured in 2016, was spotted in the West Wing lobby on Tuesday, according to two White House officials. | Getty
Politico’s Tara Palmeri reports: Trump, frustrated by his administration’s handling of the multiple scandals engulfing the White House, has turned once again to his team of former campaign advisersincluding Jason Miller, David Bossie, and Corey Lewandowski.
John Yoo, who as Bush 43’s assistant attorney general authored the notorious “torture memos,” believes Trump’s purported comments to Comey “come close to obstruction of justice but don’t clearly cross the line.” The Berkeley law professor writes in an op-ed for today’s New York Times:...“Contrary to common wisdom, impeachment does not require the president to commit a crime but instead refers to significant political mistakes or even incompetence,” he adds. “This was the framers’ intent — as Hamilton explained in Federalist 65, impeachment was to tackle ‘the misconduct of public men’ or ‘the abuse or violation of some public trust.’ Such offenses, he wrote, ‘are of a nature which may with peculiar propriety be denominated political, as they relate chiefly to injuries done immediately to the society itself.’ The first step would be for Congress to form a special committee to investigate the Russia controversy and the Trump-Comey affair.”

May 17, 2017

OBSTRUCTION OF JUSTICE? TRUMP ASKED COMEY TO END FLYNN INVESTIGATION

Trump asked Comey to SHUT DOWN Mike Flynn investigation

Trump urged halt to Flynn probe, former FBI director’s notes say.

‘I hope you can let this go,’ Trump said, according to notes taken by Comey and described by associates.

According to a set of notes taken by former FBI director James Comey following a February meeting with President Trump, the president brought up the counterintelligence investigation into Michael Flynn, the former national security adviser, and urged Comey to drop it.

Trump might have obstructed justice if Comey’s allegation is true, legal analysts say.

More evidence would likely be required to warrant action and, as one expert noted, “Intent is key, and intent here can be difficult to prove.” But Comey’s memo offers a plausible case that the president obstructed justice.

Democratic Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer said Tuesday that he was 'shaken' by news of Comey's memo, and warned: 'History is watching'
Democratic Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer said Tuesday that he was 'shaken' by news of Comey's memo, and warned: 'History is watching'
Sean Spicer answers questions on Trump's 'Comey twitter threat'
Loaded: 0%
Progress: 0%
0:00
Previous
Play
Skip
Mute
Current Time0:00
/
Duration Time0:45
Fullscreen
Need Text


Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-4512806/Comey-claimed-Trump-asked-SHUT-Flynn-probe.html#ixzz4hIt5exeC
Follow us: @MailOnline on Twitter | DailyMail on Facebook

As scandals grow, GOP senators say they’re ‘troubled’ but not much else.

....as lawmakers grapple with troubles in the fallout of another scandal in the Trump administration, nobody was exactly sure what to do about the situation, at least not yet.

  • Comey (whom Trump fired last week, drawing accusations that he was trying to chill the FBI’s ongoing investigation into contact between the Trump campaign and Russian officials) was known for taking careful and exhaustive notes when in circumstances he was worried would provoke later controversy — providing a paper trail to tell his side of the story. [Matthew A. Miller via Twitter]
  • And while it’s not clear who leaked the existence of the memo to the Times, it wouldn’t be surprising if the leak came from within the FBI — which has a history of reacting extremely badly to any perceived threat to its independence, and a lot of ways to make politicians’ lives hell. [Vox / Zack Beauchamp]
President Donald Trump walks from the Residence to the West Wing of the White House after returning from Philadelphia on January 26, 2017 in Washington, DC.
 Getty

Trump is careening toward an inevitable showdown with an undeniable truth.

Time and time again, the public has been forced to decide: Whom do you believe — Donald Trump, or some other source? Whether it’s Trump’s word against that of his campaign rivals or of the media or of James Comey, it seems only a matter of time until Trump is up against someone or something that leaves him no wiggle room.
Trump 'told Comey to JAIL journalists who publish classified information.'

Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-4513042/Trump-told-Comey-jail-reporters-classified-leaks.html#ixzz4hIqgocTI 
Follow us: @MailOnline on Twitter | DailyMail on Facebook


According to the New York Times , who have spoken to two unnamed advisers, the president has become 'sour and dark' and has turned against his staff, son-in-law Jared Kushner


Is President Trump turning on Jared Kushner? 'Sour and dark' president has unleashed his fury on his White House staff - including his son-in law - following the Russia revelations.

