Help!

To keep the Conversation going, please help me by linking news articles, opinion pieces and other political content in today's Comments section.

Link Code:   <a href="URL">text</a>

OR you can try this Link Generator, which a contributor recommends: "All you do is paste in the URL and supply the text to highlight. Then hit 'Get Code.'... Return to RealityChex and paste it in."

OR you can always just block, copy and paste to your comment the URL (Web address) of the page you want to link.

Note for Readers. It is not possible for commenters to "throw" their highlighted links to another window. But you can do that yourself. Right-click on the link and a drop-down box will give you choices as to where you want to open the link: in a new tab, new window or new private window.

Thank you to everyone who has been contributing links to articles & other content in the Comments section of each day's "Conversation." If you're missing the comments, you're missing some vital links.

The Ledes

Saturday, May 18, 2024

Washington Post: “Paul D. Parkman, a scientist who in the 1960s played a central role in identifying the rubella virus and developing a vaccine to combat it, breakthroughs that have eliminated from much of the world a disease that can cause catastrophic birth defects and fetal death, died May 7 at his home in Auburn, N.Y. He was 91.”

New York Times: “Dabney Coleman, an award-winning television and movie actor best known for his over-the-top portrayals of garrulous, egomaniacal characters, died on Thursday at his home in Santa Monica, Calif. He was 92.”

The Wires
powered by Surfing Waves
The Ledes

Friday, May 17, 2024

AP: “Fast-moving thunderstorms pummeled southeastern Texas for the second time this month, killing at least four people, blowing out windows in high-rise buildings, downing trees and knocking out power to more than 900,000 homes and businesses in the Houston area.”

Public Service Announcement

The Washington Post offers tips on how to keep your EV battery running in frigid temperatures. The link at the end of this graf is supposed to be a "gift link" (from me, Marie Burns, the giftor!), meaning that non-subscribers can read the article. Hope it works: https://wapo.st/3u8Z705

Marie: BTW, if you think our government sucks, I invite you to watch the PBS special "The Real story of Mr Bates vs the Post Office," about how the British post office falsely accused hundreds, or perhaps thousands, of subpostmasters of theft and fraud, succeeded in obtaining convictions and jail time, and essentially stole tens of thousands of pounds from some of them. Oh, and lied about it all. A dramatization of the story appeared as a four-part "Masterpiece Theater," which you still may be able to pick it up on your local PBS station. Otherwise, you can catch it here (for now). Just hope this does give our own Postmaster General Extraordinaire Louis DeJoy any ideas.

The Mysterious Roman Dodecahedron. Washington Post: A “group of amateur archaeologists sift[ing] through ... an ancient Roman pit in eastern England [found] ... a Roman dodecahedron, likely to have been placed there 1,700 years earlier.... Each of its pentagon-shaped faces is punctuated by a hole, varying in size, and each of its 20 corners is accented by a semi-spherical knob.” Archaeologists don't know what the Romans used these small dodecahedrons for but the best guess is that they have some religious significance.

"Countless studies have shown that people who spend less time in nature die younger and suffer higher rates of mental and physical ailments." So this Washington Post page allows you to check your own area to see how good your access to nature is.

Marie: If you don't like birthing stories, don't watch this video. But I thought it was pretty sweet -- and funny:

If you like Larry David, you may find this interview enjoyable:


Tracy Chapman & Luke Combs at the 2024 Grammy Awards. Allison Hope comments in a CNN opinion piece:

~~~ Here's Chapman singing "Fast Car" at the Oakland Coliseum in December 1988. ~~~

~~~ Here's the full 2024 Grammy winner's list, via CBS.

He Shot the Messenger. Washington Post: “The Messenger is shutting down immediately, the news site’s founder told employees in an email Wednesday, marking the abrupt demise of one of the stranger and more expensive recent experiments in digital media. In his email, Jimmy Finkelstein said he was 'personally devastated' to announce that he had failed in a last-ditch effort to raise more money for the site, saying that he had been fundraising as recently as the night before. Finkelstein said the site, which launched last year with outsize ambitions and a mammoth $50 million budget, would close 'effective immediately.' The New York Times first reported the site’s closure late Wednesday afternoon, appearing to catch many staffers off-guard, including editor in chief Dan Wakeford. As employees read the news story, the internal work chat service Slack erupted in what one employee called 'pandemonium.'... Minutes later, as staffers read Finkelstein’s email, its message was underscored as they were forcibly logged out of their Slack accounts. Former Messenger reporter Jim LaPorta posted on social media that employees would not receive health care or severance.”

Contact Marie

Click on this link to e-mail Marie.

Constant Comments

A nation of sheep will beget a government of wolves. -- Edward R. Murrow

Publisher & Editor: Marie Burns


Sunday
Aug262018

Trump's True Colors

Time for a Left-Wing Conspiracy Theory:

This is the Russian flag:

Daniel Politi of Slate: "... Donald Trump and First Lady Melania Trump visited children at a hospital in Columbus, Ohio as part of an effort to call attention to the way the opioid crisis affects infants. Plus, it’s always a good idea to have a photo-op with kids at the end of a no good, very bad week. For politicians it’s 'a time-honored tradition,' writes Esquire, 'sitting in tiny desks alongside adorable kids in hope that the guileless innocence on the little faces surrounding them will take some of the heat off of their craven politicking.' Yet things didn’t go so well for Trump this time. The president and his wife joined the children in an arts-and-crafts activity that involved coloring in the American flag. But it seems Trump didn’t quite color his flag right. A photo posted on Twitter seems to show that the president colored in a blue stripe on the U.S. flag.” Thanks to Akhilleus for the link.

