CPI Falls to 4.0% -- The Consumer Price Index fell to an annual rate of 4.0% in May, down from 4.9% in April, the Labor Department reported Tuesday. Prices were up 0.1% on a monthly basis, with highest increase for shelter, followed by used cars and trucks, according to the department’s Bureau of Labor Statistics.

Food prices were up 6.7% on an annual level, offset in part by an 11.7% drop in energy prices. The CPI for all items less food and energy was +5.3% in May.

Most economists believe the Federal Reserve, which holds its latest regular meeting Tuesday through Thursday will forego an interest rate increase for the first time in about two years. 

•••

Truce for McCarthy and Freedom Caucus – Last week’s disagreement between Speaker Kevin McCarthy (R-CA) and “conservatives” dominated by the Freedom Caucus, which clogged up legislation in the House is over for now, Roll Call reports. “Members of the rebel bloc made it clear” Monday “it may not be the end of trouble” for McCarthy. 

There were even whispers last week of the possibility of a motion to vacate, in which one representative can call for a vote that would recall the speaker. The brouhaha stemmed from Freedom Caucus members who objected to what they saw as a debt ceiling deal favoring President Biden. Last week, the hard-right bloc blocked votes on bills otherwise favorable to them, including one that would prevent regulation or banning of gas stoves. 

Trouble ahead: The MAGA/Freedom Caucus bloc reopened the House floor to action this week in exchange for renegotiating the “power-sharing” agreement they worked out with McCarthy to give him the speaker’s gavel, Rep. Matt Gaetz (R-FL) told reporters Monday. Short of unspecified “progress” Gaetz said, “perhaps we’ll be back here next week.”

Why the quote marks?We put “conservatives” in quotes, above, because we presume most, if not all, 222 House Republicans consider themselves leaning right. The Freedom Caucus currently counts 46 members, a bit more than one-tenth the size of the House membership.

--Compiled and edited by Todd Lassa

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COMMENTS: editors@thehustings.news

Former President Trump is arraigned in a Miami court Tuesday afternoon in the 37-count indictment for allegedly keeping sensitive federal documents at his Mar-a-Lago home and resort. 

Attempts to ban books in public and school libraries reached record levels in the U.S. last year, according to a Stacker investigative report posted below in the center column. Use the track bar on the far right and scroll down to read the story.

Comment on these and other news and issues in the appropriate section below, or in the left column, or email editors@thehustings.news. Indicate in the subject line whether you lean right or left.

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With Monday's Center Column piece we welcome readers to our new partnership with Stacker. Look for more news features from the data journalism experts, alongside our regular news aggregate/analysis and left-right commentary regularly at The Hustings.

As with our regular aggregate news and commentary, we welcome your comments on Stacker news features for posting in left and right columns flanking the center column piece. See the right column for details on how to add your voice.

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By Eliza Siegel and Emma Rubin/Stacker

At the start of 2023, in accordance with HB 1467 passed in 2022, Florida schools made national headlines as teachers and librarians covered shelves with tarps and removed books from circulation.

Under the new law, all materials in school libraries and on reading lists must be reviewed by a media specialist who completed a Florida Department of Education training. It also revised the definition of a school library to include personal teacher collections kept in classrooms. As the law took effect, districts took immediate action to comply. 

A memo from Manatee County School District instructed schools to "remove or cover all classroom libraries until all materials can be reviewed." A viral video showed empty shelves at a Jacksonville middle school. 

As the purging of Florida's school libraries caught the nation's attention, it became the most extreme example of a trend already gaining momentum across the United States: removing books from schools and libraries.

Both the free expression organization PEN America and the American Library Association's Office for Intellectual Freedom tracked significant increases in the number of attempts to ban books in 2022. While the scale of these efforts is unprecedented, attempts to censor libraries and school materials have a long and messy history in the U.S.

Stacker looked at banned books data by the American Library Association from the past two decades; combed through historical records, scholarly research, and news reports; and spoke to experts to understand how book challenges have changed over the years.Book burning in orange flames.

(Shutterstock)

Burned or banned: Outlawed books reflect fears and politics of the time

As long as there have been books, it seems that there have always been those who oppose them or have corralled them to gain the upper hand. The Chinese emperor Qin Shi Huang ordered a bonfire of books in 213 B.C. to wipe out any comparisons to previous rulers. Livy's "History of Rome," finished in 1 A.D., details past rulers who outlawed and burned books to prevent foreign ideas from taking root on Roman soil.

Throughout history, the types of books targeted by challenges often reflect the fears and politics of a particular moment in time. During the Red Scare in the late 1940s and early 1950s, for instance, censorship pressures on libraries became more overt as fears of communism swept the nation and Sen. Joseph McCarthy's influence grew. Books like John Steinbeck's The Grapes of Wrath and even Robin Hood came under fire for promoting "un-American" ideas. In 1948, the ALA responded to these pressures by adopting a revised—and more strongly worded—Library Bill of Rights, a document that pledges the commitment of libraries to provide access to information regardless of "partisan or doctrinal disapproval."

