(TUE 7/12/22)

To indict, or to let him go … Should the Justice Department prepare charges against former President Donald J. Trump in connection to the January 6 Capitol insurrection? Seditious conspiracy? Obstruction of justice? 

Or should he be let off the hook?

Hold on; It’s not that easy a question for progressives or for never-Trump conservatives, who lately have been expressing fear Trump will become (more of) a martyr among his minions if he is prosecuted. Never-Trump pundits worry such potential prosecution will help, not hurt, his almost inevitable 2024 run. 

Your opinion?: Does the Justice Department have the evidence to go after Trump, or is the potential for (more) martyrdom not worth it?

Hit the Comments button on any of these columns or email us at editors@thehustings.news.

New timeThe 1/6 committee reset its schedule for Tuesday’s hearing, moving it back three hours to 1 p.m. Eastern time. 

Bannon not in the clear: Despite his about-face on agreeing to testifying before the 1/6 panel, former Trump advisor Steve Bannon has not been let off the hook for his court appearance on contempt of Congress charges from his earlier refusal. U.S. District Judge Carl Nichols has ordered Bannon to appear in court next week and has also banned him from asserting several defenses or from calling House members, including Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-CA) to the stand, The Baltimore Sun reports.

Graham too: Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-SC) has been ordered to testify before a special grand jury investigating Trump’s alleged attempts to overturn the 2020 presidential election by Fulton County Superior Court Judge Robert McBurney, Reuters reports. Graham is scheduled to testify August 2.

--Todd Lassa

_____________________________________

The Week that Will Be

(MON 7/11/22)

Next hearing … of the United States Select Committee to Investigate the January 6 Attack on the United States Capitol is Tuesday at 10 a.m. Eastern. A second, and potentially final, public hearing may be scheduled for prime time this Thursday, according to NPR. Watch this space for more coverage during the week.

Last Friday, the committee heard behind closed doors from former White House counsel Pat Cipollone, who “corroborated key elements” of last Tuesday’s testimony by Cassidy Hutchinson, aide to then-Chief of Staff Mark Meadows (per Newsweek). Committee member Zoe Lofgren (D-CA) told CNN’s State of the Union that clips of Cipollone’s testimony will be played during this week’s public hearings.

Cipollone invoked executive privilege to some of the panel’s questions, according to CNN, but 1/6 panel spokesman Tim Mulvey issued a statement saying there were no agreements during the interview to limit questioning because of executive privilege.

Speaking of which, Lofgren also told CNN that Steve Bannon, the former White House aide and consultant to Donald J. Trump, has executed an “about face,” reversing his claim of executive privilege (to which he was not entitled), and will now comply with a 1/6 committee subpoena. 

Not coincidentally, this comes a couple of weeks after Trump reignited his attacks on Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy (R-CA) for failing to get some of his House allies on the panel. Should be quite the interrogation. 

This week in the Middle East: President Biden begins with a visit to Israel Wednesday, to advance the Trump administration’s Abraham Accords, according to NPR’s Morning Edition. It is perhaps the only policy from the previous administration, negotiated just a couple of months before the November 2020 presidential election, that the Biden administration embraces.

Biden continues on from Israel to Saudi Arabia, where he had initially planned to confront Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman over the gruesome killing of Washington Post columnist Jamal Khashoggi, but now will concentrate instead on increased oil production in order to help lower gas and diesel prices at the pump.

While we were on recessAs Congress enjoyed the week of Independence Day away from Capitol Hill, the latest economic indicators last Friday gave the embattled White House its own sort of break. The Labor Department’s Bureau of Labor Statistics reported 372,000 jobs added to the economy in June, a huge number especially compared with economists’ expectations, as the unemployment rate remained steady at 3.6%. 

Vacationers on the road found gas prices easing up a bit. As of Sunday, the national average price for regular unleaded gasoline was $4.684 per gallon, a decline of 30.2-cents versus a month ago, AAA says. 

EO reaction to Dobbs: Meanwhile, Biden took the first step toward countering the Supreme Court’s 6-3 ruling on Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization which overturned Roe v. Wade, though progressive critics say it’s too little, too late, particularly considering that a draft of Justice Samuel Alito’s 13th Century-inspired opinion was leaked to Politico last May. 

The president’s executive order signed last Friday orders the Department of Health and Human Services to expand access to medication abortions and directs the attorney general’s office to help provide legal assistance to those who seek lawful reproductive health services (per The Hill). States cannot ban mifepristone, a drug used to aid abortion, as it its FDA-approved. Under the EO, women suffering medical emergencies such as miscarriages or ectopic pregnancies cannot be denied care. HHS also will expand access to emergency contraception and intrauterine devices (IUDs) and the AG’s office will organize pro bono attorneys to help provide legal representation for patients, providers and third parties.

