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Showing posts with label OVERTHOW. Show all posts

Thursday, December 23, 2021

RSN: FOCUS: Laurence H. Tribe, Donald Ayer and Dennis Aftergut | Will Donald Trump Get Away With Inciting an Insurrection?

 


 

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January 6th Capitol riot. (photo: Mark Peterson/The New York Times)
FOCUS: Laurence H. Tribe, Donald Ayer and Dennis Aftergut | Will Donald Trump Get Away With Inciting an Insurrection?
Laurence H. Tribe, Donald Ayer and Dennis Aftergut, The New York Times
Excerpt: "In his nine months in office, Attorney General Merrick Garland has done a great deal to restore integrity and evenhanded enforcement of the law to an agency that was badly misused for political reasons under his predecessor."

In his nine months in office, Attorney General Merrick Garland has done a great deal to restore integrity and evenhanded enforcement of the law to an agency that was badly misused for political reasons under his predecessor. But his place in history will be assessed against the challenges that confronted him. And the overriding test that he and the rest of the government face is the threat to our democracy from people bent on destroying it.

Mr. Garland’s success depends on ensuring that the rule of law endures. That means dissuading future coup plotters by holding the leaders of the insurrection fully accountable for their attempt to overthrow the government. But he cannot do so without a robust criminal investigation of those at the top, from the people who planned, assisted or funded the attempt to overturn the Electoral College vote to those who organized or encouraged the mob attack on the Capitol. To begin with, he might focus on Mark Meadows, Steve Bannon, Rudy Giuliani, John Eastman and even Donald Trump — all of whom were involved, in one way or another, in the events leading up to the attack.

Almost a year after the insurrection, we have yet to see any clear indicators that such an investigation is underway, raising the alarming possibility that this administration may never bring charges against those ultimately responsible for the attack.

While the Justice Department has filed charges against more than 700 people who participated in the violence, limiting the investigation to these foot soldiers would be a grave mistake: As Joanne Freeman, a Yale historian, wrote this month about the insurrection, “Accountability — the belief that political power holders are responsible for their actions and that blatant violations will be addressed — is the lifeblood of democracy. Without it, there can be no trust in government, and without trust, democratic governments have little power.”

The legal path to investigate the leaders of the coup attempt is clear. The criminal code prohibits inciting an insurrection or “giving aid or comfort” to those who do, as well as conspiracy to forcibly “prevent, hinder or delay the execution of any law of the United States.” The code also makes it a crime to corruptly impede any official proceeding or deprive citizens of their constitutional right to vote.

Based purely on what we know today from news reports and the steady stream of revelations coming from the House select committee investigating the attack, the attorney general has a powerful justification for a robust and forceful investigation into the former president and his inner circle. As White House chief of staff, Mark Meadows was intimately involved in the effort to overturn the election. He traveled to Georgia last December, where he apparently laid the groundwork for the phone call in which the president pressured Georgia’s secretary of state, Brad Raffensperger, to “find 11,780 votes.” Representative Jim Jordan of Ohio reportedly promoted a scheme to pressure Vice President Mike Pence to reject duly certified Joe Biden electors. And from their war room at the Willard Hotel, several members of the president’s inner circle hatched the legal strategy to overturn the results of the election.

The president himself sat back for three hours while his chief of staff was barraged with messages from members of Congress and Fox News hosts pleading with him to have Mr. Trump call off the armed mob whose violent passion he had inflamed. That evidence, on its own, may not be enough to convict the former president, but it is certainly enough to require a criminal investigation.

And yet there are no signs, at least in media reports, that the attorney general is building a case against these individuals — no interviews with top administration officials, no reports of attempts to persuade the foot soldiers to turn on the people who incited them to violence. By this point in the Russia investigation, the special counsel Robert Mueller had indicted Paul Manafort and Rick Gates and secured the cooperation of George Papadopoulos after charging him with lying to the F.B.I. The media was reporting that the special counsel’s team had conducted or scheduled interviews with Mr. Trump’s aides Stephen Miller and Mr. Bannon, as well as Attorney General Jeff Sessions.