Other moral panics have similarly corresponded with which books are subject to challenges. In the 1970s and '80s, after the Supreme Court handed down its decision on Roe v. Wade, Judy Blume's frank discussion of topics including puberty, menstruation, masturbation, and female sexuality in books like Forever… and Are You There God? It's Me, Margaret. made her work a frequent target of bans. In 1982, one year before the founding of the now-discredited drug education program Drug Abuse Resistance Education and amid President Ronald Reagan's expansion of the war on drugs, Go Ask Alice, a young adult book that explicitly details drug use by a teenager, was the most censored book in the U.S. The novel Bridge to Terabithia was frequently challenged in the 1980s and '90s for allusions to witchcraft and the occult as the satanic panic raged across the U.S.

Some books and topics have proven to be evergreen targets of attempted bans, cropping up on most-challenged lists year after year. Books by Black authors, or those dealing explicitly with racism, like Toni Morrison's Beloved and The Bluest Eye, Alice Walker's The Color Purple, and Maya Angelou's I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings, have been repeatedly challenged on charges of being "anti-white," for depicting homosexuality, and for themes of sexual abuse. Books with LGBTQ+ characters or storylines, like Daddy's Roommate and The Picture of Dorian Gray, have also long been singled out by challengers.

As attempts to remove certain books from libraries and schools intensify, many of the most frequently challenged stories bear a strong resemblance to those targeted in the past. There are, however, key differences in recent book ban efforts—both in terms of scale and who's behind them.Column chart showing book ban attempts have surged in the past two years. The American Library Association tracked 1,269 book challenges in 2022, over 3.5 times the 2010-2019 average. The number of books targeted is on the rise too, with over 2,500 unique titles included in challenges during 2022.

Emma Rubin // Stacker

2022 set a record for book challenges, almost doubling from 2021

The ALA's Office for Intellectual Freedom, established in 1967 to protect people's right to freely access library materials, tracked a dramatic increase in attempts to remove books from library and school shelves in 2022. The surge in challenges to books is unprecedented in scale—2022 marked the highest number of censorship attempts since the ALA began recording them in 1990. And this number is, in all likelihood, a dramatic undercount, OIF Director Deborah Caldwell-Stone told Stacker.

While last year's rise in book-banning efforts is unheard-of, it mirrors another recent trend: the uptick in restrictive education laws.

Beginning in 2020 and accelerating in 2021 and 2022, conservative lawmakers in dozens of states proposed legislation limiting what can and cannot be taught in the classroom. Curricula including topics like racism, the legacy of slavery, and LGBTQ+ identities and historical figures have been subject to particular crackdowns. Over 20 laws are currently active in 17 states as of May 19, 2023, according to PEN America's index of educational gag orders, which is updated monthly.

As educational topics like critical race theory and so-called "gender ideology" have become conservative talking points of lawmakers like Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, the focus of some politicians and parents has increasingly shifted toward restricting books in libraries and schools.

Raising concerns about a book in a public or school library is a well-established process—one that Caldwell-Stone said has its place.

"We actually support the idea that libraries should have a process in place for individuals to raise concerns about materials as part of their First Amendment right to petition government entities, like libraries and schools," Caldwell-Stone said.

The protocol for challenging a book is fairly simple. Normally, an individual library patron or parent of a student starts by bringing their concerns to a librarian. If discussing the concerns in a conversation does not resolve the issue, the librarian gives the concerned party a form, which asks questions about what parts of the content caused unease and if the patron or parent reviewed the book in its entirety. Once it's filled out, the form is delivered to the library director, and a committee composed of library staff, community members, or a mix of both will review the material to ensure it aligns with the library's material selection policy. Reading materials are reviewed based on whether they serve the information needs of members of the community.

Most of the time, according to Caldwell-Stone, book challenges do not result in bans, especially when the official protocol is followed. But increasingly, library patrons and parents are using other, less formal channels to get library materials removed from circulation. Social media smear campaigns and public comment periods in school board meetings have become forums for stirring up controversy about specific books, effectively circumventing established, democratic review processes.

These protocols serve an important purpose, Caldwell-Stone said.

"Formal processes mean taking time to think about the book, to read it, and review the work as a whole rather than focusing on a few paragraphs or an image. [These processes] provide notice to the community, allow other people to speak up against censorship where others might be speaking for censorship," she said.Line chart showing challenges against sexual and LGBTQ+ content are rising. Anxieties about LGBTQ+ content have become more prominent over the past decade, only dipping in 2020 when books related to "divisive" and racial topics were among the most challenged.

Emma Rubin // Stacker

Most of the top challenged 2022 books cited LGBTQ+ and sexual content

Nowhere is the overlap between hot-button politicized issues and the increase in book challenges more evident than in the rise of attempts to ban books containing sexual and LGBTQ+ content. Attempts to censor books with these themes are certainly nothing new—complaints about sexual or "deviant" content date back to the beginning of the ALA's recordkeeping on book bans.

The increase of challenges on the basis of sexual and LGBTQ+ themes in recent years is hardly surprising considering the corresponding swell of anti-transgender legislation across state legislatures. In 2023 alone, 63 anti-trans bills have been signed into law; an additional 10 have passed and are awaiting a governor's signature. Many of these laws specifically target gender-affirming health care for trans youth. Meanwhile, 7 out of the top 13 most challenged books of 2022 cited LGBTQ+ content, and all 13 were charged with containing sexually explicit material.

