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Showing posts with label RNC. Show all posts
Showing posts with label RNC. Show all posts

Sunday, February 13, 2022

RSN: FOCUS: Marjorie Taylor Green Should Be an Embarrassment, Not a GOP Superstar

 

 

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Marjorie Taylor Greene.(photo: Luis G. Rendon/Daily Beast/Getty Images)
FOCUS: Marjorie Taylor Green Should Be an Embarrassment, Not a GOP Superstar
Matt Lewis, The Daily Beast
Lewis writes: "Did springtime come early? In recent days, there have been signs that the Republican Party's support for Donald Trump - frozen rock-solid in time since 2016 - may be thawing."

Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene says indefensible and incredibly stupid things. And she’s the new soul of the Republican Party.

Did springtime come early?

In recent days, there have been signs that the Republican Party’s support for Donald Trump—frozen rock-solid in time since 2016—may be thawing.

Mike Pence, the former vice president, said “Trump is wrong” for suggesting that he (Pence) could have unilaterally overturned the 2020 election. Meanwhile, Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell called Jan. 6 a “violent insurrection.” Both men lived to tell the tale.

What is more, polling suggests that Pence isn’t just on the right side of history, he’s on the correct side of the GOP. This glimmer of hope suggests Trump’s cult-like hold on the Republican electorate may be eroding, as voters (who still like Pence) indicate that they want to move forward (not backward).

However, this silver lining has more than a touch of gray. To truly read today’s GOP, you must balance positive developments with competing evidence. For example: Don’t tell the “Gazpacho” police, but the most important endorsement in today’s Republican Party—second only to Donald Trump—is Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene.

That is the claim that was made by four top Republican strategists who spoke to The Daily Beast last week. “If you can’t get Donald Trump, you are going to want to have MTG in your back pocket,” an influential veteran GOP operative told Daily Beast reporters Asawin Suebsaeng and Sam Brodey. Not surprisingly, Greene’s spokesperson Nick Dyer concurred, saying the congresswoman has “become one of the most popular Republicans nationwide.”

Not too shabby for someone who has been kicked off of Twitter and her congressional committees. But for those who are hoping the GOP will come to its senses, it’s even more concerning when you put it in context.

While Greene, the QAnon queen, is the hot ticket if you want to win a GOP primary, Reps. Liz Cheney and Adam Kinzinger are persona non grata in the party, having been censured by the RNC for serving on the Jan. 6 Committee.

That’s right. When given a choice between decent conservatives (who are brave enough to put their political careers on the line) and a woman who floated the conspiracy theory that a California wildfire was the result of Jewish space lasers, the Republican faithful are shouting, Give us Barabbas!

But you don’t have to take the word of veteran GOP operatives, or even yours truly. Just look at who the really desperate Republican primary candidates are turning to.

Last week, Politico reported on a 98-page PowerPoint presentation produced last month by veteran pollster Tony Fabrizio that said J.D. Vance, the famed Hillbilly Elegy author turned Trumpy candidate for U.S. Senate in Ohio, has suffered a “precipitous decline” in support and “needs a course correction ASAP.” According to Fabrizio, Vance’s negative numbers are driven by “the perception that he is anti-Trump.”

So where did Vance immediately turn to in his hour of need? You guessed it.

“I am so honored to have Marjorie’s support,” Vance told The Hill. “I’ve gotten to know her over the last year, and she’s precisely the type of leader we need in our party: genuine, honest, and courageous. Unfortunately, there are too few like her, and so long as that’s the case, Republicans may win an election from time to time, but we’ll never do the difficult work of truly taking our country back from the leftwing mob and the woke corporations.”

This development is both sad and telling.

As The Bulwark’s Mona Charen wrote last year, “Vance is an extremely bright and insightful man who could have been a fresh voice for a fundamentally conservative view of the world.” This is a guy from a tough background who joined the Marines, went to Yale Law School, became a business success in Silicon Valley, and authored a best-selling memoir. And here he is, lavishing Marjorie Taylor Greene with praise and acting desperate for her support.

And he’s not alone. According to Daily Beast reporters Suebsaeng and Brodey, “at least seven GOP candidates have landed that coveted nod from the freshman Georgia congresswoman, from the loudly pro-Trump Rep. Mo Brooks, running for U.S. Senate in Alabama, to the conservative personality Robby Starbuck, running for U.S. House in Tennessee.”

