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Friday, July 26, 2019

Mueller Time - After the Report

On 05/17/2017, Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein appointed Robert S. Mueller III as Special Counsel. Mueller was to investigate any possible collusion between the Trump presidential campaign or other Americans and the Russian government regarding the 2016 elections. The investigation was not limited to that issue and any crimes discovered while investigating were also subject to prosecution and/or being turned over to the Justice Department or state prosecutors.

On 03/22/2019 Mueller essentially completed his job with the submission of his report to Attorney General William Barr. Now we dissect that report and see what the fallout is.

  • 03/24 - Attorney General William Barr submits a four-page summary letter of the Mueller report to Congress outlining the principal conclusions. The findings are no chargeable collusion (conspiracy) between the Trump campaign and Russia. On obstruction, neither guilt or exoneration. 
  • 04/12 - In a Mueller investigation spinoff case, W. Samuel Patten, 47, a GOP political consultant, in August admitted steering $50,000 from a pro-Russian Ukrainian politician to Trump’s inaugural committee, is sentenced to probation.
  • 04/18 - The redacted Mueller report is released to Congress and the public. It is 448 pages. 
    • The report concluded that there was Russian interference in the 2016 election. 
    • Russian interference was meant to benefit Trump. 
    • There was no provable coordinate cooperation between Russian and the Trump campaign. 
    • There were many links and contacts between Russia and the campaign, none prosecutable. 
    • There was evidence of obstruction.
    • The DOJ will not indict or prosecute a sitting president. 
  • Mueller wrote a letter to AG Barr objecting to Barr's description and conclusions of the Mueller Report.
  • Barr appears before the Senate Judiciary Committee. Softball questions from GOP members. Barr is evasive and combative with Democrat's questioning. 
  • Barr refuses to testify about the Mueller Report before the House Judiciary Committee.
  • 05/06 - Trump's former lawyer, Michael Cohen, reports to prison for a three-year sentence. 
  • 05/08 - Trump invokes Executive Privilege to block the release of full Mueller Report to Congress. 
  • 05/08 - Over 700 former federal prosecutors say there is enough evidence in the Mueller Report to charge and prosecute Trump for obstruction. 
  • 05/20 - Trump blocks Don McGahn from testifying before Congress.
  • 05/23 - Manafort's bankerchairman Stephen M. Calk of Federal Savings Bank, is indicted in Manhatten for pushing through $16 million in high-risk loans.
  • 05/29 - Mueller reiterates that his team cannot clear Trump of obstruction but DOJ cannot charge a sitting president. It is up to Congress. He also stated that he will not provide testimony to Congress beyond his report.
  • 06/25 - Mueller agrees to testify before the House  Judiciary and Intelligence committees in open hearings on July 17th. 
    • 07/12 - Hearings are delayed one week until July 24th.
  • 07/24 - Mueller testifies before the House Judiciary Committee and House Intelligence Committee for about six hours. He was succinct with his answers and passed on answering many questions. While not a stellar or exciting appearance, Mueller did say, among other things, the following statements:
    • The president was not exonerated.
    • No chargeable conspiracy with Russia but certainly cooperation during the campaign.
    • Russian interference was to benefit Trump
    • Russia did and is interfering with our elections. Others too.
    • Did not subpoena Trump because the White House would fight the subpoena and prolong/distract the investigation.
    • DOJ policy stopped Muller from indicting Trump.
    • Trump and others in the administration and campaign lied to investigators.
    • Trump could be prosecuted for obstruction once out of office.
    • The investigation was not a witch hunt and Russian interference is not a hoax.
  • This may be the last we see or hear from Robert Mueller. He seems to want to fade into retirement out of the limelight. It is now up to Congress and the voters to act on the findings of the report.
wjh

Monday, July 15, 2019

Trump Speak II

Donald J. Trump and his minions have introduced a whole new set of words and phrases. They have also brought some older words to the forefront as well as changing their meaning. Here is the second list of some of the new Trump lexicon. 
  • Take the mantle - Usually means ttake on a specific role or position, along with any associated responsibilities. To Trump in regards to the Christmas 2018 government shutdown, it meant blame the Democrats.

  • The Pesident - the title Trump used in a tweet to describe himself. No R needed
  • The United States looses soooo much money on Trade with Mexico under NAFTA - Is all that money loose change? Maybe loose pesos.
  • It turns out to be true now - Here comes a whopper.
  • Make no mistake... - One of Pence's favorite expressions. Whatever follows is probably a Trump lie or threat that Pence is repeating.
  • Very strongly - usually used when Trump is trying to convey that a foreign leader is denying some terrible action that everyone knows they did or authorized. 
  • Even greater than anyone would know! - Used by Trump to falsely describe his support on an issue.
  • A far worse situation than almost anyone would understand - The implication being that only a (J)enius like Trump could figure this out. First, it ain't that bad. Second, almost everyone understands except Trump.
  • Some say - get ready, a whopper will be following. Either a wild boast, misused statistic, or another outright lie. The "some" is either none or maybe two. 
  • You all know it - The words that just came out of my mouth was complete bullshit.
  • Most people don't know... - followed by an outright lie or something almost everyone knows. 
  • Total exoneration - only total in Trump's mind and his stooges. Nevermind that his Attorney General specifically said the Mueller findings do not mean exoneration. 
  • No Obstruction - The DOJ decided not to prosecute the obstruction they found.
  • People are beginning to realize... - Trump just found out. The world has realized for years. 
  • A little squabble - His term for a major and serious trade war with China.
  • Only in America - What was once a positive phrase, Trump uses as a negative, particularly when complaining about laws or policies he disagrees with. 
  • Not my type - Trump's first response when confronted with a sexual assault charge. This indicates that there is a "type" that he would assault. 
  • A very stupid guy - Anyone who disagrees with or points out Trump's shortcomings. Actual IQ or ability does not matter.
wjh

Monday, July 1, 2019

Winning - June 2019


Keeping track of the GOP and Trump Administration:
  • The Trump lie count as of June 7th was 10,796. An average of 12/day. A truly stellar achievement.
  • The owners of the former Trump Ocean Club building in Panama filed suit in federal court over tax evasion.
  • Trump's top economist, Kevin Hassett, resigns.
  • The Homeland Security Department acting inspector general, John V. Kelly, "retires" after revelations that he directed staff to whitewash audits of disaster response. The swamp creatures continue to rule.
  • 06/11 - The House votes to seek court enforcement of subpoenas for Barr and Gahn. 
  • 06/13 - The Office of Special Counsel recommends that Trump fire Kellyanne Conway for Hatch Act violations.
    • Trump says he won't fire her. Laws don't matter.
  • 06/13 - Press Secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders resigns.
  • 06/18 - Trump withdraws the nomination of Acting Secretary of Defense Patrick Shanahan for the permanent position. A background check turned up domestic abuse allegations. Maybe try vetting before nominating. 
  • 06/18 - Ann Marie Buerkle, Acting Consumer Protection Chairwoman, will step down in October. Another ACTING agency head.
  • And the bluffing continues. A promised immigrant roundup by ICE is delayed. A military strike against Iran is called off. 
  • 06/25 - The Customs and Border Protection agency’s acting commissioner, John Sanders, resigns. Another one bites the dust.
  • 06/25 - A federal judge ruled that the emoluments case against Trump by 200 Democrats in Congress can proceed. 
  • 06/27 - The Supreme Court returns the 2020 census citizenship question to a lower court. Considered a setback to the Trump administration.  
wjh