The federal government already has banned TikTok from smartphones issued to its employees, ahead of Thursday’s hearing by the House Committee on Energy and Commerce, where the 150-million user-strong social media company’s CEO is testifying. Do you think TikTok should be banned from the U.S. altogether? 

Scroll down with the trackbar on the far right for political news and issues covered in the center column, and for the following in the left column …

•Trump-era bank deregulation is blamed for failure of Silicon Valley Bank and Signature Bank.

•Some Senate Democrats vote with Republicans to stop the D.C. crime bill, as President Biden promises not to veto.

•”Spiritual guru” Marianne Williamson is the first to declare her candidacy for the 2024 Democratic nomination for president. (Biden has yet to declare, though he has given every possible indication he will run again.)

•How House Democrats plan to retake the House majority in 2024.

Become a citizen pundit and voice your opinion on these and other recent news stories in the Comment section in this column or the one on the right. Or email editors@thehustings.news and let us know whether you lean liberal or conservative in the subject line.

_____

FRIDAY 3/24/23

(The Federal Reserve raised interest rates for the ninth consecutive time since the beginning of last year. Chairman Jerome Powell, pictured, called the U.S. banking system “sound and resilient,” while signaling this could be the final increase in its efforts to reduce the inflation rate back to 2%, according to NPR.)

Border Deal to the North – President Biden announced a new rule that will allow Canada to turn back migrants who cross from the U.S. at unofficial, but popular, border crossings – and who cross them from Canada into the U.S. – NPR reports. Biden announced the rule, which takes effect Saturday and will be published in the Federal Register, to Canada’s parliament on Friday, the second day of his visit with Prime Minister Justin Trudeau. 

•••

Defense Was Down During Attack in Syria – The main air defense system was “not fully operational” at a coalition military base in northeast Syria attacked by a suspected Iranian drone Thursday, two U.S. officials told The New York Times Friday. An American contractor was killed and six other Americans were injured in the attack.

According to the report, it is unclear why the defense system failed, and whether the attackers had detected the vulnerability. U.S. forces have been on high alert since January 2021. There have been 78 such attacks by Iranian-backed militias since then, according to the NYT.

--TL

_______________________________________________

THURSDAY 3/23/23

Oh, Canada – President Biden travels to Ottawa Thursday to discuss the war in Ukraine and the crisis in Haiti, with Canadian Premier Justin Trudeau (NPR).

•••

TikTok Testimony – Chew Shou Zi, CEO of the popular Chinese-owned social media site, testifies before the House Committee on Energy and Commerce beginning 10 a.m. Eastern Thursday. Ahead of his appearance, Chew promised to wall off U.S. users’ data and make further safety and security improvements, Semafor reports.

•••

Trump Lawyers Must Turn Over Documents – A three-judge panel for the D.C. Court of Appeals rejected attempts by Donald J. Trump’s legal team challenging a court ruling last Friday that orders the former president’s own lawyers to turn over documents related to the Mar-a-Lago classified documents probe, according to The Hill. Last Friday’s ruling removes attorney-client privilege between Trump and Evan Corcoran as the former president is believed to have lied to his legal team over whether he returned all the documents from Mar-a-Lago.

Meanwhile: As we await potential Manhattan grand jury charges in another of the former president’s cases, the one involving a $130,000 payment to porn star Stormy Daniels ahead of the 2016 election, Trump has raised $1.5 million, MSNBC reports, for his 2024 presidential campaign after he said on his own social media site last Sunday that he would be arrested Tuesday.

As Trump’s GOP Lead Grows: Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis appears to be facing a backlash against his veiled criticism of the former president. In Morning Consult’s latest poll on the 2024 GOP race, 54% of Republicans polled said they preferred Trump for president, versus 26% for DeSantis. Ex-Veep Mike Pence came in third at 7%, with Nikki Haley edging out former Rep. Liz Cheney (R-WY), 4% to 3%. 

A raft of other undeclared candidates all polled at 1% or less, including Texas Gov. Greg Abbott, South Dakota Gov. Kristi Noem, former Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, Virginia Gov. Glenn Youngkin, South Carolina Sen. Tim Scott and Woke, Inc.author Vivek Ramaswamy. 

--TL

_______________________________________________

WEDNESDAY 3/22/23

UPDATE: Fed Raises Interest Rate 0.25% -- Citing “modest growth in spending and production,” increasing job gains in recent months and inflation remaining elevated, the Federal Reserve raised its interest rate by 25 basis points Wednesday to a range of 4.75% to 5%. 

Prior to the 2 p.m. (Eastern) announcement some economists had expected the Fed to stop raising interest rates for the first time since the beginning of 2022 after failures this month of Silicon Valley Bank and Signature Bank. But the Fed said in its statement following the increase “The U.S. banking system is sound and resilient.

“Recent developments are likely to result in lighter credit conditions for households and businesses and to weigh on economic activity, hiring and inflation. The extent of these effects is uncertain. The (Fed) Committee remains highly attentive to inflation risks.”

•••

Will They or Won’t They? – There’s nervous anticipation and angst among economists waiting to find out whether the Federal Reserve will raise interest rates Wednesday afternoon by a quarter-point, half of what was expected to fight inflation before banks began collapsing or whether it will wave off any increase for now. It began with the failures of Silicon Valley Bank and Signature Bank nearly two weeks ago and continued when America’s banking giants had to bail out First Republic Bank with more than $30 billion in emergency funds.