--Todd Lassa

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COMMENTS: editors@thehustings.news

Most of our commentary in this column on the 1/6 Committee hearings has come from the never-Trump side of conservatism, so far. But your comments, whether never-Trump or pro-MAGA are welcome here, so long as you’re civil, respectful and rely on facts. (Unlike Facebook, Twitter and numerous other social media sites, we do moderate comments and edit for clarity and style, though without any alteration to the point you’re making.)

Join the conversation and become a citizen pundit by entering your comments on the appropriate section at the bottom of any of the three columns, or simply email us at editors@thehustings.news and please indicate whether you consider yourself “left” or “right.”

_____

We break from our summer recess break with news of British Prime Minister Boris Johnson’s resignation as leader of his Conservative party. Our coverage and analysis of, and commentary on the House Select Committee’s investigation of the January 6 Capitol insurrection continues next week. 

The 1/6 panel this Friday, July 8, questions former White House counsel Pat Cipollone and returns to television 10 a.m. Eastern on Tuesday, July 12, with its next public hearing. 

Express your opinions civilly in the Comments box in any of these columns, or email editors@thehustings.news. Please tell us whether your comments should be in the left or right column.

_____

Former Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe has died after he was shot twice from the back while giving a campaign speech for another candidate in the city of Nara in western Japan, NPR reports. A 41-year-old male suspect is in custody. Abe, 67, was shot about noon Friday local time at a campaign rally for another candidate in the city of Nara in western Japan. Eyewitnesses told Japanese television NHK network that Abe was shot twice from behind while giving a speech for the candidate and that the alleged gunman did not run or resist arrest.

Abe was Japan's longest-serving prime minister, in office from 2006-07 and again from 2012 to 2020.

Japan's elections are Sunday.

(FRI 7/8/22)

•••

(THU 7/7/22)

Boris Johnson Pulls a Trump...

Boris Johnson has resigned as leader of his Conservative party but will stay on as Britain’s prime minister until a successor can be chosen. The Guardian lists eight party members by name and “many others” likely to stand to become prime minister. 

“It’s clearly the will of the parliamentary Conservative party,” Johnson said in his announcement Thursday. "Them's the breaks."

More than 50 ministers and government aides have resigned in recent days in a rolling walkout, including the health secretary, Sajid Javid, and the chancellor, Rishi Sunak. 

Senior Conservative ministers of parliament pushed back on Johnson’s plan to remain until replaced, suggesting an interim leader such as Dominic Raab. Johnson replaced Theresa May as leader in 2019, and that December his party gained an 80-seat majority, giving him the mandate to manage “Brexit” from the European Union. 

The UK parliament’s new chancellor, Nadhim Zahawi, had urged Johnson to quit as anger grew over Johnson’s protection of Conservative whip Chris Pincher, accused of sexual assault, and other scandals, including numerous parties attended by leadership during pandemic lockdowns. 

Speaking to a crowd of supporters in front of 10 Downing Street, Johnson said he was “sad to be giving up the best job in the world,” and called the resulting change in Conservative leadership “eccentric” at this time, per The Guardian. “I regret not to have been successful in those arguments.”

Note: A “growing number” of Tory MPs are saying Johnson must leave immediately, the BBC reports. Now. And former prime minister and fellow Tory John Major has written to the chairman of the Conservatives’ 1922 Committee to warn it is “unwise” for Johnson to remain in office while his successor is being chosen. Unlike Donald J. Trump and his many fellow Republicans who supported his Big Lie after losing re-election, Boris Johnson’s own party overwhelmingly will see to it that he cannot try to retain his leadership in Great Britain.

--Todd Lassa

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COMMENTS: editors@thehustings.news

Should former President Donald J. Trump be charged for complicity in the January 6 attack on the Capitol? Whether you’re pro-MAGA, never-Trumper right or a moderate or progressive left we want to hear from you. 

Express your opinions civilly in the Comments box in any of these columns, or email editors@thehustings.news. Please tell us whether your comments should be in the left or right column.

The House Select Committee investigating the January 6 Capitol insurrection has scheduled 10 a.m. Tuesday, July 12, for its next televised hearing, and former White House counsel Pat Cipollone will testify to the committee Friday, July 8. Check back for our coverage, analysis and commentary next week.

_____

Along with Congress, The Hustings is taking Independence Day recess through July 10, though with occasional updates in our center column. We also welcome your comments on the latest political news. Please use the comments box (subject to moderation) on any of these columns or email us at editors@thehustings.news.