Coloring Between the Lines. Let's look at these photos in chronological order:

1. This is Donald Trump coloring a stripe with a red marker:

You can see the red marker in his hand.

2. This is Donald Trump coloring a stripe with a blue marker:

This photo comes via the Raw Story. You can see the red stripe was completed earlier. Notice how intent Trump is on getting it right.

3. This is Donald Trump with his "finished product":

This photo comes from the Twitter feed of Alex Azar, the Secretary of Health & Human Services.

Here's a close-up from that photo:

You can see the blue marker Trump used.

Weirdly, Trump skipped a line. The colors on his flag are red, white, white, blue. As we all know, white is pretty important to Trump: white is more equal than others, you might say.

Okay, I'll admit Trump has painted the colors of the stripes in the Russian flag out of order. But you have to admit you've never seen a mentally-competent, adult, native-born, U.S.-educated person who thinks some of the stripes in the stars and stripes are blue.

Trump's coloring exercise was a Freudian slip. It showed his true colors. They're Russian. We've seen a great deal of evidence Trump is a Russian asset. But this slip-up is like total proof, man. He's a sleeper.

*****

Here's Akhilleus's take:

You might think that a president* who threatens people for “disrespecting” the flag would have at least a vague clue what that symbol looks like.

You’d be wrong.

Here are photos that show Trump the Patriot demonstrating for little kids in a classroom that they should color the stripes on the American flag red, white, and, um, blue.

Hope he didn’t try to help them spell potato.

*****

Trump has always been hazy about the American flag he now claims to cherish so much it deeply disturbs him when NFL take a knee to honor the equality it represents to most of us.

In this clip from about ten years ago, Stephen Colbert revealed what Trump really knew about the American flag:

... How would he know? When I was in grade school learning what the 13 stripes represented, little Donald was -- somewhere else.

P.S. This is a joke. The real reason Trump has absolutely no knowledge of the American flag is that he's an ignorant narcissist who, in all fairness, probably has a severe learning disability that explains his inability to read the presidential briefing books and accurately color an American flag. *

     ... *Update: Be sure to see the Comments below for better explanations.

Saturday
Aug252018

The Commentariat -- August 26, 2018

Afternoon Update:

Trump Has a Problem Bigger than Bob Mueller. Noah Feldman of Bloomberg: "Trump is now facing a two-front war against the Justice Department. The team led by special counsel Robert Mueller is supposed to focus on Russian interference in the 2016 election. But the Southern District can investigate any aspect of Trump's behavior that took place in its jurisdiction, at any time. And unlike Mueller, who could in principle be fired, the Southern District isn't one man; it's a whole office of career lawyers. It can't be fired. Even if Robert Khuzami, the acting U.S. attorney in this case, were removed, no new U.S. attorney could realistically call off the prosecutors.... It remains to be seen how far the Southern District will go. But its opening salvo -- [Michael] Cohen's statement against the president ... made in consultation with the Southern District prosecutors ... -- already went further than any part of the Justice Department has gone since Richard Nixon's administration."

The Nastiest Candidate Ever. Morgan Gstalter of the Hill: "Arizona GOP Senate candidate Kelli Ward suggested Saturday that the Friday statement issued by Sen. John McCain's (R-Ariz.) family about ending medical treatment for brain cancer was intended to hurt her campaign. McCain died Saturday hours after she made the suggestion on Facebook." ...

... Yesterday, James Arkin of Politico reported that on the campaign trail, Ward kept up her criticism of McCain after the family announced he was discontinuing cancer treatment. ...

... AND last summer, after McCain announced he had cancer, Ward said, "'the medical reality of [McCain's] diagnosis is grim,' and he should consider stepping down and having her take his place." Ward is in a primary race against Martha McSally -- the "establishment" candidate -- and that nice Joe Arpaio. to replace Sen. Jeff Flake (R), who is retiring. Mrs. McC: My guess is that McSally will win because Ward & Arpaio will split the white nationalist/crazy person/sadist vote.

*****

Robert McFadden of the New York Times: "John S. McCain, the proud naval aviator who climbed from depths of despair as a prisoner of war in Vietnam to pinnacles of power as a Republican congressman and senator from Arizona and a two-time contender for the presidency, died on Saturday at his home in Arizona. He was 81." ...

... Karen Tumulty wrote Sen. McCain's obituary for the Washington Post. ...

... Emily Cochrane of the New York Times: "Senator John McCain ... will lie in state in the Capitol Rotunda and receive a full dress funeral service at the Washington National Cathedral. Mr. McCain ... will also lie in state at the Arizona Capitol before his burial in Annapolis, Md., a Republican official involved in the planning said.... Two Republicans familiar with the planning said that Presidents George W. Bush and Barack Obama have been asked to offer eulogies at his funeral. Under initial plans for Mr. McCain's funeral, Vice President Mike Pence was to attend, but not President Trump, who clashed repeatedly with Mr. McCain. Senator Chuck Schumer of New York, the top Senate Democrat, said on Saturday that he would introduce a resolution to rename the Russell Senate Office Building -- currently named for Senator Richard Russell of Georgia, who often opposed civil rights legislation -- in honor of Mr. McCain." ...

