FILE PHOTO: U.S. President Donald Trump speaks to reporters about border security in the Briefing Room at the White House in Washington, U.S., January 3, 2019. REUTERS/Carlos Barria
Welcome to another edition of What Fresh Hell?, Raw Story’s roundup of news items that might have become controversies under another regime, but got buried – or were at least under-appreciated – due to the daily firehose of political pratfalls, unhinged tweet storms and other sundry embarrassments coming out of the current White House.
In 1992, the conservative columnist William Safire dubbed William Barr, who at the time was serving in his first stint as AG, the “Coverup-General” for his role in burying a scandal, largely forgotten since then, which was known as “IraqGate.” It was one of at least three major scandals he’s helped Republican administrations bury “navigate,” along with the BCCI bank scandal and Iran-Contra.
Barr had come to Washington during Watergate, when another Republican presidency was being brought down for obstructing justice. We can’t say that experience shaped his worldview, but since then he has been, in the words of the ACLU, a consistent “advocate of sweeping executive authority, which would have major implications for oversight.”
Last June, Barr wrote a legally sketchy 19-page brief effectively arguing that the President can’t obstruct justice, which he CCed to Trump’s attorneys. Trump, who aides had talk out of firing Mueller on at least two occasions, hired him, and last week he inserted himself into the process and delivered a four-page summary of the report which echoed the arguments in that memo and largely exonerated Individual-1.
We’re pretty sure the “West Wing” writers would have been a bit more subtle.
What followed was one of the more frustrating weeks of Trump’s “presidency,” as Cheeto crowed that he’d been exonerated on all charges and too many mainstream media outlets went right along with that narrative. “A Cloud Over Trump’s Presidency Is Lifted,” read a headline at The New York Times, never mind the fact that even if Mueller’s report did clear him—and we don’t know what it says—the Trump Crime Family still faces a half-dozen investigations by prosecutors across the country.
But the public doesn’t appear to have fallen for this. Trump’s approval rating hasn’t trended upwards at all. According to a Marist Institute poll released this week, only around a third of Americans believes Mueller cleared him of wrongdoing. A CNN poll was slightly better for the regime, with 42 percent believing he’d been exonerated, but even that number was “about the same as the 42% who said in a CNN poll earlier this year that Trump’s campaign did not collude with the Russian government.”
As the week progressed, the media spent a bit more time digesting the report and more critical stories emerged. And with public opinion behind them, House Democrats demanded to see the complete, unredacted report and all the supporting materials by April 2.
Barr now says that his 4-page letter last weekend wasn’t really a “summary” of Mueller’s report and he never intended to summarize 400 pages because that wouldn’t have been in the “public interest.” The technical legal term for this is “walking back your story.” https://t.co/4ZeUkWTnTB
According to NBC, House Dems are now “on a collision course” with Barr “as it appears increasingly unlikely he will comply with their demands to see Robert Mueller’s full unredacted report — let alone the evidence that backs it up.” Tuesday is the deadline and Barr has so far made it clear that he will not meet it.
Ken Starr’s 440 page report was released concurrently with his report to Congress, including all grand jury transcripts.
Also, recall: Brett Kavanauagh leaked secret Grand Jury transcripts to the media during the Ken Starr investigation to embarrass President Clinton.
We’ll see where this all heads soon. But once again, it looks like we’re fortunate that this regime isn’t more competent. Even with a seasoned “Coverup-General” coming out of retirement to do his thing, they seem to have botched this one – at least in the court of public opinion.
*****
“A 7-year-old Guatemalan girl who collapsed in Border Patrol custody in December — one of two child deaths that month — died of a bacterial infection that spread to her bloodstream and caused multiple organ failure, according to an autopsy report released Friday,” according to the WaPo.
“While the report sheds some light on Jakelin’s cause of death, it still leaves many questions that require further review,” lawyers for Jakelin’s family said Friday. “The report’s findings suggest Jakelin’s chances of surviving would have been improved with earlier medical intervention. As we requested back in December of last year, the family seeks a thorough independent investigation of this matter to learn why medical intervention was delayed.”
Anyway, we think this should help inform the debate over impeachment:
Trump just lied about the father of Jakelin Caal Maquin, girl who died in US custody, saying “the father gave the child no water for a long period of time — he actually admitted blame.” In fact, he denied this claim. She died of bacterial infection. https://t.co/tqRWMgItuf
In case you weren’t totally convinced that we’re truly dealing with the worst people in the world, a driver who used to chauffeur Trump’s kids and campaign staffers around Florida has been locked up by ICE for eight months and now they’re trying to deport him. Miriam Jordan has that story for The NYT.