Cuffs for Trump? – Donald J. Trump has told his advisors he “wants to be handcuffed” for an expected court appearance before a Manhattan grand jury, according to The Guardian. The former president is willing to play political martyr for his small, vociferous group of hardcore MAGAtarians who remain sufficiently significant to maintain Trump’s status as the frontrunner for the 2024 GOP nomination for president.

Trump reasons that if he needs to surrender himself to a Manhattan courthouse for fingerprints and mug shots anyway, he might as well turn everything into a “spectacle.”

Uh, yeah, it could become a spectacle.

No Attorney-Client Privilege?: A district court judge has written that “compelling preliminary evidence” uncovered by Special Counsel Jack Smith’s office – you know, the one investigating Mar-a-Lagogate – proves Donald J. Trump “knowingly and deliberately misled” his own lawyers about whether he returned all classified material uncovered at his Florida compound, thus removing attorney-client privilege, ABC News reports. U.S. Judge Beryl Howell wrote last Friday, March 17, before stepping down as D.C. district court judge that prosecutors in the special counsel’s office have made a “prima facie showing that the former president had committed criminal violations,” and orders attorney Evan Corcoran to comply with a grand jury subpoena to testify on six separate lines of inquiry for which he had previously asserted attorney-client privilege. 

The report cites “sources who described” the judge’s order to ABC News.

--Compiled and edited by Todd Lassa

_____
COMMENTS: editors@thehustings.news

TikTok CEO Chew Shou Zi faces tough questioning and criticism from Republicans and Democrats alike in Thursday’s hearing by the House Committee on Energy and Commerce. We want to know what you think: Should TikTok, with its 150 million users, be banned from the United States if its Chinese parent company does not find a U.S. buyer for it? 

Scroll down with the trackbar on the far right for political news and issues covered in the center column, and for the following in the right column …

The GOP is split on whether to continue support for Ukraine in its defense of the Russian invasion, particularly in the House versus the Senate. 

Trump-signed bank deregulation in 2018 is not to blame for the failures of Silicon Valley Bank, Signature Bank, says op-ed in The Wall Street Journal.

Former Vice President Mike Pence, a presumed candidate for president in 2024, finally strikes back at former President Trump at the Washington press corps’ gridiron dinner.

Tucker Carlson Tonight's editing of the January 6 Capitol insurrection footage.

Is the GOP finally moving on from Trump? (Spoiler alert: no.)

Become a citizen pundit and voice your opinion on these and other recent news stories in the Comment section in this column or the one on the left. Or email editors@thehustings.news and let us know whether you lean conservative or liberal in the subject line.

_____

We want to hear from you, whether you lean left or right, moderate, progressive or pro-MAGA. Become a citizen pundit and submit your civilly stated comments on the latest political issues and news in the space provided in this column or the one on the right. Or email us at editors@thehustings.news and indicate in the subject line whether you lean liberal or conservative.

Recently in this column:

Trump-era bank deregulation is blamed for failures of Silicon Valley Bank and Signature Bank.

Senate Democrats vote with Republicans to overturn a District of Columbia criminal code update.

House Democrats outline their plan to retake the lower chamber’s majority in 2024.

_____

WORLD POETRY DAY TUESDAY, 3/21/23

(It's also the first full day of springtime for Trump, the day the former president had expected to be arrested by Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg's (pictured) over his investigation of possible financial crimes in connection with 45's payment of hush money to two women, including porn star Stormy Daniels. Though an indictment didn't look likely Tuesday, the New York Police Department Monday erected barricades around Manhattan's Criminal Court in anticipation of MAGA protesters.)

House Republicans … are attempting to counter Bragg’s next move with their demand the “George Soros-funded” DA turn over documents in the case and come in for a grilling/hearing. 

•••

Kishida Counters Xi – Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida made a surprise visit to Kyiv Tuesday for a “show of unity” with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy on the second day of Chinese leader Xi Jingping’s three-day Kremlin sleepover with Russian dictator Vladmir Putin (AP). 

Xi, who is said to be on a “peace mission” to Moscow, has invited Putin (charged with war crimes by the International Criminal Court last week) to Beijing later this year. 

Kishida, who also will meet with Polish President Andrzej Duda before returning to Tokyo Thursday, is chairman of the Group of Seven summit this May in Hiroshima. Can a country in the Pacific become a member of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization?

--TL

_______________________________________________

...meanwhile...

MONDAY 3/20/23

Weekend of Trump’s Discontent – This is what Donald J. Trump posted on his Truth Social media outlet Saturday: “The far and away leading Republican candidate and former President of the United States of America will be arrested on Tuesday of next week!” (Per The Guardian.) 

Trump continues; “Protest, take our nation back!”

Which of His Myriad Cases?: Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg (pictured above) is expected to charge Trump under his investigation of $130,000 in "hush money" paid to porn star Stormy Daniels prior to the 2016 presidential election by then-Trump fixer Michael Cohen and whether the payments violated campaign finance laws. 

Signals, Maybe, But Not Words: Bragg did not confirm speculation he will issue the charges. “As with all our investigations, we will continue to apply the law evenly and firmly and speak publicly only when appropriate,” he said in a private email to his office employees, according to Politico.

Meanwhile: A Trump spokesman “walked back” Trump’s Truth Social rant, saying there is no notification from the Manhattan DA that he has “decided to take his witch-hunt to the next level. President Trump is rightfully highlighting his innocence and the weaponization of our injustice system.” (Per ABC News.)