... The New Yorker features David Remnick's May 2018 reflections on John McCain. ...

... Russ Feingold, in a New York Times op-ed, remembers working with John McCain. Thanks to PD Pepe for the lead. ...

... Michael Sykes of Axios posts videos & photos of a few of "McCain's finest moments." ...

... Here are the last words of McCain's last book, titled The Restless Wave.

*******************************************************************

David Fahrenthold, et al., of the Washington Post: "President Trump's wall of secrecy -- the work of a lifetime -- is starting to crack.... His longtime lawyer, Michael Cohen, pleaded guilty last week to breaking campaign-finance laws and said he had arranged hush-money payments to two women at Trump's direction. A tabloid executive -- who had served Trump by snuffing out damaging tales before they went public -- and Trump's chief financial officer gave testimony in the case. All three had been part of the small circle ... who have long played crucial roles in Trump's strategy to shield the details of his personal life and business dealings from prying outsiders. But ... a growing number of legal challenges -- including the Russia investigation by special counsel Robert S. Mueller III and a raft of lawsuits and state-level probes in New York -- is eroding that barrier. The result has been a moment in which Trump seems politically wounded, as friends turn and embarrassing revelations about alleged affairs and his charity trickle out.... In coming months, certain cases could force Trump's company to open its books about foreign government customers or compel the president to testify about his relationships with women."

Michael Shear & Katie Benner of the New York Times: "In his attempt at self-defense amid the swirl of legal cases and investigations involving himself, his aides and his associates, Mr. Trump is directly undermining the people and processes that are the foundation of the nation's administration of justice. The result is a president at war with the law. 'You are dealing with a potentially indelible smearing of our law enforcement institutions,' said Neal K. Katyal, who was acting solicitor general under President Barack Obama. 'If Trump's views were actually accepted, there would be thousands of criminals who are out on the streets right now.' The president's public judgments about the country's top law enforcement agencies revolve largely around how their actions affect him personally -- a vision that would recast the traditionally independent justice system as a guardian of the president and an attack dog against his adversaries. For more than a year, he has criticized the Justice Department, questioned the integrity of the prosecutors leading the Russia investigation, and mercilessly mocked Jeff Sessions, his own attorney general.... As president, Mr. Trump is sworn to uphold the law, but he has viewed the legal system itself as an adversary, suggesting that it be circumvented to, for instance, send migrants back home." ...

... Bob Bauer in the Atlantic: "... even now we know what Trump seems unable to comprehend -- that he is a key reason why the investigation keeps going. This is ... because of what the investigation and his response have already revealed about this character: his disregard of legal limits when it is in his personal and political interest to ignore them, and his persistent failure to render an honest accounting of his actions. Although not quite in the way that he imagines, Trump is, in fact, what ties all [the] pieces [of the investigation] together and assures that the inquiry will, as it must, continue. Trump ... has failed to negotiate the boundary between legitimate self-defense and obstruction of justice, and in attacks such as those on his attorney general and his failed courtship of former FBI Director James Comey, he has indicated in no uncertain terms that he expects loyalty rather than fidelity to the law."

Philip Bump of the Washington Post on "the three illegal acts that may have helped Trump with the presidency.... [1] The hush money [to Karen McDougal & Stormy Daniels].... [2] The hackers. Last month, special counsel Robert S. Mueller III obtained an indictment against 12 Russians believed to work for the country's Main Intelligence Directorate, or GRU.... [3] The trolls. In February, Mueller's team obtained indictments against 13 Russians who worked for an organization called the Internet Research Agency.... We ... do not yet have a full picture of two other key points of contact between the Trump campaign and Russian actors.... What became more clear this week is Trump's campaign was aided by many more surreptitious acts violating federal law than we realized -- and President Trump himself is now clearly implicated in aiding at least one." (Also linked yesterday.)

Conservative Peter Wehner in a New York Times op-ed: "A party that once spoke with urgency and apparent conviction about the importance of ethical leadership -- fidelity, honesty, honor, decency, good manners, setting a good example -- has hitched its wagon to the most thoroughly and comprehensively corrupt individual who has ever been elected president.... Mr. Trump and the Republican Party are right now the chief emblem of corruption and cynicism in American political life, of an ethic of might makes right.... Thanks to the work of Robert Mueller -- a distinguished public servant, not the leader of a 'group of Angry Democrat Thugs' -- we are going to discover deeper and deeper layers to Mr. Trump's corruption." ...

     ... Mrs. Bea McCrabbie: How is it that Republican "thinkers" are shocked, shocked to discover that the leaders of their party are corrupt opportunists? My prediction is that the Never-Trumpers will get back on their high horses the minute somebody drives Trump out of Dodge. The whole lot of reprobates will once again be hailed as paragons of virtue saving us all from riffraff & "entitlements."

For What It's Worth. Ramsey Touchberry of Newsweek: "Roger Stone, a former Donald Trump aide..., said he believes one of the president's sons, Donald Trump Jr., will soon be indicted for 'lying to the FBI.' 'I [predict], based on excellent sourcing, that the special counsel is going to charge Donald Trump Jr. with lying to the FBI,' Stone told James Miller of the conservative online outlet The Political Insider." Thanks to Ken W. for the link.

