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Tuesday 13 June 2023

NSC maintains initial reporting on Chinese spy base in Cuba was inaccurate


A National Security Council spokesperson on Monday doubled down on comments from the White House and the Pentagon over the weekend calling initial reporting about Chinese efforts to establish a new spy base in Cuba “inaccurate.”

“The original reporting, as we said, was inaccurate,” spokesperson John Kirby said during the regularly scheduled White House press briefing. “We did the best we could in the moment to be as forthcoming as we could.”

On Thursday, The Wall Street Journal, followed by POLITICO and other outlets, reported that China had been in conversations with Cuba to set up an eavesdropping facility roughly 100 miles from Florida — reporting that officials called inaccurate, without elaborating. But on Saturday, officials confirmed that such a base already existed, and has since at least 2019.

Kirby denounced the sources behind the initial report.

“We were as forthcoming as we should have been at the time the first stories appeared,” Kirby said on Monday. “Sadly, not everybody seems to take it as seriously as we do. … Clearly, there’s a source or sources out there that think it’s somehow beneficial to put this kind of information into the public stream. And it’s absolutely not.”

Kirby also rejected the idea that the White House or the Pentagon had walked back comments calling the early reports inaccurate.

“The fact that we came out a couple of days later and provided some clarifying information does not mean, and should not be taken as I’ve seen in some of the press reporting, as some kind of walk-back,” he said.



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McCarthy tees off on Trump indictment amid conservative rebellion


Speaker Kevin McCarthy Monday afternoon welcomed his brief break from talking about House conservatives’ open rebellion — even if it was to talk about another indictment of Donald Trump.

Those are the two political headaches the California Republican is facing this week: figuring out the best approach to Trump’s legal fight and finding a compromise with a band of far-right rebels that has vowed to jam up the House floor until leaders agree to some not-quite-clear demands.

McCarthy seemed to have a more substantive answer to the former problem. He quickly defended Trump, who last week was indicted for mishandling classified documents, echoing Republicans’ assertions that indicting Trump amounted to a double standard in a 20-minute gaggle with reporters. But the speaker dodged when asked whether the former president was innocent, adding that he hasn’t spoken to Trump since the indictment.

“I believe President Trump has not been treated equally like everybody else in this process,” McCarthy said.



McCarthy promised that House Republicans will use their majority to investigate the investigators — a repeat of the conference’s strategy in responding to the Trump indictment brought by New York District Attorney Alvin Bragg earlier this year. He also didn’t rule out Special Counsel Jack Smith being called to testify before Congress, arguing that there was a “responsibility” to understand decisions made by the Justice Department and FBI.

“Why did [Smith] think President Trump should be treated differently than anybody else? I think the American public does need to know,” McCarthy said. Republicans have called foul on the FBI’s previous decision to not charge Hillary Clinton over her mishandling of classified documents, which they’ve argued was comparable to Trump’s transgressions.

McCarthy hinted at other investigative steps Republicans could take, casting fresh doubt on allowing the FBI to build a new headquarters — POLITICO previously reported that key Republicans are discussing blocking the funds.

The speaker had fewer answers when it came to an ongoing conservative rebellion, which kept leaders from passing legislation last week and remained unresolved Monday. When asked if he had the votes to revive that legislation, McCarthy said that leaders would “eventually.”

Already, it’s clear that House Republicans’ response will come from multiple corners of the conference as it plays a familiar role: Trump’s unofficial defense team. Judiciary Committee Chair Jim Jordan (R-Ohio) has already requested new details on last year’s FBI search of Mar-a-Lago for the classified records. McCarthy has also pointed to Oversight Committee Chair James Comer (R-Ky.), who has jurisdiction over the National Archives. Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-Ga.) vowed on Monday that she would try to defund Smith.

The House Intelligence Committee has already talked behind closed doors with National Archives officials earlier this year. Though they largely sidestepped talking about the details of the Trump investigation, Archives officials did delve into how they realized records were missing.

In addition to the arguments about former Democratic presidential nominee Clinton, Republicans have also accused the FBI of a “double standard” between the investigation into Trump’s and Biden’s handling of classified information. Those two cases have key differences, as the search of Mar-a-Lago came after a months-long back-and-forth between Trump’s team and Archives and Justice Department officials.

