Pundit-at-large Stephen Macaulay discusses Republicans In Name Only (RINOs) in his latest column "What's in a Name?" Thursday on Substack. Go to https://thehustings.substack.com.

In The Gray Area (click above) read our appreciation of conservative writer and humorist P.J. O'Rourke, and Stephen Macaulay's "Infantile Adventures in Trumpworld."

Scroll down using the trackbar on the far right to read our center column on President Biden’s second year in office, “Biden Breaking Build Back Better.” Left column reactions include:

•“Cut Joe Biden Some Slack” by Jim McCraw.

•“Biden Must Move Past His Agenda,” by Eric Blair.

Go to Page 2 for our debate on “Trump’s Coup Must be Stopped.”

Email your own civil comments on these debates and/or on News & Notes items to editors@thehustings.news and let us know whether you consider yourself “left” or “right.”

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FRI 2/18/22

We are celebrating Presidents Day. News & Notes returns Tuesday, February 22.

The Senate Thursday passed a temporary spending bill ahead of a Friday deadline that would have shut part of the federal government (Roll Call). Next kick-the-can-down-the-road deadline: March 11.

All members of Congress are invited to President Biden’s State of the Union address Tuesday, March 1, but they will be required to wear masks and will not be allowed to bring guests. What’s the over-and-under on the number of empty seats?

U.S. Sells $6b in Tanks to Poland – The U.S. will sell 250 M1A2 Abrams tanks to Poland for $6 billion to give the NATO ally that flanks Ukraine’s western border a “substantial boost in firepower,” according to Stars and Stripes. Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin announced the sale in Warsaw, where he met with Polish officials about the Russian aggression with more than 150,000 troops on Ukraine’s border.

“We are on the verge of the most dangerous conflict since World War II,” Austin said. He describes the tank sale as a deal Russian President Vladimir Putin “did not want.”

Note: The Biden administration warns that a full-on Russian invasion is imminent, as Russia announces nuclear missile drills and has begun cyber-attacks on Ukraine. Vice President Kamala Harris meets with other NATO leaders at the pre-scheduled Munich Security Conference. But one has to wonder where NATO would be now, had Donald J. Trump managed to turn over the 2020 presidential election in his favor. Recall that in his 2018 meeting with Putin in Helsinki, Trump put more trust in the Russian president’s denials of meddling in the 2016 presidential election than his own intelligence reports. “I don’t see any reason why it would be” Russia, Trump said. “President Putin was extremely strong and powerful in his denial today.”

•••

Trumps Must Testify – Ex-President Donald J. Trump, Ivanka Trump and Donald Trump, Jr. must comply with New York Attorney General Letitia James’ subpoenas to testify in her investigation of family business practices, a state Supreme Court judge ruled Thursday, according to The Hill. Judge Arthur Engoron has denied the Trumps’ efforts to reject the subpoenas, dismissing the former president’s arguments that James’ various comments, including her campaign vows essentially amounted to a political “witch hunt.”

Engoron’s “review of the thousands of documents responsive to [Office of Attorney General’s] prior subpoenas demonstrates that OAG has a sufficient basis for continuing its investigation, which undercuts the notion that this ongoing investigation is based on personal animus, not fact and law. …

James is conducting both civil and criminal investigations of the Trump Organization’s business practices. Engoron gave Trump 14 days to comply with his subpoena. Ivanka and Don Jr. have 21 days to give depositions. 

Note: Perhaps the only certain thing here is that Las Vegas will soon offer odds on the over-under bet on number of pleadings of the Fifth.

•••

McCarthy Endorses Cheney’s Trumpian Primary Challenger – House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy (R-CA) has endorsed Rep. Liz Cheney’s (R-WY) primary challenger for the midterm elections. Republican candidate Harriet Hageman is one of ex-President Trump’s hand-picked primary challengers, and McCarthy’s endorsement is considered the “latest act of GOP retribution for criticism of Trump election lies,” according to Roll Call. Cheney, of course, is one of two Republicans on the House Select Committee investigating the January 6 Capitol insurrection. (The other, Adam Kinzinger, of Illinois, is not running for re-election this year.)

Note: McCarthy does not have a Republican primary challenger for the seat he has held since 2007, yet. However, Bruno Amato, an actor most recently seen on the Paramount+ TV series Yellowstone is challenging McCarthy as a Democrat, according to Bakersfield.com.

--Edited by Todd Lassa and Gary S Vasilash

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THU 2/17/22

Time to re-open the nation? White House coronavirus coordinator Jeff Zients said Wednesday the U.S. has made ‘tremendous progress’ in its ability to protect against the coronavirus, with ¾ of adults double-vaccinated. U.S. cases dropped 44% in the last week (WaPo).

No, Not a Pull-Out – There is no sign that Russia is pulling back troops from near the Ukraine border, U.S. intelligence indicates, per The Washington Post. Instead, Russia has added “thousands” more troops, apparently beyond the 150,000 previously estimated. 

And on Thursday, President Biden warned, “my sense is (invasion) will happen in the next several days,” The Hill reports.

Meanwhile, a separatist reportedly told Russian media – without evidence, and serving as an example of the Kremlin’s efforts to invade from within – that he had been fired upon by Ukrainian forces. Thursday morning, NPR reported shelling on a Ukrainian village from the Russian-occupied east sector of the country. Ukraine officials said the Russian shelling hit a pre-school and injured at least two civilians.

•••

Is There Middle Ground in Public Schools?  -- As more conservative suburban school districts around the country consider banning books and any American history lesson that might make white students feel “uncomfortable,” voters in the nation’s most liberal city, San Francisco, have voted to recall three school board members who made renaming 44 schools their priority. Mayor London Breed (D) criticized the board for being distracted by “political agendas,” The Guardian reports, while board President Gabriela Lopez, Vice President Faauuga Moliga and commissioner Alison Collins say they made racial equity their priority because that’s what they were elected to do. Breed will name three temporary replacements.

Issues: San Francisco public school parents want the seven-member board to concentrate on a $125-million deficit, replacing the district’s retiring superintendent and how to return students to in-class instruction as the COVID-19 pandemic finally recedes.

What they did instead: The board began the process in January 2021 of renaming 44 San Francisco schools named after public figures linked to racism, sexism, etc., including presidents Abraham Lincoln and George Washington, and California’s senior U.S. senator, Dianne Feinstein (D). 

Note: It’s as if school board members asked, “what can we do to make San Francisco an even easier red meat target of Fox News pundits?” Moderate Democrats, like James “wokeness is a problem and we all know it” Carville, have been warning for much of the last year that such progressives are all but handing the midterms over to pro-Trump Republicans.