In the private email according to Politico, Bragg warned “we do not tolerate attempts to intimidate our office or threaten the rule of law in New York.” His office has been coordinating protection with the New York Police Department and the Office of Court Administration. 

Above the Law?: Former Vice President Mike Pence -- who a week earlier finally called out his ex-boss for being “wrong” about his ability to overturn the Electoral College count on January 6, 2021 -- told ABC News’ Jonathan Karl Saturday on This Week it would be a “politically charged” mistake for Bragg to have Trump arrested. 

“I’m taken aback at the idea of indicting a former president of the United States, at a time when there’s a crime wave in New York City that – the fact that the Manhattan DA thinks that indicting President Trump is his top priority. I think is, just tells you everything you need to know about the radical left in this country.”

But Wait, There’s More: Cohen told MSNBC Sunday he has been re-called as a “rebuttal” witness to testify Monday in the hush-money case. Cohen’s former legal advisor, Robert Costello, also is expected to testify, and has signaled to a Trump attorney that he has information that counters Cohen’s previous testimony pinning the hush-money payment on Trump, and thus exonerates him, a person familiar with the matter told the Associated Press.

Mixed Signals?: House Speaker Kevin McCarthy (R-CA) called for calm in the face of potential arrest of the ex-president. “I don’t think people should protest this stuff,” he said at a House GOP issues retreat, The Hill reports. So as to not upset Trump too much, the speaker – who condemned Trump’s complicity in the January 6th Capitol insurrection before visiting him at Mar-a-Lago in February 2021 – suggested that the ex-president was calling on others to “educate people about what’s going on.”

•••

Also This Week – The Federal Reserve meets Tuesday and Wednesday to set interest rate increases. There is speculation on Wall Street the Fed will hold off on another increase, otherwise expected to be 0.5% to fight inflation, because of the recent failures of Silicon Valley Bank and Signature Bank.

Update: The Fed will hike interest rates by 0.25% this week, CNBC says.

Senate: The full Senate is in session Tuesday through Friday.

HouseThe full House of Representatives is in session Wednesday, Thursday and Friday.

•••

USB Merges with Credit Suisse – USB is calling it a merger, though it looks more like a takeover of troubled fellow Swiss bank Credit Suisse. According to USB, the two entered into a merger agreement Sunday after intervention of the Swiss Federal Department of Finance, Swiss National Bank and Swiss Financial Market Supervisory Committee. Shareholders of the failing bank will receive one USB share for every 22.48 shares of Credit Suisse. USB will write off 16-billion Swiss francs (US $17.28-billion) of Credit Suisse debt and will appoint “key personnel” to Credit Suisse. USB hopes to complete the merger by the end of this year. 

The "merger" will cost USB $3 billion to take over Credit Suisse, The Wall Street Journal reports.

--Compiled and edited by Todd Lassa

_____
COMMENTS: editors@thehustings.news

Citizen pundits of all stripes are invited to comment on recent political issues and news covered here. Traditional conservatives as well as pro-MAGA populists are encouraged to enter civilly expressed comments in the appropriate space in this column. Or email editors@thehustings.news and indicate the political direction toward which you lean in the subject line.

Recently in this column:

Senate and House Republicans split on continuing U.S. aid to Ukraine.

Wall Street Journal op-ed says Trump-era bank deregulation is not to blame for Silicon Valley Bank and Signature Bank failures.

Tucker Carlson edits January 6 history.

CPAC becomes Trump-ac.

_____

Stormy Daniels has agreed to meet with Manhattan prosecutors in the case involving Donald J. Trump’s payment of $130,000 in hush money to the porn star prior to the 2016 presidential election, Politico reports. Daniels’ attorney, Clark Brewster tweeted that she “responded to questions and has agreed to make herself available as a witness.”

Meanwhile, grand jury members in Georgia say they listened to a third leaked call, in which Trump tried to overturn the state’s Electoral College vote, The Atlanta Journal-Constitution reports. It says the former president attempted to get state House Speaker David Ralston to convene a special session of the legislature to overturn Joe Biden’s win in the state.

Are we really close to seeing former President Trump indicted in either of these cases, or perhaps for his alleged involvement in the January 6th Capitol insurrection?

Become a Citizen Pundit. Add your Comments in the left column, or in the right if that’s how you lean. Or email editors@thehustings.news and let us know if you’re left or right in the subject line. 

Also up for debate:

Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-MA) says easing of banking regulations during the Trump administration, including Dodd-Frank, contributed to meltdowns of Silicon Valley Bank and Signature Bank. Agree or disagree?

How House Democrats plan to retake the majority in 2024.

Can traditional Republicans retake control of the party from the MAGA-right by next year’s elections?

_____

FRIDAY 3/17/23

(U.S. European Command has released de-classified video footage of a Russian Su-27 “conducting an unsafe/unprofessional intercept of a U.S. Air Force MQ-9 in international airspace over the Black Sea…” Russian aircraft spilled fuel on the MQ-9 drone before an Su-27 caught its propeller and forced European Command to down it. See the released footage here:https://www.eucom.mil/article/42318/media-advisory-camera-footage-release-from-us-air-force-mq-9-interaction-with-russian-su-2)

Slovakia Joins Poland – Slovakia becomes the second NATO country to provide warplanes to Ukraine for its defense against Russia’s invasion. It will send 13 MiG-29 jets to Ukraine. Earlier this week, Poland announced it will send four of the Soviet-era warplanes to the country. According to The Kyiv Independent, Ukrainian Prime Minister Eduard Heger said the jets will be used to protect the country’s skies and “not to carry out attacks against Russian military.”