Up for discussion …

Our extensive coverage and commentary on hearings by The U.S. Select Committee to Investigate the January 6th Attack on the United States Capitol, including former Chief of Staff Mark Meadows’ aid Cassidy Hutchinson’s explosive testimony on June 28.

SCOTUS’ ruling on Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization overturning Roe v. Wade.

_____

(Photo: Collection of the Supreme Court of the United States)

UPDATES … 

Next hearing announced … The U.S. Select Committee to Investigate the January 6 Attack on the United States Capitol has scheduled its next hearing for 10 a.m. Eastern time Tuesday, July 12.  … 

Meanwhile, in Fulton County: Judge Robert McBurney has granted a petition by District Attorney Fanni Willis to subpoena Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-SC), close political ally of Donald J. Trump, personal attorney to the ex-president Rudy Giuliani, Trump campaign staff John Eastman, Cleta Mitchell, Kenneth Chesebro and Jenna Ellis, and attorney and podcast host Jacki Pick Deacon for advising “the Trump campaign on strategies” for overturning Democrat Joe Biden’s victory in Georgia and other swing states, according to The Atlanta Journal-Constitution.

The subpoenas direct the witnesses to appear before a special grand jury also on Tuesday, July 12. 

Shooter charged … The young white male suspected of shooting at a July 4 parade in Highland Park, Illinois with a high-powered rifle has been charged with seven counts of first-degree murder with “much more to come” according to Lake County District Attorney Eric Rinehart. 

Noted: A quick peak of as much as we could stomach of the Ingraham Angle Tuesday evening laid out the Fox News’ point of view on the Highland Park shooting. Democrats and the Biden White House are using the tragedy, Laura Ingraham said, to scare us from going to any more patriotic events, because liberals apparently do not like patriotic events and want them to cease. Really.

--Todd Lassa

(WED 7/6/22)

•••

Another turn of the coup? … The Supreme Court has agreed to hear an appeal in its next term by North Carolina Republicans over a state congressional map that could affect lawmakers’ ability to pick electors in the 2024 presidential election. The North Carolina Supreme Court’s seven justices were split on whether the gerrymandered map by the Republican-majority state legislature were “unconstitutional beyond a reasonable doubt,” according to The Chronicle of Duke University. If the U.S. Supreme Court were to rule in the Republican lawmakers’ favor in Harper v. Hall it could potentially remove state courts’ limits on gerrymandering and the allow state legislatures authority to choose its own slate of electors regardless of the popular vote, says reporter Hansi Lo Wang on NPR’s Morning Edition. 

SCOTUS will hear the case in the next term, beginning in October. According to the NPR report, Justices Alito, Thomas and Gorsuch are interested in a legal theory that the Constitution gives legislatures such authority over the Electoral College.

Note: This could be “Originalism” taken to its extreme, and just in time for Donald J. Trump’s attempted return to the White House.

•••

SCOTUS’ term end in review … Ketanji Brown Jackson was sworn in as the 104th associate justice to the U.S. Supreme Court Thursday (pictured), just after the court handed down its ruling on Biden v. Texas (per SCOTUSblog). In that 5-4 ruling, SCOTUS affirmed the Biden White House’s authority to revoke a Trump-era policy that required asylum seekers to remain in Mexico while awaiting a U.S. immigration court hearing.

Reeling in federal agencies: The Environmental Protection Agency does not have the authority to regulate carbon dioxide emissions without authority from Congress, SCOTUS ruled. The court’s 6-3 ruling in West Virginia v. EPA applies to all federal agencies and will ease regulations for a wide variety of consumer and environmental protections.

•••

From the NATO Summit … Turkey has finally agreed to let Finland and Sweden join the North Atlantic Treaty Organization, thus expading the western military alliance to Russia’s doorstep. President Biden returned from the summit in Madrid with a promise for another $800 million in military and humanitarian aid to Ukraine, plus plans for expansion of American forces in Europe, including two Navy destroyers in Rota, Spain and a new permanent headquarter for the U.S. Army in Poland.

--Todd Lassa

_____
COMMENTS: editors@thehustings.news

Happy Fourth of July break. The Hustings joins Congress in celebrating Independence Day with some time off through July 10, though with occasional updates through the week. Meanwhile, please take some time to enter your comments on the latest news, including … 

Our extensive coverage and commentary on hearings by The U.S. Select Committee to Investigate the January 6th Attack on the United States Capitol, including former Chief of Staff Mark Meadows’ aid Cassidy Hutchinson’s explosive testimony on June 28.

SCOTUS’ ruling on Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization overturning Roe v. Wade.

Whether you are right- or left-leaning, pro-MAGA or never-Trumper, we seek your civilly expressed comments. Go to one of the comments boxes in these columns (subject to moderation) or email us at editors@thehustings.news.