It has been observed that Republican politicians aren’t really afraid of Trump; they are afraid of his supporters. When you consider that these same supporters incentivize politicians to seek out Greene’s endorsement, this assessment sadly rings true. Even if Trump disappeared from the political scene tomorrow, the larger problem to contend with is the grassroots base he inherited and helped attract.

In the past, Greene has been criticized by popular conservatives, including Ben Shapiro, Erick Erickson, and Rep. Dan Crenshaw, with Shapiro calling her comparison of COVID safety measures to the Holocaust “nutso” and “demented nonsense.” This criticism hasn’t stopped her meteoric rise. Suebsaeng and Brodey also note that Greene has raised over $7 million since joining Congress last January, “making her one of the most prolific fundraisers in the entire House.” This is now a movement where the inmates run the asylum.

It’s tempting to dismiss Greene as a fringe character who is a mere mainstream obsession. But all evidence, including her status as the most sought-after Republican endorser (next to Trump), says otherwise.

She’s the heart and soul of the base now. It’s a sad state of affairs.


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Saturday, February 12, 2022

Legitimate political discourse?

 

 
 

"Legitimate political discourse." That's what the Republican National Committee (RNC) called the violent attack against America on January 6th.

The Republican Party has lost its way, Frank.

In an effort to shame two members of their own party who stood up for democracy, the RNC censured Representatives Cheney and Kinzinger and called the January 6th committee's investigation "a Democrat-led persecution of ordinary citizens engaged in legitimate political discourse."

I was there that day. The rioters were beating police officers with flagpoles. They came with lead pipes and guns. They were breaking in the windows and destroying property. There were more than 1,000 assaults on police officers that day and people lost their lives.

Legitimate political discourse? Give me a break!

In the hours after the attack, I was hopeful that we would all come together—Republicans, Democrats, Independents, all of us. After all, this was an attack on our democracy and the country that we have taken an oath to defend and protect.

Sadly, the RNC cares more about the QAnon fringe members of its party than they do about the rule of law and defending our democracy. They are trying to rewrite history, but we all saw what happened with our own eyes.

Time may not heal our wounds. Only the truth and accountability can do that.

I will never forget what happened on January 6th. And I will never stop defending our democracy and the elections that give power and voice to the people. I will never abandon my oath to my country.


Jim



 

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Friday, February 11, 2022

GOP officials plot dystopian pregnancy database

 

Today's Top Stories:

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Oklahoma Republicans introduce bill to create a database for tracking women considering abortions

The GOP's war on women has entered a frightening, dystopian phase.



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VIDEO OF THE DAY: Trump adviser Peter Navarro called out for his "un-American" plan to steal the election

The MAGA minion fell to pieces explaining his clearly criminal ideas about how American elections work.


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BOMBSHELL: Democrats score HUGE win ahead of midterms

No Lie with Brian Tyler Cohen: WOW.


Trump denies report he flushed printed paper down White House toilet
Satire is dead, buried, and apparently lodged in the pipes.


Biden warns Americans in Ukraine to leave, says sending troops to evacuate would be "world war"
The president issued the warning during a wide-ranging new interview with NBC News.


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Republican Senate candidate ignites outrage with new ad in which he wields a gun against President Biden, Nancy Pelosi, and Mark Kelly

It must be noted that Kelly's wife, former Rep. Gabby Giffords, previously survived a would-be assassin's gunshot to the head.  [JIM LAMON ARIZONA REPUBLICAN]



1/6 investigators find glaring "gaps" in Trump White House call logs
The logs don't reflect all the calls that investigators then-President Trump was making that day, raising obvious concerns about what's being concealed.


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Lauren Boebert still refuses to "tone it down"

United Rural Democrats: She's digging her own political grave, and we need to take advantage! Could you spare $7 to fund our grassroots rural organizing project today?


Fire company suspended after alleged racist remarks, mocking of 8-year-old girl killed in police shooting
2022, y'all.  PENNSYLVANIA


Judge rebukes RNC's "legitimate political discourse" language at 1/6 sentencing
The RNC may soon regret throwing their lot in so publicly with the Capitol insurrectionists.



Trump remains in contact with North Korea’s Kim Jong-un
The disturbing information was revealed in journalist Maggie Haberman's much-anticipated book about the former president.


Republican deputy attorney general resigns in Virginia after posts surface of her applauding 1/6 rioters
Monique Miles resigned from her position Thursday after Facebook posts surfaced showing she had applauded 1/6 rioters and falsely claimed that Trump won the 2020 presidential election.


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Seriously?

Yes. Seriously.