"We're seeing, overwhelmingly, challenges right now to books that deal with the lives and experiences of groups that have been traditionally marginalized in our society," Caldwell-Stone said.

Many of the books with the most attempted bans deal with the lived experiences of queer people. In the cases of Maia Kobabe's Gender Queer: A Memoir, Alex Gino's Melissa (formerly published under the title George), and George M. Johnson's All Boys Aren't Blue, which have all topped the lists of most challenged books over the last several years, the authors and their protagonists have been nonbinary or transgender.

Other top challenged books charged with being "sexually explicit" are titles intended to be educational, like It's Perfectly Normal, a book that explains puberty to young people ages 10 and older, and This Book is Gay, which offers sex education and coming-out advice for LGBTQ+ teens.

In some cases, the backlash to these books has been much more severe than merely trying to have them removed from library and school shelves. In Heyworth, Illinois, an eighth-grade teacher with 20 years of experience was reported to the police for "child endangerment" after putting This Book is Gay out in her classroom, an experience she said made her leave her job. In Jamestown, Michigan, a fight over a public library's collection, which included LGBTQ+ books like Kobabe's Gender Queer, resulted in the community voting to defund the library. Earlier in the year, the library's director resigned after being harassed and accused of "indoctrinating children."

LGBTQ+ content has been a leading reason behind most challenges since 2016, only declining in 2020 when challenges raised regarding "divisive" and racial topics became more prominent. Complaints that year targeted the children's book Something Happened in Our Town: A Child's Story About Racial Injustice and the young adult nonfiction book Stamped: Racism, Antiracism, and You. Also challenged in 2020 were Toni Morrison's The Bluest Eye and Angie Thomas' The Hate U Give, a young adult novel about police brutality.

Stacker categorized the reasons listed for the top challenged books since 2009 and visualized their prominence over the years.Column chart showing school libraries are becoming a more prominent battleground for book and media censorship. Venues also include schools, other, and public libraries.

Emma Rubin // Stacker

School libraries are being targeted more frequently

As Florida school librarians began reviewing books in compliance with HB 1467, the strictest book legislation in the nation, a new problem presented itself: the project of going through thousands, or millions, of titles takes untold hours of time and staffing—resources few school districts have.

The process of reviewing entire school library collections is a significant undertaking and can require schools to hire additional staff. While state-level data is not available, 2015 national data showed there are 0.68 full-time and 0.21 part-time librarians and library media specialists employed for every school library.

Duval County Public Schools in Jacksonville is one Florida district confronting a high vacancy of media specialists. With a collection of 1.6 million books, one in five of its 70 positions across 200-plus schools were unfilled, according to reporting from Jacksonville Today.  As of May 18, the district has so far reviewed 6.8% of its titles.

In May 2023, PEN America, along with the publisher Penguin Random House, the authors of several banned books, and parents of students, filed a lawsuit against Florida's Escambia County School District over the school board's decision to remove several books from its collections. The suit is the first indication that battles over book bans and the constitutional right to information are starting to take place in courtrooms on top of social media and school board meetings.

Only recently have school libraries become common targets for book challenges. Prior to 2021, public libraries and specific challenges against books for school assignments made up the majority.

When public libraries receive challenges, however, they have more flexibility due to the wide range of people they serve. In defending book challenges, public librarians are able to cite the Library Bill of Rights and remind patrons that these resources are provided "for the interest, information, and enlightenment of all people of the community [emphasis Stacker's]." Librarians may also opt to move books to a more adult-oriented section if mature content is part of the complaint. Schools, however, have no such recourse, and concerns over age-appropriateness can make enforcing standards for collection policies more complicated.

"While we talk about constitutional rights for adults, minors also have rights that are separate from their parents," Allison Grubbs, the director of southeastern Florida's Broward County Public Library, told Stacker. "They are their own fully-formed little human beings, and the Constitution, the Supreme Court, [and] the United States government have recognized that they have rights that do not end at the school gate. So where I am most concerned is seeing those rights being eroded due to a lot of fear-mongering."

Broward County's library system in the Fort Lauderdale area is joining a growing nationwide movement of creating book sanctuaries in public libraries. According to Grubbs, the library first committed to purchasing additional copies of titles that were being challenged or banned in the local school district and elsewhere in Florida. It's even gone so far as to issue library cards with the words "I Read Banned Books" printed alongside the county library logo."

Eleven titles have been banned in the Broward County School District, including The Bluest Eye and Khaled Hosseini's The Kite Runner, according to PEN's index.

Book sanctuaries are a relatively simple setup, featuring displays on shelves or tables of frequently targeted books. "It's a way where we can bring extra attention to this issue and start conversation amongst our users," Grubbs said.

So far, Broward County's book sanctuary, which was set up in April and is the first of its kind in the state of Florida, has gotten largely positive feedback from the community.

"It seems that most of our patrons understand that we serve a diverse community and as a result, we're going to have a diverse collection," Grubbs said.Column chart showing book ban efforts are growing more organized. Groups have also emboldened parents to challenge materials in less direct ways, providing resources for complaints about titles.

Emma Rubin // Stacker

Organized efforts are accelerating

Restrictive book legislation is not confined to Florida. In April, the Texas House passed a bill that would ban "sexually explicit" materials from school libraries—a category so vague that librarians and legal experts warn it could be used against books that are age-appropriate but discuss topics like LGBTQ+ issues and identities, sex education, or other subjects frequently targeted by book bans.