Noam Scheiber of the New York Times: "A federal district judge in Washington struck down most of the key provisions of three executive orders that President Trump signed in late May that would have made it easier to fire federal employees. The ruling, issued early Saturday, is a blow to Republican efforts to rein in public-sector labor unions, which states like Wisconsin have aggressively curtailed in recent years. In June, the Supreme Court dealt public-sector unions a major blow by ending mandatory union fees for government workers nationwide.... The complaint said that the president lacks the authority to override federal law on these questions, and the judge in the case, Ketanji Brown Jackson, agreed, writing that most of the key provisions of the executive orders 'conflict with congressional intent in a manner that cannot be sustained.'" (Also linked yesterday.)

Astead Herndon of the New York Times: "Democratic Party officials, after a yearslong battle between warring ideological wings, have agreed to sharply reduce the influence of the top political insiders known as superdelegates in the presidential nomination process. Under the new plan, which was agreed to on Saturday afternoon in Chicago at the Democratic National Committee's annual summer meetings, superdelegates retain their power to back any candidate regardless of how the public votes. They will now be largely barred, however, from participating in the first ballot of the presidential nominating process at the party's convention -- drastically diluting their power. Superdelegates will be able to cast substantive votes only in extraordinary cases like contested conventions, in which the nomination process is extended through multiple ballots until one candidate prevails."

Beyond the Beltway

Joe Johnson, et al., of the Raleigh News & Observer: "Police had arrested seven people by early Saturday afternoon, as protesters clashed at UNC-Chapel Hill five days after the toppling of the Silent Sam Confederate monument.... Silent Sam supporters numbered no more than a couple of dozen, while the anti-protesters had the numbers on their side, with about 200 people shouting and chanting various slogans.... The UNC-Chapel Hill Police Department on Friday filed warrants charging three people in connection with the toppling of the statue. The warrants charge the three with misdemeanor riot and misdemeanor defacing of a publi monument, according to a UNC police statement."

Way Beyond

New York Times: "On the second day of a difficult mission to win back the confidence of Irish Catholics, Pope Francis awoke on Sunday to a bombshell attack from within his own citadel. A former top-ranking Vatican official released a 7,000-word letter asserting that the pontiff had known about the abuses of a now-disgraced American prelate, Cardinal Theodore McCarrick, years before they became public. The official, Archbishop Carlo Maria Viganò, a conservative critic of Francis and a former apostolic nuncio to the United States, claimed that the pope had failed to punish Cardinal McCarrick, who was suspended in June following allegations that he had coerced seminarians into sexual relationships. He was also found to have abused a teenage altar boy 47 years ago, when he was a priest in New York. In the letter, published on Saturday in Italian by The National Catholic Register and in English by LifeSiteNews, both critical of Francis, the archbishop called on the pope to resign." ...

     ... The report linked above is part of the NYT's liveblog of Francis's visit to Ireland. ...

     ... Chico Harlan, et al., of the Washington Post: "A former Vatican ambassador to the United States has alleged in an 11-page letter that Pope Benedict XVI and Pope Francis -- among other top Catholic Church officials -- had been aware of sexual misconduct allegations against a top American cardinal years before that prelate resigned this summer.... The letter offered no proof and Vigano on Sunday told the Post he wouldn't comment further." ...

... Chico Harlan & Amanda Ferguson of the Washington Post: "Pope Francis said Saturday that the 'failure of ecclesiastical authorities' to address sexual abuse has 'rightly given rise to outrage,' his first acknowledgment during his trip to Ireland of the traumas here that have radically diminished the Roman Catholic clergy's once-towering authority. In an address at Dublin Castle, Francis described the 'repellent crimes' and the failure to deal with them as 'a source of pain and shame for the Catholic community.' But he did not discuss concrete changes in laws or transparency or address the question of the Vatican's complicity in the abuse cases." (Also linked yesterday.) ...

... The main Irish Times story is here. The front page of the Irish Times has links to numerous related stories.

News Ledes

(Jacksonville,) Florida Times-Union: "Multiple people are dead, including the lone suspect, after a mass shooting Sunday afternoon at the Jacksonville Landing during a video game tournament, a chaotic scene at a waterfront venue synonymous with downtown.... Many details about the shooting were not immediately clear, including how many people were dead and what kind of gun the suspect used. Police publicly referred to the incident as a 'mass shooting,' a term with varying definitions that often means at least three or four people have died." ...

     ... Washington Post Update: "Jacksonville Sheriff Mike Williams said the suspect took his own life, but he did not know details of any motive or if the suspect knew the victims. This story is developing. At least three people are dead and 14 are injured after a lone gunman opened fire Sunday during a video game tournament in Florida that drew professional players from around the world." The suspect is believed to be from Baltimore, Md.

New York Times: "Neil Simon, the playwright whose name was synonymous with Broadway comedy and commercial success in the theater for decades, and who helped redefine popular American humor with an emphasis on the frictions of urban living and the agonizing conflicts of family intimacy, died on Sunday in Manhattan. He was 91."

