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Friday 27 October 2023

Blake Masters announces House bid in Arizona, forgoing another run for Senate


Former Republican Senate candidate Blake Masters announced Thursday that he would run for an open congressional seat in the Phoenix suburbs, changing course from a planned second run for Senate in 2024.

“I’m running for Congress, to fight for Arizona’s 8th,” Masters tweeted Thursday, along with a video featuring his family. “Biden has failed. We need Trump back. We need to stop inflation, Build the Wall, avoid WW3, and secure Arizona’s water future. We need to fight for our families.”

Masters, who ran against Sen. Mark Kelly (D-Ariz.) in a marquee Senate race in the 2022 midterm elections and lost by nearly 5 percentage points, had been hailed by conservative figures like Tucker Carlson as the “future of the Republican Party.” He has also received financial support from tech billionaire Peter Thiel.

Masters received considerable attention during the 2022 campaign for his views on abortion and his flirtations with “the great replacement,” a racist conspiracy theory promoted by white nationalists that contends elites — and in some cases Jews and Democrats — plan to use nonwhite immigrants to radically change the country’s demographics.

He had previously planned to make another run for Senate, this time against incumbent Sen. Kyrsten Sinema (I-Ariz.). Masters’ entry could have kicked off a tough and expensive primary against Pinal County Sheriff Mark Lamb and former gubernatorial candidate and television reporter Kari Lake.

The safely Republican district, which encompasses many of the northern and western suburbs of Phoenix, went for former President Donald Trump by 13 points in 2020 and has been represented by outgoing Rep. Debbie Lesko, a Republican, since 2018.

Lesko announced earlier this month that she would retire in 2024, saying in a statement that “I want to spend more time with my husband, my 94-year-old mother, my three children, and my five grandchildren.”

Masters, who lives 120 miles away from the district in Tucson, will face off against Abraham Hamadeh, a former prosecutor and candidate for Arizona attorney general in 2022, in the Republican primary. Hamadeh, who lives just outside the district, has been endorsed by Lake and other prominent Republicans. Both Hamadeh and Masters unsuccessfully challenged their 2022 losses in court.

“All the way from Tucson, Blake Masters apparently has crawled out from under the rock he was hiding under after his terrible performance last November and now wants to run for a district hours away,” Erica Knight, a spokesperson for the Hamadeh campaign, told POLITICO.

“The key endorsements for Abe Hamadeh so far, including Kari Lake, Ric Grenell, Kash Patel and Bernie Kerik, tell you everything you need to know about who the true America First fighter is in this race,” Knight added.



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Gavin Newsom slams Maine Republicans over gun control after mass shooting


California Gov. Gavin Newsom slammed Maine Republicans on social media for rejecting a gun control bill that would have required a 72-hour waiting period for firearm purchases earlier this year after a gunman opened fire and killed at least 18 people in Lewiston Wednesday night.

Newsom pointed the finger at Republicans, but Democrats have control of both Maine's House and Senate. The June legislation's rejection was bipartisan, failing in the House 73-69 with 65 Republicans and seven Democrats voting against and in the Senate 24-11 with all 13 Republicans and 11 Democrats voting against.

Democratic Maine Gov. Janet Mills had remained largely silent on the proposal. At a press conference Thursday, Mills condemned the shootings without mentioning gun control.

“They seriously could not fathom waiting 72 hours to buy a gun,” Newsom wrote on X, formerly known as Twitter, in a post that also criticized Maine's lack of laws to ban assault weapons, require permits to carry a gun in public or require background checks on all gun sales.

The California governor also repeated his calls for further gun control action from Congress. He has been vocal about calling out Republicans for not passing gun safety legislation, particularly after two mass shootings in his state left 19 people dead earlier this year.

On Wednesday night, a man shot and killed at least 18 people and injured at least 13 at a restaurant and a bowling alley in Lewiston, Maine, and then fled the scene. Law enforcement continued to search for the suspect, identified as Robert Card, on Thursday.

Card was described as a firearms instructor believed to be in the Army Reserve and assigned to a training facility in Saco, Maine, according to the Associated Press.



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Thursday 26 October 2023

From Trump loyalists to state witnesses: The evolution of 3 ex-members of Trump's legal team


In November 2020, Donald Trump mobilized a team of lawyers to help challenge the presidential election results. Their aim was to push state legislators to unlawfully appoint presidential electors and make baseless claims that voting machines were tampered with.

Nearly three years later, these same lawyers are abandoning the former president with guilty pleas to Georgia prosecutors. Trump and 18 allies were indicted in August on racketeering charges stemming from their efforts to overturn Joe Biden’s victory in Georgia.