These laws mark a definitive shift in library collection decision-making away from librarians and communities and toward lawmakers, political groups, and state governments. But book challenges themselves have also undergone a marked change, namely in who is initiating them—and how.

"It used to be a parent or an individual in the community raising a concern about a book they read, but now we're seeing, as a result of organized campaigns, efforts to remove books simply because a group says they're 'bad books,'" Caldwell-Stone said. "Not because a person has a genuine concern for the content, but because they're being told from a political or moral standpoint that a group disapproves of books being available to the community."

Perhaps the biggest player behind the organized book-challenging campaigns is the conservative group Moms for Liberty. Originally based in Florida, the group has expanded its influence by establishing local chapters in most states. It lists its mission as "fighting for the survival of America by unifying, educating, and empowering parents to defend their parental rights at all levels of government."

In early June, Moms for Liberty was called an "extremist" group by the Southern Poverty Law Center in its Year in Hate & Extremism Report for 2022, NPR has reported.

Moms for Liberty's power has been wielded largely through its dissemination of a master document of books that contain "sexually explicit, vulgar, and/or obscene materials." The list includes an "objective" scale for ranking books' content, created by Moms for Liberty itself, and is largely populated by books featuring LGBTQ+ stories and characters of color. The ranking tool also includes "book reports," a database of books containing "objectionable content" that offers specific language for parents or library patrons to use in book challenges while removing the need to read and assess the work as a whole.

The result of these campaigns has been the rise in book ban attempts that include multiple books within a single form. Caldwell-Stone said the Office for Intellectual Freedom has gotten reports of as many as 50 titles within one challenge. The inclusion of multiple books on one form is usually an indication that the concerned party probably hasn't actually read and assessed the materials—and that it's likely part of an organized campaign, according to Caldwell-Stone.

"We tend to think that book challenges, they come, and they go," Grubbs said. "This is unprecedented what we are experiencing now, and it's really sad to see these adults just really try to silence voices—silence people of color, silence people who are LGBTQ+—who are trying to shape the world in their image. The world is struggling back because that's not how we live, that's not who we are."

Story editing by Carren Jao. Copy editing by Paris Close. Photo selection by Abigail Renaud.

MON 6/12/23

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COMMENTS: editors@thehustings.news

(CBS News/YouGov poll)

To comment on Stacker's center-column data news feature on the acceleration of efforts to ban books in the U.S., go to the Comment section at the bottom of this column, or to the Comment section in the left column, depending on your political leanings.

As with our daily news/news aggregate and regular commentary by contributing pundits, you could also comment on the center column with an email to editors@thehustings.news. Please use the subject line to indicate whether you lean right or left.

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(CBS News/YouGov poll)

President Biden has refused to comment on his predecessor’s 37 criminal charges for keeping classified documents at the Mar-a-Lago compound in Florida. But that has not prevented Donald J. Trump to refer to last week’s indictment as a “witch hunt” by the Biden Justice Department. 

As the latest CBS News/YouGov poll shows, there is a huge schism between the issues  that never-Trumpers lingering within the party and pro-MAGA Republicans believe should be points of attack against Biden in next year’s presidential election race. 

What do you think? Whether you lean left or right, we want to hear from you. Post your civilly stated Comments below or in the right column, as appropriate for your leanings, or email editors@thehustings.news.

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MONDAY 6/12/23

‘Witch Hunt’ Defense, Again – Donald J. Trump’s reaction to his federal grand jury indictment last week over confidential/top secret government documents he (allegedly) took to Mar-a-Lago from the White House in January 2021 was right out of the ex-prez’s standard playbook, and it was good enough for his rabid supporters. 

“In the end, they’re not coming after me,” he said, speaking at both the Georgia state GOP convention and the North Carolina state GOP convention. “And I’m just … standing in the way.”

Beside potentially unleashing violent supporters, if history is any guide, Trump’s boilerplate is likely to seriously hike donations to his campaign.

Potential danger: Resulting “calls to action and threats have been amplified on right-wing media sites and have been met by supportive responses from social media users and cheers from crowds,” The New York Times reports. Secret Service and local police have intensified security at the Miami courthouse where Trump will be formally indicted. 

But at the Georgia GOP convention, Trump’s fellow failed election denier, Arizona gubernatorial candidate Kari Lake issued this warning, per NYT: “I have a message tonight for Merrick Garland and Jack Smith and Joe Biden – and the guys back there in the fake news media, you should listen up as well, this one is for you. If you want to get to President Trump, you are going to have to go through me, and you are going to have to go through 75 million Americans just like me. And I’m going to tell you, most of us are card-carrying members of the NRA. … That’s not a threat, that’s a public service announcement.”

Bill Barr on Trump: The ex-president’s former secretary of state told Fox News of the indictment of his former boss: “If even half of it is true, he’s toast.” (Per Semafor.)

John Bolton on Trump: The ex-president’s national security advisor from 2018 to 2019 told NPR’s Morning Edition; “I think this is a potentially catastrophic turn of events for him. It should be. … It should put Trump in jail for a long time.”