_____

By Ken Zino

Cassidy Hutchinson, aide to former chief of staff Mark Meadows, was an entirely credible first-hand witness Tuesday about the chaos enveloping the White House staff during the final days leading up to the January 6 insurrection, at the twilight of the failed Trump dictatorship. She had firsthand details of what transpired in the office of the White House chief of staff just steps from the Oval Office, as the threats of violence became clear and violence ultimately descended on the Capitol in the attack on American democracy.

Moreover, Hutchinson was key to supporting the growing but clear body of evidence of Trump’s deranged state of mind that not only believed Mike Pence should be hanged, but also that the Capitol should be sacked. Furthermore, Trump knew without question that he was sending an armed and dangerous mob to the Capitol to interrupt an official proceeding. A seditionist mob that he wanted to lead there after his speech, security issues notwithstanding. 

Even the circumstances surrounding the speech point to Trump’s enraged state of mind. He didn’t like the size of the crowd on the Ellipse, because many of the armed participants could not pass through the metal detectors, or “mags.” Duh. “I don’t care if they have effing weapons, they are not here to hurt me,” Trump said. And “take the effing mags away. … They can march to the Capitol after this is over.”

The beast inside “The Beast” (slang for the presidential limousine, though for this ride the Secret Service used an armored Chevrolet Suburban) was Trump, who after his January 6 speech at the Elipse, got into that Beast thinking he was going to the Capitol since his inner circle wasn’t brave enough to tell him otherwise. That responsibility instead fell to his Secret Service detail. “I’m the effing president,” Trump raged, “take me to the Capitol.” At that point and the evening before, it was clear to Republican insiders and security people that they were dealing with a dangerous mob. 

An out of control, deranged Trump first reached over to grab the steering wheel from the Secret Service detail driving it, then got into a physical altercation with him. The charge here against Trump is indisputable: Assaulting a Secret Service officer. Will the Secret Service testify, or have they already done so?

The threat of violence was real, which was demonstrated during the hours that followed. Trump wasn’t going to the Capitol. Senior Republican staff, Republican Congress members, Fox News insiders as well as Trump family members urged an immediate reaction to call off the Capitol invaders. Trump tweeted that Mike Pence betrayed his supporters instead, then watched the mob from the secure Oval Office. 

Hutchinson noted that White House Counsel Pat Cipollone called her that day. “Please make sure we don’t go up to the Capitol, Cassidy,” she has him saying. “We’re going to get charged with every crime imaginable if we let that happen.”

-30-

C-Col. HED: Hutchinson Testifies to Trump’s Intent

By Todd Lassa

Rudy Giuliani and Mark Meadows requested pardons from then-President Trump on January 7, 2021. Former White House Counsel Pat Cipolonne tried to warn Meadows to keep Trump from joining his followers to the Capitol January 6 or face legal charges, including obstruction of justice and defrauding the electoral count.

Cassidy Hutchinson’s knowledge of the January 6 “rally” began with a January 2 visit by Giuliani to the White House, the former aide to Chief of Staff Meadows (Trump’s fourth), told the U.S. House Select Committee to Investigate the January 6thAttack on the United States Capitol Tuesday afternoon. 

“Gosh, are you excited for the 6th?” Hutchinson recalled Giuliani asking. “It’s going to be a great day.”

Great indeed, for fans of political intrigue involving banana republics. When Hutchinson asked Giuliani what he meant, the reply was that Donald J. Trump was going to the Capitol that day, and “he’s going to look very strong.”

When Meadows later told Hutchinson how serious the rally could be, it was the “first moment I remember feeling scared and concerned for what could happen on January 6.”

She advised Meadows to avoid a January 5 planning meeting at the Willard Hotel with Giuliani, John Eastman and others. Meadows later told her he would “dial in” instead.

Hutchinson joined the White House contingent to the Elipse the morning of January 6, standing in the back of President Trump’s tent set up for his speech. Trump supporters had to pass through Secret Service magnetometers (“mags”) to see the speech, and their weapons kept many of them out. There had been reports of members of the rally mob carrying guns, including, as panel Vice Chair Liz Cheney (R-WY) noted, a man with a gun in a tree on the east side of Constitution Avenue, and others with AR-15s at 14th Street and Independence Avenue. 

Trump was “very concerned” that photos of the Elipse crowd did not look full “and he thought the mags were at fault, not letting people in with weapons.” (Consistent, at least, considering Trump’s insistence that his 2017 inauguration crowd was “biggest in history.”)

The armed mob weren’t there to hurt Trump, the president said; “let the people in, take the effing mags away.”