  • A New York Times report suggests that the White House has been thrown into turmoil following the report that the president disclosed top secret information to top Russian officials


Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-4510100/How-West-Wing-reacted-newest-Trump-Russia-claims.html#ixzz4hIrK9JYR
Follow us: @MailOnline on Twitter | DailyMail on Facebook

As reports of Trump released classified information to Russia broke, White House aides were 'hiding in offices' and Sean Spicer's communications team was turning up the volume of televisions to mask the sound of shouting
As reports of Trump released classified information to Russia broke, White House aides were 'hiding in offices' and Sean Spicer's communications team was turning up the volume of televisions to mask the sound of shouting

Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-4510100/How-West-Wing-reacted-newest-Trump-Russia-claims.html#ixzz4hIrydkaR
Follow us: @MailOnline on Twitter | DailyMail on Facebook

The Fix: Will Trump be impeached? It’s less likely than some Democrats are suggesting.

  • In practice, though, there’s no automatic trigger for impeachment. It’s a process that requires a majority of the House (and removing an impeached president requires two-thirds of the Senate). So unless Republicans decide that this is the violation that’s going to shake them from their support of Trump, the newest revelations won’t change anything. [Vox / Dylan Matthews]

-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

LET'S TALK: David Friedman, (R) the new United States Ambassador to Israel, with Israeli President Reuven Rivlin (L) in the president's Jerusalem residence as Friedman presents his credentials on 16 May 2017
David Friedman, (R) the new United States Ambassador to Israel, with Israeli President Reuven Rivlin (L) 

Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-4513366/Trump-spy-s-life-risk-sharing-info-Russia.html#ixzz4hIpx4sHN
Follow us: @MailOnline on Twitter | DailyMail on Facebook


Trump 'risked life of Israeli spy who is embedded in ISIS' by sharing classified information with Russia.


  • The classified information Trump shared with Russia came from an Israeli spy who is embedded in ISIS. 
  • ABC reports that Israel shared their reports with the US on the condition they remain anonymous.

  • Trump relayed the information to Russian's foreign minister and ambassador to the US.
  • He defended it on Tuesday, saying he was within his rights to do so as president. 

  • Former Mossad director Danny Yatom  said it could be a 'grave violation' and could lead to 'harm to the source' 

  • An Israeli intelligence officer said a 'special understanding' was violated and it represented 'our worst fears confirmed.'

The disclosure ensures that Trump will have plenty to discuss when he visits Israel, where Trump will meet Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and pray at the Western Wall. 

Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-4513366/Trump-spy-s-life-risk-sharing-info-Russia.html#ixzz4hIqFyTjl
Follow us: @MailOnline on Twitter | DailyMail on Facebook


Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-4513366/Trump-spy-s-life-risk-sharing-info-Russia.html#ixzz4hIp1RDx4 

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Image
House Oversight Committee Chairman Jason Chaffetz. Photo: Andrew Harrer/Bloomberg via Getty Images


Trump’s Protective Republican Wall in Congress Cracks

By 

The Republican Congress has surrounded the Trump administration with a protective wall. The majority party has denied Democratic demands for independent investigations, quashed bills to force President Trump to release his tax returns, and avoided any serious effort at oversight. Hours after the New York Times reported that James Comey has memos describing Donald Trump attempting to steer him away from the Russia investigation, that wall began to crack.
Jason Chaffetz, chairman of the House Oversight Committee, and heretofore a staunch Trump defender, has subpoenaed all records of Comey’s meetings with the president. Cathy McMorris-Rogers, the fourth-ranking House Republican, endorsed the request, followed within hours by House Speaker Paul Ryan.
Opening up Comey’s trove of evidence is hardly a radical step. But it paves the way for a series of revelations are are extremely likely to depict the president having committed an impeachable offense. The implication of the next step is apparent to many Republicans. Senator John McCain says the charges have “reached Watergate size and scale.” Dana Bash reports that Congressional Republicans are discussing an independent prosecutor or an independent commission – two steps the party has avoided so far.

May 16, 2017




Trump’s new ‘voter fraud’ commission: A tool to help GOP win elections.