Bolton says if Trump wanted the confidential material to write a book, there are federal government protocols for that. “It really is a national security issue.”

The former national security advisor (and UN ambassador under President George W. Bush) added, “The government has to prove it, and I hope they do it soon.” Bolton conceded that Trump will try to delay the trial until after the 2024 presidential election under the prospect he could win and pardon himself. 

•••

NATO Chief at White House – President Biden welcomes North Atlantic Treaty Organization Secretary Gen. Jens Stoltenberg Monday to discuss the war in Ukraine and next month’s NATO summit in Vilnius, Lithuania. Stoltenberg’s term is up, and NATO leaders will vote on his replacement at the summit. At their meeting in Washington last week, UK Prime Minister Rishi Sunak lobbied for his defense minister, Ben Wallace, to replace Stoltenberg.

•••

This Week – The Labor Department releases the May Consumer Price Index Tuesday. While “headline” inflation has come down from last year’s record highs, core inflation remains “in a narrow range,” Forbes previews.

Up on The Hill: The House of Representatives and Senate are in session Monday through Thursday. The Senate only is in session Friday.

•••

Brief Obit: Berlusconi – Media mogul and “proto-populist” Silvio Berlusconi, who served as Italy’s prime minister on-and-off between 1994 through 2001, and again from 2008 to 2011, has died, age 86. He was on one hand, a preternatural Trump-like politician with his own sex scandal and well-publicized “bunga bunga” parties, who spoke of the “upside” of Italian dictator Benito Mussolini. On the other hand, Berlusconi was not a sore loser the three times he was voted out, Corriere della Seraeditor and editorial writer Beppe Severghini wrote in a November 10, 2020, NYT guest editorial.

--Compiled and edited by Todd Lassa

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COMMENTS: editors@thehustings.news

Senate Republicans, including Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, are “staying quiet” on former President Trump’s 37 criminal charges over Mar-a-Lagogate. McConnell has told his GOP colleagues that he wants the party to turn the page on Trump, The Hillreports. Republican Whip John Thune (SD) and Sen. John Cornyn (R-TX) also have said they don’t want Trump to be the GOP nominee again in 2024.

Meanwhile, House Speaker Kevin McCarthy (R-CA) and Majority Leader Steve Scalise (R-LA) wasted no time issuing statements last Thursday calling the Justice Department indictments “political.”

What do you think? Whether you lean right or left, we want to hear from you (including “pro-MAGA” conservatives). Post your civilly stated Comments below or in the left column, as appropriate for your leanings, or email editors@thehustings.news.

(CBS News/YouGov poll)

Senate Republicans, including Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, are “staying quiet” on former President Trump’s 37 criminal charges over […]

Trump-appointed Associate Justice Brett Kavanaugh voted with the majority in a surprise 5-4 Supreme Court ruling upholding an Alabama district court ruling that struck down a Republican voting district map, SCOTUSblog reports. Chief Justice John Roberts also joined associate justices Sonia Sotomayor, Elana Kagan and Ketanji Brown-Jackson in Allen v. Caster. Scroll down for more details in the center column.

We welcome your civil comments on this and other issues. Hit the Comment section in the left or right column or email editors@thehustings.news.

Also on this page, below …

•Lordy, There Are Tapes – Special Counsel on the Mar-a-Lago classified document case Jack Smith reportedly has a tape of Donald J. Trump acknowledging that he held on to a classified Pentagon document about a potential attack on Iran near the end of his presidency, according to CNN and The New York Times.

•Incumbent Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan Wins Runoff – Notching another victory for authoritarianism over liberal democracy?

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FRIDAY 6/9/23

(PHOTO: Special Counsel Jack Smith unsealed the Justice Department's 49-page indictment of Donald J. Trump over the former president's alleged retention of classified documents, Friday. Smith promised a speedy trial, to be held in the Southern District of Florida.)

UPDATE: Evidence behind Donald J. Trump's indictment includes a 2021 audio recording in which he says of an apparently secret document, "As president, I could have declassified it, but now I can't." This from The Washington Post quoting "a person familiar with a transcript of the remarks." It has become increasingly apparent, WaPo reports, that Trump's own words could serve as the most severe evidence against him.

Ex-President Trump says he will surrender to court Tuesday after being indicted by a Florida grand jury on seven counts in the case of classified documents stashed at his Mar-a-Lago compound after he left the White House. Charges include conspiracy to obstruct justice, willful retention of documents in violation of the Espionage Act, false statements and a conspiracy count, people familiar with the indictment told The New York Times.

Trump attorney Jim Trusty told CNN the legal team had not been shown the indictment itself, but that a summary commanding the former president to appear in court contained language that suggests the counts would include obstructing an official effort and witness tampering or other means of obstructing an official proceeding,

--Compiled and edited by Todd Lassa

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COMMENTS: editors@thehustings.news

Russian soldiers in Eastern Ukraine are shooting at rescuers working to save people from the flood zone below the broken Kakhovka dam, according to Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelinskyy, who stresses that the disaster will not stop Ukraine from liberating its territory nor “increase the chances of occupiers staying on the land.”

Zelenskyy also has blasted the reaction of the UN and Red Cross to the dam’s destruction, saying international organizations should join in evacuating people from villages and cities.