•••

As ‘All the Best People’ Churns – The Trump administration’s first interior secretary, Ryan Zinke, “misused his official position” to support a project that could benefit the Great Northern Veterans Peace Park Project, a non-profit he established with his wife, according to a Department of the Interior inspector general’s report, per Roll Call. Zinke “maintained close ties” with the foundation after he was confirmed as interior secretary, the IG’s report states, even though he said he would not participate after his confirmation in 2017. The foundation commenced negotiations with developers of a commercial project related to the non-profit’s project, in Zinke’s hometown of Whitefish, Montana. The inspector general referred the case to the Justice Department, which declined to prosecute, Roll Call says. 

No note on this news item – just adding to the Trump-era political corruption pile.

--Edited by Todd Lassa and Nic Woods

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WED 2/16/22

President Biden has rejected Donald J. Trump’s claims of executive privilege in ordering the National Archives to turn over January 6 White House visitor logs to the House of Representatives Select Committee investigating the Capitol insurrection, within two weeks (Politico).

Is Russia Pulling Back, or Adding Troops? – The Kremlin claims Russia is pulling back troops from the Ukrainian border, but NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg says there is evidence Russia is actually adding troops, the BBC reports. 

In an address from the White House Tuesday, President Biden vowed to “rally the world” against Russia if its president, Vladimir Putin, decides to invade Ukraine (per Newsweek). “The world will not forget that Russia chose needless death and destruction,” Biden said. “Invading Ukraine will prove to be a self-inflicted wound.” 

Biden put the number of Russian troops threatening Ukraine at 150,000 Tuesday. 

Meanwhile, there’s a “measure of calm” in Kyiv, NPR’s Morning Edition reports.

Note: The “measure of calm” may have as much to do with the monotony over eight years of conflict over the Crimean peninsula as the actual Russian troop count. What may be making Ukrainians more nervous is the Kremlin’s acumen in cyber-warfare, which effectively shut down two national banks briefly earlier this week.

•••

Sandy Hook Families Settle with Remington – Nine families of victims in the December 2012 Sandy Hook Elementary School massacre in Newton, Connecticut, have settled with Remington, manufacturer of the AR-15 used to kill 20 first graders and six adults, for $73 million, The New York Times reports. It is believed to be the largest payout for a gun manufacturer, and skirted a federal law protecting gunmakers from lawsuits by arguing the Remington AR-15 was marketed to “couch commandos” and troubled young men like the man who committed the massacre.

Note: The payout will be from Remington’s insurers, as the gun manufacturer is currently undergoing bankruptcy. Connecticut, along with New York and California, have instituted consumer protection laws that skirt federal protection for firearm manufacturers, and legislators in other states are looking at similar runarounds. This recalls the National Firearms Act of 1934, which essentially taxes certain high-power weapons out of existence although, in this case, it would work only for certain states. 

•••

Obituary: P.J. O’Rourke – Writer, journalist, satirist, and conservative political commentator P.J. O’Rourke has died in Sharon, New Hampshire, from complications of lung cancer at age 74. He was editor-in-chief of National Lampoon, wrote numerous books, including Parliament of Whores and a collection of essays How the Hell Did This Happen? The Election of 2016, was the conservative opposite Molly Ivins in the point-counterpoint segment of 60 Minutes in the 1990s and was a regular on NPR’s comedy quiz show, Wait, Wait … Don’t Tell Me. O’Rourke wrote for The Daily BeastRolling Stone and The American Spectator.

When The New York Times in 2010 invited prominent people to define the two major political parties, O’Rourke wrote: “The Democrats are the party that says government will make you smarter, taller, richer, and remove the crabgrass on your lawn. The Republicans are the party that says ‘government doesn’t work’ and then get elected and prove it.”

--Edited by Todd Lassa and Nic Woods

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TUE 2/15/22

Russia says some units participating in its “military exercises” near the Ukrainian border will return to their bases, giving NATO and the U.S. a modicum of hope that an invasion is being averted (AP).

A U.S. District Court judge in Manhattan will dismiss a libel case by 2008 vice presidential candidate Sarah Palin against The New York Times over an inaccurate 2017 editorial (WaPo). The judge says Palin has not met the legal standard of “actual malice” for the case to go forward.

Trump Bean-Counters Take it All Back – What do you say when your own long time accounting firm, Mazars USA, says it can no longer stand behind 2011-20 financial statements it compiled based on information provided by the Trump Organization? If you’re former President Donald J. Trump, you say the firm’s withdrawal of support, which came in a letter to New York Attorney General Letitia James February 9, according to The New York Times, is politically motivated.

Never mind that the letter retracts the firm’s “statements of financial condition” for the decade that includes the Trump Organization’s development of the Trump International Hotel Washington D.C., in the Old Post Office building, “just minutes from the White House” according to its website, developed during Mazars’ decade time frame. The Trump Organization is the subject of a civil case in which it is alleged to have artificially inflated the values of its properties for favorable loan terms, and a criminal investigation, both in New York State. The disclosure of Mazars’ “instrument to retract” came in a New York AG disclosure Monday by James, who hopes to question Trump and two of his children, Donald Jr. and Ivanka.

Note: For about seven years now, Trump has managed to convince about 30% of American voters that he is the constant victim of a political witch hunt. Keeping the banking industry on his side – loyal Trump Organization lender Deutsche Bank notwithstanding – is not going to be as easy. Bottom line is that while the civil and criminal cases may affect Trump’s ability to run for president in 2024, it will not have much of an effect on the political fortunes of his congressional candidate picks for this year’s midterms.

•••

Push Comes to Shove – Prime Minister Justin Trudeau has invoked Canada’s Emergency Act to bring to order semi-truck drivers’ protests against pandemic restrictions, The Globe and Mail reports. How serious is it? Well, the CBC preempted its continuing coverage of the Winter Olympics to provide live coverage of Trudeau’s announcement invoking the Emergencies Act for the first time in the nation’s history. Canadians take the Winter Games very seriously.

There are two primary situations in Canada (although there are acts occurring in other provinces as well). The ones in Quebec and Ontario are caused by the so-called “Freedom Convoy.” Think of it as “Truckers Against Vaccines.” (It has since morphed into being against masks and other restrictions, too.) Part of the convoy drove to the country’s capital and parked their big rigs in downtown Ottawa near Parliament Hill. The trucks have been joined by all manner of other vehicles and plenty of people as part of a protest. Why? Well, there is a requirement that Canadian commercial truck drivers have to show proof of vaccination when they cross back into Canada. In other words, the government wants to minimize the potential of their bringing more virus back into the country. The other situation is in Windsor, at the Ambassador Bridge, which was blocked for six days by truckers and their associates; usually some 10,000 cross the bridge per day, so this had a big economic impact, to say nothing of causing more than minor inconvenience to the business owners and travelers from both sides of the border.