WASHINGTON POST


 Trump’s commission on ‘election integrity’ could instead restrict voting



WASHINGTON POST (2)

This is why Richard Nixon taped his White House conversations


 (Jabin Botsford/The Washington Post)

This is why Richard Nixon taped his White House conversations
Nixon and others recorded conversations to gain political advantage and help write lucrative memoirs.
By Richard A. Moss and Luke Nichter  •  Read more »


WASHINGTON POST




American Fascism, in 1944 and Today


HENRY SCOTT WALLACE, NY TIMES

Seventy-three years ago, The New York Times asked the sitting vice president to write an article about whether there are fascists in America, and what they’re up to.
It was an alarming question. And the vice president took it quite seriously. His article, “The Danger of American Fascism,” described a breed of super-nationalist who pursues political power by deceiving Americans and playing to their fears, but is really interested only in protecting his own wealth and privilege.
That vice president was my grandfather, Henry A. Wallace. And in my view, he predicted President Trump.
....Mussolini was a proponent of “corporatism,” defined by some as “a merger of state and corporate power.” And through that lens, using that term, my grandfather’s warning looks prescient.
----
My grandfather warned about hucksters spouting populist themes but manipulating people and institutions to achieve the opposite. They pretend to be on the side of ordinary working people — “paying lip service to democracy and the common welfare,” he wrote. But at the same time, they “distrust democracy because it stands for equal opportunity.”
They invariably put “money and power ahead of human beings,” he continued. “They demand free enterprise, but are the spokesmen for monopoly and vested interest.” They also “claim to be super-patriots, but they would destroy every liberty guaranteed by the Constitution.”
They bloviate about putting America first, but it’s just a cover. “They use isolationism as a slogan to conceal their own selfish imperialism.”
They need scapegoats and harbor “an intensity of intolerance toward those of other races, parties, classes, religions, cultures, regions or nations.”
----
They “poison the channels of public information,” he wrote. Their “problem is never how best to present the truth to the public but how best to use the news to deceive the public” into giving them more money or power.
In fact, they use lies strategically, to promote civic division, which then justifies authoritarian crackdowns. Through “deliberate perversion of truth and fact,” he said, “their newspapers and propaganda carefully cultivate every fissure of disunity.”
Thus might lying about unprecedented high crime rates legitimize a police state. Lying about immigrants being rapists and terrorists might justify a huge border wall, mass expulsions and religion-based immigration bans. Lying about millions of illegal votes might excuse suppression of voting by disfavored groups.
----
The antidote? For my grandfather, it lay in that phrase the “common man.” In 1942, he famously rebutted conservatives calling for an “American Century” after the war — America, the greatest country on earth, dominating the world.
Nonsense, my grandfather said in that speech: We Americans “are no more a master race than the Nazis.” He called for a “century of the common man” — ordinary people, standing up and fighting for their rights, with decent jobs, organized (into unions), demanding accountable government committed to the “general welfare” rather than the privilege of the few, and decent schools for their kids (teaching “truths of the real world”). Democracy, he said in his 1944 essay, must “put human beings first and dollars second.”
If there’s any comfort in his essay 73 years ago, it is that this struggle is not new. It wasn’t even new then. The main question today is how our democracy and our brash new generation of citizen activists deals with it.

SAUL LOEB


MICHAEL TOMASKY, DAILY BEAST

-----

[The Republicans] see Trump as an opportunity to get what they can. If they can pass their tax cuts for the rich, end Obamacare, and put conservative judges on the Supreme Court and the federal circuit courts, they’ll let Trump do what he wants.

-----

What will it take [to impeach him?]…two things. One, Trump gets so low in the polls that he’s clearly an albatross to the House Republicans in their pursuit to hold on to their majority in 2018. Two, he does or says something that just makes everyone throw up their hands and say “okay, enough.” We can’t say what that thing is, but it does exist. As Potter Stewart said, we’ll know it when we see it. Or maybe the Republicans will never know it when they see it, which will increase the chances that the Democrats will take the House in 2018, and then it's a different ball game.






1. CLUES

Researchers Link Ransomware to N. Korea


SYMANTEC/HANDOUT VIA REUTERS


Researchers at Symantec and Kaspersky Lab have discovered a potential link between North Korea and the WannaCry ransomware virus, Reuters reports. Code from an earlier version of the virus reportedly matches code from used by the Lazarus Group, which researchers believe to be a North Korean hacking group. While the evidence is still too sparse to link WannaCry definitively to North Korea, the code “is the best clue we have seen to date as to the origins of WannaCry,” Kaspersky Lab researcher Kurt Baumgartner told Reuters. WannaCry has infected more than 300,000 computers since Friday, locking the machines until their owners pay a bitcoin ransom.