Over the past week, three Trump-affiliated lawyers — Jenna Ellis, Kenneth Chesebro and Sidney Powell — struck plea deals that will allow them to avoid prison. The three guilty pleas could spell bad news for Trump because the deals require all three lawyers to cooperate with prosecutors and potentially testify for the state at trial.

Here is how the former president’s lawyers went from having his back to turning against him.

Jenna Ellis



Before she became part of team Trump, Ellis was a staunch critic of the former president, calling him an “idiot” in 2016. But the attorney became a Trump campaign adviser in November 2019 and was soon known for going to bat for him on TV and social media.

“In 2016, people were hesitant because they weren’t sure that President Trump would fulfill his promises, as opposed to the 2020 election where he has a track record where he has been so pro-American family,” Ellis said in an appearance on Fox Business in August 2019.

After the election, Ellis became part of a legal team challenging the results. She often traveled with Rudy Giuliani to various Biden-won states and pushed Republican lawmakers to appoint alternate slates of presidential electors.

“I’m so proud of this president. That President Trump is completely behind protecting election integrity and is making sure that the people and these corrupt election officials, from governors to secretaries of state all the way down to these local election officials, that they don’t get away with this,” Ellis said after the election in November 2020.

Prosecutors charged Ellis in August with a felony for participating in an effort to make false statements to Georgia lawmakers about election fraud. She pleaded guilty Tuesday.

Ellis had distanced herself from the former president, calling him a “malignant narcissist” on her radio show in September. She tearfully expressed remorse to the judge in her plea.

“What I did not do but should have done, your honor, was to make sure that the facts the other lawyers alleged to be true were in fact true,” Ellis said in court Tuesday. “In the frenetic pace of attempting to raise challenges to the election in several states, including Georgia, I failed to do my due diligence.”

Kenneth Chesebro



Chesebro worked as an outside adviser to the Trump campaign and was a behind-the-scenes architect of the far-fetched legal arguments that Trump used to justify his last-ditch attempt to remain in power.

Chesebro sent memos in November and December 2020 to James Troupis, a former Wisconsin judge and a lawyer with the Trump campaign who asked for Chesebro’s help on campaign litigation in Wisconsin, describing the push to send pro-Trump electors to Congress as a way to preserve Trump’s chances to win in post-election legal battles. But when those courtroom battles all fizzled, Chesebro’s rationale for the false electors evolved, and he noted that pro-Trump members of Congress could invoke them to potentially flip the Electoral College to Trump on Jan. 6, 2021.

Chesebro has largely stayed quiet about his involvement in efforts to overturn the 2020 election. In an interview with Talking Points Memo in June 2022, he said that it was the “duty of any attorney to leave no stone unturned in examining the legal options that exist in a particular situation.”

“Lawyers have an ethical obligation to explore every possible argument that might benefit their clients. In my work for the Trump-Pence campaign, I fulfilled that ethical obligation,” Chesebro told the outlet.

Chesebro pleaded guilty last week to a single felony count of conspiring to file false documents.

Sidney Powell



Powell became prominent during the Trump presidency as the attorney for Michael Flynn, who served as Trump’s first national security adviser, later pleaded guilty to lying to the FBI and was eventually pardoned by Trump. Powell was later hired to Trump’s legal team to challenge the results of the 2020 election.

The firebrand attorney is best known for speaking to the media, particularly Fox News, about conspiracy theories of foreign governments manipulating voting machines. Despite being pushed away by the Trump campaign soon after the 2020 election, Powell continued to advise Trump.

“This is stunning, heartbreaking, infuriating and the most unpatriotic acts that I can even imagine for people in this country to have participated in any way shape or form. And I want the American public to know right now that we will not be intimidated,” Powell said at a press conference after the election that is best remembered for the image of Rudy Giuliani’s hair dye running down his face.

Powell appeared in the Oval Office in December 2020 to push Trump to use the military to seize voting machines. Trump came close to appointing her special counsel and empowering her to lead that effort before rejecting it amid pushback from White House advisers.

“Most of us there knew something very wrong had happened,” Powell said in an August 2021 interview. “It was obvious to me from the mathematical and statistical impossibilities that occurred the night of our election. I already had some knowledge of the ability of voting machines to be tampered with.”

In the Georgia indictment, prosecutors accused Powell of leading an effort to illegally breach voting equipment after the election in Coffee County, Ga.

Last week, Powell pleaded guilty to six misdemeanor counts to commit intentional interference with performance of election duties. Powell also agreed to testify against the other defendants in the case, including Trump.