The yacht 'Graceful' of Russian President Vladimir Putin is moored at the port of Sochi, Russia, 13 July 2015.
Russian President Vladimir Putin's yacht Graceful.Marcus Brandt/picture alliance via Getty Images
  • Vladimir Putin's yacht Graceful left Hamburg before finishing repairs, German media reported.

  • It is speculated Graceful made an abrupt exit to avoid Western sanctions if Russia invaded Ukraine.

  • The luxury superyacht is said to be worth at least $100 million.

A yacht named Graceful and said to belong to Russian President Vladimir Putin left port in Hamburg abruptly before finishing repairs, according to reports from German media.

It is unclear what prompted the move, but the $100 million yacht's relocation from German waters to Kaliningrad, part of Russian territory, came amid fears the West would impose sanctions if Russia invaded Ukraine.

While Moscow has continuously denied any plans to invade its neighbor, it has gathered over 100,000 troops at positions all around Ukraine and has even sent six assault ships into the Black Sea, moving more combat power toward the former Soviet territory.

The US and UK have warned of sanctions on Russian elites, and President Joe Biden has threatened to sanction Putin personally should Russia decide to attack Ukraine. He has also deployed troops to Eastern Europe to support NATO members and has put thousands of US troops on "heightened alert" as tensions rise.

Some have speculated that sanctions could target certain luxury assets. Graceful was spotted on a public maritime-traffic-tracking site sailing for Kaliningrad.





Even on the day two years ago that the trade deal was inked, there was skepticism that China would live up to its pledge to spend $200 billion more on U.S. goods and services.

But a new study finds China didn’t even spend an additional dime on U.S. products.

Capitol Report (June 2020): Trump asked China’s Xi to buy U.S. farm products to help him win re-election, Bolton book says

Also see (June 2020): Bolton book adds urgency to Trump bid to depict himself as a China hawk and to paint Biden as a Beijing apologist

Chad Bown of the Peterson Institute for International Economics examined the so-called Phase 1 agreement inked during the administration of former President Donald Trump.

China agreed to buy at least $227.9 billion of U.S. exports in 2020 and $274.5 billion in 2021, for a total of $502.4 billion over the pact’s two years, he noted. In reality: U.S. exports of covered goods and services to China over the two years totaled $288.8 billion.

There were many reasons for this failure. The trade war that preceded the trade pact, finalized in January 2020, meant that U.S. goods exporters started in a hole, Bown said.

Another reason for the failure was the fatal crash of two Boeing BA, -0.04% jets, which led the U.S. airplane maker to halt 737 Max production and led China to cancel orders.

Also see (January 2022): Boeing stock gains after $1.4 billion order from China Airlines

The pandemic was another big factor, as it slammed services exports, as well as travel and education. Financial-services exports and charges for intellectual property were down slightly in 2020, though Bown said they may improve over the longer term.

U.S. agricultural exports, which were politically significant, did recover from the trade war but also fell shy of commitments under the deal, Bown said.

Bown conceded that the deal wasn’t a total washout. “The deal did halt his spiraling trade war. And several of its elements should be kept, notably China’s commitments to remove technical barriers to U.S. farm exports, respect intellectual property, and open up its financial services sector,” he said. But the main lesson of the phase one agreement, according to Bown, was that different terms for the trade relationship are still needed.

Opinion: Trump negotiated a bad trade deal that Biden perplexingly continues




Hope...





Tuesday, February 8, 2022

POLITICO NIGHTLY: No stock answers for Congress’ trading problems

 


 
POLITICO Nightly logo

BY ELANA SCHOR

Traders work on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange.

Traders work on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange. | Spencer Platt/Getty Images

CAPITOL GAINS — In the Senate, Majority Leader Chuck Schumer said today that he supports it, while Minority Leader Mitch McConnell said he’s prepared to look at it. Speaker Nancy Pelosi has left the door open to backing it, and House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy is said to be eyeing it.

What is “it”? Across the aisle, momentum seems to be building for legislation that would restrict lawmakers’ stock trading.

How Congress got here is easy to understand. After heightened scrutiny of trades by members of both parties, including reported Justice Department inquiries into four senators, it became impossible to ignore the potential for politically perilous — if not truly illegal — stock-market plays by lawmakers who are often privy to privileged information that the average investor never gets.

How Congress can fix the problem is more complicated. About a decade ago, members passed a law that requires disclosures of their trades, but that didn’t stop several of them from landing in hot water thanks to spotty compliance. Now there’s a flurry of proposals out there to rein in lawmakers’ trades, so many that Schumer said today that he’s asked his Democrats to “try to come up with one bill.”

