Archive for the ‘Republicans’ Category

The Republicans Fake Investigations – The New York Times

Republicans have refused to release full transcripts of our firms testimony, even as they selectively leak details to media outlets on the far right. Its time to share what our company told investigators.

We dont believe the Steele dossier was the trigger for the F.B.I.s investigation into Russian meddling. As we told the Senate Judiciary Committee in August, our sources said the dossier was taken so seriously because it corroborated reports the bureau had received from other sources, including one inside the Trump camp.

The intelligence committees have known for months that credible allegations of collusion between the Trump camp and Russia were pouring in from independent sources during the campaign. Yet lawmakers in the thrall of the president continue to wage a cynical campaign to portray us as the unwitting victims of Kremlin disinformation.

We suggested investigators look into the bank records of Deutsche Bank and others that were funding Mr. Trumps businesses. Congress appears uninterested in that tip: Reportedly, ours are the only bank records the House Intelligence Committee has subpoenaed.

We told Congress that from Manhattan to Sunny Isles Beach, Fla., and from Toronto to Panama, we found widespread evidence that Mr. Trump and his organization had worked with a wide array of dubious Russians in arrangements that often raised questions about money laundering. Likewise, those deals dont seem to interest Congress.

We explained how, from our past journalistic work in Europe, we were deeply familiar with the political operative Paul Manaforts coziness with Moscow and his financial ties to Russian oligarchs close to Vladimir Putin.

Finally, we debunked the biggest canard being pushed by the presidents men the notion that we somehow knew of the June 9, 2016, meeting in Trump Tower between some Russians and the Trump brain trust. We first learned of that meeting from news reports last year and the committees know it. They also know that these Russians were unaware of the former British intelligence officer Christopher Steeles work for us and were not sources for his reports.

Yes, we hired Mr. Steele, a highly respected Russia expert. But we did so without informing him whom we were working for and gave him no specific marching orders beyond this basic question: Why did Mr. Trump repeatedly seek to do deals in a notoriously corrupt police state that most serious investors shun?

What came back shocked us. Mr. Steeles sources in Russia (who were not paid) reported on an extensive and now confirmed effort by the Kremlin to help elect Mr. Trump president. Mr. Steele saw this as a crime in progress and decided he needed to report it to the F.B.I.

We did not discuss that decision with our clients, or anyone else. Instead, we deferred to Mr. Steele, a trusted friend and intelligence professional with a long history of working with law enforcement. We did not speak to the F.B.I. and havent since.

After the election, Mr. Steele decided to share his intelligence with Senator John McCain via an emissary. We helped him do that. The goal was to alert the United States national security community to an attack on our country by a hostile foreign power. We did not, however, share the dossier with BuzzFeed, which to our dismay published it last January.

Were extremely proud of our work to highlight Mr. Trumps Russia ties. To have done so is our right under the First Amendment.

It is time to stop chasing rabbits. The public still has much to learn about a man with the most troubling business past of any United States president. Congress should release transcripts of our firms testimony, so that the American people can learn the truth about our work and most important, what happened to our democracy.

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The Republicans Fake Investigations - The New York Times

Republicans, Democrats joust over ‘Dreamer’ immigration …

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Months of bipartisan negotiations in the U.S. Senate over the fate of young, undocumented immigrants known as Dreamers turned angry on Friday, with the lead Democratic negotiator blasting the White House for making hardline anti-immigrant demands.

President Donald Trump in September ordered that an Obama-era program that prevented young immigrants from being deported should end in six months. The program is known as Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals, or DACA.

Saving the Dreamers from deportation is a high priority for Democrats, but Republican and Democratic lawmakers have struggled to reach a bipartisan deal.

Senator Dick Durbin, the No. 2 Senate Democrat, said the White House on Friday had submitted a list of demands it wanted in order to agree a deal that were simply a repeat of a document it sent to Congress in early October. Democratic leaders rejected those demands at the time.

Further inflaming the negotiations, Durbin said, was an added White House demand for $18 billion to fund the construction of a wall along the southwestern border with Mexico, despite staunch Democratic opposition.

On Saturday, congressional Republican leaders are due to huddle with Trump at Camp David, the presidential mountain retreat, to discuss 2018 legislative priorities.