Friday
Aug242018

The Commentariat -- August 25, 2018

Late Morning Update:

Noam Scheiber of the New York Times: "A federal district judge in Washington struck down most of the key provisions of three executive orders that President Trump signed in late May that would have made it easier to fire federal employees. The ruling, issued early Saturday, is a blow to Republican efforts to rein in public-sector labor unions, which states like Wisconsin have aggressively curtailed in recent years. In June, the Supreme Court dealt public-sector unions a major blow by ending mandatory union fees for government workers nationwide.... The complaint said that the president lacks the authority to override federal law on these questions, and the judge in the case, Ketanji Brown Jackson, agreed, writing that most of the key provisions of the executive orders 'conflict with congressional intent in a manner that cannot be sustained.'"

Philip Bump of the Washington Post on "the three illegal acts that may have helped Trump with the presidency.... [1] The hush money [to Karen McDougal & Stormy Daniels].... [2] The hackers. Last month, special counsel Robert S. Mueller III obtained an indictment against 12 Russians believed to work for the country's Main Intelligence Directorate, or GRU.... [3] The trolls. In February, Mueller's team obtained indictments against 13 Russians who worked for an organization called the Internet Research Agency.... We ... do not yet have a full picture of two other key points of contact between the Trump campaign and Russian actors.... What became more clear this week is Trump's campaign was aided by many more surreptitious acts violating federal law than we realized -- and President Trump himself is now clearly implicated in aiding at least one."

Chico Harlan & Amanda Ferguson of the Washington Post: "Pope Francis said Saturday that the 'failure of ecclesiastical authorities' to address sexual abuse has 'rightly given rise to outrage,' his first acknowledgment during his trip to Ireland of the traumas here that have radically diminished the Roman Catholic clergy's once-towering authority. In an address at Dublin Castle, Francis described the 'repellent crimes' and the failure to deal with them as 'a source of pain and shame for the Catholic community.' But he did not discuss concrete changes in laws or transparency or address the question of the Vatican's complicity in the abuse cases."

*****

Mark Landler & Eileen Sullivan of the New York Times: "President Trump said on Friday that he had asked Secretary of State Mike Pompeo to skip a planned trip to North Korea, abruptly canceling the next round of negotiations on the country's nuclear program in his first public acknowledgment that his diplomatic overture to the North Korean leader, Kim Jong-un, had run into trouble.... In his tweets on Friday afternoon, Mr. Trump said the nuclear negotiations had been hampered by a lack of support from China, which he attributed to its increasingly rancorous trade dispute with the United States.... Lower-level trade negotiations between Washington and Beijing ended on Thursday with few signs of progress, raising the odds of additional American tariffs on Chinese goods. Mr. Trump also met with legislators to discuss a new law aimed at curbing Chinese investment.

When Loonytoons Meet. Asawin Suebsaeng & Will Sommer of the Daily Beast: "On Thursday..., Donald Trump posed for an Oval Office photo with one of the leading promoters of the QAnon conspiracy theory, which claims that top Democrats are part of a global pedophile cult ... [and] that Trump and the military are engaged in a high-stakes shadow war against ... [the] cult.... YouTube conspiracy theorist Lionel Lebron was in the White House for an event on Thursday, according to a video Lebron posted online. During the visit, Lebron and his wife posed for a smiling picture with Trump in the Oval Office.... Lebron claimed to have received a 'special guided tour of the White House' before posing for pictures with Trump." Lebron said he didn't discuss the anti-cult operation with Trump because, "I think we all know he knows about it." ...

... Jeet Heer: "The two possibilities are that either someone in the White House set up the meeting to help bolster QAnon or that White House security is so lax that a dubious character like LeBron could easily push his way into a photo-op. Neither possibility is reassuring."

As the Worms Turn, Ctd.

The Trump Family Is So Screwed. Tom Winter of NBC News: "The longtime chief financial officer of the Trump Organization, Allen Weisselberg, was given immunity by federal prosecutors in New York during the course of the Michael Cohen investigation, according to two people with knowledge of the matter. The news was first reported Friday by The Wall Street Journal. Weisselberg is 'Executive 1' on page 17 of the criminal information filed by prosecutors in the Michael Cohen case.... Weisselberg, 70, began working for the Trump Organization as an accountant in the 1970s, when ... Donald Trump's father Fred ran the company. Weisselberg was also treasurer of The Donald J. Trump Foundation, the president's charitable organization, which has been sued by the New York attorney general for alleged violations of state law." Thanks to MAG for the lead. (Also linked yesterday.) ...

... Aaron Blake of the Washington Post: "... Weisselberg ... becom[es] the latest figure close to President Trump to cooperate with investigators in exchange for leniency for himself. Weisselberg follows Michael Flynn, Rick Gates, George Papadopoulos, David Pecker and, of course, [Michael] Cohen. But the latest news is potentially even bigger than its predecessors. And that's because none of these other figures can likely hold a candle to Weisselberg when it comes to knowing about any skeletons in Trump's closet.... How much Weisselberg actually knew the specific details of [the McDougal & Daniels hush-money] arrangement[s] isn't clear. But the fact that there was reason to subpoena him and make him cut an immunity deal is big. That means he personally had potential criminal liability, and he had to give something of real value to get out of that." (Also linked yesterday.) ...