Meanwhile: Beijing has announced Chinese leader Xi Jingping meets with Vladimir Putin in Moscow next week (per NPR).

•••

Truth Social Money Laundering Probe – Top executives of Truth Social became concerned last spring about “opaque entities in two emergency loans” to Donald J. Trump’s struggling social media site, The Guardian reports, citing “documents, emails and sources familiar with the matter.” The U.S. attorney’s office for the Southern District of New York is investigating yet another potential crime in connection with the former president, in a scoop by The Guardian earlier this week. 

The two “emergency loans” include $6 million from the ES Family Trust in February 2022 (the month Russia invaded Ukraine), the trustee of which turns out to be a director of Paxum Bank, a part-owner of which is a relative of a Putin ally. The first of the two loans came in December 2021 from Paxum Bank, which is registered in Dominica.

Trump, Meanwhile, Defends Russia: In a video he released Thursday, Trump said, “the greatest threat to Western civilization today is not Russia,” per another UK-based newspaper, the Daily Mail, “it’s probably more than anything else ourselves and some of the horrible, USA-hating people.”

•••

Other Banks Save First Republic – Eleven banks led by JP Morgan Chase, Citigroup, Bank of America and Wells Fargo & Co. have deposited $30 billion into First Republic to save the San Francisco bank. The bailout includes $2.5 billion each from Morgan Stanley and Goldman Sachs, and The Wall Street Journal reports that First Republic executives sold $11.8 million in stock in the two months leading up to the bank’s crash, at an average price of nearly $130 per share.

Executive Chairman James Herbert II was among the bank’s executives who sold shares before First Republic stock fell to $34.27 per share and credit-rating agency S&P Global downgraded the bank four notches to “junk” status. WSJ notes that insider stock sales at banks are exempt from normal disclosure rules.

•••

We welcome your civil comments. Become a Citizen Pundit with an email to editors@thehustings.news on any recent issues, and note whether you lean left or right in the subject line.

--TL

_____________________________________________

THURSDAY 3/16/23

Ukraine to Get Warplanes – Poland will provide Soviet-made MiG-29 fighter jets to Ukraine, President Andrzej Duda said at a news conference Thursday (per The Washington Post). Poland is the first NATO nation to provide fighter jets, long requested by Ukraine after Russia’s invasion more than a year ago.

•••

TikTok ... Time Out? – The Biden administration demands that Chinese-owned TikTok be sold to avoid a potential ban in the United States, according to NPR’s Morning Edition. It is not clear whether federal officials have set a deadline for such a sale, the report says. 

The Committee on Foreign Investment in the U.S. (CFIUS) has been examining for two years whether U.S. data collected by TikTok are properly safeguarded from employees of the social media site’s Beijing owner, ByteDance. TikTok has commited $1.5 billion to its “Project Texas,” in which U.S.-based Oracle is to build a firewall to ensure security for users in the U.S. 

The Trump administration had attempted to put TikTok out of business, NPR notes, but efforts were halted by federal courts.

•••

Banking “Remains Sound” – Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen will tell the Senate Finance Committee Thursday the U.S. banking system “remains sound” and promote the government’s “decisive and forceful actions” to shore up confidence, Axios reports. 

Meanwhile: Credit Suisse will borrow up to $54 billion from Switzerland’s central bank. Shares in Credit Suisse momentarily plunged 25% Wednesday after Saudi National Bank indicated to other European banks it would no longer support the Swiss bank.

--Compiled and edited by Todd Lassa

_____
COMMENTS: editors@thehustings.news

The continuing rift between Senate GOP leaders and MAGA Republicans continues to boil over, after undeclared presidential candidate Ron DeSantis accused President Biden on Tucker Carlson Tonight of “virtual ‘blank check’ funding” of “Ukraine in a territorial dispute.” Thursday, The Bulwark recalled a speech Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-KY) gave in Munich earlier this year in which he said his caucus supports “a strong, involved America and a robust trans-Atlantic alliance.”

McConnell said; “Don’t look at Twitter, look at people in power.”

Will pro-Ukraine Senate Republicans prevail, or will isolationism and antipathy for Ukraine and its president, Volodymyr Zelenskyy, prevail among DeSantis, MAGA House Republicans and declared 2024 candidate Donald J. Trump? 

Become a Citizen Pundit. Add your Comments in the right column, or in the left if that’s how you lean. Or email editors@thehustings.news and let us know if you’re right or left in the subject line. 

Also up for debate:

Editorial in The Wall Street Journal says Trump-era bank deregulation is not to be blamed for Silicon Valley Bank and Signature Bank failures. Agree or disagree?

Senate Republicans condemn Tucker Carlson’s deceptive video editing of the January 6th Capitol insurrection.

TPAC for sure: Trump maintains control of the Conservative Political Action Conference. But does it matter to GOP leadership?

_____

How did Silicon Valley Bank’s collapse happen? Rollback of the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act of 2010, according to PoliticusUSA.

The “liberal news, commentary and opinion” media website quotes Liz Zelnick, director of the economic security and corporate power program at Accountable.US saying, “This mess was left behind by Republicans and the Trump administration who were too deep in the big banks’ pockets to care about the consequences of gutting financial industry oversight. The chickens came to roost [Friday] in the Republican war against Wall Street Reform and common financial protections.”

Accountable.US is self-described as a non-partisan organization that “shines a light on corporations and special interests.”