The most frequently cited proposals would require members of Congress to choose mutual funds or other diversified investment options, while either divesting of individual stocks or moving them into “blind trusts.”

Blind trusts are designed to turn over control of investments to third-party trustees, who manage the money out of members’ sight, and influence. But that hasn’t stopped several politicians from running into tough questions over the years about how truly blind their blind trusts are, including former Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist (R-Tenn.) and Sen. Joe Manchin (D-W.Va.).

Manchin’s holdings in a coal brokerage steered by his son earned him $500,000 last year, according to financial disclosures. He has said he uses a blind trust for those holdings and adheres to Senate ethics guidelines. Yet the Washington Post has reported that the size of Manchin’s disclosed blind trust doesn’t seem to encompass the full scope of his reported earnings from the family business.

Which gets us to the questions: Can Congress be trusted to set up its own blind trusts? And will the public be too, uh, blind to the contents of those trusts to tell what lawmakers are doing behind the scenes?

Sen. Mitt Romney (R-Utah), who faced his own PR troubles over a blind trust during his 2012 presidential campaign, called the blind trust “an age-old ruse, if you will,” during his 1994 Senate run . “Which is to say,” he went on, “you can always tell the blind trust what it can and cannot do.”

Now, that’s not a fair description of the current rules for blind trusts owned by federal lawmakers, which Romney wasn’t subject to in 1994 because he was but a Senate candidate at the time. An FAQ produced in 2015 by the Senate ethics committee, which approves blind trust arrangements for the chamber, states: “When interviewing a trustee, the grantor may communicate his or her overall investment objectives for the portfolio, but may not communicate specific directions about how to construct or manage the portfolio.”

Even so, Frist ran into trouble in 2005 after reports emerged that he had delivered very specific instructions to his blind trust about selling stock in a family-founded hospital company, which would seem to fly in the face of that guidance.

The Senate and House ethics committees may well have since tightened up their internal rules for approving blind trusts — but we haven’t exactly seen press releases trumpeting that. That’s because, though the House panel has made some strides since the establishment of the Office of Congressional Ethics, both chambers’ internal ethics are known more for their opacity than their transparency.

Given that truism about the ethics committees, putting all lawmakers’ individual stock trades into the existing blind trust approval structure might shed less sunshine on lawmakers’ investments, rather than more.

And perhaps it wouldn’t matter, if the majority of the members of Congress responded to a stock trading ban by simply selling their stocks or moving into mutual funds, as McConnell said he’s recommended to his Republicans.

The truth is, we don’t know. But it’s time to start asking whether more blindness, as it were, would help eliminate congressional conflicts of interest, or just make us blinder to them.

Welcome to POLITICO Nightly. Reach out with news, tips and ideas at nightly@politico.com. Or contact tonight’s author at eschor@politico.com, or on Twitter at @eschor.

 

HAPPENING THURSDAY – A LONG GAME CONVERSATION ON THE CLIMATE CRISIS : Join POLITICO for back-to-back conversations on climate and sustainability action, starting with a panel led by Global Insider author Ryan Heath focused on insights gleaned from our POLITICO/Morning Consult Global Sustainability Poll of citizens from 13 countries on five continents about how their governments should respond to climate change. Following the panel, join a discussion with POLITICO White House Correspondent Laura Barrón-López and Gina McCarthy, White House national climate advisor, about the Biden administration’s climate and sustainability agenda. REGISTER HERE.

 
 
WHAT'D I MISS?

— Congress inches ‘real close’ to government funding deal: Congressional leaders are zeroing in on a broad funding accord to set new totals for federal government spending into the fall. Top appropriators continued to close in on a bipartisan “top-line” deal today to set the overarching budget caps for military and non-defense agency spending, as well as ground rules for hashing out the details of a final package. Once they strike that compromise, spending leaders are expected to quickly wrap up a 12-bill bundle to fund the federal government through September.

— Canadian truckers shut down busiest U.S.-Canada border crossing: A convoy of Canadian truckers and protesters objecting to Covid restrictions has caused Ottawa residents headaches for weeks. Now, they are disrupting the other side of the border. The Ambassador Bridge linking Detroit and Windsor, Ont., was closed to Canada-bound traffic today, according to the Michigan Department of Transportation and the Canadian government, and trucks were told to cross at another bridge 60 miles away. Cars and trucks initially blocked the approach to the bridge in Windsor on Monday, and other vehicles jammed the area in solidarity.