Of course, there is no way to know for sure whether Mr. Garland’s Department of Justice is investigating the leaders of the attack behind closed doors. Justice Department policy does not permit announcing investigations, absent exceptional circumstances. Mr. Garland, unlike his predecessor, plays by the book, keeping quiet about investigations until charges are filed. But the first of the rioters to plead guilty began cooperating with the Justice Department back in April. If prosecutors have been using their cooperation to investigate the top officials and operatives responsible for the siege of the Capitol and our democracy, there would likely be significant confirmation in the media by now.

It is possible that the department is deferring the decision about starting a full-blown investigative effort pending further work by the House select committee. It is even conceivable that the department is waiting for the committee’s final report so that federal prosecutors can review the documents, interviews and recommendations amassed by House investigators and can consider any potential referrals for criminal prosecution.

But such an approach would come at a very high cost. In the prosecution business, interviews need to happen as soon as possible after the events in question, to prevent both forgetfulness and witness coordination to conceal the truth. A comprehensive Department of Justice probe of the leadership is now more urgently needed than ever.

It is also imperative that Mr. Trump be included on the list of those being investigated. The media has widely reported his role in many of the relevant events, and there is no persuasive reason to exclude him.

First, he has no claim to constitutional immunity from prosecution. The Department of Justice’s Office of Legal Counsel has recognized such immunity only for sitting presidents because a criminal trial would prevent them from discharging the duties of their office. Mr. Trump no longer has those duties to discharge.

Nor is exclusion of the former president remotely justified by the precedent President Gerald Ford set in pardoning Richard Nixon to help the country “heal” from Watergate. Even our proud tradition of not mimicking banana republics by allowing political winners to retaliate against losers must give way in the wake of violence perpetrated to thwart the peaceful transition of power. Refusing to at least investigate those who plot to end democracy — and who would remain engaged in efforts to do so — would be beyond foolhardy.

Furthermore, the pending state and local investigations in New York and Atlanta will never be able to provide the kind of accountability the nation clearly needs. The New York case, which revolves around tax fraud, has nothing to do with the attack on our government. The Atlanta district attorney appears to be probing Mr. Trump’s now infamous call to Mr. Raffensperger. But that is just one chapter of the wrongdoing that led up to the attack on the Capitol.

Significantly, even if the Atlanta district attorney is able to convict Mr. Meadows and Mr. Trump for interfering in Georgia’s election, they could still run for office again. Only convicting them for participating in an insurrection would permanently disqualify them from office under Section 3 of the 14th Amendment.

Some have expressed pessimism that the Department of Justice would be able to convict Mr. Trump. His guilt would ultimately be for a jury to decide, and some jurors might believe he deluded himself into believing his own big lie and thus genuinely thought he was saving, rather than sabotaging, the election. But concerns about a conviction are no reason to refrain from an investigation. If anything, a federal criminal investigation could unearth even more evidence and provide a firmer basis for deciding whether to indict.

To decline from the outset to investigate would be appeasement, pure and simple, and appeasing bullies and wrongdoers only encourages more of the same. Without forceful action to hold the wrongdoers to account, we will likely not resist what some retired generals see as a march to another insurrection in 2024 if Mr. Trump or another demagogue loses.

Throughout his public life, Mr. Garland has been a highly principled public servant focused on doing the right thing. But only by holding the leaders of the Jan. 6 insurrection — all of them — to account can he secure the future and teach the next generation that no one is above the law. If he has not done so already, we implore the attorney general to step up to that task.


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Sunday, December 12, 2021

Dem gov turns tables on GOP over anti-abortion laws

 


The aftermath: How you can help victims of historic band of tornadoes

Today's Top Stories:

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California Gov. Gavin Newsom pushes for gun laws modeled on Texas abortion ban

Two can play this game, it would seem.


Mark Meadows claims he received, but did nothing, with document that detailed ways to undermine the 2020 election
Riiight.