Three days after Powell pleaded guilty, Trump claimed on his social media platform, Truth Social, that Powell was never his attorney.

“MS. POWELL WAS NOT MY ATTORNEY, AND NEVER WAS. In fact, she would have been conflicted,” Trump wrote on Truth Social.

In November 2020, however, Trump touted Powell as among “a truly great team, added to our other wonderful lawyers and representatives!”



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ACLU: Trump’s gag order in federal case is unconstitutional


For four years during former President Donald Trump's presidency, the American Civil Liberties Union was one of his biggest courtroom adversaries. Now, the group is taking his side in a high-profile fight over what Trump can say as a criminal defendant.

The ACLU on Wednesday stepped into the battle over Trump’s federal gag order, arguing that U.S. District Judge Tanya Chutkan violated Trump’s First Amendment rights as well as the public’s right to hear him when she issued the order earlier this month. Chutkan is presiding over the criminal case special counsel Jack Smith is pursuing against Trump for trying to overturn the 2020 presidential election results.

“The obvious and unprecedented public interest in this prosecution, as well as the widespread political speech that it has generated and will continue to generate, only underscores the need to apply the most stringent First Amendment standard to a restraint on Defendant’s speech rights,” ACLU attorneys wrote in a friend-of-the-court brief.

The group urged Chutkan to reevaluate her order, calling it both vague and overbroad, with aspects of its meaning “unknown and perhaps unknowable.” One particular uncertainty the ACLU seized on was the meaning of Chutkan’s prohibition on statements that “target” Smith, his prosecutors, court personnel, defense attorneys or witnesses.

“Reading the order, Defendant cannot possibly know what he is permitted to say, and what he is not,” the group wrote.

Trump’s lawyers opposed the gag and have appealed to the D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals. Chutkan has temporarily lifted the gag order while she mulls a request to keep it on ice during that appeal.

While Chutkan said during a hearing on the issue that Trump should not be treated differently from other defendants simply because he’s running for president, the ACLU said the ongoing campaign heightens the public interest in letting the former president speak freely about his prosecution and other grievances against Smith’s office.

“Defendant’s ability to speak publicly about the substance of the prosecution, even including potential witnesses and testimony, is in many ways inextricable from the 2024 presidential campaign in which he is a declared candidate,” the ACLU brief said.

The ACLU brief also echoed arguments from Trump’s lawyers that his speech should not be curtailed simply because some who hear it may have acted violently or issued explicit threats to the targets of his ire.

“The First Amendment does not authorize the Court to impose a judicial gag order on Defendant merely because third parties who hear his public statements may behave badly of their own accord,” the group wrote.

Taking Trump’s side in court is a new look for the ACLU, which once boasted of filing more than 400 legal actions against the Trump administration and saw a huge influx of donations for its legal battles against Trump policies such as the travel ban.

Undoubtedly aware that many ACLU supporters will be surprised to see the organization coming to Trump’s defense, the group’s filing includes a blunt condemnation of his efforts to overturn the 2020 election.

“Defendant’s role in the events related to his obstruction of the peaceful transition of power are relevant not only to the proceedings in this Court, but to the country’s decision about whether he deserves to be elected again,” the organization’s brief says. “Much that he has said has been patently false and has caused great harm to countless individuals, as well as to the Republic itself. Some of his words and actions have led him to this criminal indictment, which alleges grave wrongdoing in contempt of the peaceful transition of power.”



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The Terrifying Learning Curve Facing Mike Johnson


When Republicans drafted Paul Ryan into the speakership eight years ago, it was head-spinning. The magnitude of the task and sheer volume of responsibilities were jarring, even for someone with more than 15 years of legislative experience.

Experience, it seems, is no longer an attractive attribute for a Republican speaker. It was perhaps Mike Johnson’s short tenure in the House that allowed him to win the gavel. But now he faces a terrifyingly steep learning curve and almost no margin for error.

Each speaker is different, and Johnson will come to develop his own way of running the House. In the short term, however, a neophyte speaker will naturally create a leadership void simply by nature of being new to the job. That might mean Steve Scalise, a fellow Louisianan who was just passed over for the top job, becomes the most powerful majority leader in decades — perhaps since Tom DeLay.

I’ve seen firsthand how difficult it is to be thrust into the speakership, serving as an aide at Ryan’s side after he took over from my former boss John Boehner.

At the time of his ascension, Ryan was arguably the most famous member of the House of Representatives. He had recently served as Mitt Romney’s vice-presidential running mate. He had engaged in high-level negotiations within his own party and with Democrats, and he successfully moved difficult legislation through the House and into law. He understood the media and knew how to drive a message. He had relationships with major donors. He was also as aligned with leadership as anyone outside of it.