After Trump’s speech, he still had planned to take the “Beast” – or rather an armored Chevrolet Suburban daily driver – to the Capitol to join his armed supporters. But his deputy chief of staff for security detail, Tony Ornato, and White House staff resisted because it would not be secure.

“It was becoming clear to us and [the Secret Service] that Capitol security were being overrun and were short of people to secure the Capitol,” Hutchinson said.

What happened next is well-detailed in both the left and right columns. Suffice to say the Secret Service prevailed, though not uninjured, on this one.

Back at the White House, Hutchinson told Meadows at 2:05 p.m. that rioters were getting close to the Capitol, she testified by video. “Do we want to talk to the president?

“He said ‘no, he wants to be alone.’”

The 1/6 panel outlined a series of text messages and calls from the likes of Rep. Kevin McCarthy (R-CA) and Fox News commentators Laura Ingraham and Sean Hannity, who tried to get Trump to call off the riot mid-afternoon, before he wrote a tepid tweet at 4:17 p.m. telling the mob they’re “special” and “loved.” 

Hutchinson heard Trump watching chants of “Hang Mike Pence” on television in the White House dining room, where she delivered a text message from Rep. Jim Jordan (R-OH) to Meadows. There, she heard Meadows say to Cipolonne; “You heard him, Pat, he thinks the vice president deserves it. He doesn’t think they’re doing anything wrong.”

What, Cheney asked, was Hutchinson’s reaction to this day’s events?

“As a staffer that worked to always represent the president to the best of my ability and to always showcase the good things that he had done for the country, I remember feeling frustrated, disappointed, and really, it felt personal. It was really sad. 

In her closing remarks Tuesday, Cheney said the 1/6 panel has evidence of witness intimidation by a former colleague or colleagues attempting to influence testimony. She produced two emails, with the sender(s) and recipient(s) redacted. Expect to learn more in Hearing VII next month.

_____
COMMENTS: editors@thehustings.news

By Todd Lassa

UPDATE: The 1/6 House Select panel has subpoenaed former White House counsel Pat Cipollone in the wake of Cassidy Hutchinson's testimony, below...

Rudy Giuliani and Mark Meadows requested pardons from then-President Trump on January 7, 2021. Former White House Counsel Pat Cipolonne tried to warn Meadows to keep Trump from joining his followers to the Capitol January 6 or face legal charges, including obstruction of justice and defrauding the electoral count.

Cassidy Hutchinson’s knowledge of the January 6 “rally” began with a January 2 visit by Giuliani to the White House, the former aide to Chief of Staff Meadows (Trump’s fourth), told the U.S. House Select Committee to Investigate the January 6thAttack on the United States Capitol Tuesday afternoon. 

“Gosh, are you excited for the 6th?” Hutchinson recalled Giuliani asking. “It’s going to be a great day.”

Great indeed, for fans of political intrigue involving banana republics. When Hutchinson asked Giuliani what he meant, the reply was that Donald J. Trump was going to the Capitol that day, and “he’s going to look very strong.”

When Meadows later told Hutchinson how serious the rally could be, it was the “first moment I remember feeling scared and concerned for what could happen on January 6.”

She advised Meadows to avoid a January 5 planning meeting at the Willard Hotel with Giuliani, John Eastman and others. Meadows later told her he would “dial in” instead.

Hutchinson joined the White House contingent to the Elipse the morning of January 6, standing in the back of President Trump’s tent set up for his speech. Trump supporters had to pass through Secret Service magnetometers (“mags”) to see the speech, and their weapons kept many of them out. There had been reports of members of the rally mob carrying guns, including, as panel Vice Chair Liz Cheney (R-WY) noted, a man with a gun in a tree on the east side of Constitution Avenue, and others with AR-15s at 14th Street and Independence Avenue. 

Trump was “very concerned” that photos of the Elipse crowd did not look full “and he thought the mags were at fault, not letting people in with weapons.” (Consistent, at least, considering Trump’s insistence that his 2017 inauguration crowd was “biggest in history.”)

The armed mob was not there to hurt Trump, the president said; “let the people in, take the effing mags away.”

After Trump’s speech, he still had planned to take the “Beast” – or rather an armored Chevrolet Suburban daily driver – to the Capitol to join his armed supporters. But his deputy chief of staff for security detail, Tony Ornato, and White House staff resisted because it would not be secure.

“It was becoming clear to us and [the Secret Service] that Capitol security were being overrun and were short of people to secure the Capitol,” Hutchinson said.

What happened next is well-detailed in both the left and right columns. Suffice to say the Secret Service prevailed, though not uninjured, on this one.

Back at the White House, Hutchinson told Meadows at 2:05 p.m. that rioters were getting close to the Capitol, she testified by video. “Do we want to talk to the president?