*****
“The federal government provided additional food-stamp aid to Puerto Rico after the hurricane, but Congress missed the deadline for reauthorization in March as it focused on other issues before leaving for a week-long recess,” reported Jeff Stein for WaPo. “Federal lawmakers have also been stalled by the Trump administration, which has derided the extra aid as unnecessary. Now, about 43 percent of Puerto Rico’s residents are grappling with a sudden cut to a benefit they rely on for groceries and other essentials.”
According to the report, 1.3 million Puerto Ricans lost benefits, representing “a new crisis for an island still struggling from the effects of Hurricane Maria.”
If you sense a pattern here, you’re like everyone else outside of the Trump cult.
As far as I can tell, Trump is punishing the island of Puerto Rico because he’s mad at them for dying in such large numbers during Maria that it made him look bad?
“Acting Defense Secretary Patrick Shanahan is under investigation by the Pentagon’s Office of Inspector General because of allegations he improperly advocated on behalf of his former employer, Boeing Co.,” reported NPR.
*****
Never heard of anything like this before. A reminder that this administration’s scandals aren’t limited to Trump – people are looting the government at all levels. https://t.co/ViWvYnjMZg
David Bernhardt, who’s been the Acting Interior Secretary since Ryan Zinke stepped down amid a slew of conflicts of interest, wants the job full time but he had a rough confirmation hearing this week.
And with good reason. NYT’s Eric Lipton reported that Bernhardt played a pivotal role in blocking the release of a report which found that just two commonly used pesticides “were so toxic that they ‘jeopardize the continued existence’ of more than 1,200 endangered birds, fish and other animals and plants, a conclusion that could lead to tighter restrictions on use of the chemicals.” The report was the result of an exhaustive, years-long agency study into the impact of several popular pesticides. After killing it, the agency “set in motion a new process intended to apply a much narrower standard to determine the risks from the pesticides.”
And the DeSmogBlog had a good rundown of Bernhardt’s many trips through the revolving door.
He spent his career lobbying for oil and gas interests and against environmental protections. Naturally, this made him qualified to work at the DOI under the-supposedly-actually-not-that-bad George W. Bush. Some of Bernhardt’s highlights at Bush’s DOI included helping the attempts to open the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge to drilling and implementing the Energy Policy Act of 2005, which exempted the fracking industry from certain regulations and created the “Halliburton Loophole.” And as the Solicitor General he also, no joke, managed the ethics office.
After another lobbying stint, Bernhardt was brought back to DOI by Trump in 2017 as deputy secretary. Since then, one of his biggest adversaries has been the Endangered Species Act. Bernhardt led a national effort to weaken the act and directed a rollback on protections for smelt, something he lobbied for on behalf of California farmers for years before joining the agency. The New York Times recently reported that in 2017, Bernhardt blocked a Fish and Wildlife Services report that found three widely used pesticides present a serious threat to hundreds of endangered species.
And Bernhardt wasted no time after being made acting head the agency. Just weeks after he took over, during the government shutdown, he approved 267 drilling permits, including many for his former clients.
*****
It’s been five months since a federal court ordered Education Secretary Betsy DeVos to give defrauded student loan borrowers relief, but more than 100,000 people are still waiting to hear whether their debt will be canceled https://t.co/3o03Yz8102
Last week, we asked WTF? when the Twitter-Troll-in-Chief tweeted out that he was putting the kibosh on US sanctions against North Korea.
It turns out that we weren’t the only ones bewildered by the inexplicable reversal. Bloomberg reported this week that Trump had every intention of withdrawing the sanctions “until officials in his administration persuaded him to back off and then devised a misleading explanation of his vague tweet announcing the move.”
*****
We want to make sure you don’t miss a few items about the most important issue of our time.
According to USA Today, “extreme weather events, supercharged by climate change, affected some 62 million people around the world in 2018, the United Nations’ weather agency said Thursday…. The report said the Earth is almost 2 degrees (Fahrenheit) warmer than it was in the late 1800s, and that the past four years have been the warmest on record.”
“Climate change doesn’t just shift weather patterns. It can force the migration of plants, people, animals, bugs — and disease,” according to PBS’ News Hour. “By the end of this century almost all of the world’s population could be exposed to mosquito-borne diseases once limited to the tropics, according to a new study from PLOS Neglected Tropical Diseases.”
Adrian Higgins reported for WaPo this week that climate change is “inducing earlier flowering of temperate tree fruits, exposing the blooms and nascent fruit to increasingly erratic frosts, hail and other adverse weather,” and scientists say that “fruit-growing regions of the United States will be seriously disrupted by future warming scenarios.”