What he quickly learned was that none of it mattered much. Nothing can fully prepare you for the speakership.



Ryan leaned heavily on Kevin McCarthy, then majority leader and someone who had also just seen his own speakership hopes dashed, for institutional knowledge and to guide the decisions needed to keep the House moving forward during a period of major disruption. We simply could not have gotten through the first year without him.

While Johnson goes through some on-the-job training, Scalise may be the person best positioned to shape and drive legislative outcomes. If he’s willing to wield power, Scalise could have enormous influence on the ultimate success of the Johnson speakership. Because for Mike Johnson, the job ahead is daunting, and the early weeks and months will be an exercise in learning all he never knew he didn’t know.

Johnson is aware that he needs to set an agenda for the House, but he will quickly realize this is a more sprawling undertaking than meets the eye. There are the big things — keeping the government open, passing a supplemental appropriations bill to support Ukraine and Israel — but also countless other legislative priorities of members and committees in various stages of readiness. It’s his job to make sense of all of it and demonstrate to members that they are making progress.

Indeed, two words will come to define life for Johnson: member management. Anyone outside of the top levels of leadership simply has no idea the volume of member priorities, problems, rivalries and interpersonal dynamics that you must appreciate and navigate. Being armed with this background alone makes Scalise invaluable. Johnson is likely already hearing from an endless parade of members seeking this and that — promises he often can’t keep and many in conflict with others. Success or failure in the job can simply come down to keeping members happy, busy and focused.

In short order he will need to learn the mechanics of operating the floor. The speaker’s authority, particularly over the Rules Committee, is critical to maintaining order in the chamber and avoiding the humiliation of failed votes.

Johnson will also need to develop relationships that are fundamental to lawmaking. He will serve as the chief negotiator between the House and Senate, and must quickly gain the trust of Mitch McConnell, Chuck Schumer and Hakeem Jeffries. Similarly, the speaker is the House’s point person for dealing with the White House. While he doesn’t need to make friends, he does need to establish a relationship with President Joe Biden.

The speakership comes with enormous institutional responsibilities, from keeping the Capitol and the people who work there safe, to the upkeep of the building, to presiding over countless ceremonial events. He now has national security responsibilities that will regularly keep him in classified briefings.

The speaker is also the face of the House GOP, and Johnson must be prepared to meet the press. He will be the chief communicator for the conference, required to consistently drive messages and rally support for the House’s agenda.

The speaker must stand up a large-scale political operation, develop relationships with donors and set a political strategy for protecting a thin majority. For all the things he must quickly learn, the new speaker’s schedule will constantly be crushed by basic obligations of the job.

Above all, the job of speaker is a problem-solving one. The discord in the House GOP is well documented, and it is the job of the speaker to break through the pettiness and inspire members to set their sights on a higher purpose. The most difficult decisions land in the lap of the speaker. Even once you’ve gotten down the basics, you spend much of the day figuring your way around detours and out of cul-de-sacs.

In the best of times, all of this would be impossible for Johnson to master immediately. Of course, these are not the best of times, and pressing priorities with short timelines are staring him in the face.

Many members of the House will say it is not the job of the speaker to drive outcomes, but rather to simply oversee a fair process. Indeed, Johnson, like his challengers, ran on a pledge to decentralize power.

While they may not say it this way, Republicans seem intent on wanting a weak speaker, and they are likely to get their wish, at least in the short term. Members have increasingly bought into the fallacy that it is the heavy hand of past speakers to blame for a failure to deliver spending cuts or other priorities, rather than a result of the realities of divided government.

Nonetheless, they believe the solution is giving committees and individual members more say on how the House functions. This is fine, so much as members are willing to accept the power and use it constructively. There is little evidence though that all members of the House are interested in the trade-offs associated with governing. The reality is that the House does not function on its own, and most of the major policymaking that falls on leadership to execute is the result of the failure of members to do the hard work of policymaking and creating governing coalitions.

Members want both a hands-off speaker and big legislative progress. This is where Scalise can assert himself and shape the success of the Johnson speakership, much like DeLay once did to corral the House GOP. Indeed, maybe a weak speaker and a strong majority leader is what the conference actually needs.



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Wednesday 25 October 2023

Bernie Sanders opposes Biden's pick to lead the NIH, putting her confirmation in jeopardy


President Joe Biden’s nominee to lead the National Institutes of Health will need at least one Republican vote to advance after Sen. Bernie Sanders — angry that Biden isn’t doing more to lower drug prices — said Tuesday he’d oppose her.