Then-President Trump in 2018 signed a bill that exempted many U.S. banks from Dodd-Frank.

Upshot: If SVB’s collapse has anything like the effect of Lehman Brothers’ collapse in 2008 during the Biden administration, the current president will bear much of the blame.

•••

Dear Citizen Pundits: What do you think? Go to the Comments section in this column, or the one in the right column if that’s how you lean, or email editors@thehustings.news and type “for the left column” or “for the right column” in the subject line.

_____

WEDNESDAY 3/15/23

(The Consumer Price Index inched down in February to a 6% inflation rate, raising expectations the Federal Reserve will forgo another interest rate hike when it meets next week. Scroll center column for details.)

Two Nuclear Powers Clash Over U.S. Drone – A Russian jet struck a U.S. MQ-9 Reaper drone in international airspace over the Black Sea (per The Washington Post). According to the Pentagon, two Russian war planes, believed to be Su-27 fighter jets seen in the vicinity of the MQ-9 dumped fuel on the drone before one Russian jet collided with the drone’s propeller to force it down. Russia denied responsibility and faulted U.S. military for “breaching” a “temporary” border.

‘Temporary Border’ Means: Russian-occupied Ukraine. Russia’s authoritarian leader Vladimir Putin has accused the U.S. of intervention in its so-called border dispute – that’s “invasion” to the free world -- for much of the past year. Though the Su-27’s collision with the MQ-9 is being described as a clumsy maneuver, the question of Russia’s intention will be an escalating issue in the coming days.

•••

Credit Suisse Rattles Global Banking – The panic triggered by Silicon Valley Bank and Signature Bank has gone global, with giant Credit Suisse bond and share values dropping like Wile E. Coyote on an anvil. Stock prices around the world plunged pretty quickly Wednesday, when the Dow Jones Industrial Average dropped more than 1.3% at the opening bell.

“Credit Suisse has been the problem child of Europe for years,” The Wall Street Journal notes.

The Swiss bank’s freefall accelerated after Saudi National Bank told other outlets in Europe it no longer would continue its financial help, AP says.

Meanwhile: The Justice Department and the Securities and Exchange Commission have opened an investigation into Silicon Valley Bank’s sudden closure last Friday.

•••

Abortion Pill Ban? – Trump-appointed U.S. District Judge Matthew Kacsmaryk hears arguments in Texas Wednesday on whether to reverse the FDA’s 2000 approval of Mifepristone, one of two medicines used to medically induce abortion and manage miscarriages. Mifepristone is currently available by mail, telemedicine and pharmacy pickup, Newsweek reports, so the judge’s ruling in Texas could determine whether it is available nationwide, even in states where abortion is allowed. 

--TL

_____________________________________________

TUESDAY 3/14/23

CPI Eases Slightly to 6.0% -- Consumer prices rose 6.0% year-over-year in February, the Labor Department reported Tuesday, on an increase of 0.4% over January. This compares with a 6.4% annual rate in January from a month-over-month increase of 0.5%. The Labor Department’s Bureau of Labor Statistics says shelter accounted for 70% of last month’s increase. Food was up 0.4% and food at home was up 0.3%, with energy down 0.6% as natural gas and fuel oil prices declined. Used cars and trucks, and medical care prices also declined.

Upshot: The Federal Reserve was expected to continue its aggressive interest rate increases at next week’s regularly scheduled meeting. But after collapse of Silicon Valley Bank and Signature Bank last weekend blamed at least in part on their mishandling of aggressive increases over the last year, the Fed may hold rates at the current level. 

•••

Cohen Testifies Ahead of Possible DJT Indictment – Michael Cohen, former “fixer” for Donald J. Trump appeared before a Manhattan grand jury for a reported three-plus hours Monday ahead of an expected indictment of the former president for his alleged role in paying hush money to porn star Stormy Daniels prior to the 2016 election. Cohen told reporters as he walked into the building where the grand jury met he felt “fine” but “a little twisted, to tell the truth,” The New York Times reports. Prosecutors from Manhattan District Attorney Alvin L. Bragg’s office have questioned at least seven others before the grand jury this year.

Bragg’s office has offered to Trump’s lawyers the chance to appear before the grand jury this week, “should he want to,” signaling potential indictment of the ex-president. Trump reportedly has declined the offer.

•••

McConnell Released from Hospital – Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-KY) Monday afternoon was released from the hospital where he was treated for a concussion from a fall last week, The Guardian reports, and will recover in an inpatient rehabilitation facility according to a spokesperson. McConnell suffered a concussion when he tripped and fell at a private dinner at the Waldorf Astoria hotel in Washington last Wednesday evening. No word on when he is expected to return to the Senate.

•••

Obituary: Patricia Schroeder – “Feminist trailblazer,” Democratic representative from Colorado from 1973 to 1997, Patricia Schroeder has died. First elected in 1972 as an opponent of the Vietnam War, Schroeder served on the House Armed Services committee for all her 24 years in office, which she persuaded to recommend the military allow women soldiers to fly combat missions, says her NYT obit. Schroeder died in a Celebration, Florida, hospital following a stroke. She was 82.

--TL

_____________________________________________

MONDAY 3/13/23

SVB, Signature Deposits Covered

Deposit Insurance Fund Triggered – While the Treasury Department will not bail out Silicon Valley Bank and Signature Bank as Janet Yellen said Sunday, the banks’ customers will be covered by the federal Deposit Insurance Fund, President Biden said Monday morning in a special address to the country (above). Signature Bank fell on Sunday, two days after the Treasury Department took over SVB.