Republican and Democratic leaders are also scheduled to meet with Trump at the White House on Tuesday to talk about immigration legislation.

Durbin said the latest White House move, coming as Congress also struggles to pass a bill by Jan. 19 to fund the government through September, could push federal agencies closer to a shutdown.

Earlier, some congressional Republicans downplayed the likelihood of a deal with Democrats on legislation to protect the Dreamers - some 700,000 young immigrants who were brought to the United States as children.

Republican Senator John Cornyn accused Democrats in a tweet of trying to force a deal on Dreamers by doing a slow walk on efforts to approve critical disaster aid and defense spending.

Two other Republicans late on Thursday said the sides remained far apart. Our discussions on border security and enforcement with Democrats are much further apart, and that is key to getting a bipartisan deal on DACA, senators Thom Tillis and James Lankford said in a statement.

On Oct. 8, the White House released a list of immigration principles Trump wanted in return for giving Dreamers legislative protection from deportation.

Besides the border wall, it included the hiring of 10,000 more Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents and 300 federal prosecutors.

Immigration advocacy groups fear the hiring expansion would be part of an attempt to round up the adult relatives of Dreamers to ship them to their native countries.

Resubmitting the demands that were dismissed by Democrats three months ago, Durbin said, was outrageous. But he added that bipartisan negotiations continue among senators.

Democrats have said they are open to tying DACA to additional funding for border security technology. But they oppose Trumps wall, which government estimates have said could cost over $21 billion.

Republican lawmakers met with Trump at the White House on Thursday and initially emerged saying they were optimistic that they could find a legislative fix for DACA.

The struggle over the Dreamers carries political weight for both parties heading into the November 2018 midterm congressional elections. Most of the Dreamers came from Mexico and Hispanics tend to vote for Democrats.

Cornyn, in an interview on Fox News on Friday, said Trump would demand that an immigration deal address the visa lottery system and chain migration that unites family members.

Those are things that hes insisted upon, and Democrats would have to embrace them along with border security, said Cornyn.

Additional reporting by Susan Cornwell, Makini Brice and Susan Heavey; Editing by Alistair Bell and Rosalba O'Brien

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Republicans, Democrats joust over 'Dreamer' immigration ...

Republicans’ Washington Leadership Struggles with No Clear …

Editors Note: This piece originally appeared in the July 31, 2017 issue of National Review.

Republicans dont have many legislative wins to show for their control of the House, Senate, and White House. They have, it is true, confirmed Justice Neil Gorsuch to the Supreme Court. His confirmation, along with the thought of how Hillary Clinton would have used executive power, is enough to make a lot of conservatives happy about voting for President Trump last fall.

But Republicans hoped to have enacted major conservative changes in government policy by now. Congressional Republicans have complained over the years that their grassroots supporters have exaggerated expectations of what they can achieve. This time, though, the congressmen themselves have been disappointed. After the election, they too believed that Congress would quickly repeal Obamacare and then move ahead on tax reform.

That didnt happen. Action on health care has been repeatedly delayed, and the current betting in Washington, D.C., is that no major change to Obamacare will pass. Congress has barely begun to take up taxes. Legislation on infrastructure, which the president has consistently described as a priority, does not exist.

Republicans have been productive, at least, in coming up with competing explanations for their failure to change the laws. Many Republicans, especially those outside the capital and those who strongly support Trump, blame the congressional party for being weak and disloyal to the president. (A smaller number of strong Trump supporters insist that a few deregulatory moves by Congress, the Gorsuch confirmation, and Trumps executive actions, especially his planned withdrawal from the Paris climate-change accord, mean that everything is going well.) Often this criticism is couched as a defense of the president: If hes not signing laws, its the fault of Congress for not sending them for his signature.

Those Republicans who are more sympathetic to Speaker of the House Paul Ryan than to Trump most Republicans in D.C., in other words tend to blame Trump. In particular, they blame his tweets. When one of them becomes a big news story, it drowns out any other Republican message. Many Republicans in Congress complain that this White House is better at providing drama than direction.