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Republicans' secret plot to rig election FINALLY exposed

No Lie with Brian Tyler Cohen: Whoa.


Retired Army colonel at center of PowerPoint election overthrow plot talked often with Mark Meadows
Phil Waldron, a cybersecurity expert who specialized in psychological operations in the military, discussed plans to overthrow the democratic election of Joe Biden as many as ten times with Trump's former chief of staff.



White House braces for legal, political showdown over vaccine mandates
The mandates, once heralded as the most effective way to get America out of the COVID pandemic, are now facing a three-front battle in the judicial system, Congress, and the court of public opinion.


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Biden directs immediate surge of federal resources to states hit by deadly tornadoes

FEMA is sending emergency response personnel, water, and other needed commodities to the region, and Biden's order will make other federal resources and personnel available.



Donald Trump, Bill O'Reilly event reportedly fizzles in Florida
Speaking to a half-empty arena, the disgraced ex-president told the disgraced ex-Fox News personality that the world leaders he "got along best with were tyrants. For whatever reason, I got along great with them."


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Marjorie Taylor Greene, Madison Cawthorn, and Lauren Boebert's extremism costing them support from their voters

United Rural Democrats: New extremists in Congress are taking their districts for granted while delivering nothing for them. United Rural Democrats are organizing on the ground to shock Republicans by winning back Middle America. But they need your help!


Australia shortens wait time for COVID-19 booster doses as Omicron cases rise
This isn't anywhere near close to over.


Ex-Houston cop weeps as he’s jailed for Capitol riot: "Worst choice of my life"
A former cop who worked for the Houston Police Department when he stormed the Capitol was sentenced to 45 days in jail on Friday.


California man charged in Jan. 6 MAGA riot flees to Belarus
Evan Neumann, 49, was charged with 14 counts relating to Trump's insurrection at the US Capitol, including assaulting police officers.


NPR sues the Pentagon for info on possible civilian deaths during the Baghdadi raid
In late 2019, NPR reported claims that US helicopter fire killed two Syrian civilians and blew the arm off a third during the raid, prompting US Central Command to investigate. Last year, the Pentagon cleared troops of wrongdoing.


Seriously?

Yes. Seriously.

Hope...


Sunday Funnies

Sunday Funny
Sunday Funny
Sunday Funny
Sunday Funny





Saturday, December 11, 2021

1/6 panel gets Trump's actual coup plan from top aide

 


Tornadoes kill dozens in Kentucky and throughout midwest

Today's Top Stories:

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Trump's chief of staff turns over PowerPoint presentation detailing plans to overturn election results

The damning document was part of a cache of files Mark Meadows turned over to the January 6th committee before he reneged on his cooperation deal.



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VIDEO OF THE DAY: Republican fact checked to his face after claiming Listerine could treat COVID

Senator Ron Johnson's disinformation could get you killed or cause you to fall off your chair laughing.


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Major news on the future of Roe

No Lie with Brian Tyler Cohen: Wow.


SCOTUS rules lawsuits against Texas' controversial abortion ban can proceed
It's a small procedural victory in the fight to protect a woman's right to choose, but conservative justices continue to refuse to lift the ban while lawsuits play out.



Biden backs Kellogg's striking union workers in their desperate fight against the corporate giant
The President's vocal support is "exactly what we needed at this time," worker hails.


Six more subpoenas issued by the January 6th committee
The noose continues to tighten around Trump's insurrection collaborators with this latest list of aides and associates called to face congress.


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Sonia Sotomayor unloads on conservative justices in her latest salvo in the battle to save abortion rights

The liberal justice is leaving it all on the field as abortion rights hang by a thread


photo
Meet the four powerhouse rural candidates ready to take the GQP down

No Dem Left Behind: Richard Ojeda introduces No Dem Left Behind's powerhouse first round of Senate endorsements -- each with a plan to connect with rural voters and spotlight their issues in the midterm elections and beyond.