... Natasha Bertrand of the Atlantic: "The significance of [Allen Weisselberg's] flip, paired with [Michael] Cohen's recent plea deal, cannot be overstated: It took slightly more than a year for two of the president's longest-serving employees, considered by many to be the last who would ever turn on him, to cooperate with federal investigators -- and, in Cohen's case, directly implicate Trump in a crime. But the news also marked a turning point in the legal assault on Trumpworld: SDNY prosecutors may now pose a more immediate threat to the president than Special Counsel Robert Mueller does.... Taken together, SDNY seems to be homing in on Trump.... The SDNY investigation has prompted comparisons to a mob roll-up -- of the kind, ironically, that Trump's personal lawyer Rudy Giuliani oversaw in the 1980s while he was a prosecutor in New York." ...

... Aaron Keller of Law & Crime: "Law&Crime Founder Dan Abrams tweeted that Weisselberg's deal is 'with the Southern District of NY, not Mueller's team and is likely confined to Cohen/hush payments.' Abrams believes it is likely 'not some broader deep dive into President Trump's finances.'... [But] several opinion leaders and experts [said] ... Weisselberg's decision to 'flip' carries broader implications." ...

... Mrs. Bea McCrabbie: Dan Goldman, formerly an SDNY prosecutor, said on MSNBC last night that Weisselberg's & Pecker's immunity deals were granted on a "compulsion" basis; that is, prosecutors compelled them to testify about specific matters & granted them immunity from prosecution on any of their admissions related to those rounds of questioning. That suggested that their immunity deals are indeed limited, as Abrams guessed. No link. ...

... Mimi Rocah & Elie Honig in the Daily Beast: Cohen, Pecker & Weissenberg: all these former President's men "work for the feds now.... We now know from the charging document (called an Information) to which [Michael] Cohen pleaded guilty, that several other people, identified but not named, were involved in [the hush-money] scheme. The Information identifies a 'Chairman of a Media Company,' and Executive-1 and Executive-2 of what is clearly the Trump Organization, as participating in this scheme. Based on reporting and the facts in the Information, it's clear that the media chairman is David Pecker< of American Media, Inc. (the National Enquirer), a longtime ally of Trump, and that Executive-1 is Allen Weisselberg, chief financial officer of the Trump Organization. And we now know, based on further reporting, that both of those men received some kind of immunity deal in exchange for their cooperation.... It seems unlikely that the Southern District of New York needed to immunize these two witness just to charge Cohen.... At least some of the individuals and entities who should be concerned: Executive-2 of the Trump Organization, the Trump Organization, and possibly 'one or more members of the campaign' who coordinated with Cohen.... This must have many people, including Trump, very concerned." ...

... Inae Oh of Mother Jones: "The news of Weisselberg's and Pecker's immunity deals comes amid Trump's recent remarks lashing out at so-called 'flippers.' In an interview that aired Thursday, the president suggested that 'flipping' -- that is, cooperating with law enforcement in exchange for leniency --; should even be 'outlawed.'"

Erica Orden of CNN: "The New York State Attorney General's Office is poised to pursue a criminal probe of Michael Cohen's potential state tax law violations, having sought a criminal referral on the matter from the state Department of Taxation and Finance, according to a person familiar with the matter. Attorney General Barbara Underwood's office sought the referral in recent days, following the criminal charges brought against ... Donald Trump's former personal attorney by federal prosecutors in the US Attorney's Office for the Southern District of New York, this person said.... The state tax department also subpoenaed Cohen earlier this week as part of a probe pertaining to the Trump Foundation...."

"No Collusion." Catherine Rampell of the Washington Post: "Trump and surrogates have argued that his former lawyer's and his campaign chairman’s near-simultaneous legal losses don't imperil the president himself. After all, none of the charges that Michael Cohen and Paul Manafort were convicted of this week involved Russian connections to Trump's 2016 campaign. Quoth the president: 'And what's come out of Manafort? No collusion. What's come out of Michael Cohen? No collusion.' As for the Cohen crimes that did directly implicate Trump -- the campaign finance violations -- the president and his people have argued that these are not actually crimes. After all, they're so rarely prosecuted! [But] there's plenty of precedent for prosecuting [tax crimes]. And the Cohen filings this week raise serious new questions about whether Trump has criminal tax-fraud exposure.... 'The reason to go through the shenanigans of making this transaction [-- the hush-money payment to Stephanie Clifford --] look like legal expenses, to me, is to make something not deductible look deductible,' said Johnson Ware." ...

... Even the Doorman Has Turned on Trump. of CNN: "A former Trump World Tower doorman who says he has knowledge of an alleged affair ... Donald Trump had with an ex-housekeeper, which resulted in a child, is now able to talk about a contract he entered with American Media Inc. that had prohibited him from discussing the matter with anyone, according to his attorney. On Friday, Marc Held -- the attorney for Dino Sajudin, the former doorman -- said his client had been released from his contract with AMI, the parent company of the National Enquirer, 'recently' after back-and-forth discussions with AMI. CNN has exclusively obtained a copy of the 'source agreement' between Sajudin and AMI, which is owned by David Pecker. The contract appears to have been signed on Nov. 15, 2015, and states that AMI has exclusive rights to Sajudin's story but does not mention the details of the story itself beyond saying, 'Source shall provide AMI with information regarding Donald Trump's illegitimate child...'.... Sajudin's allegation that Trump fathered a child out of wedlock has not been independently confirmed by any of the outlets that have investigated the story." Mrs. McC: The saddest part: they may be another little Trumpie Toddler out there. Poor kid.

