Skip to content

A bit of speculation

I don’t pretend to know all that much about British politics, but it strikes me that the Conservative Party is suffering from one of the anti-democratic maladies for which the Republican Party has become notorious.

Apparently, the British people, if given the chance, would vote to reverse the Brexit vote.It was, after all, the result of fraud on the part of its proponents mixed with a healthy dose of Russian interference. (Sounds familiar doesn’t it?) Yet Theresa may will have none of it:

With talk of a second referendum growing, May again reiterated her opposition to another vote last night and said parliament had “a democratic duty to deliver what the British people voted for”. She even described Tony Blair’s recent appearance in Brussels to support a second vote as “an insult to the office he once held and the people he once served.”

At first glance, you’d think that a second referendum would be a no-brainer, since if, as expected, it reversed the first referendum, there would be no need to come up with an exit strategy, which so far has proven to be impossible. Not only that, it might salvage May’s tenuous grip on her office.

The only explanation that makes sense to me is that May is terrified of her base, just as our Republican politicians are terrified of theirs. 

How do these idiots rise to the surface?

Okay, I guess if you run a propaganda network, you’ll give a forum to anyone. Here’s a person who has a columnin the New York Post, who’s invited on to Fox to talk about his suggestion that Trump supporters pay for the wall by starting a GoFundMe campaign:

Trump surrogates in the conservative media are so desperate to get a border war built so Hair Leader doesn’t look like a con artist (he does), that they are stumping Trump voters to chip in $80 apiece so they could fund the wall themselves.

Isn’t Mexico supposed to pay for Donald Trump’s border wall? Didn’t Donald Trump campaign on that proposition to the American people?

Michael Goodwin calls for Trump supporters to start a GoFundMe page in today’s NY Post.

Let the people who support the wall pay for it — directly and voluntarily. That’s what a number of readers suggest.–

“If the 63 million people who voted for Trump each pledge $80, we can build the wall.”

And as usual, a Trump supporter in the media who writes something that might help their petulant lordship, immediately got the call to be a guest on Fox and Friends.

This guy is an idiot, and he has a column in a (relatively) major newspaper and is allowed to bloviate on what is, alas, a major “news” network. I suppose it’s too much to expect such folks to address a rather fundamental issue here. Even ifyou raised all the money you’d need, you’d have no right to build the wall. It has to be authorized by Congress and you would need the capability to exercise the power of eminent domain to seize the land on which you built it. There are, in fact, a lot of property owners on the border who would prefer to keep their land as is, thank you very much.

The eminent domain issue isn’t discussed much in this context. Right wingers don’t like eminent domain. Supposedly. Witness the reaction from the right (all the way to the Supreme Court about the little pink house) when New London used eminent domain to facilitate a project that was supposed to bring jobs to the city. The city made the mistake of believing a major corporation, but that’s another issue. Of course, right wing hypocrisy knows no bounds, so we can rest assured that there would be no squawks from that quarter if the government seized border land to build a useless wall, so long as they could hate them some brown people in the process.

Trump’s defense: Don’t blame me, I can’t tell right from wrong

Trump is defending his Stormy Daniels related criminality by claiming that his lawyer should have told him that conspiring to pay her off in order to keep the public from finding out about the affair was wrong. The debate has therefore focused on whether Trump did, indeed, know it was wrong.

I once worked on a case involving a client who really did not appear to know right from wrong. He would make suggestions about possible actions he might take in a given situation. To his credit, when we explained that doing those things “would be wrong”, he accepted that and moved on. He was, despite his moral blindness, nonetheless, a somewhat likable guy. He was not, however, qualified to be president of the United States, precisely because he could not tell right from wrong.

No one seems to be pointing out that Trump’s defense boils down to a claim on his part that all on his own, he can’t tell right from wrong, and that unless someone tells him something is wrong, he can’t be held responsible for doing wrong. Focusing on whether he knew his illegal acts were wrong concedes that argument. Even if it does constitute a legal defense (which, given the facts that we know, seems unlikely), his admission that he can’t tell right from wrong disqualifies him from being considered a fit occupant of the office he has apparently obtained by fraud. I would humbly submit this obvious point should be front and center in the reporting on this issue.