Trudeau said in a news conference, “It is now clear that there are serious challenges to law enforcement's ability to effectively enforce the law." So, the Royal Canadian Mounted Police will be able to join the provincial and local police forces who are trying to restore order. In addition, the government is requiring that crowdfunding platforms, which many protestors have turned to, register with the Financial Transactions and Reports Analysis Centre of Canada. Deputy Prime Minister Chrystia Freeland said “We are making these changes because we know that these platforms are being used to support illegal blockade and illegal activity, which is damaging the Canadian economy.” 

Note: This is serious stuff. Some are saying more should have been done earlier, which presumably means the police being more forceful in their response to the blockades. Then, of course, there would have been an issue with that.

But one thing that Freeland said is probably going to do more than any number of law enforcement personnel: “We are today serving notice: if your truck is being used in these protests, your corporate accounts will be frozen. The insurance on your vehicle will be suspended.”

--Edited by Todd Lassa, Gary S. Vasilash and Nic Woods

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MON 2/14/22

Authorities have re-opened the Ambassador Bridge connecting Detroit and Windsor, Ontario, the busiest commercial connection between the U.S. and Canada, after anti-vaxx truckers blocked it for nearly a week (AP). A larger protest persists in Ottawa.

Arguments begin today in the hate-crime trial of Ahmaud Arbery’s killers (WaPo).

Diplomacy’s Race Against Invasion – Russia’s foreign minister, Sergey Lavrov, says diplomacy over Ukraine is “far from over” and proposes continuing and “intensifying” them even as Russian and Belarussian jets fly near their neighbor’s border, The New York Times reports. German Chancellor Olaf Scholz is next on deck for negotiations. He is in Kyiv, Ukraine, today and proceeds to Moscow tomorrow. President Biden made little headway with Russian President Vladimir Putin in an hour-plus call Saturday.

Note: Even as fighter jets and Russian warships are gathering near Ukraine in the Black Sea, the U.S. and NATO nations are relying on the threat of economic sanctions, including the future of the Russian Nord Stream 2 natural gas pipeline to Germany, to staunch Putin’s desire to rebuild his country’s dominance in the region.

•••

Slow-Walking Attorney – Former Trump lawyer John Eastland, a key player in the attempt to get Vice President Mike Pence to overturn the Electoral College count on January 6, 2021, is claiming attorney-client privilege in attempting to refuse to turn over thousands of emails to the House Select Committee investigating the Capitol insurrection, Politico reports. Judge David Carter, of the U.S. District Court for the Central District of California has ordered Eastland to review more than 94,000 emails. Some 8,000 have been turned over to the committee. Eastman has about 48,000 more to review and is reportedly taking his time in doing so.

Note: Eastman was pretty much an unknown until he was interviewed by the 1/6 panel in December, when he reportedly pleaded the 5th Amendment 146 times. There are concerns he is slow walking his review of the emails until the mid-term elections in November. The Eastman emails originated on the server of his former employer, Chapman University. Eastman resigned from the university after January 6. As an attorney for Chapman has made clear: the school isn’t interested in trying to help Eastman. Why didn’t the committee subpoena the emails directly from the university?

•••

Vaxx By State — “Have you gotten the vaccine, or not?” is the question asked in a Morning Consult survey of about 40,000 people in the U.S. and a fairly consistent 20% are unwilling (i.e., on February 7 of this year, 20% said they are unwilling; on March 15 of last year, 21% were unwilling). Where are the opposition rates the highest? The top-five areas of resistance are: Wyoming (35%), Montana (34%), North Dakota (30%), Idaho (29%), and West Virginia, Alabama and Oklahoma tie for fifth at 28%.

On the flip side, the lowest rates of vaccine unwillingness are: District of Columbia (7%) and Massachusetts (10%), while New Jersey, Vermont and Delaware tie for fifth at 16%.

Note: It is interesting to note that the states where people are more willing to get vaccinated happen to be representative of the creation of the country: Look at the list of the first states and they check the boxes (yes, D.C. is an anomaly, but other than that. . . ). And it is notable that while Vermont is the only outlier vis-à-vis the original 13 – it’s the nation’s 14th state.

Seems that the original freedom-lovers are pro-vaccine. 

--Edited by Todd Lassa and Gary S. Vasilash

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Please email your comments on News & Notes, or any of our three-column debates, to editors@thehustings.news

Read "What's in a Name," Stephen Macaulay's column on RINOs Thursday on our Substack page, https://thehustings.substack.com.

Click on The Gray Area above to read our appreciation of conservative writer and humorist P.J. O'Rourke, and Stephen Macaulay's call to refill the 20-foot Trump Baby balloon with air in “Infantile Adventures in Trumpworld."

Scroll down using the trackbar on the far right to read our center column on President Biden’s second year in office, “Biden Breaking Build Back Better.” Right column reactions include:

•“Pivot to the Center” by Bryan Williams.

•“Everyday People” by Stephen Macaulay.

Go to Page 2 for our debate on “Trump’s Coup Must be Stopped.”

Email your own civil comments on these debates and/or on News & Notes items to editors@thehustings.news and let us know whether you consider yourself “right” or “left.”

_____

Maggie Haberman’s new book about the Trump presidency, Confidence Man, suggests to our pundit-at-large, Stephen Macaulay, that it’s time to revive the 20-foot Trump Baby balloon, in “Infantile Adventures in Trumpworld”, at https://thehustings.substack.com.

Scroll down using the trackbar on the far right to read our center column on President Biden’s second year in office, “Biden Breaking Build Back Better.” Left column reactions include:

•“Cut Joe Biden Some Slack” by Jim McCraw.

•“Biden Must Move Past His Agenda,” by Eric Blair.

Go to Page 2 for our debate on “Trump’s Coup Must be Stopped.”

Email your own civil comments on these debates and/or on News & Notes items to editors@thehustings.news and let us know whether you consider yourself “left” or “right.”

_____

THU-FRI 2/10-11/22

Russia begins major military exercises in Belarus Thursday, which Western leaders fear could be cover for launching an invasion against Ukraine to the south (WaPo). The exercises are scheduled to run for 10 days.