“He said ‘no, he wants to be alone.’”

The 1/6 panel outlined a series of text messages and calls from the likes of Rep. Kevin McCarthy (R-CA) and Fox News commentators Laura Ingraham and Sean Hannity, who tried to get Trump to call off the riot mid-afternoon, before he wrote a tepid tweet at 4:17 p.m. telling the mob they’re “special” and “loved.” 

Hutchinson heard Trump watching chants of “Hang Mike Pence” on television in the White House dining room, where she delivered a text message from Rep. Jim Jordan (R-OH) to Meadows. There, she heard Meadows say to Cipolonne; “You heard him, Pat, he thinks the vice president deserves it. He doesn’t think they’re doing anything wrong.”

What, Cheney asked, was Hutchinson’s reaction to this day’s events?

“As a staffer that worked to always represent the president to the best of my ability and to always showcase the good things that he had done for the country, I remember feeling frustrated, disappointed, and really, it felt personal. It was really sad." 

In her closing remarks Tuesday, Cheney said the 1/6 panel has evidence of witness intimidation by a former colleague or colleagues attempting to influence testimony. She produced two emails, with the sender(s) and recipient(s) redacted. Expect to learn more in Hearing VII next month.

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COMMENTS: editors@thehustings.news

By Stephen Macaulay

“As an American, I was disgusted.”

Amen, Cassidy Hutchinson, former aide to then-White House chief of staff Mark Meadows, testifying to the Select Committee to Investigate the January 6th Attack on the United States Capitol.

Disgusted.

“She’s one of them. Or was.” — John Karl, ABC News chief Washington correspondent, talking about Ms. Hutchinson in relation to the Republicans who, by and large, have heretofore been resistant to what has been explained and exposed, chapter and verse, about what Donald Trump and his enablers did before, during, and after January 6, 2021.

Disgusted.

“I said, ‘The rioters are getting really close. Have you talked to the president?’” Hutchinson recalled asking her boss, then-Chief of Staff Mark Meadows.

“Meadows said, ‘No. He wants to be alone right now.’”

Mark Meadows. Profile in sniveling servility.

Disgusted.

Hutchinson on hearing a noise in the White House dining room in December 2020 and finding ketchup on the wall, a broken plate on the floor and a valet cleaning up the mess: “The valet had articulated that the president was extremely angry at the attorney general’s AP interview and had thrown his lunch against the wall.”

Then-Attorney General Bill Barr had told the Associated Press that an investigation by the Department of Justice had found no evidence of widespread fraud in the 2020 election. If there was a “steal” it had been “stopped” before it happened in any measurable way, whether it was by Venezuelans, Italians or who knows who else.

Disgusted.

Trump was being taken back to the White House from the Ellipse in an armored SUV because his intended destination was deemed to be a dangerous place. Hutchinson says, she had been told by another White House aide, security official Tony Ornato, “The president said something to the effect of, ‘I’m the effing president, take me up to the Capitol now’ — to which Bobby [Engel, part of the president’s security detail] responded, ‘Sir, we have to go back to the West Wing.’ The president reached up toward the front of the vehicle to grab at the steering wheel. Mr. Engel grabbed his arm, said, ‘Sir you need to take your hand off the steering wheel. We’re going back to the West Wing. We’re not going to the Capitol.’”

And then, Hutchinson testified (remember: she is under oath) that she was told by Ornato that Trump grabbed Engel as though he was going to strangle him.

Disgusted.

“I hardly know who this person, Cassidy Hutchinson, is, other than I heard very negative things about her (a total phony and ‘leaker’), and when she requested to go with certain others of the team to Florida after my having served a full term in office, I personally turned her request down. Why did she want to go with us if she felt we were so terrible? I understand that she was very upset and angry that I didn’t want her to go, or be a member of the team. She is bad news!” -- Donald Trump on Truth Social, after Hutchinson’s testimony.

Let’s see: He doesn’t know who she is (other than being “a total phony and ‘leaker’”) yet he “personally turned her request down.” Seems somewhat at odds, but how is that any different than anything else Trump has said?

Disgusted.

During Hutchinson’s testimony, video was shown of portions of the testimony of Michael Flynn, former National Security Advisor of the United States, being questioned by Liz Cheney. He repeatedly invoked the Fifth Amendment, as is his right.

Cheney:  "General Flynn, do you believe the violence on January 6 was justified?"

Flynn: "I said, I said the Fifth."

Flynn, a retired lieutenant general in the U.S. Army resistant to talking about the transfer of power that he had sworn an oath to uphold.

Hutchinson, 26, or seven years fewer than Flynn had served in the military, was out there, defending democracy against those who would have twisted it to their own ends.