A few thoughts on the future of the criminal in chief

Now that Trump has been more or less accused of a crime by his own Justice Department, we must consider where we go from here. There’s been a lot of discussion about indictments, impeachments, etc., and, at times there’s talk as if Trump’s downfall is inevitable. . Things are moving fast, and I may have this all wrong, but I’m going to put myself on record now. I’m sort of hoping I’ll be proven wrong in the long run, but I doubt it. This is a long post, but since no one reads this blog anymore anyway, I can indulge myself.

Back in what now look like the good old days, when we had a criminal named Nixon in the White House, I became certain that he would ultimately be removed from office once the existence of the tapes was made known. It was a given that they would contain a “smocking gun”, and it was also pretty much a given that Congress would do the right thing once Nixon’s guilt became clear.

While I’ve seen a lot of stuff on the net to the effect that Trump is going down, I’ve yet to see any reasonable scenario as to how that’s to be accomplished. That is, I haven’t seen any suggested pathway that leads to the end of the Trump presidency during his first term. I should add that I’m not sure I want him to leave office during this term, not unless he takes Pence with him.

He will not be indicted. I am an agnostic about whether a sitting president can be indicted. I incline toward the opinion that he can be, although perhaps the trial would have to await the end of his term.

I’m going to stray a bit here and point out that I think Laurence Tribe’s rationalefor claiming the constitution assumes a president can be indicted doesn’t hold water. Tribe says:

Just think about it: The president and vice president run as a ticket. No president selects a vice president who wouldn’t strongly consider doing for him exactly what Vice President Gerald Ford did for President Richard Nixon: namely, give the president a full pardon shortly after he becomes the former president — whether that sudden reversal of fortune occurs upon the president’s being turned out by the voters, or upon his being impeached and removed, or upon his resigning under the threat of such ignominious removal.

It’s crazy to assume that the framers of the impeachment power would have created a system in which even the most criminally corrupt president could permanently escape full accountability. Immunized from criminal trial while serving in office (as the ostensible Justice Department policy would require), such a president could count on receiving a get-out-of-jail-free card upon his exit. For he would leave behind him a newly minted (albeit unelected) president wielding the power to pardon any and all “offenses against the United States.”

There’s a glaring problem with the above. The framers did not envision anyone “running as a ticket”. In fact, truth be told, they didn’t contemplate anyone “running”. See, e.g., Thomas Jefferson pretending to be above the fray while James Madison ran his campaigns. But more importantly, they actually expected the electoral college to work in the way it was designed, which meant that there was no popular vote and that the individuals who got electoral votes might have no connection with one another, or might even be political rivals. See, e.g., Thomas Jefferson serving as Vice President while John Adams was president. Jefferson and Adams had been fairly close friends when they were both in France, but by 1796, they were definitely on opposite sides of the political fence. Adams would have had no reason to believe that Jefferson would pardon him if he went on a crime spree.

What the founders didexpect, in my humble opinion, was a Congress highly suspicious of any presidential overreach. A Congress which, regardless of party considerations, would impeach any felonious president, making the issue of prior indictment somewhat moot. Tribe may, ultimately, be right that a president can be indicted, but his history is a little weak.

Let me stray a bit more. The Founders also expected a judicial system in which the judges were at least somewhat removed from politics. Those days are gone. We can hope it’s not a permanent thing, but unless something radical happens, it will be the case during the entire Trump administration. Right now Trump is most obviously (in the sense of the evidence being out in plain sight) guilty of campaign finance violations. Not so long ago, Justice Kennedy declared in Citizens United that, given the fact that there was no evidence at all that money had any influence in politics, certain restrictions on political spending just couldn’t jibe with constitutional principles newly discovered by the Republican justices. It wouldn’t be a stretch for the court to rule that limits on campaign donations, and the obligation to disclose those donations, are also unconstitutional. In other words, it wouldn’t matter that Trump clearly broke the law, because the Supreme Court could rule that, the law being unconstitutional, it’s perfectly okay to break it.

Back to the main theme.

As I said, I haven’t heard any scenarios that are likely to play out.