Meanwhile, on Capitol Hill, House Speaker Kevin McCarthy (R-CA) and Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-KY) earlier in the week clashed over the issue of continued funding of Ukraine’s defense against Russian forces.

McCarthy on Monday said he opposed a supplemental spending bill that would include additional financial and military aid to Ukraine over the spending limits imposed by the bipartisan debt ceiling compromise. McConnell countered in a speech on the Senate floor Tuesday that the bipartisan debt deal is “Simply insufficient given the major challenges that our nation faces.” McConnell called out threats from China, Russia, Iran and North Korea, “and terrorists emboldened by America’s retreat from Afghanistan.”

Do you agree with Minority Leader McConnell or Speaker McCarthy? We want to hear from you. Hit the Comment section in the right or left column or email editors@thehustings.news.

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House Speaker Kevin McCarthy (R-CA) called President Biden and his team “very professional, very smart, very tough” in negotiations over the debt limit ceiling, according to The New York Times.

What’s your take on the whole debt ceiling folderol? Whether you lean left or right, we want to hear from you. Become a Citizen Pundit by going to the Comment section in this column, or the one on the right, or email editors@thehustings.news. As always, please indicate your political leanings in the subject line.

Other recent issues up for debate include:

•Lordy, There Are Tapes – Special Counsel on the Mar-a-Lago classified document cache Jack Smith reportedly has a tape of Donald J. Trump acknowledging that he held on to a classified Pentagon document about a potential attack on Iran near the end of his presidency, according to CNN and The New York Times.

•Incumbent Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan Wins Runoff – Notching another victory for authoritarianism over liberal democracy?

Ukraine to Negotiate Peace Without Putin – Ukraine and NATO allies are planning a peace summit without Russia, according to The Wall Street Journal. The summit will be aimed at Kyiv’s terms for ending the war and is to be held ahead of a meeting of NATO nations planned for July. 

•DeSantis Announces on Twitter – And it was not pretty.

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(PHOTO: Destruction of the Kakhova Hydroelectric Power Plant has flooded towns and villages in Eastern Ukraine https://www.pravda.com.ua/eng/ )

THURSDAY 6/8/23

SCOTUS Surprise – The Supreme Court ruled 5-4 against a 2022 Alabama voting map that would have prevented a second majority-Black district in the state, according to NPR, with Associate Justice Brett Kavanaugh serving as the swing vote according to SCOTUSblog. The decision that reverses a recent court trend of eroding the Voting Rights Act of 1965.

One of three Trump-appointed justices, Kavanaugh joined Chief Justice John Roberts and associate justices Sonia Sotomayor, Elana Kagan and Ketanji Brown-Jackson in upholding an Alabama district court’s injunction against the district map in Allen v. Caster. The three-judge district court found that the plan likely violated Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act of 1965. 

•••

Russian Forces Shoot Rescuers, Zelinskyy Says – Russian soldiers in Eastern Ukraine are shooting at rescuers working to save people from the flood zone below the broken Kakhovka dam.

“From the roofs of the flooded houses, people see drowned people floating by,” Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelinskyy told Germany’s BildSemafor reports. “When our forces try to get them out, they are shot at by occupiers from a distance.” 

The apparent attack on the dam by Russia, coming as a long-awaited offensive by Ukrainian forces was about to begin, has caused at least 1,800 local citizens to be evacuated. Hundreds of thousands are without water, according to reports. 

Destruction of the Kakhovka Hydroelectric Power Plant has “caused an ecological catastrophe,” Ukrainska Pravda reports. “Water from the reservoirs has begun to flood towns and villages, and evacuation of local residents from dangerous areas has begun. The blowing up of the dam at [the KHPP] has caused problems with the water supply in the cities of Kryvyi Rih, Marhanets and Nikopol, Dnipropetrovsk Oblast.”

Zelinskyy stresses that the disaster will not stop Ukraine from liberating its territory nor “increase the chances of occupiers staying on the land.”

Ukraine’s president also has blasted the reaction of the UN and Red Cross to the dam’s destruction, saying international organizations should join in evacuating people from villages and cities.

Biden meets Sunak: In Washington, UK Prime Minister Rishi Sunak meets with President Biden Thursday largely to discuss the war in Ukraine, NPR reports. Sunak is lobbying for appointment of UK Defense Minister Ben Wallace to become the next head of NATO.

McCarthy’s unfortunate timing?: Monday, before the dam broke, House Speaker Kevin McCarthy (R-CA) voiced opposition to a supplemental spending bill that would include additional financial and military aid to Ukraine, as Freedom Caucus members threatened revolt over what they consider a debt ceiling bill favorable to the White House. Politico reported a “schism” between McCarthy and Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-KY), who took to the Senate floor Tuesday to call the bipartisan debt deal “Simply insufficient given the major challenges that our nation faces.”

McConnell called out threats from China, Russia, Iran and North Korea, “and terrorists emboldened by America’s retreat from Afghanistan.”

Senate Majority Whip Dick Durbin (D-IL) told Politico he supports a supplemental defense spending bill, but, “There’s a conflict in the messages coming from the two Republican leaders,” he said.

Pence-Trump schism: In his Quixotic quest for the 2024 GOP presidential nomination, former Vice President Mike Pence will play up his side of the Republican schism. In his CNN Town Hall appearance Wednesday, Pence noted Donald J. Trump’s description of Vladimir Putin’s invasion of Ukraine as “genius” in a 2022 radio interview. 