Report: Kanye West's publicist threatened Georgia election worker at the center of Trump's "stop the steal" conspiracy
Trevian Kutti traveled to Georgia after the election to confront Ruby Freeman and pressure her into confessing to the voter fraud conspiracy Trump spun around her.


President Biden orders end to federal funding of new fossil fuel projects overseas
Official cables affirm the Biden administration's commitment to end American financing of "coal and carbon-intensive energy projects overseas."



Trump launched profane tirade about Netanyahu in interview for congratulating Biden on win
In interview with Israeli journalist, the former president once again proved that Trump loyalty is a one-way street.


photo


Seriously?

Yes. Seriously.

Hope...




Wednesday, December 8, 2021

RSN: FOCUS: Charles Pierce | Never Forget That Trump Purged the Pentagon Leadership Between the Election and January 6

 


 

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07 December 21

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January 6, 2021. (photo: Brent Stirton/Getty Images)
FOCUS: Charles Pierce | Never Forget That Trump Purged the Pentagon Leadership Between the Election and January 6
Charles Pierce, Esquire
Pierce writes: "One of the relatively unexamined pieces of the January 6 disaster is the delayed deployment of the D.C. National Guard to the Capitol."

And that the new leadership he installed seized direct control over deploying the National Guard that day. And that deployment was delayed for hours.

One of the relatively unexamined pieces of the January 6 disaster is the delayed deployment of the D.C. National Guard to the Capitol. Politico had a look on Monday at some explosive allegations from former D.C. National Guard official Colonel Earl Matthews, "who held high-level National Security Council and Pentagon roles during the Trump administration." Matthews sent a memo to the House committee looking into the events of January 6 in which he offered detailed recollections of what happened inside the security apparatus that day. In it, he said the Pentagon's inspector general assembled a report on the Department of Defense's response to the attack on the Capitol that was riddled with errors and, in Politico's words, "protects a top Army official who argued against sending the National Guard to the Capitol on Jan. 6, delaying the insurrection response for hours."

The main takeaway seems to be that two top Pentagon officials, General Charles Flynn—who happens to be the brother of Trumpist fanatic Mike Flynn, though Matthews' memo does not seem to cast aspersions on this front—and Lieutenant General Walter Piatt, opposed deploying the Guard on conference calls that afternoon. That included a 2:30 p.m. call in which then-Capitol Police Chief Steven Sund "pleaded" for the National Guard to be deployed in order to aid his officers under attack. In Matthews' telling, both Flynn and Piatt said on the call that they opposed the move because "the optics of having uniformed military personnel deployed to the U.S. Capitol would not be good."

These "optics" were not a concern during the George Floyd protests the previous summer, when the Guard was frequently deployed alongside police. It's absurd on its face. What worse "optics" are there in a democracy than people storming your seat of government in pursuit of elected officials, hoping to disrupt the peaceful transfer of power? "Optics" has been the party line throughout, but there's reason to believe this is all a sideshow. Check out what else Politico found.

In addition to Matthews’ memo, POLITICO also obtained a document produced by a D.C. Guard official and dated Jan. 7 that lays out a timeline of Jan. 6. The D.C. Guard timeline, a separate document whose author took notes during the call, also said that Piatt and Flynn at 2:37 p.m. “recommended for DC Guard to standby,” rather than immediately deploying to the Capitol during the riot.

Four minutes later, according to that Guard timeline, Flynn again “advised D.C. National Guard to standby until the request has been routed” to then-Army Secretary Ryan McCarthy and then-acting Defense Secretary Chris Miller.

The request had to be sent up the food chain to Miller because on January 4, Miller issued a memo in which he ordered that the D.C. National Guard could not be deployed without his personal authorization. "At all times, the DCNG will remain under the operational and administrative command and control of the Commanding General of the DCNG, who reports to the Secretary of Defense through the Secretary of the Army." Matthews, the memo author, also alleges in his memo that the Secretary of the Army, Ryan McCarthy, was "incommunicado or unreachable for most of the afternoon." That is, during an attack on the United States Capitol.