McCarthy — asked about Trump storing classified documents in a bathroom, according to the Justice Department indictment — quipped back: “A bathroom door locks.”



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Californians: Have you asked Sens. Feinstein or Padilla for help recently? Send us your receipts.


Part of a senator’s job involves helping the people they represent cut through federal red tape to access services or solve problems with veterans benefits, expedited passports, Social Security checks and more.

POLITICO’s California team wants to know how well Sens. Dianne Feinstein and Alex Padilla are responding to residents’ requests and providing the help they need.

If you are a California resident who has reached out to Sen. Feinstein or Sen. Padilla to ask for casework assistance, we want to see emails or letters you’ve sent or received from the senators and their staff since 2022.

We also want to hear from anyone else who may have information on how casework assistance is handled in the senators’ offices, whether you’re a current or former staffer, a federal agency liaison who communicates with them or someone else.

Please fill out our brief survey below or at this link.

We won’t use your name or clearly identifiable details about your case without speaking to you and getting your permission. We may use anonymous data collected from this survey for our reporting.




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Monday 12 June 2023

Maxine Waters, Elizabeth Warren clash over investment rules


Rep. Maxine Waters and Sen. Elizabeth Warren — long-time allies when it comes to cracking down on Wall Street — are finding themselves at odds over a GOP push to scale back investment guardrails.

At the heart of the rift is a series of Republican-led proposals that would make it easier for individual Americans to buy stakes in startups and other privately held businesses — an area of investment that’s less regulated than the shares trading on the New York Stock Exchange or Nasdaq.

Waters, a California Democrat, is using her lead role on the House Financial Services Committee to rally support for the measures, arguing that existing restrictions tied to wealth and income shut out otherwise-savvy investors from economic opportunity.

Her backing helped House Republicans pass the bills and send them to the Senate in recent days — despite an outcry from consumer advocates and opposition from progressives including Warren and fellow Massachusetts Democrat Rep. Ayanna Pressley. Eighteen Democrats — among them, Reps. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-N.Y.) and Katie Porter (D-Calif.) — broke with Waters to vote against one of the bills when it hit the House floor late last month.

“House Financial Services passed legislation to reduce the number of people who will be covered by basic consumer protection laws,” Warren said in an interview. “That's not good for investors, and ultimately, not good for markets.”

The conflict is exposing an internal rift on the left over the extent to which the government should dictate access to investment opportunities — similar, in some ways, to how cryptocurrency has scrambled progressives’ approach to financial regulation. The fight is poised to reveal how much sway consumer protection hardliners like Warren hold over the rest of their party when it comes to rules that impact how Americans save, speculate and build wealth.

“This was a little bit of opening the door to allow people — who can be tested, and who are smart, and who can handle this better than someone who's a millionaire — to have a chance,” Waters told POLITICO.

The fight is being triggered by three bills that House Financial Services Chair Patrick McHenry (R-N.C.) is driving as part of a broader push to loosen Securities and Exchange Commission rules to boost capital raising for startups.

The legislation would seek to expand the number of Americans who qualify as so-called accredited investors — a category of individuals, as defined by the SEC, who can put their money into private-market investments that aren’t subject to the same transparency requirements as publicly traded companies.

The SEC’s current threshold to qualify as an accredited investor hinges in part on an individual’s economic status. They can meet it if they have a net worth of over $1 million or a $200,000 annual income. Investment professionals and corporate insiders can also qualify.

The bills Waters helped usher through the House would, among other things, enshrine the SEC’s current wealth-based cut-off, which investor watchdogs argue is too permissive as is. They would also allow more individuals to gain access to the investments after taking a test or meeting certain educational and professional criteria.

“I've always been a little bit uneasy about considering those who have more money” as those who “know better how to spend their money,” Waters said. “And of course, I've been concerned about those who don't have very much and may be destroying their life.”

Business groups like the U.S. Chamber of Commerce are lobbying for the changes on the grounds that they expand opportunities for investors to get in early on the next great startup.

“Getting capital to the businesses that need it shouldn’t be a partisan issue,” said Evan Williams, the executive director of the Chamber’s Center for Capital Markets Competitiveness.

But investor advocates including the Consumer Federation of America and AARP have pushed for tightening restrictions to help shield Americans from the next great startup disaster, like FTX or Theranos.