The Department of Homeland Security warns that a semi-truck convoy of drivers protesting COVID-19 lockdown rules and vaccination may attempt to blockade streets surrounding SoFi Stadium in Los Angeles Sunday where the L.A. Rams and Cincinnati Bengals will play Super Bowl LVI. The blockade would mimic truckers’ protests held in Canada in recent weeks (NPR).

Annual Inflation Rate Hits 7.5% -- The Consumer Price Index rose 0.6% in January, the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics reported Thursday, for an annual rate of 7.5%. That’s up a half percentage point over the annual rate for the 12 months of 2021, which already was the highest U.S. inflation since 1982. Largest contributors are the usual suspects; Both food and energy prices rose 0.9% in January, with shelter also up sharply. 

•••

1/6 Committee Subpoenas Navarro – Until he described on MSNBC the “Green Bay Sweep,” a plan to overturn the November 2020 presidential election results by challenging Electoral College ballots in six battleground states, Peter Navarro might be best known as the failed San Diego politician and University of California-Irvine professor who found his way into the Trump administration as the proponent of strict, un-Republican-like trade policy toward China. Thanks to his open boasting about the plan, Navarro has been subpoenaed by the House Select Committee investigating the January 6 Capitol insurrection. (We’ll pause while you utter “duh.”) The committee sees Navarro, who was the Trump administration’s director of trade and manufacturing policy as central to the plot to overturn the election of Joe Biden, according to NPR’s Morning Edition. And they can also see Navarro holding forth last year on MSNBC’s The Beat with Ari Melber.

Navarro has responded with Trumpian fervor, calling the 1/6 panel “domestic terrorists” and claiming executive privilege, which of course neither the ex-president nor he have. 

Note: There are many books on the shelves about the Trump administration, and Navarro’s In Trump Time: My Journal of America’s Plague Year published in 2021 is one of them. Now Navarro might sell a few more copies, as it apparently details this coup plot in its pages. 

Political Trivia 1: According to Ballotpedia [ballotpedia.org], the Trump-Pence organization petitioned Wisconsin Elections Commission on November 18, 2020, for recounts in Dane County (Madison) and Milwaukee County, and the Trump campaign sent the state elections commission $3 million to pay for the recount. On November 27 and November 29 Milwaukee and Dane counties, respectively, announced the results of their recounts: Joe Biden received 87 more votes. 

Sports Trivia: The “Green Bay Sweep” is better known among football afficionados as the “Packers Sweep” or the “Lombardi Sweep,” in which the running back takes a handoff behind the line of scrimmage before turning upfield behind lead blockers (Wikipedia). 

Political Trivia 2: Richard Nixon famously considered Green Bay Packers Coach Vince Lombardi as his 1968 running mate, though Lombardi was a registered Democrat. 

•••

More of the Same from Trump – The defeated former president said in a statement released Thursday that the recent transfer of White House documents to the National Archives and Records Administration from Mar-a-Lago was “no big deal,” The Hillreports. The Trump administration records, you might recall from news reports earlier this week, belong to the American public, not Donald J. Trump.

Speaking of a minority of the American public: Trump earlier hit back against Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell’s (R-KY) criticism of the Republican National Committee’s censure of Republican panelists on the House Select Committee investigation of the January 6 insurrection, in a release Wednesday, according to The Hill. McConnell “does not speak for the Republican Party, and does not represent the views of the vast majority of its voters. He did nothing to fight for his constituents and stop the most fraudulent election in American history.”

And so the fight over the soul of the GOP continues.

--Edited by Todd Lassa and Gary S. Vasilash

_____
Please email your comments to editors@thehustings.news

In “Infantile Adventures in Trumpworld,” our pundit-at-large, Stephen Macaulay, suggests that based on revelations reported in Maggie Haberman’s new book on the prior administration, Confidence Man, it’s time to re-inflate the 20-foot Trump Baby balloon. Go to https://thehustings.substack.com.

Scroll down using the trackbar on the far right to read our center column on President Biden’s second year in office, “Biden Breaking Build Back Better.” Right column reactions include:

•“Pivot to the Center” by Bryan Williams.

•“Everyday People” by Stephen Macaulay.

Go to Page 2 for our debate on “Trump’s Coup Must be Stopped.”

Email your own civil comments on these debates and/or on News & Notes items to editors@thehustings.news and let us know whether you consider yourself “right” or “left.”

_____

We compare British conservatives with American conservatives in Wednesday's News & Notes. What's your opinion? Email your comments to editors@thehustings.news.

Read Pundit-at-Large Stephen Macaulay's commentary on former Vice President Mike Pence's speech before the Federalist Society, "Lies, Damn Lies and the RNC" by clicking on The Gray Area above.

Scroll down using the trackbar on the far right to read our center column on President Biden’s second year in office, “Biden Breaking Build Back Better.” Left column reactions include:

•“Cut Joe Biden Some Slack” by Jim McCraw.

•“Biden Must Move Past His Agenda,” by Eric Blair.

Go to Page 2 for our debate on “Trump’s Coup Must be Stopped.”

_____

WED 2/8/22

Russia has sailed warships to the Black Sea in what President Vladimir Putin is calling a “military exercise” in Belarus, which happens to flank the northern border of Ukraine (WaPo). Russia already has more than 100,000 troops along Ukraine’s eastern and southern borders, and U.S. intelligence has warned of an invasion any day now, although some analysts believe Putin has boxed himself into a corner.

McConnell Claws Back His Party – Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-KY), often the most powerful man on Capitol Hill, shot back at the Republican National Committee for its voice-vote censure of Reps. Liz Cheney and Adam Kinzinger at its winter meeting in Salt Lake City last weekend.

Cheney and Kinzinger are the sole Republicans on the House of Representatives Select Committee investigating the January 6 Capitol insurrection.

“The issue is whether or not the RNC should be sort of singling out members of our party who may have different views than the majority,” McConnell said Tuesday, according to the Associated Press. “That’s not the job of the RNC.”

Note: McConnell, who said he still has confidence in RNC chairperson Ronna McDaniel, isn’t exactly escalating his cold war with ex-President Donald J. Trump, but he is keeping a lane open for “traditional” Republicans as this year’s midterm primaries, and the November final elections, play out.

We’ll drink to that … Speaking of the ever-widening rift between McConnell and Trump, the minority leader laughed off the ex-pres’ derogatory nickname for him, “Old Crow,” in an interview with the Washington Examiner, according to The Hill. “Old Crow? That’s my favorite bourbon.” 

It’s worth a reminder here that Trump does not drink.