— McConnell critical of GOP censure of Kinzinger, Cheney: McConnell said today that it’s not up to the Republican National Committee to be calling out specific members of the party. “The issue is whether or not the RNC should be sort of singling out members of our party who ... have different views from the majority,” McConnell told reporters, when asked about the committee’s censure of Reps. Liz Cheney (R-Wyo.) and Adam Kinzinger (R-Ill.). “That’s not the job of the RNC.”

Police officers wait outside Dunbar High School as members of the Metropolitan Police Department of the District of Columbia conduct an investigation of a security threat at the school.

Police officers wait outside Dunbar High School as members of the Metropolitan Police Department of the District of Columbia conduct an investigation of a security threat at the school. | Alex Wong/Getty Images

— Emhoff whisked out of event following reported bomb threat: Doug Emhoff, the husband of Vice President Kamala Harris, was whisked out of an event today at a Washington high school by Secret Service agents following an apparent bomb threat. Emhoff was at Dunbar High School for an event in commemoration of Black History Month. He was in the school’s museum for about five minutes before a member of his security detail approached him saying, “We have to go.” Emhoff was removed from the building into his waiting motorcade.

— House staffers confront reality of unionization: ‘No one knows how it would work’: While congressional staffers’ talk of unionizing its long-overlooked workforce has suddenly accelerated, they’re already crashing headfirst into the more complicated reality. Buoyed by an endorsement from Pelosi herself, dozens of senior House staff, mostly on the Democratic side, are searching for the next steps for their union drive. But it turns out that many of the problems with the Capitol as a workplace — notably, that there are more than 535 offices, each of which sets their own policies — are some of the same reasons it would be so tricky to collectively organize.

— Hogan won’t challenge Van Hollen for Maryland Senate seat: Gov. Larry Hogan made the announcement during a regularly scheduled news conference today, telling reporters he would remain focused on the job of governor until his term ends in January 2023, at which time Hogan will consider getting into the 2024 presidential race.

 

DON’T MISS CONGRESS MINUTES: Need to follow the action on Capitol Hill blow-by-blow? Check out Minutes, POLITICO’s new platform that delivers the latest exclusives, twists and much more in real time. Get it on your desktop or download the POLITICO mobile app for iOS or AndroidCHECK OUT CONGRESS MINUTES HERE.

 
 
AROUND THE WORLD

WORLD ON CLIMATE CHANGE: UGH — A new POLITICO Morning Consult Global Sustainability Poll reveals frustration from citizens that they are being left to take on climate action on their own, when they believe governments and the companies with the most resources (which also tend to bear the most responsibility for carbon emissions) should shoulder the burden.

Ryan Heath has the first numbers from the poll, and visit POLITICO tomorrow for more, including widespread agreement that companies must shoulder more of the cost in lowering carbon emissions.

Consumers want fossil fuel company accountability

NIGHTLY NUMBER

$4.5 billion

The amount that went missing in a 2016 hack of a cryptocurrency exchange. The Justice Department announced the arrest today of a couple in New York charged with conspiring to launder stolen Bitcoin linked with the hack.

PARTING WORDS

Civilians participate in a Kyiv Territorial Defense unit training session in Kyiv, Ukraine.

Civilians participate in a Kyiv Territorial Defense unit training session in Kyiv, Ukraine. | Chris McGrath/Getty Images

FOOD FIGHT — International policymakers are looking with horror at the implications of a Russian invasion of Ukraine for global security and energy markets, but the consequences for world food supplies have attracted less attention than they deserveZosia Wanat and Sarah Anne Aarup write.

Once the breadbasket of the Soviet Union, Ukraine is a farming powerhouse and conflict there would send instant tremors and price hikes through grain and food oil markets, just as European households are grappling with surging inflation.

Ukraine is the EU’s fourth biggest external food supplier and provides the bloc with about one-quarter of its cereal and vegetable oil imports, including almost half of its corn.

A major food producer itself, the EU should probably be able to adapt to the immediate shock of a rupture in bilateral trade. The potentially greater strategic concern hinges on Ukraine’s even more pivotal role as a supplier to the Middle East and North Africa. Analysts identify food supply as one of several significant underlying factors behind the Arab Spring revolutions that ignited a decade ago, and the EU has persistent fears about instability in its neighborhood. Egypt, for example, is a major buyer of Ukrainian grain.


 

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