Disgusting.

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COMMENTS: editors@thehustings.news

Scroll down to read our coverage and analysis of last Friday’s Supreme Court ruling on Dobbs v. Jacksonville Women’s Health Organization, with Ken Zino commenting on “Power Politics” and Jim McCraw commenting on “Death of Self” in this column.

Scroll further for extensive coverage and analysis on House Select Committee hearings on the January 6 Capitol insurrection, with comments by Ken Zino here on the left. 

We encourage you to continue the conversation, no matter your point-of-view. Go to the comment section at the bottom of this column or email us at editors@thehustings.news.

_____

(TUE 6/28/22)

(Cassidy Hutchinson, former special assistant to Trump White House Chief of Staff Mark Meadows.)

Rudy Giuliani, Mark Meadows sought presidential pardons.

•Trump complained that the Elipse crowd looked small because magnetometers kept armed MAGA supporters out.

•Giuliani told Cassidy Hutchinson at the White House January 3 of the 1/6 plans.

•White House Counsel Pat Cipollone warned Trump of potential obstruction of justice, defrauding the electoral count if Trump were to proceed to the Capitol.

•Donald J. Trump wanted to ride to the Capitol after his Elipse speech, tried to grab steering wheel, lunged at Bobby Engel, head of his security detail.

Check back for our analysis and commentary late Tuesday.

Surprise Witness: Cassidy Hutchinson

Suddenly, Hearing VI... Pat Cipollone? Ex-Veep Mike Pence? Punchbowl News scooped the surprise witness for Tuesday’s House Select Committee investigating the January 6 insurrection is Cassidy Hutchinson, who last week in video testimony named Republican Congress members who asked then-President Donald J. Trump for blanket pardons over participation in January 6. 

Hutchinson was special assistant to Trump White House Chief of Staff Mark Meadows, who has refused to speak to the committee, and had “unique and constant access” to Meadows, Trump and the White House inner circle, “in the time up to, during and after January 6,” Punchbowl News says, while also having direct contact with dozens of Congress members. What’s more, she was in contact with Georgia officials after the November 2020 presidential election over an effort there to overturn the vote from Joe Biden to Donald J. Trump. Hutchinson switched lawyers earlier this month, in a possible explanation for her decision to appear live.

Butterfield VIWithout knowing, or at least naming Hutchinson Monday evening, Nixon White House counsel John Dean on CNN compared the surprise witness with Alexander Butterfield, who in the Watergate Hearings on July 13, 1973, revealed the existence of a White House taping system. 

Special securityCNN also reported Monday night that the 1/6 panel had secured extra security for its surprise witness.

•••

G7 to NATO … The G7 is wrapping up its annual summit, in Germany Tuesday. President Biden heads from the Bavarian Alps to Madrid for a NATO summit, where the organization will concentrate on China, NPR reports.

Bad news for necktie industry: G7 leaders are being criticized for a “sloppy look” in a group photograph in which Italy’s Mario Draghi, Canada’s Justin Trudeau, France’s Emmanuel Macron, Germany’s Olaf Scholz, President Biden, Britain’s Boris Johnson and Japan’s Fumio Kishida were pictured wearing open-neck shirts with two-piece suits, and no neckties, Britain’s Independent reports.

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Tuesday’s primaries … Colorado, Illinois, New York, Oklahoma and Utah hold statewide primaries June 28, according to Ballotpedia.

--Todd Lassa

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COMMENTS: editors@thehustings.news

Scroll down to read our coverage and analysis of last Friday’s Supreme Court ruling on Dobbs v. Jacksonville Women’s Health Organization, with pundit-at-large Stephen Macaulay commenting in “Life & Truth.”

Scroll further for extensive coverage and analysis on House Select Committee hearings on the January 6 Capitol insurrection, with comments by Stephen Macaulay here on the right. 

We encourage you to continue the conversation, no matter your point-of-view. Go to the comment section at the bottom of this column or email us at editors@thehustings.news.

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Power Politics Are What the Mid-Terms Are About

By Ken Zino

The advertising and messages from Democratic candidates and office holders started over the weekend in Michigan. Levin Condemns Supreme Court Reversal of Roe  (https://andylevin.house.gov/media/press-releases/levin-condemns-supreme-court-reversal-roe) was the headline on Friday from Rep. Andy Levin (D-MI). 

The substance was:

“Simply put, this represents a total and blatant violation of human rights and further delegitimatizes the highest court in the land. I refuse to accept a future where my 17-year-old daughter cannot access reproductive health care freely…

“We cannot disentangle the movement to suppress reproductive freedom from the same regressive politics of our national past as they are borne from the same oppressive forces. This is about control by a small group of hyper-conservative, unaccountable justices contravening the will of the public to strip away rights and harm communities en masse,” Levin said.