•••

And Then There’s Nikki – Erstwhile Republican “moderate” and president wannabee Nikki Haley is siding with ex-President Trump again, following ex-Vice President Mike Pence’s defense of his actions in certifying the Electoral College vote for Joe Biden on January 6, 2021, as MAGA-hatted insurrectionists stormed the Capitol, in a speech last weekend before the Federalist Society in Florida [https://thehustings.substack.com/p/will-pence-really-strike-back].

“I think he did what he thought was right,” Haley, Trump’s UN ambassador and Republican governor of South Carolina before that, said about Pence's speech in a Fox News interview, according to Yahoo!News. “But I will always say … I’m not a fan of Republicans going against Republicans because the only ones who win when that happens are Democrats and the media.”

Note: This recalls, of course, President Reagan’s 11th Commandment, “Thou shalt not speak ill of any fellow Republican.” While Haley might think this applies to Pence, and perhaps McConnell for that matter, we can’t recall any direct application of this amendment – by Haley or any of her wing of the GOP at least – to Trump, up to and including rhetoric leading to January 6 insurrectionists’ calls to “hang Mike Pence .” Yes, the media are making a big thing of that.

•••

Three Cheers for the Conservatives (Brits, that is) -- Boris Johnson, the British prime minister, who has recently had to apologize for parties held at Downing Street in violation of his own government’s protocols, now has another matter to deal with. This lead paragraph from The Washington Post story by Adela Suliman simply must be quoted in full:

“LONDON — British lawmakers from Boris Johnson’s ruling Conservative Party are demanding that he apologize and withdraw false claims about the leader of the opposition Labour Party, which appeared to stir up protesters who mobbed his political rival Monday night.”

Let’s break this down:

  1. Members of the party he is part of
  2. Demanding that he do something
  3. That something is to apologize for saying in Parliament last week that Keir Starmer, leader of the opposition Labour Party, didn’t prosecute a British TV personality, Jimmy Savile, who has been revealed as a child abuser—and Starmer was not involved in the decision not to prosecute
  4. That something also includes withdrawing the “false claims”

Note: Make no mistake that British politicians at all levels are, in some cases, as bizarre as their American cousins.

But full marks to those in the Conservative Party who have the guts to stand up to their leader, who has done something wrong, and to call him out on it rather than either pretending it didn’t happen or try to spin it as something that it isn’t.

If only their American cousins understood there are things like honesty and reality.

•••

Bomb Threat Disrupts Emhoff Visit – Secret Service agents quickly moved Second Gentleman Doug Emhoff from commemoration of Black History Month at a Washington, D.C., high school after a bomb threat was called in, The Guardianreports. Emhoff, husband of Vice President Kamala Harris, was in the high school’s museum about five minutes when the Secret Service rushed him out. While reports say there is no confirmation that the bomb threat was related to Black History Month, several Historically Black Colleges and Universities have reported at least 17 such threats since the beginning of the month.

--Edited by Todd Lassa, Gary S. Vasilash and Nic Woods


 TUE 2/8/22

Trial begins today for Louisville police officer Brett Hankinson, accused of endangering Breonna Taylor’s neighbors’ lives in a shooting over a no-knock warrant during which Taylor was killed.

Macron Meets Putin — Emmanuel Macron, president of France, met with Vladimir Putin, president of Russia, for five hours of talks yesterday regarding the situation on the border of the Ukraine. According to Politico, while Putin held forth on his fanciful claims and demands (which helps explain, in part, perhaps, while Donald Trump was so cozy with Putin), the Politicoreporting has it: “To all of this, Macron mustered virtually no response other than to insist that it was important to keep on talking.” 

Macron traveled to Kyiv today to meet with Ukraine’s president, Volodymyr Zelensky.

Ah, yes.

Note: There are more than 100,000 Russian troops — and tanks and cannons and all manner of other military gear — on borders with the Ukraine, both in Russia and Belarus. They aren’t there for the sightseeing. Politico quotes Putin as saying during a news conference, “I want to underscore once again even though I have already mentioned it — I’d really love if you really hear me and bring this point to your audience, that if Ukraine is in NATO and if they decided to take back Crimea using military means, European countries will automatically be in a military conflict with Russia.” Has NATO announced anything like it is going to be taking back Crimea by military means?

While the whole situation may seem far away to many in the U.S., this, by Dr. Taras Kuzio, a research fellow at the Henry Jackson Society in London, published by Atlantic Council, is worth keeping in mind:

“At the heart of this crisis is one man’s refusal to accept the verdict of the Cold War and his burning resentment at modern Russia’s diminished standing on the global stage. Throughout his political career, Vladimir Putin has made no secret of his desire to revive Russia’s international prestige and address the perceived geopolitical injustices of the recent past. These imperial ambitions have found expression in Putin’s increasingly public obsession with Ukraine, a country whose very existence has come to embody the Russian ruler’s darkest fears and his many historical grievances.”

This is serious.

•••

More White Districts in Alabama – The Supreme Court ruled 5-4 from its “shadow docket” to reinstate Alabama’s redistricting plan, based on the 2020 U.S. Census, that cuts its majority-Black congressional districts from two down to one, just in time for this year’s midterms, SCOTUSblog reports. Alabama has seven seats in the House, and approximately 25% of its population is Black.

A three-judge district court panel, two of whom were appointed by then-President Trump, ruled in January that the redistricting plan probably violates Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act, banning racial discrimination in voting policies. The 5-4 SCOTUS vote essentially gives Alabama time to address the redistricting plan until after the state’s next election – its midterm primary is May 24, with a runoff June 21. 

Note: The SCOTUS “shadow docket” ruling has implications for similar redistricting challenges in other states. In her dissent, Justice Elena Kagan argued the case should have been heard with a full briefing and oral arguments. Chief Justice John Roberts joined the minority in voting to uphold the Alabama district court’s ruling that would have required the state to redraw the map within two weeks, or hand it over to an expert. The case and its implications for other states turned on Justice Amy Coney Barrett’s appointment to the court in fall of 2020, SCOTUSblog’s Amy Howe told NPR’s Morning Edition.

--Edited by Gary S. Vasilash, Todd Lassa and Charles Dervarics

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MON 2/7/22

French President Emmanuel Macron meets with Russian President Vladimir Putin in Moscow today; meanwhile, German Chancellor Olaf Scholz meets with President Biden in Washington, D.C., in efforts to renew talks to prevent a Russian invasion of Ukraine (NPR).