Speaker Ryan has not himself pointed a finger at Trump: not in public, and not, to my knowledge, in private, either. He has noted that congressional Republicans spent ten years in opposition, first to Harry Reid and Nancy Pelosi in the last two years of the George W. Bush presidency, then to President Obama. Many members of his conference therefore have no experience of passing federal laws. The partys stumbles, he suggests, are part of its transition to being a governing party.

Yet Ryans own ambitious schedule for 2017 underestimated the difficulties. Congressional Republicans arent just out of practice at governing: They face a fundamentally new situation. From 2001 to 2007, they were very largely pursuing the agenda set by a Republican White House. The last time they were setting an agenda themselves, as they are now doing by necessity, was during the Clinton administration. They have not set an agenda that they had a responsibility to turn into law with the assistance of a Republican president since before the Great Depression.

At one tricky moment in the Houses consideration of health care, Trump tweeted a few attacks on members of the House Freedom Caucus. The controversy that ensued might obscure the fact that he has generally taken a very hands-off approach to the Congress. He has said that congressional Republicans, not he, decided to tackle health care first. Ryan has pushed for tax reform to include a border-adjusted tax to offset some of the revenue losses other portions of the reform will cause. Trumps aides have not taken a unified line on the matter, pro or con.

Trumps management style, unusual in a president, does not require public unity from his subordinates. Budget director Mick Mulvaney and Treasury secretary Steve Mnuchin have taken opposing views in interviews about how much revenue a reformed tax code should raise. Mulvaney has also said that the administrations budget does not reflect its policy proposals which left some observers a bit flummoxed, since putting its proposals into budgetary form has historically been considered the point of the document.

The president does not engage or seem familiar with the details of policy, either. Many jobs in his administration remain unfilled, in many cases with no nominees yet submitted. For these and other reasons, his administration has provided his congressional allies with much less guidance than is typical.

Usually, a presidential candidate runs on a fairly detailed list of proposals and communicates to his party, the public, and relevant interest groups that he intends to achieve something close to its top items. That list reflects, adjusts, and solidifies the partys existing consensus. When the candidate comes from the party that controls Congress but not the White House, the list includes many of the priorities that the incumbent president beat back. If the candidate wins, his party defers to his list.

In the run-up to 2016, congressional Republicans decided to rely even more than before on their presidential nominees policy preferences. Senate Republicans made a conscious decision not to put forward a comprehensive agenda, so as to leave the nominee free to develop his own plans. Ryan tried to supply some content, devising a list of policies that he called A Better Way. But the lack of Senate buy-in, and the expectation that the presidential nominee would have a more authoritative platform, limited the seriousness with which House Republicans took it.

When Trump won, though, congressional Republicans could not defer to his proposals, even if they had been inclined to do so for a man many of them regarded as an interloper, because his campaign was so light on policy. His health plan consisted of a few pages of boilerplate, much of it dated. (The plan endorsed health savings accounts, for example, without taking any notice of the fact that President Bush had already gotten them enacted.) His own administration has not drawn on those pages. He ran on one tax plan during the primaries and another during the general election; reportedly instructed his White House staff to come up with a new plan that mimicked a New York Times op-ed he had read; and then oversaw the release of a plan that could fit on a 35 card.

During the last few decades our political system has come to rely ever more heavily on strong presidential leadership, and a shift away from this model of an overbearing executive may be salutary. It has, however, also been abrupt. Congressional Republicans have been left scrambling to figure out their own role.

Perhaps theyre blaming his tweets for their travails as a form of displaced anger over their new obligations. The proposition that the tweets are undermining congressional work does not really hold up. Nobody in Congress is going to vote against a tax bill because of something Trump tweeted about Mika Brzezinski. And its not as though the president would make a compelling case for Republican health-care legislation whether to the public or to holdout senators if only he could keep himself from using social media to boast and settle scores.

Whether anyone could make a compelling case for that legislation is a contested question. The health-care bill is hated by many and loved by almost no one, in part because it does not reflect any coherent understanding of what our health policy should be. That may be the kind of legislation one should expect when neither the Congress nor the president has thought through a policy agenda. The health debate has shown that moderate Republicans, especially, never worked out the implications of the partys loud opposition to Obamacare, which they joined with gusto. If they had, they might have realized that it was impossible to repeal Obamacare while also refusing to modify in any way its protections for people with preexisting conditions.