Biden said Monday:

All customers of both banks “are protected and will have access to their money as of today,” including “small businesses across the country that bank there and need to make payroll, pay their bills” to stay open for business.

No bank losses will be covered by U.S. taxpayers. These deposits will come from fees by other banks paid into the federal Deposit Insurance Fund.

SVB and Signature management “will be fired. … If the bank is taken over by the FDIC, they should not work there.”

Investors in the two banks will not be protected. “They knowingly took a risk and when the investment does not pay off they lose their money. That’s how capitalism works.”

The government must get to the bottom of these two banks’ collapse. “We must get a full account of what happened and why.” 

Finally, Biden said, “we must reduce the risks of this happening again.” He said the “last administration” rolled back some of the protections added to the banking system after the 2008 collapse was addressed early in the Obama administration, including the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Protection Act of 2010.

•••

Lehman Brothers Redux? – Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen (above) has ruled out federal bailout of Silicon Valley Bank, taken over by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) last Friday after a run on deposits. The bank was the nation’s 16th-largest, and the second-largest to fail, according to NPR.

“During the financial crisis, there were investors and owners of systemic large banks that were bailed out,” Yellen told CBS News Face the Nation Sunday. “And the reforms that have been put in place means that we’re not going to do that again. But we are concerned about deposits and are focused on trying to meet their needs.”

SVB’s customers largely are tech-industry companies and employees, most with deposits exceeding the $250,000 limit covered by the FDIC. Lehman Brothers was generally blamed for triggering the 2007-08 financial crisis and subsequent Great Recession with its September 15, 2008, bankruptcy, largest in U.S. history at the time according to britannica.com.

On Friday the FDIC took control of the ”startup-focused lender” using a new entity called the Deposit Insurance National Bank of Santa Clara, The Wall Street Journal reports. House Speaker Kevin McCarthy (R-CA) told Maria Bartiromo on Fox News’ Sunday Morning Futures the White House “has the tools” to handle SVB’s collapse and that an acquisition by a larger bank may be the “best option” to cool markets.

•••

Old Industry, on the Other Hand – Saudi Aramco, the oil giant owned mostly by the government of Saudi Arabia, earned a record $161 billion last year, a 47% jump over fiscal 2021, The New York Times reports. 

“We anticipate oil and gas will remain essential for the foreseeable future,” chief executive Amin H. Nasser said in a statement. 

Take that, Tesla, rapidly electrifying traditional auto industry and solar panel manufacturers.

The 2022 revenues are a record since 2019, when Saudi Aramco began offering shares on the local Tadawuhl stock exchange.

This Week -- The full Senate is in session Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday. The full House of Representatives is off.

--Compiled and edited by Todd Lassa

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COMMENTS: editors@thehustings.news

The Wall Street Journal’s Opinion board calls the White House and Treasury Department’s action on Signature and Silicon Valley Bank “de facto bailout of the banking system, even as the regulators and Biden officials have been telling us that the economy is great and there was nothing to worry about. The unpleasant truth – which Washington will never admit – is that SVB’s failure is a bill coming due for years of monetary and regulatory mistakes.” 

The right answer, according to the Monday editorial (subscription required) is to allow big banks to “merge” with the smaller, struggling banks, according to the Monday editorial (subscription required), but “acolytes” of Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-MA) on the FDIC board are against such mergers, according to the WSJ board. 

“Democrats andf the press corps may try to pin the problem on bankers and the Trump administration, but these are political diversions.”

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Pence, Finally

Last Year’s House Select Committee to Investigate the January 6th Attack on the United States Capitol pretty much painted Donald J. Trump’s vice president, Mike Pence, as a hero on that day, resisting an angry mob ready to hang him and a Secret Service offering to whisk him away from danger. But Pence has been loath to strike back and criticize his ex-boss, who leads in most polls among potential candidates for the GOP’s 2024 presidential nomination. 

Until Saturday night’s Gridiron dinner, hosted by the Washington press corps.

“President Trump was wrong,” The Washington Post reports. Pence is, of course, one of the GOP’s leading undeclared candidates for president in 2024. “I had no right to overturn the election. And his reckless words endangered my family and everyone at the Capitol that day. And I know that history will hold Donald Trump accountable.”

Also speaking at the white-tie event were Secretary of State Antony Blinken and New Jersey Gov. Phil Murphy (D). 

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Dear Citizen Pundits: What do you think? Go to the Comments section in this column, or the one in the left column if that’s how you lean, or email editors@thehustings.news and type “for the right column” or “for the left column” in the subject line.

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Thirty-three Democratic senators joined Republicans in overturning a Washington, D.C. city council bill that would update the District’s criminal code for the first time in a century, according to The Hill. The vote was an overwhelming 81-74, with proponents including Sen. Krysten Sinema (I-AZ). 

President Biden already has said he will not veto the bill, angering many progressives in his party, even though D.C. Mayor Muriel Bowser, a fellow Democrat did not support it.

The bill included a 26-year maximum sentence for carjacking cases, which supporters of the city council bill say is the typical sentence most judges impose. 

Upshot: This is the first time in about 30 years that Congress has imposed its will over Washington “home rule,” and is considered a blow to a long-time effort among Democrats to make the District of Columbia the 51st state.