Speaking of which: Russia is close to completing preparations for a large-scale invasion of Ukraine, according to U.S. military and intelligence assessments that estimate the aggression could leave up to 50,000 civilians killed or wounded, decapitate the Kyiv government in two days and create a humanitarian crisis with 5 million fleeing refugees. (WaPo). National Security Advisor Jake Sullivan said Sunday an invasion could take place “as soon as tomorrow.” (The Guardian).

•••

Rip-Rip-Rip – While in office, President Donald J. Trump had a penchant for ripping up documents. (He presumably had it before he was elected; he probably has it now.) The problem with this handling of documents, The Washington Post reports, is a little something known as the Presidential Records Act. That act requires that all written communication relevant to a president’s official duties be preserved and turned over to the National Archives.

The Post reports: “Trump’s shredding of paper was far more widespread and indiscriminate than previously known and — despite multiple admonishments — extended throughout his presidency.” Apparently, the admonishments didn’t come from some librarian from the Archives but from people including then-White House counsel Donald McGahn, and chiefs of staff Reince Priebus and John F. Kelly.

Aides ended up having to collect the shreds and try to tape them back together. 

Note: This is further evidence that Donald Trump never understood the fact that he was working for the people not working for the Trump Organization. When he was running his own firm, he could do pretty much whatever he wanted with his documents: rip-rip-rip. But the presidency is something apart from the person who has that office and as such there are rules and procedures that are attached to that office. Even after the admonishments you can imagine Trump smirking, shaking his head and rip-rip-rip.

Wonder how the Republican National Committee thinks about this blatant disregard of norms that are part of the heritage of the nation? 

But wait, there’s more. . .

Florida Man’s Circular Argument – The National Archives and Records Administration retrieved Donald J. Trump’s presidential papers – apparently those he didn’t rip into little pieces -- and other records in January from his Mar-a-Lago home, that should have been turned over to the federal agency when he left office, The Washington Post reports. Of course, Trump has been long claiming he won the election anyway so perhaps he figured the records were his to keep, including those indicating what role he and his closest aides may have played in the January 6, 2020 attempt to overturn Joe Biden’s victory.

Of course, he doesn’t “own” any of the official documents, despite what he probably imagines.

--Edited by Gary S. Vasilash and Todd Lassa

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Please email your comments to editors@thehustings.news

Read a comparison of British conservatives and American conservatives in Wednesday's News & Notes, center column. What's your opinion? Email your comments to editors@thehustings.news.

Read Pundit-at-Large Stephen Macaulay's commentary on former Vice President Mike Pence's speech before the Federalist Society, "Lies, Damn Lies and the RNC" by clicking on The Gray Area above.

Scroll down using the trackbar on the far right to read our center column on President Biden’s second year in office, “Biden Breaking Build Back Better.” Right column reactions include:

•“Pivot to the Center” by Bryan Williams.

•“Everyday People” by Stephen Macaulay.

Go to Page 2 for our debate on “Trump’s Coup Must be Stopped.”

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Read commentary here on the center-column political news and analysis from the liberal perspective.

Columns on President Biden’s second year in the White House:

“Cut Joe Biden Some Slack” by Jim McCraw.

“Biden Must Move Past His Agenda.”

Send your own comments for posting in the left or right columns on recent center columns, including:

“Biden Breaking Build Back Better.”

“Trump’s Coup Must be Stopped.”

Submit your comments for the left or right column to editors@thehustings.news.

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FRI 2/4/22

The Republican National Committee voted at their national convention in Salt Lake City Friday afternoon to censure Reps. Liz Cheney (R-AZ) and Adam Kinzinger (R-IL) for their participation as members of the House Select Committee investigating the January 6 Capitol insurrection. Read pundit-at-large Stephen Macaulay's commentary at thehustings.substack.com.

Russian President Vladimir Putin becomes the first leader in two years to meet with Chinese Premier Xi Jinping, as the Winter Olympics opens in Beijing (NPR).

Despite Omicron, Good Jobs Report – Payroll employment was up by 467,000 jobs in January, the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics reports, far greater a number than expected particularly as the omicron variant of COVID-19 shut down large portions of the economy. The unemployment rate rose just 0.1 point, to 4.0%, an indication that a few more people sought jobs in January. The BLS cited growth in leisure and hospitality, professional and business services, retail trade and transportation and warehousing as major factors in the jobs growth rate.

•••

Pence Strikes Back? – Believe it when you see it. Former Vice President Mike Pence speaks at a Federalist Society event in Florida Friday where he “will discuss remarks about constitutional principles and the rule of law,” The Hill reports, which is being interpreted to mean he will answer his ex-boss’ constant and continuing bleating about how Pence could have “stopped the steal” when counting Electoral College votes properly cast for Joe Biden, January 6, 2021. 

It’s hard to parse the latest Donald J. Trump attack on Pence, especially with the 45th president’s Twitter account suspended, though Newsweek Thursday reported on Trump ally Roger Stone calling the former Veep “a disloyal POS” on the right-wing messaging platform Telegram. No, we don’t follow that MAGA echo-chamber, either.

According to The Hill, “it’s unclear how far Pence will go.”

Note to the former Veep: Let’s not get carried away just 13 months after January 6 Capitol insurrectionists were ready to hang you for not withholding the Electoral College votes that went for Biden. However, you might have used that time to help try to steer the GOP away from Trump, especially evangelicals. We can assure you that you will not be Trump’s 2024 running mate.

•••

Opportunity to Increase Defense Spending – Defense spending should be folded into a fiscal year 2022 omnibus spending bill in order to send a message to Russian President Vladimir Putin to lay off Ukraine, congress members said at an event held at the Wilson Center Thursday. 

Sen. Roger Wicker (R-MS), the number-two Republican on the Armed Services committee urges President Biden “to get personally involved.” 

“Everybody agrees that working off defense appropriations from a year and a half ago are completely inadequate and sends exactly the wrong signal not only to Vladimir Putin but to our friends and potential adversaries all over the road.”

Sen. Jeanne Shaheen (D-NH) said, “Putin’s thinking, ‘boy they can’t even pass a budget, never going to be able to unite against our actions.’”

The Issue: Good old “kick the can” with an evenly split Senate gumming up the FY22 budget over the White House’s Build Back Better program. The House passed the budget in December, while the Senate has kept the federal government funded with continuing resolutions, the latest expiring just two weeks from today – February 18 – and with the Senate in recess next week.

The $$$: Count on another CR kicking the can further. However, that means the Pentagon will have to work off its FY21 budget of $705.4 billion. The 2022 National Defense Authorization Act would budget $768.1 billion, which is $25 billion more than the White House had proposed.