William Saletan of Slate: Donald Trump is also bent out over Jeff Sessions' failure to "protect" him & to "take control of" the DOJ & "this Russia thing," and over Michael Cohen's flip. But on obstruction, White House counsel Don McGahn may have given the Mueller team everything it needs. By detailing to prosecutors Trump's actions & remarks on several matters, McGahn likely exposed Trump's "criminal intent" to obstruct the investigation, whether McGahn thinks so or not. ...

     ... Mrs. McCrabbie: I think Trump's public statements, including many of his tweets, are strong evidence of his "criminal intent" to impede the investigation. Why incessantly knock Mueller's team & DOJ brass for conducting a "witch hunt" if your intent is not to delegitimize, stifle or end the "witch hunt"?

Chris Sommerfeldt of the New York Daily News: Rudy Giuliani "-- famous for coaxing New York mobsters into spilling the beans on their bosses -- took a slight jab at President Trump on Friday over his claim that the longstanding legal tactic of 'flipping' ought to be 'outlawed.' 'The President is not a lawyer,' Giuliani told the Daily News. In an unusual rebuttal of his own boss, the New York mayor-turned-top Trump attorney suggested the President might not have had a full grasp of what he was talking about when he went on Fox News on Wednesday and proposed outlawing witness cooperation agreements. 'I don't think he's against the idea of cooperation,' Giuliani, 74, said. 'He's against the idea of getting people to lie.' 'I'm not troubled by his comments,' Giuliani added."

Two victims of the notorious FBI, according to the NRA.Jonathan Chait: "NRA spokesperson Dana Loesch informs her audience that the FBI is trying to pull the same tricks on Trump that they used to entrap the beloved Prohibition-era Chicago gang leader: 'They're trying to Al Capone the president. I mean, you remember. Capone didn't go down for murder.... He went in for tax fraud. Prosecutors didn't care how he went down as long as he went down.' You might wonder why Trump's supporters believe his legal defense is aided by analogizing him to a murderous criminal. Perhaps the answer is that Capone had several qualities that recommend him to the Republican grassroots base. He was a business owner -- or, in modern Republican lingo, a Job Creator. He was an avid Second Amendment enthusiast. And, most importantly, Capone, like Trump, was a victim of the deep state." Chait goes on to have more fun with Loesch's "logic." ...

... Lawrence Douglas & Alexander George in the Guardian: "If Trump shot Michael Cohen in broad daylight, here's what Republicans would say." Mrs. McC: Funny. In fact, I suspect the authors -- who are both Amherst College law professors -- got hold of Paul Ryan's pre-written talking points. Thanks to Ken W. for the link.

Josh Gerstein of Politico: "Special counsel Robert Mueller's team is shaving its estimate for the length of former Trump campaign chairman Paul Manafort's upcoming trial, projecting that the prosecution case could be completed in as little as two weeks. 'The government anticipates that its case-in-chief will last approximately ten to twelve trial days,' prosecutors wrote in a filing Friday evening in U.S. District Court in Washington. Manafort is set to go on trial there beginning September 17 on charges of failing to register as a foreign agent, money laundering and obstruction of justice."

Julian Barnes & Matthew Rosenberg of the New York Times: "In 2016, American intelligence agencies delivered urgent and explicit warnings about Russia's intentions to try to tip the American presidential election -- and a detailed assessment of the operation afterward -- thanks in large part to informants close to President Vladimir V. Putin and in the Kremlin who provided crucial details. But two years later, the vital Kremlin informants have largely gone silent, leaving the C.I.A. and other spy agencies in the dark about precisely what Mr. Putin's intentions are for November's midterm elections, according to American officials familiar with the intelligence. The officials do not believe the sources have been compromised or killed. Instead, they have concluded they have gone to ground amid more aggressive counterintelligence by Moscow, including efforts to kill spies, like the poisoning in March in Britain of a former Russian intelligence officer that utilized a rare Russian-made nerve agent. Current and former officials also said the expulsion of American intelligence officers from Moscow has hurt collection efforts. And officials also raised the possibility that the outing of an F.B.I. informant under scrutiny by the House intelligence committee -- an examination encouraged by President Trump -- has had a chilling effect on intelligence collection." (Also linked yesterday.)


Paul Fontelo
of Roll Call: Rep. "Duncan Hunter [R-Calif.] is Using Campaign Funds to Defend Himself Against ... Misusing Campaign Funds.... Hunter's legal defense is coming from the same campaign coffers he and his wife are accused of misusing, so far amounting to more than $600,000 for the lawyers.... Hunter's use of campaign funds for attorney fees is likely legal and permitted.... The Hunter campaign';s expenditures of $600,000 for the 2018 election dwarfs the campaign's previous payments for legal matters." Mrs. McC: Maybe we can rationalize this by positing that anybody who donates to Duncan there deserves to have his hard-earned money misused. AND Gloria makes an excellent point in today's Comments. ...