Whatever the consitutional merits may be, there is a Justice Department rule that forbids indicting a sitting president. Mueller is subject to that rule, and so are the prosecutors in the Southern District of New York. There is little if any reason to believe that the rule will be modified by whoever is running the Justice Department for the next two years. It is therefore unlikely that Trump will be indicted while he is in office, or that he will be brought to trial during his term if he is indicted. If he is indicted, my guess is that it would be a prophylactic measure to stay the statute of limitations

There are probably multiple state charges that could be brought against Trump, but I think the same general considerations apply to them. It’s unlikely they would or could be resolved before the next election, given the endless pretrial appeals that can be expected. While such charges, one would hope, would add to the likelihood that he’d lose the election (I don’t think a Republican primary challenger is in the cards), consider that two loathsome Republican Congressmen just got reelected despite the fact they’ve been indicted on serious charges.

I’ve seen some speculationthat Trump might cut a deal to avoid prison, something akin to what Spiro Agnew did, trading a resignation for reduced or dismissed charges. I don’t see that happening, primarily because I don’t think formal charges will be pressed against him, and, lacking those, I don’t believe Trump can be brought to believe that he can’t get away with his crimes if he just hangs tough. He’s a lifelong criminal, protected in the legal realm by his wealth and in his psyche by his narcissism. He has been a lifelong beneficiary of the fact that we don’t put rich people on trial in this country unless they do kill someone on Fifth Avenue, in any other even, we look the other way. As an elected official, his actions have now been subjected to scrutiny, scrutiny to which the merely wealthy are rarely subjected. His narcissism makes it hard for him to understand that the rules (may) have changed so far as he is concerned. I don’t think he will ever accept that basic fact, and in his case, for the reasons I’ve given, he may be right, at least until 12:01 PM on January 20, 2021. If, on the other hand, an indictment is handed down in order to avoid the running of the statute of limitations, Trump may in fact try to work a deal. Given his track record on deal making, he’d probably end up in prison for the rest of his life, while claiming he’d beat the rap.

He will not be impeached. He should not be impeached, unless conviction in the Senate were a sure thing, and that is simply not the case. Senate Republicans have demonstrated beyond doubt that they will look the other way regardless of the nature of Trump’s criminal acts. They have nothing to lose by voting to acquit, and everything to lose by voting to convict. Unlike the Democrats, they fear their base, and rightfully so. Several have made it clearover the last few days that they don’t believe Trump did anything wrong, but if he did, well, it’s no big deal. Maybe if he did kill someone on Fifth Avenue they might change their position, but that’s highly doubtful.

Given the odds against a conviction, the House Democrats can and should continue to expose Trump’s criminality, but an impeachment would be a waste of time, and an acquittal would only serve to solidify Trump’s base.

As I said above, I think we’re safer with a lame duck Trump (provided the Democrats don’t do something really stupid and nominate a Biden or someone equally uninspiring) than with a Pence. Speaking of Pence, there has been some talk of Trump dumping Pence from the ticket. Assuming Pence is not indicted (he’s in up to his neck in the Russia stuff) I can’t see that happening. I’ve seen speculation that Trump will resign the presidency the morning of the 20th of January, 2021, so that Pence, as President for a few minutes or hours, can pardon him. Pence wouldn’t have much incentive to do that if Trump had dumped him. For that matter, he wouldn’t have much incentive even if Trump didn’t dump him; he’d be tarnishing his own reputation, such as it is, to no good end.

In sum, we’re stuck with him until the end of his term, unless he is indicted and opts to resign to avoid jail time. Assuming that doesn’t happen, it is not impossible that he will be reduced to a sort of irrelevance if the Democrats play their cards right, if it’s obvious that he’ll be facing charges at the end of his term, andif it’s obvious that he will not get another term. That would require those around him to quash any attempts on his part to salvage his personal situation by starting a war, either of the international variety or of the civil.

Say it ain’t so, Joe

Joe Biden sayshe’s the most qualified person in the country to be our next president.

In my humble opinion, there are very few potential candidates that Trump could beat in 2020. Biden tops the list. Also, if there were a god, I’d be asking him (or her) to please preserve us from Hillary, who has been making noisesabout being available. Actually, maybe she tops the list.