•••

Unionization South of the Border -- “As workers, we are stronger when we can speak with one voice – and we are stronger when our fellow workers around the world can do the same.” That’s U.S. Secretary of Labor Marty Walsh, on the occasion of this week’s election at General Motors’ Silao, Mexico assembly plant, where the National Independent Auto Workers’ Union (SINTTIA) received the majority of votes to represent factory workers where pickup trucks are built. (The votes are still to be certified, but highly likely.)

The election was overseen by Mexico’s Federal Center for Conciliation and Labor Registration. Said Deputy Undersecretary for International Affairs Thea M. Lee, “This election at the Silao General Motors’ plant represents a landmark achievement for the newly created Federal Center in ensuring a free and fair election for workers under Mexico’s new labor justice system. The Federal Center’s administration of this election helped to ensure a fair and transparent process.” 

Note: President Joe Biden’s support of organized labor is well and widely known. But who knew that it extends as far as it evidently does?

According to the Labor Department, “In July 2021, the U.S. and Mexico announced an unprecedented comprehensive plan to remediate a past denial of the rights of freedom of association and collective bargaining rights for workers at the same facility under the USMCA [United States-Mexico-Canada Agreement].”

--Edited by Todd Lassa, Gary S. Vasilash and Charles Dervarics

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THU 2/3/22

ISIS leader Abu Ibrahim al-Hashimi al-Qurayshi was killed following a U.S. operation in northwest Syria. “All Americans have returned safely from the operation,” President Biden said (NYT). UPDATE: Biden says al-Qurayshi blew himself up, taking along several members of his family, to avoid being taken alive by U.S. special forces (NPR).

Biden meets with police and community violence intervention groups in New York City today in an effort to lobby Congress to allocate an additional $500 million to combat violence in the fiscal 2022 spending package (Roll Call).

It appears White House agenda items will be held up on Capitol Hill for four to six weeks, the amount of time Sen. Ben Ray Lujan (D-NM) is expected to need to recover from a stroke (The Hill).

More than Coup Practice –The efforts that followed Donald Trump’s re-election defeat weren’t successful, but it was not for lack of trying. Descriptions of the former president’s henchmen (and women, we haven’t forgotten you, Sidney Powell and Jenna Ellis) plotting to use fake alternate electors, rogues within the Defense Department – which even former Trump attorney and future masked singer Rudy Giuliani rejected – or the Department of Homeland Security have been leaking out over the past week. 

Latest is from The Washington Post, which Thursday revealed a Trump White House memo suggesting the National Security Agency and the Defense Department sift through raw electronic communications in search of proof that foreign powers had interfered in the presidential election. Such proof (assuming, of course, that it actually existed) would “support next steps to defend the Constitution in a manner superior to current civilian-only judicial remedies,” says the memo circulated December 18, 2020 “among Trump allies.”

Note: No doubt those interfering countries would not include Russia or any other authoritarian-led nation whose leaders Trump admires.

•••

Dog-Whistle for Authoritarianism – If you thought the Republican Party’s love affair with Russia’s longtime authoritarian leader President Vladimir Putin came and went with the Trump administration, you have not been paying attention. Now comes Sen. Josh Hawley (R-MO), he of the fist-pump proffered to January 6 Capitol insurrectionists, who is presuming to tell the president – the one who actually won the election -- to back off on talk about the Ukraine joining NATO. 

Specifically, The Hill reports, in a letter to Secretary of State Antony Blinken, Hawley says President Biden should abandon support for Ukraine’s eventual admission to the NATO -- even though neither Biden nor anyone else on our side is talking about Ukraine entering NATO.  

White House React: This prompted White House Press Secretary Jen Psaki to admonish; “If you are digesting Russian information and parroting Russian talking points you are not aligned with longstanding bipartisan American values, which is to stand up for the sovereignty of countries like Ukraine, but others.”

It’s OK, get personal: Later, Rep. Adam Kinzinger (R-IL), the 1/6 House Select Committee member who apparently has been disinvited to this weekend’s Republican National Committee annual meeting in Salt Lake City, tweeted “I hate to be so personal, but Hawley is one of the worst human beings, and self egrandizing (sic) con artists. When Trump goes down I certainly hope this will be layed (sic-after all, this is a tweetin the open for all to see, and be ashamed of.” 

Note: Hawley is presuming to tell the president to not do something that he isn’t doing. All part of the “let’s make stuff up and thereby magically make it real” approach that served Trump so well for so long.

•••

The Key is Timing – The Senate goes on recess today, with just 15 days before federal agencies run out of cash, Punchbowl News reports. There will also be no action before the Senate returns in one week on sanctions against Russia. As for the omnibus spending bill funding the federal government, it is time, once again, for another continuing resolution.

•••

About Those Red Social Sites — Remember the Trumpian-driven outrage about “mainstream” social media — like Twitter and Facebook? Remember how there would be a phalanx of right-wing alternatives that would bury what eventually became outlets that banned the lies and misinformation being promulgated by Trump and his allies? It turns out that those alternatives had their moment. Publishers Daily, citing data from TheRighting, a site that monitors website traffic, found that several sites had serious declines in unique visitors in December 2021 compared with the year earlier.

As in Newsmax down 36%, The Blaze down 23%, Washington Examiner down 56%, Brietbart down 52%, and The Federalist down 49%.

However, it is not that there weren’t some gains, as it found that four of the 20 sites it tracks have increased visitors: The Daily SignalNewsBustersThe Daily Wire and Townhall.

To be fair: it was also calculated that The Washington PostHuffPost, CNN, and The New York Times all saw declines.

Note: Traffic on DonaldJTrump.com was down 69%.

--Edited by Todd Lassa and Gary S. Vasilash

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WED 2/2/22

President Biden is sending about 2,000 U.S. troops to Poland, and is shifting about 1,000 troops from Germany to Romania to support NATO as Russian troops gather near Ukraine’s border, the Pentagon has announced (AP).

OPEC meets today to discuss production levels of crude oil, which has hit a seven-year price high of about $90 per barrel due to high demand (NPR).

President Biden will announce revival of the “cancer moonshot” to boost prevention, detection and treatment, an initiative he led while serving as vice president to Barack Obama (WaPo).

And Now there are 49 – Sen. Ben Ray Lujan (D-NM) underwent brain surgery after suffering a stroke Monday, Punchbowl News reports. With no timetable for his return, the Democrat’s 50-plus-veep majority in the Senate is on hold as Luhan recovers in his home state, and there are questions whether the chamber will pass anything significant before President Biden’s State of the Union speech March 1. 