The same lack of forethought is already undermining tax reform. Republicans think they have a clear idea of tax reform because they share certain goals, such as lower tax rates and better treatment of investment. But those goals can be pursued in many different ways. How large should tax cuts be? Is it more important to cut corporate or individual tax rates? Or would the economy be better served by changing the definition of the corporate tax base? Should concerns about the trade deficit affect our tax policy? How should Trumps promises about child care be integrated with tax reform, if they should be at all?

Passing tax legislation will not require starting out with a consensus on all these questions, let alone on the more detailed ones that have to be answered after them. But Republican lawmakers are quite far away from a consensus on them, and the vast majority of individual congressmen do not yet have a strong sense of their own answers.

It is a mistake, then, to ask why Trump, Ryan, and the rest are not making more rapid progress on the Republican agenda. That question assumes that Republicans have a clear sense of what they want and are confronting an obstacle to the realization of their desires: that theyre not getting their way because [blank], which could be filled in with Trump is being a maniac on Twitter or Ryan is a weakling. But the problem is more basic. The main reason theyre not doing much is that they havent figured out what they want to do.

READ MORE:Editorial: Dont Settle for Nothing on Health-Care ReformTrump Owns the Health Care FailureAre Republicans the Party of Bad Faith?

Ramesh Ponnuru is a senior editor of National Review.

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Republicans' Washington Leadership Struggles with No Clear ...

Ed Asner Sounds Off on Republicans: They Want to Destroy the …

If you dont know who Ed Asner is, then you dont know much about television.

Even die-hard Republicans have laughed at and been entertained by Lou Grant, the newspaper editor and longtime Democrat brought to life on the classic comedy The Mary Tyler Moore Show, and later in the hour-long spinoff series. Besides being one of only two actors to win an Emmy for portraying the same character in a sitcom anda drama, the extremely affable Asner hasearned more Emmys for his performancesseven total in four different showsthan any male actor in the history of television. And to millennials, hes best known for playing Santa Claus in the Christmas classic Elf, and as the voice of crotchety Carl Frederickson in Pixars .

At 88,Asner, along with co-author Ed Weinberger, whose numerous credits include being a writer and producer for The Mary Tyler Moore Show, have written an excellent book titled The Grouchy Historian: An Old-Time Lefty Defends Our Constitution Against Right-Wing Hypocrites and Nutjobs, about how he feels the GOP exploits our countrys Constitution. Both authorsincluding Asner, a longtime liberal activisthave clearly done their homework.

In an interview with The Daily Beast, Asner opened up about his new book and life under President Trump.

What made you pen your book The Grouchy Historian now?

I thought of doing it for a long time. As a progressive, its a story I believe and believe in. If right-wingers trulyunderstood what the Constitution meant they wouldnt use it as a crutch every time they screw over the poor and the disenfranchised.

What group of people do you think misinterpret our Constitution the most?

The NRA is the worst offender. The Republican Party basically uses it to advance their own agenda, often at the expense of their ownmembers. For example: a government needs to collect taxes in order to survive, but the recently passed tax bill in the Senate is so tilted towards the rich and corporations thatsome industry leaders, like the head of the largest coal company in America, predict it will bankrupt them.

EMBED

Do you think President Trump could be impeached?

Theres the possibility certainly but it wont happen until after Robert Mueller makes his final report. Lets face it: Trump supporters like his jack-bootedstyle. Teachers, low-paid wage earners and environmentalistshe doesnt care about them unlessPutintells him to. Ive never met Trump and Im not eager to. Like many Republicans through the years he probably hates the fact Ive made him laugh on The Mary Tyler Moore Show. But if you didnt love our beloved Mary and laughed at her sitcom, thats just plain un-American.

As a World War II veteran, what do you think of President Trump dodging the Vietnam draft?

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[Laughs] He has his hand on the nuclear button and I dont!

Do you believe Trump is an anti-Semite?

No. He might be, but how can he be because he counts on the Jews to lead Wall Street.