We don’t need an old, uninspiring candidate, particularly one with a Wall Street enabling past. I’m even against Bernie, not for ideological reasons, but because we need to pass the torch to a new generation, as a long ago president once said. Beto looks good to me. 

An observation

As is well known by now, a Republican candidate for the House from North Carolina committed voter fraudin connection with the election, by “harvesting” absentee ballots and either tossing those that didn’t go his way, or completing incomplete ballots without the voters consent, never mind input:

The amazing depth and breadth of apparent absentee voter fraud in North Carolina’s 9th district is breathtaking. In a nutshell, it appears that a Republican operative with convictions for fraud in his past harvested absentee ballots, discarding some and having day workers collect others, adding their signatures as witnesses to those they actually turned in.

One thing I’ve seen no comments about: The violations were so blatant that it is hard to believe anyone would engage in them unless they believed the authorities would look the other way. Besides paying people to do the harvesting, something it would be hard to hide, their lackeys witnessed an extraordinary number of ballots, which should have sent anyone’s spider sense tingling:

Woody Hester witnessed 44
James Singletary witnessed 42
Lisa Britt witnessed 42
Ginger Eason witnessed 28
Jessica Dowless witnessed 15
Cheryl Kinlaw witnessed 13
Deborah Edwards witnessed 11
Sandra Dowless witnessed 10

In addition, consider the fact that the percentage of absentee ballots cast for the Republican was about 69% when the percentage of absentee ballots case byRepublicans was less than 20%.

What this tells you, I think, is that the folks organizing this fraud fully expected that the relevant people would see, hear, and speak no evil. It makes you wonder, doesn’t it, how many other elections have been stolen using similar tactics.

Funny, isn’t it, that the only people insisting we have to suppress the vote to combat voter fraud are the only ones committing voter fraud.

study up on that.

UPDATE: Just saw this tweet. I don’t know how to embed tweets but here’s the gist:

The ’16 GOP primary, ’18 GOP primary; ’18 general elections in #NC09 were all decided by fewer than 1,000 votes. In all three cases, Dowless’s absentee ballot scheme was hidden in plain sight – in the election results. Amazing anyone thought they could get away with it forever.

2016 primary: Dowless works for Todd Johnson (R), who wins Bladen mail-in absentees 221-4-1 (!) over Harris (R) ; Pittenger (R).

2018 primary: Dowless works for Harris (R), who wins Bladen mail-in absentees 437-17 (!) over Pittenger (R).

A blatantly obvious absentee mill. #NC09

Something to investigate

The Democrats will have a lot on their plates once they take over in the House. There’s plenty to investigate. Here’s hoping they won’t forget to haul the corrupt Ajit Pai of the FCC before one or more committees, and look into the FCC’s handling of the process through which he did away with net neutrality. The comment system was obviously compromised, and the FCC has done everything it can to make sure no one finds out who was responsible. I don’t think there’s much Pai could do to avoid giving Congress the information he has withheld from the press and the New York Attorney General.

It really is astonishing that corruption is now so endemic in Washington that the level of corruption exhibited by Pai barely registers.

A good start

I believe I’ve written before about what the Democrats should do with their house majority: pass legislation that people want regardless of the fact that it won’t pass the Senate and/or would be vetoed by the very stable genius. It looks like the Democrats are going to do exactly that, with the first item of business being an anti-corruption package:

Here are some of the things the surviving House Republicans will have to oppose if they don’t want to support House Resolution 1.

  • A requirement that members of Congress stop using taxpayer money to settle sexual harassment cases or buy first-class plane tickets.
  • A new ethical code for the US Supreme Court.
  • Restoration of the gutted Voting Rights Act of 1965.
  • Public financing of campaigns, including a voluntary 6-1 match for candidates for president and Congress.
  • A requirement that Super PACs and “dark money” political organizations make the identity of their donors public.
  • A requirement that social media platforms like Facebook and Twitter disclose the source of money for political ads they run and an accounting of how much money was spent.
  • Money for improved elections security, including a requirement that the Director of National Intelligence provide regular updates on foreign threats.
  • A requirement that President Trump release his tax returns.