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Williamson Declares, Again

MONDAY 3/7/23

Marianne Williamson, “one-time spiritual guru to Oprah Winfrey and others,” and one of more than two-dozen candidates for the Democratic nomination for president in 2020 is running again, and this time she hopes voters take her seriously, The New York Times reports. Williamson, 70, who moved to Washington, D.C., after her first run three years ago sounds like a “Bernie Sanders-style liberal,” according to the Times, and emphasizes economic justice, corporate power and “intentional blindness” of federal government officials to poverty in the U.S.

Meanwhile: President Biden, who has yet to declare for 2024, is still attempting to get beyond conservative charges he is “weak on crime” over his support of police reform, which became branded three years ago as “defund the police.” Biden repeatedly insists he has never embraced such contentious verbiage. Now progressives are upset over reports Biden plans to sign a bill by Congress that would overturn Washington, D.C.’s new criminal justice law, according to The Washington Post

The bill would shorten penalties for certain crimes committed in the District – Biden singled out lowered penalties for carjacking – and was supported by D.C.’s council over the objections of Mayor Muriel E. Bowser. Biden had previously said he would support criminal justice reform. A statement by the White House a month ago said that Congress’ efforts to block it was an example of “how the District of Columbia continues to be denied true self-governance and why it deserves statehood.” 

•••

What do you think? Go to the Comments section in this column, or the one in the right column if that’s how you lean, or email editors@thehustings.news and type “for the left column” or “for the right column” in the subject line.

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FRIDAY 3/10/23

Strong Job Growth Persists – Though growth slowed in February from an unexpectedly strong January, and the unemployment rate ticked up from a 54-year low of 3.4% to 3.6%, the Labor Department counted 311,000 jobs added in February. Wall Street will be anxious about the Federal Reserve’s reaction to last month’s number, higher than the 225,000 new jobs economists expected though lower than January’s 517,000, which compounded concerns the Federal Reserve was losing its battle against high inflation. 

The Labor Department’s Bureau of Labor Statistics releases its latest Consumer Price Index next Tuesday.

Usual Suspects: Notable job gains were in leisure and hospitality, retail trade, government and health care. 

--TL

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THURSDAY 3/9/23

Fed Chairman Jerome Powell to the Senate Banking Committee -- "Although inflation has been moderating in recent months, the process of getting inflation back down to 2% has a long way to go and is likely to be bumpy." Powell also warned; "Whatever else Congress does, we need to raise the debt ceiling. That's the only way out." Up next: The Labor Department's jobs report Friday, March 10 and the Consumer Price Index for February on Monday, March 13.

Biden Budget Bows– Reverse President Trump’s 2017 tax cuts for the rich with new taxes on billionaires earning more than $100 million per year and cut the deficit by $3 trillion over the next decade. Those are the headline features of President Biden’s fiscal year 2024 federal budget, which he introduces in Philadelphia Thursday, per NPR and AP.

White House budget proposals are typically “dead on arrival,” and this one will be no different, as far as Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-KY) is concerned.

“You know the president’s budget is replete with what they would do if they could – thank goodness the House is Republican,” McConnell said earlier this week, perhaps somewhat ruefully – massive tax increases, more spending.”

Biden will use his event in Philadelphia to hit back and note that the Republican plan is to oppose without offering any alternative plan. The White House budget will propose $246 billion in savings by reversing a tax subsidy for cryptocurrency transactions. It is expected to include pay increases for federal workers and an $835 billion defense budget.

That last item is under pressure from MAGA House Republicans who want more scrutiny over military aid to Ukraine in its struggle against Russia.

McConnell Hospitalized – McConnell, 81, was hospitalized Wednesday night after suffering a fall at a private dinner at the Washington area hotel, Politico reports. 

•••

Louisville PD Civil Rights Violations – The Justice Department says that after a “comprehensive investigation” the Louisville Metro Police Department and Louisville/Jefferson County metropolitan government “engaged in a pattern or practice of conduct that violates the U.S. Constitution and federal law.” 

Read the full DOJ report here: https://www.justice.gov/opa/pr/justice-department-finds-civil-rights-violations-louisville-metro-police-department-and

--TL

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WEDNESDAY 3/8/23

More Fox News Emails from Dominion: Dominion Voting Systems has released more emails and other internal communications procured in discovery over its $1.6-billion lawsuit against Fox News for defamation connected to Donald J. Trump’s Big Lie. Here are a few juicy excerpts, as reported by The Washington Post:

•”We are very, very close to being able to ignore Trump most nights. I truly can’t wait. I hate him personally.”… and “We’re all pretending we’ve got a lot to show for [Trump’s four years in office], because admitting what a disaster it’s been is too tough to digest. But come on. There really isn’t an upside to Trump.” –Tucker Carlson

•”Totally insane” and “just mind blowingly nuts.” –Fox News Senior Vice President Raj Shah in a November 21, 2020, email to producers describing Trump attorney Sidney Powell’s conspiracy theories involving Fox News and Dominion Voting System’s voting machines.

•Fox News Channel’s Prime Time net favorability of Carlson, Sean Hannity and Laura Ingraham fell from 70% before the election to less than 30%. Several emails show Fox was more concerned about competition from Newsmax and other hard-right outlets than it was CNN and MSNBC.

•”Dominion was used in Ohio and Florida. Trump won them. Did they forget to rig these or all part of the plan?” Tucker Carlson Tonight producer Alex Pfeiffer. 

…meanwhile…

In part one of Tucker Carlson’s “documentary” from more than 40,000 hours of 1/6 video footage handed to him by House Speaker Kevin McCarthy (R-CA), the Fox News host described the insurrection as “mostly peaceful chaos” and that the footage does not show an insurrection or riot in progress. 