Note: Best the White House can hope for is bipartisan Senate support for small “chunks” of the Build Back Better program, but of course the focus will be on Biden’s replacement for Supreme Court Justice Stephen Breyer. Politico reports that ranking minority member on the Senate Judiciary Committee, Lindsay Graham (R-SC) is ready to support Biden’s choice. It’s worth noting that Lujan is not on that committee, so his absence will not be a factor in the committee’s vote to send the nominee to the Senate.

•••

Some Republicans Have a Memory Problem — Some Republicans (e.g., Susan Collins of Maine) have expressed concern over Joe Biden’s announcement while he was a candidate that he would appoint a Black woman to the Supreme Court, considering it to be politicizing the judicial branch.

It is worth remembering that in May 2016 Donald Trump, who was not at that time the Republican nominee, released a list of 11 potential nominees to the Court, and a second list of 10 in September 2016 (per SCOTUSblog).

Note: Sen. Ted Cruz (R-TX) said it was “offensive” for Biden to zero in on a Black woman as nominee because Black women constitute about 6% of the U.S. population, according to Politico Playbook. Cruz shouldn’t be too smug: the population of Texas is approximately 8.9% of that of the entire country, so one wonders about the statistical viability of anything he has to say about anything.

•••

Trump’s Next Rally is in Salt Lake City – Donald J. Trump’s two-time campaign advisor, David Boise, is expected to introduce a resolution to expel Reps. Liz Cheney (R-WY) and Adam Kinzinger (R-IL) from this weekend’s annual convention of the Republican National Committee in Salt Lake City, The Washington Post reports. Boise also serves as the RNC’s national committee member from Maryland.

Note: Boise seeks to punish Cheney and Kinzinger for voting in favor of Trump’s second impeachment, and of course they are the only Republicans who serve on the House of Representatives’ Select Committee investigating the January 6 Capitol insurrection. Kinzinger is retiring from the House after the current term, while Cheney faces Trump’s endorsed primary challenger for this November midterms. Meanwhile, House Republicans who voted to oppose electors for Joe Biden January 6 are having no problems raising sufficient funds for their re-election this year, Roll Call reports. Trump has effectively cemented his control of the GOP at least through the year, and Rep. Kevin McCarthy (R-CA) should continue to worry about the former president becoming House Speaker if the party wins a majority there in November.

--Edited by Todd Lassa, Gary S. Vasilash and Nic Woods

_____
Please email your comments to editors@thehustings.news

Read commentary here on the center-column political news and analysis from the conservative perspective.

Columns on President Biden’s second year in the White House:

“Pivot to the Center” by Bryan Williams.

“Everyday People” by Stephen Macaulay

Send your own comments for posting in the left or right columns on recent center columns, including:

“Biden Breaking Build Back Better.”

“Trump’s Coup Must be Stopped.”

Email comments for the left or right column to editors@thehustings.news.

_____

In this column: Reader comment on Stephen Macaulay’s column in The Gray Area, “Tucker Carlson Probably Doesn’t Like Borscht, Either” …PLUS: Jim McCraw and Eric Blair ruminate on how President Biden can save his second year in office.

Submit your comments for the left or right column to editors@thehustings.news.

_____

TUE 2/1/22

Wagging for Peace? – Great Britain Prime Minister Boris Johnson is in Kyiv to meet directly with Ukraine’s president, Volodymyr Zelensky, in an effort to diffuse the apparently pending invasion by an estimated 130,000-plus Russian troops gathered along its eastern border and to the north in Belarus. While U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken continues to meet with his Kremlin counterpart, Sergei Lavrov, to tamp down tensions in the region, the U.K.’s leader has headed over there himself as he faces calls for resignation back in London, over lavish “COVID-19 lockdown” parties he attended. 

Wagging the dog?: Certainly that’s what it looks like, and it will take a big diplomatic victory for Johnson to overcome outrage over the lockdown parties. But Johnson, who was aligned with Donald J. Trump’s presidency as the prime minister who fought for and administered the nationalistic Brexit withdrawal from the European Union, is now in Kyiv “to show support” to Ukraine, according to NPR’s Morning Edition. The U.K. “will continue to uphold Ukrainian sovereignty even as Russia seeks to destroy it,” Johnson said. 

Back here at home, factions of Trump’s GOP are taking an isolationist position at best – pro-Russia at worst -- over the crisis. 

•••

Uncovering More of Trump’s Coup Attempt – Six weeks after the November 2020 election, then-President Trump directed his attorney, former 9/11 hero Rudy Giuliani, to call the Department of Homeland Security to see whether he could have the department legally take control of voting machines in swing states whose Electoral College votes were to go to Joseph R. Biden, The New York Times reports, citing three sources. 

Giuliani did, but Homeland Security’s acting deputy director told the former New York City mayor he lacked authority to audit or impound the machines. The alleged plot quashed Team Trump’s third attempt to seize the machines, which included deploying the military and using the Justice Department, a scheme then-Attorney Gen. William Barr immediately “shot down,” according to the NYT’s report.

Note: Between the interviews with former Trump administration advisors and officials willing to talk to the House Select Committee investigating the January 6 Capitol insurrection, and subpoenas issued to those who won’t turn, the panel appears to be building a strong case against the ex-president. But Trump’s rally in Houston last weekend serves as warning he is not going down without a fight, with help of his Republican supporters on Capitol Hill as well as in his rallies, culminating in another attempt in 2024.

•••

Sinema Sinking — Sen. Krysten Sinema (D-AZ) is not doing particularly well among Arizona Democrats according to a recent Morning Consult poll conducted December 21, 2021 to January 20, 2022, and compared with results from another poll taken January 21 to February 20, 2021.

Last year 67% of Democratic voters approved of the senator. The most-recent poll has her at 43%.

Perhaps it comes as no surprise that her approval rating among Republicans last year was 35%. It is now at 55%.

Yes, Sinema is more popular among Republicans than Democrats in her home state.

The shift among Independents isn’t particularly notable: 39% approval last year; 35% approval this year.

Sinema’s numbers are quite a contrast with her fellow Democratic senator from Arizona, Mark Kelly. His early 2021 approval rating among Democrats was 81%. In the latest poll it is 80%.

Similarly, 20% of Republicans approved of him in the earlier poll and 19% do in the most recent.

As for Independents there is seemingly a shift from Sinema to Kelly. He was at 36% in last year’s poll and is now at 39%.

--Edited by Todd Lassa, Gary S. Vasilash and Charles Dervarics


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Please email your comments to editors@thehustings.news