“I know the difference between a genius and a war criminal, and I know who needs to win the war in Ukraine,” Pence countered, adding “it’s not our war, but freedom is our fight.”

•••

Trump Indictment Imminent? – Prosecutors from the office of Special Counsel Jack Smith have told Donald J. Trump’s legal team the former president is a target of their investigation involving the handling of classified documents after he left office, The New York Times reports, citing two sources. While the report says it remains unclear whether he was the subject of the special counsel’s inquiry, their notification indicates the prosecutors’ investigation is nearly complete and that an indictment is on the way. 

Trump’s caps key still sticks: The former president’s reaction, coming on his social media network Truth Social, will sound familiar. 

“No one has told me I’m being indicted, and I shouldn’t be because I’ve done NOTHING wrong,” according to The Hill’s report. Trump said he “assumed for years that I am a Target of the WEAPONIZED DOJ & FBI.” 

And along comes Pence: Former Vice President Mike Pence used the time on his CNN Town Hall Wednesday to describe the differences between himself, a true “Reagan Republican” and his former boss as well as the current Florida governor, Ron DeSantis. Pence’s sales pitch to his party so far appears to be that he was the moral compass Trump’s 2016 campaign needed to secure the Christian right’s vote, and in 2024 that support should flow directly to him.

But Pence on CNN urged the Justice Department not to indict the former president, saying an indictment would fuel division domestically and “send a terrible message to the wider world.” 

While “No one is above the law” he said, the DOJ could resolve the issue without resorting to an indictment, noting that the Justice Department simply informed his attorneys last week they would not charge him for holding on to classified documents. Never mind that Pence did not intentionally hold on to and hide classified documents after leaving office and did not try to declassify them by thinking about declassifying them.

--TL

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WEDNESDAY 6/7/23

Meadows Speaks to Grand Jury – Ex-President Trump’s ultimate chief of staff, Mark Meadows, has testified before a federal grand jury hearing evidence in both the January 6th insurrection and the retention of top secret documents at Mar-a-Lago in Florida, The New York Times reported late Tuesday. Special prosecutor Jack Smith is investigating both cases. Trump attorneys reportedly are concerned that Meadows, who has been flying under the media radar for months, may have made some sort of deal in exchange for testimony over the two cases.

•••

Take That, Mr. Speaker – A “band” of hard-right House members, most with the Trump-aligned House Freedom Caucus voted against legislation “protecting” gas stoves from perceived potential government bans, according to Politico, because they were protesting Speaker Kevin McCarthy’s (R-CA) deal with President Biden to prevent default over the debt ceiling. 

To be clear; there is no such pending legislation. And to be clear, the House’s MAGA-right would be as opposed as anyone on the Hill to said non-pending legislation to outlaw gas stoves. But the Trump-aligned House Republicans were willing to protest the bill anyway. The unexpected “rebellion” took senior GOP House leaders an hour to clear up, according to the report. Rep. Dan Bishop (R-NC) told reporters no decision has been made whether to force a vote to oust McCarthy as speaker.

•••

Crowd Gathers in GOP Presidential Race -- Chris Christie served two terms as New Jersey’s moderate Republican governor before he signed on with Donald J. Trump’s MAGA camp in the last decade. Now he’s back as “chief Trump antagonist” according to The Wall Street Journal. Christie formally announced his candidacy Tuesday in New Hampshire, first GOP primary next year after the Iowa caucuses. 

Next up is Pence: Former Vice President Mike Pence filed Monday for the 2024 GOP presidential nomination and plans to formally announce Wednesday in Iowa, according to Forbes.

Sunu-no: Meanwhile, in New Hampshire, current moderate Republican Gov. Chris Sununu announced in a Washington Postop-ed “I will not be seeking the Republican nomination for president in 2024.” Last year, Sununu disappointed supporters when he chose not to run for the Senate against incumbent Democrat Margaret Hassan. 

Sununu writes, “I believe I can have more influence on the future of the Republican Party in the 2024 nominating process not as a candidate but as the governor of the first-in-the-nation primary state.”

West to the leftFormer Harvard University Prof. Cornell West, who is also professor emeritus at Princeton University announced his candidacy on Twitter, Politico reports.

“I have decided to run for truth and justice, which takes the form of running for president of the United States as a candidate for the People’s Party,” West said in his announcement. 

--Compiled and edited by Todd Lassa

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TUESDAY 6/6/23

SCOTUS This – The Supreme Court agreed Monday to consider Vidal v. Elster, a case that challenges a rule that would let former President Trump prevent his name from being used on t-shirts without his permission. Specifically, Steve Elster seeks a trademark for the words “Trump Too Small” in order to print them on t-shirts.

The phrase comes from Sen. Marco Rubio’s (R-FL) quip in a Republican presidential debate that The Donald has “small hands” – indicating, according to bathroom talk lore – that some of his other vital parts are small, too. Elster contends the phrase was “intended to convey that some features of President Trump and his policies are diminutive,” SCOTUSblog’s Amy Howe first reported in her own online publication, Howe on the Court.

You know: Small hands. Small other parts. Never got more than a handful of panels of The Wall constructed.