However, this was farce coming after his yoga tweet. Yes, a tweet – since deleted – saying Levin was using yoga to deal with the Roe decision along with the passage of the bipartisan gun safety bill since they produced “a moment of wildly conflicting emotions” on Friday. His solution -- #AsanasWithAndy where he shares yoga poses.

Does anybody ever see a MAGA hat at yoga?

He represents Bloomfield Hills in Oakland County, in the metropolitan Detroit area, which leans Democratic. In 2016, Hilary Clinton won 343,000 votes, or 52% to Donald J. Trump’s 289,000 votes, for 43% in Oakland County, though Clinton's vote count was about 6,000 short in the county compared with Barrack Obama in 2012. In 2020, Joe Biden took 56.3% of the Oakland County vote, or 433,982.

Compared with Levin, Michigan Democratic Gov. Gretchen Whitmer was far more grounded last Friday. She filed a lawsuit asking the Michigan Supreme Court to recognize a constitutional right to an abortion under the Due Process Clause of the state’s Constitution. It asks the court to stop enforcement of the Michigan’s 1931 anti-abortion law, which is a nearly absolute criminal ban that Whitmer argues violates the state’s due process clause providing a right to privacy and bodily autonomy. It also violates Michigan’s Equal Protection Clause due to the way the ban denies females equal rights because the law was adopted to reinforce antiquated notions of the proper role for women in society. 

In Michigan, this issue is beyond settled. According to a poll conducted last January by WDIV/Detroit News, 67.3% of Michiganders support Roe and 65.7% support repealing the 1931 trigger ban on abortion. Over 77% believe abortion should be a woman’s decision. A sizeable majority of Michiganders agree that abortion is a decision for a woman to make in consultation with a medical professional she trusts. 

Success here however will likely require years of legal maneuvering and winning elections, the sort of things that Republicans have proven more adept than Democrats. It is a path forward, though.

The backdrop to this election is an entrenched group of voters who increasingly support authoritarianism and will outlast Trump’s political career. Abstract discussions about policy won’t get it done. Perhaps fear will?

If so, then what do the Democrat candidates have to run on? The only possible course is to get Democratic-leaning voters out to vote in the midterms, which now seems plausible. How does the party get non-“elites” on its side to come out and vote? Power is the ability of political groups and/or individuals to insist on their views in opposition, obstruction and hostility to the desires of others.

There’s a lot going on here. Democrats have some issues to work with -- not all of them are the angst of gas prices and inflation. I would feel better, though, if every time I saw a Democratic talking head on TV, he or she didn’t have original art, or a Federal period fireplace in an expensive townhouse, or some other signifier of “out of touch elitism” as the backdrop. 

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The Death of the Self

By Jim McCraw

Well, that’s it then. Six people, appointed justices of The Supreme Court Of The United States, four of whom are documented liars, just took away the right to a self from 335 million people in the United States, and, along the way, beat the hell out of the First Amendment, which protects every American citizen’s freedom of religion, freedom of speech, freedom of the press, freedom of the assembly and the right to petition the government.

         First, I hasten to remind the reader the First Amendment used to mean freedom from religion, as well as freedom of religion. That is apparently no longer the case. A bunch of right-wing Christians has hijacked the Supreme Court through a long, long campaign and a grifting president, and now the 6-3 conservative majority says they don’t like it when you want an abortion, because they are Christians who believe that ending a pregnancy is wrong and against God’s will.

         It’s time to call bullshit on all of that. The United States is NOT a Christian country, even though conservatives had “In God We Trust” added to our paper currency 65 years ago to fight communism.

This is a free country, a country that has welcomed people from everywhere for 233 years.  When they come here, they bring Shinto, Tao, Buddhist, Islam, Ba’hai, Coptic, Orthodox, Jewish, Catholic, Protestant, and Episcopal religious background with them, among others.  Some Americans have no religion at all. They enjoy freedom FROM religion, and they are surely entitled to that as well.

         It’s my very strong belief that a group six avowed conservative Christian justices cannot and should not chain the entire population to their beliefs about religion, pregnancy, gay marriage, interracial marriage, trans lifestyle, or a dozen other things that trouble many Christian conservatives.

         Every American who survives birth has a self, an inner being who shapes the inner and outer life, whether it’s a gay self or a Catholic self or a trans self, or a woman who wants a career now instead or a baby.  This country is and has been built on self-determination.  

         Those six justices have just told us we are no longer entitled to a self, and that we have to believe what they believe, and do what they do, or we will be punished.

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COMMENTS: editors@thehustings.news