There is, of course, a problem, as there always is with Democrats. This package is one that should easily get nearly unanimous Democratic support, but when it comes to things that actually have an immediate impact on people’s lives (and poll just as well as the items above) the conservative wing of the Democratic Party, including many of the new members that were recruited by the DCCC precisely because they were conservative, will no doubt obstruct. Medicare for all, which is hugely popular, something everyone can understand, blessed with a moniker that Fox will have a hard time abusing, and something that makes absolutely good sense, will probably never get an up or down vote, since the right wing of the party will be calling the shots. Bear in mind that with the Republicans, the “moderates” are made to toe the line with the party’s extremists calling the shots. We don’t have extremists in the Democratic Party; we have so-called extremists who are espousing causes that large majorities (including many Republicans) want. Our “extremists “ do not call the shots, our right wingers do. This inability to control its rightest fringe is a self inflicted problem for the Democrats.

Anyway, the bill mentioned above is a good start. Who knows, maybe they can surprise me and keep them coming.

No reason to wallow

This is one of many blog posts I’ve read recently crowing about the number of corporations demanding their money back from Cindy Hyde-Smith after she let her racist flag fly a little too high. Among those sending bribe money her way was Major League Baseball. Now that she has announced to the world that she is a racist, these corporations are unanimous: her racism conflicts with her values.

One must ask, what was it they thought harmonized with their values when they donated the money in the first place? She is a Southern Republican, which means she is almost be definition a racist committed to depriving black people of all their rights, and the rest of us of the benefits of a sane healthcare system, etc. How was that consistent with their values? How does Major League Baseball explain its donation to the many black players upon whom it relies to draw people into the baseball stadiums to watch the overpriced games?

It seems a little silly for left-wing, or Democratically oriented, blogs to wallow in the fact that these entities have asked for their money back (I’ve yet to see any evidence that any money was returned). We should be attacking them and demanding answers: why did they give this person money in the first place?

That’s the way you do it

Apparently at least one Democrat has learned the obvious lesson of the last several years. Incoming House Oversight Chair Elijah Cummings isn’t about to give minority Republicans subpoena power in the new Congress

Let’s step back a bit and consider the context in which we’ve learned this. The execrable Chuck Todd asked Cummings whyever he wouldn’t give this power to the Republicans, since Cummings felt it was unfair for the Republicans to take it away from the Democrats:

CHUCK TODD: You did not have your own subpoena power when you were ranking member.

REP. ELIJAH CUMMINGS: That’s right. For a long time.

CHUCK TODD: And it was the first time that had ever happened, compared to previous congresses, correct?

REP. ELIJAH CUMMINGS: Right.

CHUCK TODD: Do you plan on granting your ranking member, whoever it is on the Republican side, subpoena authority?

REP. ELIJAH CUMMINGS: No, no.

CHUCK TODD: So why not? Explain why you wouldn’t. If you believe this is something that should’ve been granted to you when you were in the minority.

You see, Chuck believes that when we’re talking about Democrats, they should follow the golden rule, and do unto the Republicans as the Republicans shoulddo unto them, but never do. Cummings is declining to do that, and with extremely good reason.

I think I’ve mentioned on this blog before that years ago I read a very persuasive article in Scientific American, that argued, in essence, that the most successful strategy to change someone else’s behavior is to engage in tit for tat. That is, when in the position to do so, give the offending party a taste of its own medicine, in the same dosage as they administered to you. It is the only way to make the offender pay a penalty for bad behavior. Were the Democrats, to do as Todd so obviously believes they should do, they would essentially be rewarding the Republicans for their bad behavior, since they would receive the message, loud and clear, that they can engage in bad behavior without consequences.

I realize this is so obvious that it hardly needs saying, except by way of explanation to people like Chuck Todd, who resolutely insist on the one sided both siderism that the Beltway media has engaged in for years. But I thought it was worth pointing out that it is happening again, and that it’s good that Cummings, at least, is having none of it, and, one hopes and suspects, neither are any of the other Democrats. That represents a change from past Democratic behavior, when they’ve caved to Beltway thinking.