You will soon be “feeling the pain” at your grocery store as a result, according to the report.
*****
This week’s good news comes from the courts.
This week, a second judge blocked parts of Wisconsin Republicans’ attempt to grab power following Democrat Tony Evers following his victory over former governor Scott Walker. The judge’s ruling, according to Governing, “appeared to respond directly to Republican lawmakers who justified the laws as simply giving them a ‘seat at the table’ with Evers.”
“Even the casual observer cannot miss the fact that this ‘rebalancing’ of power, and the defendants’ repeated demand for ‘a seat at the table,’ was not considered until the voters elected a Democratic Governor and Attorney General,” wrote the judge.
And another federal judge “struck down one of President Trump’s heath-care initiatives on Thursday, ruling that a provision allowing small businesses and individuals to band together to create group health plans ‘is clearly an end-run around’ the Affordable Care Act.” Axios has more details.
Conservative writer suffered white-hot meltdown after embarrassing story about her marriage spread online
Wedding planner Trump installed as HUD exec has brought nothing but ‘chaos and drama from day one’: report
Paul Krugman drops a bomb on Trump’s base — he just saddled you with $2 trillion more in debt
Saudi Arabia ‘had access’ to Jeff Bezos’ phone: Investigator drops bombshell allegation against the Middle East kingdom
AOC shuts down heckler at town hall: ‘That’s the difference between me and Trump’
Trump has a plan to push Congress aside and run the government the way he wants: report
After Trump border threat, Mexico says doesn’t act on threats
Ralph Nader: Forget Mueller. Forget impeachment. A million people should surround the White House and demand Trump’s resignation
Trump’s Fed pick Stephen Moore was held in contempt of court over $300K alimony and child support debt: report
Beto O’Rourke holds huge rally near the southern border — that Trump threatens to close
Trump’s clumsy Mueller coverup almost worked
30 Mar 2019 at 13:05 ET
Welcome to another edition of What Fresh Hell?, Raw Story’s roundup of news items that might have become controversies under another regime, but got buried – or were at least under-appreciated – due to the daily firehose of political pratfalls, unhinged tweet storms and other sundry embarrassments coming out of the current White House.
In 1992, the conservative columnist William Safire dubbed William Barr, who at the time was serving in his first stint as AG, the “Coverup-General” for his role in burying a scandal, largely forgotten since then, which was known as “IraqGate.” It was one of at least three major scandals he’s helped Republican administrations
bury“navigate,” along with the BCCI bank scandal and Iran-Contra.Barr had come to Washington during Watergate, when another Republican presidency was being brought down for obstructing justice. We can’t say that experience shaped his worldview, but since then he has been, in the words of the ACLU, a consistent “advocate of sweeping executive authority, which would have major implications for oversight.”
Last June, Barr wrote a legally sketchy 19-page brief effectively arguing that the President can’t obstruct justice, which he CCed to Trump’s attorneys. Trump, who aides had talk out of firing Mueller on at least two occasions, hired him, and last week he inserted himself into the process and delivered a four-page summary of the report which echoed the arguments in that memo and largely exonerated Individual-1.
We’re pretty sure the “West Wing” writers would have been a bit more subtle.
What followed was one of the more frustrating weeks of Trump’s “presidency,” as Cheeto crowed that he’d been exonerated on all charges and too many mainstream media outlets went right along with that narrative. “A Cloud Over Trump’s Presidency Is Lifted,” read a headline at The New York Times, never mind the fact that even if Mueller’s report did clear him—and we don’t know what it says—the Trump Crime Family still faces a half-dozen investigations by prosecutors across the country.
But the public doesn’t appear to have fallen for this. Trump’s approval rating hasn’t trended upwards at all. According to a Marist Institute poll released this week, only around a third of Americans believes Mueller cleared him of wrongdoing. A CNN poll was slightly better for the regime, with 42 percent believing he’d been exonerated, but even that number was “about the same as the 42% who said in a CNN poll earlier this year that Trump’s campaign did not collude with the Russian government.”
As the week progressed, the media spent a bit more time digesting the report and more critical stories emerged. And with public opinion behind them, House Democrats demanded to see the complete, unredacted report and all the supporting materials by April 2.
According to NBC, House Dems are now “on a collision course” with Barr “as it appears increasingly unlikely he will comply with their demands to see Robert Mueller’s full unredacted report — let alone the evidence that backs it up.” Tuesday is the deadline and Barr has so far made it clear that he will not meet it.
We’ll see where this all heads soon. But once again, it looks like we’re fortunate that this regime isn’t more competent. Even with a seasoned “Coverup-General” coming out of retirement to do his thing, they seem to have botched this one – at least in the court of public opinion.