And here is where we arrive at another detail that seems to have been all-too-often written out of the piece. In the days between the election and January 6, President Trump purged the top leadership of the Pentagon, including Secretary of Defense Mark Esper. He replaced those officials with unhinged loyalists like Anthony Tata, who'd called President Obama a "terrorist leader" and missed out on a Pentagon position earlier on because he wouldn't have survived a Senate confirmation process. He was placed in a job that didn't require Senate sign-off until the transition period, when Trump made Tata the acting undersecretary for policy, the third most powerful official at the Department of Defense. A former aide to Trump ally Devin Nunes, Kashyap Patel, was made chief of staff to the Secretary of Defense. McCarthy's nomination for Army Secretary was confirmed by the Senate in September 2019, according to regular order. But on November 9, 2020, two days after it was confirmed he'd lost the election, Trump made Chris Miller the acting Secretary of Defense—the same Chris Miller who took direct control of the D.C. National Guard for the discrete period of January 5th and 6th. And then the National Guard was not deployed for hours the latter afternoon, as a mob battered down the doors of the national legislature in an attempt to stop or delay Congress from confirming that Miller's boss would soon leave office.

Because all the while that Trump was purging the senior levels of the security services, he was yelling that the election had been stolen from him and the result was illegitimate. He drew his superfans to Washington to disrupt the certification of that election result. And the security services were slow to respond to that attack. Oh, and here's a line in a USA Today report on Trump's Pentagon purge, published on November 10, 2020: "White House officials said Trump wanted his own team at the Pentagon should he prevail with his legal challenges to the balloting." What? So Trump connected his purge with his attempts to overturn the election? And he was saying this to aides in the White House, and they told USA Today? Who are these staffers? They seem like people the January 6 committee ought to speak with under oath.


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Wednesday, November 24, 2021

RSN: FOCUS: Democrats Are in Denial About What They're Up Against

 


 

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23 November 21

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Senator Ron Johnson said that Republican lawmakers in Wisconsin should unilaterally assert control of federal elections. (photo: Sarahbeth Maney/NYT)
FOCUS: Democrats Are in Denial About What They're Up Against
Ryan Cooper, The Week
Cooper writes: "Reporter Reid Epstein had published a bombshell New York Times article about how Wisconsin Republicans are preparing to set up permanent one-party rule and very possibly use that power to steal the 2024 election in the state."

On Friday morning, Democrats passed their Build Back Better agenda through the House. Only hours before their triumphant celebrations, however, reporter Reid Epstein had published a bombshell New York Times article about how Wisconsin Republicans are preparing to set up permanent one-party rule and very possibly use that power to steal the 2024 election in the state.

Thus far, Democratic leadership has done nothing substantial to counter this threat, or even acknowledge it in any serious way. But if they can't get over their denial and start taking some action, the freedom of the 2024 election is legitimately in question.

Epstein reports the Wisconsin GOP has Big Lie-pilled itself into a frenzy, essentially claiming excuse to set up one-party rule. Several years ago, the party established a new agency, the Wisconsin Elections Commission, to oversee voting in the state. Then, last year, the commission carried out a number of emergency changes to procedures in keeping with the pandemic. Very few cared at the time, because those measures were reasonable and necessary.

But after former President Donald Trump lost the state, Republicans started hunting for pretexts to discredit the result and make sure it could never happen again. Initially, they ordered a report hoping to find voting irregularities. When that didn't work, they claimed the election commission's pandemic rules were illegal. The "Trump-aligned sheriff of Racine County, the state's fifth most populous county, recommended felony charges against five of the six members of the election commission for guidance they had given to municipal clerks early in the pandemic," writes Epstein.

The developing strategy seems to go something like this: First, the Wisconsin legislature districts are gerrymandered so it's nearly impossible for Democrats to win. Next, Republicans seize control of the state electoral process, as Sen. Ron Johnson (R-Wisc.) has already suggested doing, even over Democratic Gov. Tony Evers' veto. Then, either they rig the voting process such that Democrats can't win, or just award the state's electoral votes to the Republican candidate directly.