Capitol Police Chief Tom Manger responded Tuesday saying Carlson pushed an “outrageous and false” allegation that officers acted as “tour guides,” and said the Fox News program “cherry-picked from the calmer moments.”

Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-KY): “It was a mistake, in my view, for Fox News to depict this in a way that’s completely at variance with what our chief law enforcement officer here at the Capitol thinks.”

--TL

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TUESDAY 3/7/23

Even Higher Interest Rates? -- Chairman Jerome Powell (above) is expected to caution that the Federal Reserve is likely to raise interest rates more than expected to fight stubborn high inflation when he testifies beginning 10 a.m. Tuesday before the Senate Banking Committee Tuesday and again Wednesday before the House Committee on Financial Services, according to The Wall Street Journal. The Fed will consider its next move on interest rates, currently at 4.75% in its next meeting scheduled for March 21-22. Its pre-meeting quiet period begins Saturday.

•••

FY24 Budget – The White House will propose raising taxes for those earning more than $400,000 a year and allow the federal government to negotiate drug prices, in order to extend the Medicare trust fund’s solvency by 25 years, as part of President Biden’s forthcoming Fiscal Year 2024 budget, Semafor reports. Bi-partisan support is not expected from Congress.

•••

Bots for Trump – Remember when Elon Musk conducted a search for bots counted by Twitter management who figured they had an iron-clad deal to sell to the Tesla and SpaceX chief for $44 billion? It appears he missed a few. 

Thousands of them, or perhaps “hundreds of thousands” of bots the Associated Press reports were created in the past 11 months to offer “streams” of praise for Donald J. Trump. These Twitter bots also ridiculed Republican and Democratic critics of the former president alike and attacked Trump’s former UN ambassador and now challenger for the 2024 GOP nomination for president, Nikki Haley. Bots also said Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis can’t beat Trump in the race, but would make a good running mate. (Haley may have thought that was her job.)

Double-irony alert: Last November with much fanfare Musk welcomed the ex-prez back on Twitter. But Trump declined and instead stuck with his own struggling social media network, Truth Social. Why tweet when hundreds of thousands of bots can do it for you?

--TL

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MONDAY 3/6/23

Biden in Selma -- On the anniversary Sunday of “Bloody Sunday,” when peaceful civil rights proponents met with a violent police response on the Edmund Pettis Bridge in Selma, Alabama, in 1965, President Biden made the following remarks (AP):

“Selma is a reckoning. The right to vote … to have your voted counted is the threshold of democracy and liberty. With it anything is possible.

“This fundamental right remains under assault. The conservative Supreme Court has gutted the Voting Rights Act over the years. Since the 2020 election, a wave of states and dozens and dozens of anti-voting laws and the election deniers are now elected to office.” …

President Lyndon Baines Johnson introduced the Voting Rights Act eight days after “Bloody Sunday.”

•••

This Week – Monday, the Senate is in session, but the House is out. Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday, both the House and Senate are in session, and on Friday, the House only is in session.

--Compiled and edited by Todd Lassa

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The eponymous host of Fox News’ Tucker Carlson Tonight aired the first batch of 1/6 (above) footage handed to him by House Speaker Kevin McCarthy (R-CA) Monday and described the scene as “mostly peaceful chaos,” Semafor reports. 

Meanwhile, according to the report, Fox News appears to be “softening” on its “soft ban” on ex-President Trump. Does Donald J. Trump’s 62%-20% score over Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis in CPAC’s straw poll have anything to do with that?

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TPAC for Sure

Last week’s Conservative Political Action Conferenec (CPAC) was “all about former President Trump,” political reporter Mara Liasson said on NPR’s Weekend Edition Sunday. Everyone, she said, called it “TPAC.” 

In reporting Trump’s domination of TPAC’s – er, CPAC’s – straw poll of declared and undeclared 2024 Republican presidential hopefuls, Newsweek noted that attendees heckled declared candidate, Nikki Haley, former UN ambassador (in Trump’s administration) and former South Carolina governor. The straw poll:

Trump (declared): 62%.

Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis (undeclared): 20%,

Perry Johnson (businessman who declared last Thursday): 5%.

Haley (declared): 3%.

Vivek Ramaswamy (declared): 1%.

Elsewhere in the GOP: Larry Hogan, the two-term Republican governor of Maryland who had considered a run for president after he voluntarily stepped down last year says that after giving it “serious consideration” he will not seek the GOP nomination in 2024, The Hill reports. Hogan was among the vocal of not-Trump-supporters. He refused to back the candidate Trump endorsed last year for to replace him as Maryland governor, Dan Cox, who lost by a wide margin to Democrat Wes Moore.

"Right now you have, you know, Trump and DeSantis at the top of the field, they're soaking up all the oxygen, getting all the attention," Hogan told CBS News Face the Nation Sunday. "And then a whole lot of the rest of us in single digits, and the more of them you have the less chance you have for somebody rising up."

Upshot: Whether or not the GOP is Trump’s party, CPAC is now and for the foreseeable future a Trump party. Sure, CPAC’s founder, Matt Schlapp faces more than one accusation of recent sexual misconduct, but that sort of thing has never has never much dissuaded the MAGA wing of the party. 

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What do you think? Go to the Comments section in this column, or the one in the left column if that’s how you lean, or email editors@thehustings.news and type “for the right column” or “for the left column” in the subject line.

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