*****
“A 7-year-old Guatemalan girl who collapsed in Border Patrol custody in December — one of two child deaths that month — died of a bacterial infection that spread to her bloodstream and caused multiple organ failure, according to an autopsy report released Friday,” according to the WaPo.
Anyway, we think this should help inform the debate over impeachment:
*****
In case you weren’t totally convinced that we’re truly dealing with the worst people in the world, a driver who used to chauffeur Trump’s kids and campaign staffers around Florida has been locked up by ICE for eight months and now they’re trying to deport him. Miriam Jordan has that story for The NYT.
*****
“The federal government provided additional food-stamp aid to Puerto Rico after the hurricane, but Congress missed the deadline for reauthorization in March as it focused on other issues before leaving for a week-long recess,” reported Jeff Stein for WaPo. “Federal lawmakers have also been stalled by the Trump administration, which has derided the extra aid as unnecessary. Now, about 43 percent of Puerto Rico’s residents are grappling with a sudden cut to a benefit they rely on for groceries and other essentials.”
According to the report, 1.3 million Puerto Ricans lost benefits, representing “a new crisis for an island still struggling from the effects of Hurricane Maria.”
If you sense a pattern here, you’re like everyone else outside of the Trump cult.
*****
A few items from The Trump Swamp®…
“Acting Defense Secretary Patrick Shanahan is under investigation by the Pentagon’s Office of Inspector General because of allegations he improperly advocated on behalf of his former employer, Boeing Co.,” reported NPR.
*****
*****
David Bernhardt, who’s been the Acting Interior Secretary since Ryan Zinke stepped down amid a slew of conflicts of interest, wants the job full time but he had a rough confirmation hearing this week.
And with good reason. NYT’s Eric Lipton reported that Bernhardt played a pivotal role in blocking the release of a report which found that just two commonly used pesticides “were so toxic that they ‘jeopardize the continued existence’ of more than 1,200 endangered birds, fish and other animals and plants, a conclusion that could lead to tighter restrictions on use of the chemicals.” The report was the result of an exhaustive, years-long agency study into the impact of several popular pesticides. After killing it, the agency “set in motion a new process intended to apply a much narrower standard to determine the risks from the pesticides.”
And the DeSmogBlog had a good rundown of Bernhardt’s many trips through the revolving door.
*****
*****
Last week, we asked WTF? when the Twitter-Troll-in-Chief tweeted out that he was putting the kibosh on US sanctions against North Korea.
It turns out that we weren’t the only ones bewildered by the inexplicable reversal. Bloomberg reported this week that Trump had every intention of withdrawing the sanctions “until officials in his administration persuaded him to back off and then devised a misleading explanation of his vague tweet announcing the move.”
*****
We want to make sure you don’t miss a few items about the most important issue of our time.
According to USA Today, “extreme weather events, supercharged by climate change, affected some 62 million people around the world in 2018, the United Nations’ weather agency said Thursday…. The report said the Earth is almost 2 degrees (Fahrenheit) warmer than it was in the late 1800s, and that the past four years have been the warmest on record.”
“Climate change doesn’t just shift weather patterns. It can force the migration of plants, people, animals, bugs — and disease,” according to PBS’ News Hour. “By the end of this century almost all of the world’s population could be exposed to mosquito-borne diseases once limited to the tropics, according to a new study from PLOS Neglected Tropical Diseases.”
Adrian Higgins reported for WaPo this week that climate change is “inducing earlier flowering of temperate tree fruits, exposing the blooms and nascent fruit to increasingly erratic frosts, hail and other adverse weather,” and scientists say that “fruit-growing regions of the United States will be seriously disrupted by future warming scenarios.”
You will soon be “feeling the pain” at your grocery store as a result, according to the report.
*****
This week’s good news comes from the courts.
This week, a second judge blocked parts of Wisconsin Republicans’ attempt to grab power following Democrat Tony Evers following his victory over former governor Scott Walker. The judge’s ruling, according to Governing, “appeared to respond directly to Republican lawmakers who justified the laws as simply giving them a ‘seat at the table’ with Evers.”
“Even the casual observer cannot miss the fact that this ‘rebalancing’ of power, and the defendants’ repeated demand for ‘a seat at the table,’ was not considered until the voters elected a Democratic Governor and Attorney General,” wrote the judge.
And another federal judge “struck down one of President Trump’s heath-care initiatives on Thursday, ruling that a provision allowing small businesses and individuals to band together to create group health plans ‘is clearly an end-run around’ the Affordable Care Act.” Axios has more details.
About the Author
New Stories
New Videos