Are you afraid that Trumps taunting of North Korean dictator Kim Jong-un could lead to nuclear war?

I dont think so. With Trump its theatrics, being a bully and a my-missile-is-bigger than-yours bravado. Trump will mouth off and provokeNorth Korea but he wont be the first to fire.

As a former president of the Screen Actors Guild, do you think the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences, which recently expelled accused serial rapist Harvey Weinstein, should do the same to another alleged serial rapist in Bill Cosby as well as convicted teenage rapist Roman Polanski?

Cosby hasnt been tried yet in court for his alleged sexual misconductbut neither has Weinstein or President Trump. The Academy voted Polanski a best directing Oscar for a film he made overseas after he was convicted and fled the country. How to handle sexual harassment in any form now and in the future isan area, it seems, that demands our attention but has no easy legal or moral solution. Anybody can accuse a celebrity or politician of sexual misconduct and even if it didnt happen, the damage has been doneto their careers. This issue will soon affect all aspects of the workplace worldwide,if it hasnt already. Lets not adopt a witch-hunt mentality or use your powertotake advantage of people trying to raise a family and pursue their dreams. After almost seven decades in show business, I can tell you nobody should havea naked auditionalone with a member of the opposite sex in their hotel room.

What are your thoughts on the Republican Party endorsing and financing Alabama Senate candidate Roy Moore after several women alleged that he assaulted them as teenagers?

Moore had been discredited by judges from his own party up to that point.

What do you think the Democratic Party needs to do to take back Congress?

It needs to draw more attention to Republican discrepancies: what Republicans are doing to hurt anyone who isnt rich, and emphasize how the laws theyre proposing are actually meant to destroy the middle class!

How do you feel about NFL players taking a knee during the pre-game National Anthem?

I applaud it. I was a tackle when I played football back then. Todays NFL doesnt care aboutnor does it want to helpthe players after they suffer a violent, life-altering injury. Do any players really think the NFL cares about their civil rights as opposed tothe leagues sagging television ratings? The Star-Spangled Banner is a military drinking song thats hard to sing. It should be replaced by America the Beautiful, which is an inspiring tune and shows the greatness of our country.

What was your relationship with John Wayne, who you co-starred opposite in the western El Dorado?

I wasnt intimidated by him but he tested me during the filming. Even though he wasamused by me in his later years, The Duke always greeted me with a friendly smile. I didnt like his politics, but he was one of the most prepared, professional genuine movie stars I ever worked with. I suspect if he read that The Duke would be grinning and spinning in his grave at the same time!

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Ed Asner Sounds Off on Republicans: They Want to Destroy the ...

‘Too Convenient’ — Republicans Que | The Daily Caller

The New York Times published an article over the weekend laying out a new original story for the FBIs investigation into possible Trump campaign collusion with the Russian government.

The infamous Steele dossier was not the catalyst for the investigation, according to four unnamed government officials who spoke to The Times. Rather, a drunken barroom conversation that Trump campaign adviser George Papadopoulos had with an Australian diplomat in London in May 2016 was what led to the FBI probe.

Democrats and liberal pundits touted the story, which they said showed that Republicans have been overly focused on the dossiers significance to the Russia investigation.

But some congressional Republicans, conservative pundits and a former Trump campaign adviser who has been interviewed extensively by Russia investigators arent buying the new spin.

They assert that there is still ample evidence that the FBI relied on the dossier for its investigation. They also question why, after the FBI/DOJ have dodged questions about the dossier for nearly a year, U.S. government officials have just now started leaking information that downplays the documents significance to the Russia inquiry.

Its too convenient, Ohio Rep. Jim Jordan, a Republican member of the House Judiciary Committee, told The Daily Caller of the Times article.

The Democrats touted the Steele dossiers conspiracy theories all year. But now, with the dossiers credibility in tatters, theyre suddenly claiming that it was a totally irrelevant document all along, another source familiar with the congressional Russia investigations told TheDC.

According to The Times report, the Russia investigation began at the end of July 2016 after the FBI was told by the Australian government about a conversation that Papadopoulos had two months earlier with Alexander Downer, Australias top diplomat to the United Kingdom.