The U.S. Patent and Trademark office rejected Elster’s application, relying on a federal trademark law, Section 2 (c) of the Lanham Act, that prohibits the registration of a trademark that uses another person’s name without that person’s permission.

Rubio v. Spy: The Hustings for a long time has contended that Rubio’s shot in the debate that Trump has “small hands” was some sort of bastardization of an-oft printed Spy magazine trope that the then-New York real estate developer (this was the late-‘80s/early ‘90s, kids) was a “short-fingered vulgarian.” This conjurs more an image of greasy con man than that of the over-compensating under-endowed.

Spy turned this into something of a preternatural meme, consistently on first-reference calling the future president “Short-fingered vulgarian Donald Trump …”

--TL

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Meanwhile ... Anticipating Ukraine's Counteroffensive

MONDAY 6/5/23

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelinskyy told The Wall Street Journal Ukraine’s military forces are ready to launch its counter-offensive against Russian troops, but warned that it could take some time, and come at a heavy cost. 

“We strongly believe that we will succeed,” he told the WSJ in an exclusive interview from the port city of Odesa in southern Ukraine. “I don’t know how long it will take. To be honest, it can go a variety of ways, completely different. But we are going to do it, and we are ready.”

Ukraine’s long-awaited counter-offensive is nothing less than key to the future of liberal democracy against authoritarianism. There is no plausible way to defend any of Russian leader Vladimir Putin’s actions in regard to Ukraine, whether or not from a center-column point-of-view.

Last week as the Senate sent the Fiscal Responsibility Act of 2023 to the Oval Office for President Biden’s signature, Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-SC) called for more defense spending for Ukraine as part of a rider Republicans attached to the bill, which extends the federal debt ceiling to New Years Day 2025. 

Graham also wants more defense spending for Taiwan, Israel and the Pentagon in general. What’s notable here is that Graham has been largely unwavering in his support of former President Trump, who refused to take sides in Russia v. Ukraine last month in his CNN Town Hall event. 

Trump told his adoring pro-MAGA live crowd in New Hampshire that he wanted the “dying to stop” for both sides, though he failed to mention that the only Russians dying have been those who have helped Russia invade its neighbor. Many of them recruited by the Wagner Group. From prisons where they were serving time.

•••

Meanwhile, Up on the Hill – The full House of Representatives only, is scheduled to be in session Monday, with both chambers in session Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday. The full Senate, only, will be in session Friday.

--Compiled and edited by Todd Lassa

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COMMENTS: editors@thehustings.news

President Biden, who has been a key player in our federal government for more than 50 years, found that his younger, far less experienced counterpart in the debt ceiling negotiations knows something about compromise – a rare quality found in recent American politics. In his national address from the Oval Office last Friday evening, Biden had this to say about House Speaker Kevin McCarthy (R-CA): “He and I, we and our teams, we were able to get along, get things done.” 

What do you think of the deal McCarthy and Biden reached days before an expected collapse of the American economy? Whether you lean right or left, we want to hear from you. Become a Citizen Pundit by going to the Comment section in this column, or the one on the left, or email editors@thehustings.news. As always, please indicate your political leanings in the subject line.

Other recent issues up for debate include:

•Lordy, There Are Tapes – Special Counsel on the Mar-a-Lago classified document cache Jack Smith reportedly has a tape of Donald J. Trump acknowledging that he held on to a classified Pentagon document about a potential attack on Iran near the end of his presidency, according to CNN and The New York Times.

•Incumbent Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan Wins Runoff – Notching another victory for authoritarianism over liberal democracy?

Ukraine to Negotiate Peace Without Putin – Ukraine and NATO allies are planning a peace summit without Russia, according to The Wall Street Journal. The summit will be aimed at Kyiv’s terms for ending the war and is to be held ahead of a meeting of NATO nations planned for July. 

•DeSantis Announces on Twitter – And it was not pretty.

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College graduates must begin paying student loans again, coronavirus relief money not spent must be reimbursed to the federal government and more people receiving welfare must find jobs, though this will make more people eligible for government relief, in the Fiscal Responsibility Act of 2023 passed by Congress and headed for President Biden’s desk Friday. House Speaker Kevin McCarthy (R-CA) has praised the Biden team’s acumen in negotiating the debt ceiling bill, and many left-leaning pundits say Democrats came out ahead in this one.

What do you think? Be a Citizen Pundit and hit the Comment section below or in the right column if more appropriate for your political leanings, or email editors@thehustings.news and list yourself as “liberal” or “conservative” in the subject line.

Scroll down for more …

•Lordy, There Are Tapes – Special Counsel on the Mar-a-Lago classified document cache Jack Smith reportedly has a tape of Donald J. Trump acknowledging that he held on to a classified Pentagon document about a potential attack on Iran near the end of his presidency, according to CNN and The New York Times.

•Incumbent Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan Wins Runoff – Notching another victory for authoritarianism over liberal democracy?

Ukraine to Negotiate Peace Without Putin – Ukraine and NATO allies are planning a peace summit without Russia, according to The Wall Street Journal. The summit will be aimed at Kyiv’s terms for ending the war and is to be held ahead of a meeting of NATO nations planned for July. 

•DeSantis Announces on Twitter – And it was not pretty.

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