... There's Always More to the Story. We learned yesterday that Hunter went on the teevee to blame his wife for all the illegal campaign finance activity? (This was after he blamed the "political agenda" of "the Democrats' arm of law enforcement" for investigating him in the first place.) And there are those trysts with "Individuals 14, 15, and 18":

     ... Tina Nguyen of Vanity Fair: "They include thousands of dollars spent on a personal vacation with Individual 14 at a Tahoe ski resort; a $162.02 charge for 'a personal stay at the Liaison Capitol Hill hotel with Individual 14'; repeated trips to Individual 15's house; and a $32.27 Uber ride at 7:40 A.M., in Washington, D.C., from Individual 18's home to Duncan's office.... Whatever happened after Hunter threw his wife under the bus clearly did not bring the couple closer together: according to CNN, the two arrived at the courthouse separately, entered the courtroom separately, and 'sat four seats apart' during the hearing." Mrs. McC: If you read the complaint, which is here, there's much more because "Individual 14, Individual 15, Individual 16, Individual 17,? and ?Individual 18? lived in the Washington, DC. area and had personal relationships with DUNCAN HUNTER." The Liaison Hotel? ...

... Oh, and Hunter complained on Fox "News" about his crappy $174,000 annual salary, which is of course a lot more than most Americans pull down. Well, yeah, that's not much when you've racked "up $37,000 in insufficient funds fees thanks to over 1,100 overdrafts." If you make only $174K, you might want to be more careful about managing your bank account.

Nicholas Fandos & Jonathan Martin of the New York Times: "Senator John McCain of Arizona, who has been battling brain cancer for more than a year, will no longer be treated for his condition, his family announced on Friday, a sign that the Republican war hero is most likely entering his final days." (Also linked yesterday.)

Election 2018

Maggie Astor of the New York Times: "The abuse already common in many women's everyday lives can be amplified in political campaigns, especially if the candidate is also a member of a minority group.... Harassment is not new for women in politics, or anywhere else -- and men face it too, especially if they are African-American or Jewish. But for women, the harassment is ubiquitous and frequently sexualized, and it has come to the fore this election cycle, partly because so many women are running and partly because more of them are discussing their experiences":

Congressional Race -- Special Election. John Wagner of the Washington Post: "Republican Troy Balderson was declared the winner Friday over Democrat Danny O'Connor in a closely contested special election in a central Ohio congressional district that Republicans have held for decades. After thousands of provisional and absentee ballots were counted, the Associated Press declared Balderson, a state senator, the winner of the Aug. 7 contest.... Balderson's narrow win came in a district that President Trump won by 11 percentage points in 2016 and that the GOP has held since 1983. Balderson received the endorsements of both Trump and Ohio Gov. John Kasich (R). Balderson and O'Connor will face off again Nov. 6, competing this time for a full two-year term in Congress."


Laurence Tribe
in a Washington Post op-ed: The Founding Fathers would not have wanted Brett Kavanaugh's confirmation to continue. "The framers built the Constitution on the premise that men aren't angels, and they did not trust a president's nominees to the Supreme Court to be impartial in determining whether he should stay in office. At the Constitutional Convention, Virginia's George Mason thought judges 'surely' ought not preside over the impeachment trials of presidents to whom they owed their jobs; Connecticut's Roger Sherman agreed. So the framers came up with a solution: They assigned the impeachment power to the House and the power to try impeachments to the Senate.... As [the impeachment] storm and others rage, Trump has nominated an Article II maximalist to the Supreme Court -- a man who may well have been selected specifically for his antipathy to prosecution or even investigation of any sitting president. There is no need to hurry. The slowly mounting chorus of senators calling for a pause in Kavanaugh's confirmation would have resonated strongly with the framers. Their views cannot rule us from the grave, but the structure they created has served us well."


Michael Wilson
of the New York Times: "Dr. Thomas R. Frieden, who ran the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention for eight years under President Obama, was arrested in Brooklyn on Friday morning on a sex abuse charge after an incident in October 2017, the police said. A 55-year-old woman came forward to the police in July and said that Dr. Frieden, described by the authorities as an acquaintance, grabbed her buttocks against her will nine months earlier, on Oct. 20, at his residence ... in Brooklyn Heights, the police said." (Also linked yesterday.)

Beyond the Beltway

Some Good News. Victor Blackwell, et al., of CNN: "In a meeting that lasted less than 60 seconds, a Georgia elections board voted down a plan Friday to close seven of a majority-black county's nine polling places ahead of November's midterm elections. Critics had said the plan to consolidate polling places in Randolph County, Georgia, was a brazen attempt to suppress the black vote in Georgia's governor race, which pits former Georgia House minority leader Stacey Abrams, who is black, against Georgia Secretary of State Brian Kemp, who is white.The vote came amid widespread national criticism and days after the county terminated its contract with Mike Malone, the consultant who made the recommendation. Malone had argued that closing the polling stations would save the county money, and that some of the sites suggested for closure did not comply with the Americans with Disabilities Act. It's unclear whether the termination of Malone's contract impacted the vote." There are only two people on the Randolph County Board of Elections. (Also linked yesterday.)

News Lede

USA Today: "Roadways were virtually empty, stores closed, no buses are running and some buildings were boarded up as Honolulu prepared for the arrival of Lane, originally a hurricane but downgraded to a tropical storm Friday afternoon. The National Weather Service warned that even a tropical storm can bring maximum winds of 70 miles per hour and that the threat of flooding was still present through Saturday. 'We're not out of the woods yet,' Governor David Ige said at a press conference in Honolulu. The island of Oahu, home to 69 percent of Hawaii's population, has been preparing for days for the storm's slow, 5 mph approach."