Papadopoulos, an energy consultant who joined the Trump campaign in March 2016, has told Special Counsel Robert Muellers prosecutors that he was informed in April 2016 by a London-based professor named Joseph Mifsud that the Russian government had obtained thousands of Clinton-related emails.

The timing of the claim is significant because it would have been before it was publicly revealed that the Russian government hacked into Clinton campaign chairman John Podestas Gmail account. It remains unclear whether Papadopoulos told anyone on the Trump campaign about Mifsuds claim, much less whether the Trump campaign acted on the information.

Mifsud has some links to Russian government officials, but the full extent of those relationships remains a mystery.

Perhaps the most scathing takedown of the Times report comes from Andrew McCarthy, a former federal prosecutor who writes for National Review.

McCarthy notes that the Times had already previously identified a spark for the Russia investigation:former Trump campaign adviser Carter Page.

The Times reported on April 20, 2017 that a trip that Page made to Moscow in July 2016 was a catalyst for the F.B.I. investigation into connections between Russia and President Trumps campaign.

The Steele dossier alleges that during that trip, Page met secretly with two Kremlin insiders and that he also served as the Trump campaigns liaison to the Kremlin. Page has vehemently denied the allegation. He has also said he had very little interaction with Papadopoulos during the campaign.

The FBI and Justice Department were so concerned by Pages involvement in the campaign that they obtained a Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court warrant against him in Sept. 2016.

But McCarthy points out that there has been no suggestion that a similar surveillance warrant was obtained for Papadopoulos.If the FBI and Justice Department were so alarmed by Papadopoulos conversation with Downer, why did they not obtain a FISA warrant against him, McCarthy wonders in his article.

McCarthy also questions why, if Papadopoulos was central to the FBI investigation, he remained unidentified for so long in press reports.

If Papadopoulos had really been the impetus for the investigation way back in July 2016, what are the chances that we would never have heard his name mentioned until after his guilty plea was announced 15 months later? asks McCarthy.

Jordan, the House Judiciary Committee Republican, echoed that point.

When theyre leaking about the dossier and Carter Page back in the spring, where was this then? he asked, referring to leaks from U.S. government officials.

One Trump campaign adviser who has been interviewed extensively by Russia investigators is also questioning the new Papadopoulos-centered narrative.

Investigators were far more interested in Carter Page and his July 2016 trip to Moscow than anything George Papadopoulos ever did or said, the adviser told TheDC.

The NYT is grasping at straws, desperately trying to change the narrative away from the discredited Steele dossier and crumbling Trump-Russia collusion allegations, continued the adviser, who spoke on the condition of anonymity because of the sensitivity of the investigations.

The Times article comes as several congressional panels have ramped uppressure on the FBI and DOJ to produce documents and witnesses that could help shed light on the dossiers role in the Russia probe.

The House Intelligence and House Judiciary Committees have recently issued or threatened to issue subpoenas that would force agency officials to testify about the dossier.

The agencies recalcitrance to comply has led to allegations of stonewalling from some Republican lawmakers, including House Intelligence Committee chairman Devin Nunes.

As the agencies have withheld information from Congress, Democrats have sought to downplay the dossiers importance to the allegations of Trump campaign collusion. That despite an early rush by Democrats to tie the collusion allegations to the Steele report.

California Rep. Adam Schiff, the ranking Democrat on the House Intelligence panel, quoted the dossiers allegations at length during a March 20, 2017 hearing with then-FBI Director James Comey.

Papadopoulos was a virtual unknown until several months ago, when The Washington Post reported that he had sent at least six emails to other Trump campaign advisers proposing meetings between Trump or campaign officials and Russian government officials, including Vladimir Putin.

Those emails suggested that Papadopoulos requests were largely rebuffed from others on the Trump campaign, including then-campaign chairman Paul Manafort.

After that spate of reports, Papadopoulos was largely out of the news until the end of October, when it was revealed that he pleaded guilty on Oct. 5 to lying to the FBI during interviews he gave in January and February 2017.

Mueller released documents showing that Papadopoulos had been arrested at the end of July 2017 and had been cooperating with prosecutors in the collusion investigation.

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'Too Convenient' -- Republicans Que | The Daily Caller