They argue that even the current net worth and income thresholds — which are not tied to inflation and haven’t been updated since the 1980s — fail to safeguard investors. The number of U.S. households that qualified as accredited investors went from 1.3 million in 1983 to 16 million in 2019, according to the SEC.

Healthy Markets Association CEO Tyler Gellasch, a former SEC official who now represents institutional investors, said the big winners of the proposals are private equity and venture capital funds, as well as the executives of the companies in which they invest.

Some House Democrats who ended up voting for the legislation voiced concerns when it was first brought up in committee. Rep. Stephen Lynch (D-Mass.) said they were “voting with the Democratic lead.”

Rep. Jill Tokuda (D-Hawaii), who voted against the bill that would set up an accredited investor test, said the proposal appeared to be designed “in a manner that predetermines the certification outcome.”

“I find it concerning that this measure would not address disparities in access to information and gauge an individual’s ability to evaluate the value of those securities,” she said in a statement.

Now that the House has passed the bills, the organizations lobbying against the proposals are shifting their focus to convincing Senate Democrats to block them. While senators have yet to introduce companion legislation, there is a possibility that the proposals could be tacked on to another bill that moves through Congress, including potential must-pass legislation.

“It’s really frustrating,” said Micah Hauptman, a former SEC official who now serves as director of investor protection at the Consumer Federation of America. “Democrats say the right things about wanting to protect investors — and then they vote the wrong way.”



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George Soros reportedly cedes control of empire to a younger son


NEW YORK — Billionaire investor turned philanthropist George Soros is ceding control of his $25 billion empire to a younger son, Alexander Soros, according to an exclusive interview with The Wall Street Journal published online Sunday.

Soros’ business holdings include his nonprofit Open Society Foundations, which is active in more than 120 countries around the world and funnels about $1.5 billion annually to groups such as those that back human rights and promote the growth of democracies around the world, according to its website.

The 37-year-old, who goes by Alex, told the Wall Street Journal that he is “more political” than his 92-year-old father, who has been a right-wing target for his backing of liberal causes such as reducing racial bias in the justice system. But he noted that the two “think alike.”

Alex said he was broadening his father’s “liberal aims” and embracing different causes including voting and abortion rights, as well as gender equity. He said he aims to keep using the family’s wealth to back left-leaning U.S. politicians.

Alex told the Wall Street Journal that he recently met with Biden administration officials, Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer and heads of state, including Brazil’s President Luiz InĂ¡cio Lula da Silva and Canada’s Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, to push for issues related to the family foundation.

In December, the board of Open Society Foundations, known as OSF, elected Alex as its chairman, succeeding his father. The newspaper also reported that Alex now directs political activity as president of Soros’ super PAC.

The Wall Street Journal reported that the younger Soros is the only family member on the investment committee overseeing Soros Fund Management, which manages money for the foundation and the family.

During the interview with the newspaper, Alex expressed concern that former President Donald Trump would return to the White House and hinted that the Soros organization would play a key financial role in the 2024 presidential race.

“As much as I would love to get money out of politics, as long as the other side is doing it, we will have to do it, too,” he said in the interview that took place at the fund manager’s New York offices.

Alex is the oldest of two sons from George Soros’ marriage with his second wife, Susan Weber, according to the Wall Street Journal.

The appointment passes over George Soros’ elder son Jonathan Soros, 52, a lawyer with a background in finance. He had been believed to be the clear successor until “a falling out and a change of heart,” according to the paper.



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Trump to host first major fundraiser the day of his arraignment


Former President Donald Trump is set to host the first fundraiser for his 2024 campaign on Tuesday evening, hours after he is expected to be arraigned in a Miami courtroom.

The fundraiser will take place at his Bedminster, N.J. golf club, for what advisers say will be the first in a string of gatherings for donors and bundlers that will take place across the country.

The campaign said it expects to raise $2 million at the event, helping to pad the former president’s coffers just weeks before the end of the second-quarter deadline and as Trump gears up for what could be a long and expensive nomination fight.

Earlier in the day, Trump is due to be in Miami, summoned over charges stemming from his handling and retention of classified documents he took from the White House to his Mar-a-Lago estate in South Florida. The ex-president has been defiant since his indictment last week, pledging to stay in the race even if convicted.

Trump is expected to join the fundraiser just after making public remarks in which he will address the indictment, according to a person familiar with the plans. Preparations for the fundraiser were in the works long before it was known that he would be making a court appearance that same day.