"Dr. Monica Bertagnolli is an intelligent and caring person, but has not convinced me that she is prepared to take on the greed and power of the drug companies and health care industry and fight for the transformative changes the NIH needs at this critical moment," the Vermont independent said in a statement.

"I intend to vote NO at her confirmation hearing on Wednesday,” Sanders said.

However, Sanders said he would not try to sway the votes of other members of the Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee he chairs. “This should be a vote of conscience,” he said.

Seven of the 10 Democrats on the committee — Sens. Patty Murray (D-Wash.), Tammy Baldwin (D-Wis.), Tim Kaine (D-Va.), Tina Smith (D-Minn.), Bob Casey (D-Pa.), Maggie Hassan (D-N.H.) and Ed Markey (D-Mass.) either issued statements or told POLITICO that they planned to vote in favor of Bertagnolli.

The others either did not respond or did not say how they would vote.

Because Democrats have a one-seat majority on the panel, Bertagnolli will need at least one Republican vote to proceed to a floor vote and none have said they support her publicly.

Sen. Tommy Tuberville (R-Ala.) said he planned to vote against the nomination. Sen. Markwayne Mullin (R-Okla.) told POLITICO "I'd probably lean toward no right now." Other Republican members have not indicated how they will vote.

Kaine said he expected that Bertagnolli would get Republican votes because the GOP's third-ranking senator, Wyoming's John Barrasso, had introduced her during her nomination hearing.

The White House did not immediately respond to POLITICO's request for comment.

The National Cancer Institute director's nomination to lead NIH has been in limbo since spring, when Sanders vowed to oppose Biden's health nominees until the White House took more actions on reducing drug prices. In September, Sanders relented, agreeing to schedule Bertagnolli's hearing after the federal government struck a deal with biotech company Regeneron that included a reasonable pricing clause for a Covid therapy it’s developing with federal assistance.

During her confirmation hearing last week, Bertagnolli told Sanders she would work to broadly ensure the benefits of NIH research are affordable and available, but would not commit to a specific plan to address drug pricing.

On Monday, two days before the committee vote, Sanders called for an investigation into the NIH. In a letter to the Health and Human Services inspector general, he urged an investigation into an exclusive patent license for an NIH-developed cervical cancer treatment that the agency proposed granting to a company with ties to a former NIH employee.

The most recent NIH director, Dr. Francis Collins, smoothly sailed through his confirmation process and was unanimously confirmed without a hearing in 2009. The agency has been without a director since December 2021, when Collins stepped down from the role.



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White House press secretary says she misheard question on antisemitism during briefing


White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre misheard a question about concern over the rise in antisemitism amid the ongoing war between Israel and Hamas during Monday's press briefing, she told POLITICO in a statement.

“I did mishear the question,” Jean-Pierre said. “As I have footstomped many times from the podium and on the air, antisemitism is an abomination that this President has fought against his entire life; and I feel strongly about that work. That’s why, in the briefing room, I have blasted the repulsive increase in antisemitic rhetoric, conspiracy theories, and hate crimes in our nation, calling out that, tragically, this is a rising threat.”

During the briefing Monday, Jean-Pierre said the White House had not seen “any credible threats,” when asked about the administration’s level of concern about increasing antisemitism. She then went on to address “hate-fueled attacks,” against Muslim and Arab Americans.

The response received backlash online, including from one Democratic lawmaker who slammed the “weak answer” in a post on X, formerly known as Twitter.

“What a weak answer,” Rep. Jared Moskowitz (D-Fla.) posted Monday evening. “The simple answer is yes, you are concerned about the rise of antisemitism. Of course we are also worried about hatred against Muslim Americans. Must do better.”

The number of antisemitic incidents across the world has been on the rise since the war between Israel and Hamas began earlier this month, according to the Anti-Defamation League. U.S. Attorney General Merrick Garland has directed U.S. attorneys across the country to keep in close contact with state and local officials as threats against Jewish, Muslim and Arab communities rise.

President Joe Biden denounced both antisemitism and Islamophobia during an Oval Office speech last week, following the death of Wadea Al-Fayoume, the 6-year-old Palestinian American boy who authorities say was stabbed to death because he was Muslim.

“We can’t stand by and stand silent when this happens,” Biden said. “We must without equivocation denounce antisemitism. We must also without equivocation denounce Islamophobia. And to all you hurting, I want you to know I see you. You belong. And I want to say this to you: You’re all American.”

Jean-Pierre has previously condemned antisemitism during several White House press conferences. In an Oct. 12 briefing, she noted that the “entire Biden–Harris administration” is “committed to doing all we can to protect against antisemitism and other forms of hate.”



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