The basic idea here — handing out electoral votes through the legislature rather than after a vote — arguably wouldn't even be "illegal," since the Electoral College clauses in the Constitution stipulate that electors are chosen "in such Manner as the Legislature thereof may direct." Doing it over Evers' veto, though, would definitely violate state law and Supreme Court precedent. More to the point, the tactic would be a grotesque violation of the very political principles of a democratic republic, as outlined in the Declaration of Independence and the preamble to the Constitution.

Fundamentally, the idea of "legality" can't stand up to someone who is sufficiently dishonest and shameless. You just claim up is down, black is white, and shout down anyone who says otherwise. Every political system relies on norms and shared understanding to some degree. So if Republicans can pull this off in Wisconsin, then it is absolutely guaranteed they will try it everywhere else they can. From there, it only takes a few swing states stolen for the presidency to be in the bag — at least in terms of "the rules."

Now, legal strategies are not the end of politics, particularly when it comes to de facto revolution and the abolition of democracy. The reaction of the masses and opposition parties also matters. Wisconsin Republicans are plainly counting on Democrats to lie down quietly while they're kicked in the teeth. It's not hard to see why, either; that's what I would expect to happen as well, because it's what Democrats have done for the last 21 years, ever since the Supreme Court made George W. Bush president.

As the writer Michael Sweeney suggests, the ridiculously high approval ratings for Republican governors in blue states like Maryland, Massachusetts, and Vermont — where these men often register higher approval among local Democrats than they do among Republicans — suggests a deep desire among rank-and-file liberals for an opposition party that isn't composed of violent lunatics. Democratic leadership, almost all of whom came of age in a time of bipartisan comity and collaboration that couldn't be more dead, has alternately pandered to and cultivated this delusional belief. During the presidential campaign, President Biden repeatedly promised that he was a guy who could reach across the aisle and get things done. Just this week, his administration took a victory lap over his bipartisan "achievement," and in doing so implicitly instructed liberals that Republicans are a normal party:

But they aren't. Biden did get an infrastructure bill through with some Republican votes — but this was entirely because Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) cynically calculated that was the most likely way to blow up the rest of the Biden agenda, a strategy that succeeded in delaying and hence shrinking both bills considerably. Meanwhile, Trump is busy purging all the House Republicans who voted for the infrastructure bill anyway.

I can see why so many liberals grasp at straws to convince themselves Republicans have changed. But it just ain't so. Moreover, I doubt very much whether conservatives will be satisfied with mere political victory. The beating heart of modern conservative politics is a desire to dominate, humiliate, and increasingly inflict violence on liberals. Just look at the skyrocketing rate of assaults on flight attendants, mainly over mask rules, or the surge of death threats against election officials or other state bureaucrats, or the spate of inflamed conservatives threatening violence at school board meetings across the country.

In typical shameless fashion, Republicans justify their aggression by convincing themselves that liberals are engaged in some kind of Marxist-critical race theorist plot to overthrow democracy so that they have an excuse to do the same thing preemptively. (It's the Big Lie turned into an entire political philosophy — if we lose, it's because the other side cheated.)

The irony of all the throbbing metastatic insanity among Republicans is that it looks quite likely that they will win the 2022 midterms fair and square. If they nominated someone other than Trump or one of his many clones climbing the Republican ranks, they would likely be odds-on favorites to win in 2024 as well.

One major reason for this, I submit, is that Democrats have failed to convince their own voters — a substantial majority in the last election — about what Republicans are really up to. The leadership doesn't act like the republic is on the line, or can't bring themselves to believe it. That leaves their base either thinking things are basically fine, or despairing at the thought of fighting back without even their own president on their side.

The nonexistent response to the Wisconsin power grab is further proof Democratic institutions don't protect themselves. They must recognize this dangerous faction for what it is — and react.

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