Polls show Trump with large leads over his Republican primary rivals. Yet Trump is facing a well-funded opponent in Ron DeSantis, who has attracted the support of some of the party’s biggest donors. The Florida governor has raised more than $8 million following his late May campaign launch. A day after announcing his candidacy, DeSantis convened his top bundlers in Miami.

Trump has long relied on small dollar donors to propel him politically. The average contribution, those involved in his 2024 campaign say, is around $30. The former president drew a wave of online contributions in late March, after he was indicted in a separate case involving alleged hush money payments he made to a pornography actress, and his team has been sending out fundraising appeals to supporters trying to capitalize on conservative outrage over the charges in the classified documents case.

But aides say that, in contrast to his previous campaigns, the former president is also regularly working the phones to woo bundlers and other major contributors. Trump aides say they expect more than 300 bundlers to be on board the campaign by the end of June.

According to a copy of Tuesday’s invitation, supporters who bundle at least $100,000 will attend a private candlelight dinner. Those who give less will be rewarded in other ways, including with photo opportunities with Trump and with a “VIP reception with elected officials & special guests.”

The fundraiser will go towards a joint fundraising committee that will split its proceeds between the Trump campaign, which receives 90 percent of everything raised, and Trump’s Save America political action committee, which receives the remaining 10 percent. Trump has been using the PAC to pay for non-campaign-specific activities, such as paying his legal bills.



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Sunday 11 June 2023

North Carolina GOP censures Sen. Tillis


GREENSBORO, N.C. — Republican delegates in North Carolina voted Saturday at their annual convention to censure Thom Tillis, the state’s senior U.S. senator, for backing LGBTQ+ rights, immigration and gun violence policies.

As Sen. Tillis has gained influence in Congress for his willingness to work across the aisle, his record of supporting some key policies has raised concerns among some state Republicans that the senator has strayed from conservative values.

Several delegates in Greensboro criticized Tillis, who has held his seat in the Senate since 2015, for his work last year on the Respect For Marriage Act, which enshrined protections for same-sex and interracial marriages in federal law.

Both the state and national GOP platforms oppose same-sex marriage. But Tillis, who had opposed it earlier in his political career, was among the early supporters of the law who lobbied his GOP colleagues in Congress to vote in favor of it.

Others criticized him for challenging former President Donald Trump’s immigration policies and for supporting a measure that provided funds for red flag laws, which allow state courts to authorize the temporary removal of firearms from people who they believe might pose a danger to themselves or others.

The North Carolina senator initially opposed Trump’s plan to use military construction dollars to build a wall along the nation’s southern border, but he eventually shifted his position.

Tillis spokesperson Daniel Keylin defended the senator’s voting record, writing in an email to The Associated Press that he “keeps his promises and delivers results.”

“He will never apologize for his work passing the largest tax cut in history, introducing legislation to secure the border and end sanctuary cities, delivering desperately-needed funding to strengthen school safety and protecting the rights of churches to worship freely based on their belief in traditional marriage,” Keylin said.

While the vote Saturday, which took place behind closed doors, cannot remove Tillis from office, supporters said they hope it sends a firm message of dissatisfaction. A two-thirds majority of the state party’s 1,801 voting delegates was needed for the resolution to pass, party spokesperson Jeff Moore said.


“We need people who are unwavering in their support for conservative ideals,” said Jim Forster, an 81-year-old delegate from Guilford. “His recent actions don’t reflect the party’s shift to the right — in fact, they’re moving in the exact wrong direction.”

Several state legislators, including Sen. Bobby Hanig of Currituck County, criticized the decision, saying it’s a bad idea to create more divisions within the party ahead of an election year when party unity will be paramount.

“I believe that a mob mentality doesn’t do us any good,” Hanig said. “Senator Tillis does a lot for North Carolina, he does a lot for the coastal communities, so why would I want to make him mad?”

State Sen. Jim Burgin of Harnett County said the vote to censure Tillis sets a dangerous precedent and does not allow enough flexibility for individual interpretation of party values.

Burgin questioned whether his own vote last month for North Carolina’s 12-week abortion ban would similarly put him at risk of being censured because it’s out of line with the Republican platform, which states that life begins at conception.

“I don’t think we need to be attacking our own,” he said. “You don’t shoot your own elephants.”



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