NOW WOULD BE A GREAT TIME TO SAVE RSN - We’ve taken quite a beating on funding over
the past several months. Clearly it is taking it’s toll. RSN is here and strong, but it is and has always been dependent on a basic operating budget. That’s fallen off sharply in recent months. The situation is bad. / Marc Ash, Founder Reader Supported News
Charles Pierce | I'm Not Sure We're Ready for the Chaos That Will Follow the Midterms
![]() Charles Pierce, Esquire Pierce writes: "Over the weekend, there were a couple of ominous, if overlooked, statements from Republican officials touching on the upcoming midterm elections." READ MORE ![]() Michael Cohen. (photo: Getty Images)
Emily Jane Fox | "He Is Trying to Make It Right": As the Midterms Approach, Michael Cohen Is Doubling Down on His Civic Duty
Emily Jane Fox, Vanity Fair Fox writes: "Despite having no formal cooperation agreement with the government, Cohen has willingly assisted and provided information critical to several ongoing investigations." READ MORE ![]() Voters at a polling precinct. (photo: Getty Images)
Nate Silver | 2018 House Forecast
Nate Silver, FiveThirtyEight Excerpt: "How various breakdowns in the national popular vote correspond to the most likely distributions of House seats by party, according to our forecast." READ MORE ![]() Vietnam's government has scrapped plans to allow independent trade unions and unleashed its most severe clampdown on dissent in decades. (photo: WP)
How Trump's Decision on TPP Has Set Back Democracy in Vietnam
Simon Denyer and David Nakamura, The Washington Post Excerpt: "Vietnam had promised more workers' rights. Without the TPP, it has instead unleashed a crackdown." READ MORE ![]() Kamala Harris (D-CA), accompanied by Senator Cory Booker (D-NJ), questions Homeland Security Secretary Kirstjen Nielsen during a hearing before the Senate Judiciary Committee on Capitol Hill, January 16, 2018, in Washington. (photo: Jose Luis Magana/AP)
Kamala Harris, Cory Booker Lead Charge to Advance Anti-Lynching Law in Senate
Clarissa Hamlin, News One Hamlin writes: "All three of the nation's Black senators won a victory Thursday in the ongoing battle to criminalize lynching-related offenses for the first time in American history." READ MORE ![]() 'The way the war is waged has systematically choked civilians by making less food available and affordable to millions of people.' (photo: Abdullkareem Alayashy)
Civilians in Yemen Are Not Starving, They Are Being Starved
Jan Egeland, Norwegian Refugee Council Egeland writes: "Let it be known that the worst famine on our watch is wholly manmade by Yemen's conflict parties and their international sponsors." READ MORE ![]() Greenpeace ship the Arctic Sunrise in Charlotte Bay, Antarctic peninsula. (photo: Christian Åslund/Greenpeace)
Javier Bardem | I've Seen the Antarctic's Untouched Beauty. There's Still Time to Protect It
Javier Bardem, Guardian UK Bardem writes: "This area still remains one of the least-touched regions on the planet. Right now, we have an opportunity to protect it." READ MORE |
Showing posts with label MIDTERMS. Show all posts
Showing posts with label MIDTERMS. Show all posts
Tuesday, October 16, 2018
Charles Pierce | I'm Not Sure We're Ready for the Chaos That Will Follow the Midterms
Tuesday, June 5, 2018
The Daily 202: Cops are called when a senator tries to see kids taken from their immigrant parents
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The Daily 202: Cops are called when a senator tries to see kids taken from their immigrant parents
Wednesday, May 30, 2018
The Daily 202: As alcoholism fells another congressman, a reminder that no one is immune to addiction
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The Daily 202: As alcoholism fells another congressman, a reminder that no one is immune to addiction
-- A Breitbart employee courted Bernie Sanders activist Bruce Carter to get Carter to convince black voters to support Trump or refrain from voting in 2016. Bloomberg News's Lauren Etter and Michael Riley report: “Carter’s recollections and correspondence, which he shared after a falling-out with his fellow Trump supporters, provide a rare look inside the no-holds-barred nature of the Republican’s campaign and how it explored new ways to achieve an age-old political aim: getting the right voters to the polls — and keeping the wrong ones away. … The work Carter says he did, and the funds he was given to do it, also raise questions as to whether campaign finance laws were broken. The group Carter founded, Trump for Urban Communities, never disclosed its spending to the Federal Election Commission — a possible violation of election law.”
Friday, May 18, 2018
The Daily 202: Rex Tillerson is just the latest Trump aide to speak out after getting fired
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The Daily 202: Rex Tillerson is just the latest Trump aide to speak out after getting fired
Here's some perspective from a former senior Hillary Clinton aide on the length of the special counsel investigation under President Clinton:
More perspective from FiveThirtyEight:
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-- Background on the FBI's source: “Trump’s allies are waging an increasingly aggressive campaign to undercut the Russia investigation by exposing the role of a top-secret FBI source,” Philip Rucker, Robert Costa, Carol D. Leonnig and Josh Dawsey report. “The effort reached new heights Thursday as Trump alleged that an informant had improperly spied on his 2016 campaign and predicted that the ensuing scandal would be ‘bigger than Watergate!’ The dispute pits Trump and the Republican chairman of the House Intelligence Committee against the Justice Department and intelligence agencies, whose leaders warn that publicly identifying the confidential source would put lives in danger and imperil other operations. The stakes are so high that the FBI has been working over the past two weeks to mitigate the potential damage if the source’s identity is revealed …[And] the bureau is taking steps to protect other live investigations that the person has worked on and is trying to lessen any danger to associates if the informant’s identity becomes known.”
- “Trump’s allies believe outing the source and revealing details about his or her work for the FBI could help them challenge the investigation and, potentially, provide cause for removing [Robert] Mueller or [Rod] Rosenstein."
-- A Canadian real estate firm said it is close to finalizing a deal to bail out the Manhattan office tower controlled by the family of Jared Kushner. Michael Kranish, Jonathan O'Connell and Karen DeYoung report: “The deal centers on 666 Fifth Ave., which … faces a deadline early next year for repayment of a $1.2 billion debt. The investor, Brookfield Asset Management, has a real estate arm that is partially owned by the sovereign wealth fund of Qatar.Brookfield said in a statement that ‘no Qatar-linked entity has any involvement in, investment in or even knowledge of this potential transaction' ... Brookfield officials said they planned to invest in the building through one of the firm’s investment funds rather than its real estate arm, which they said would prevent Qatari money from being invested in the project.”
-- On the same day as the third Republican debate in 2016, Trump signed a letter of intent to build the Trump World Tower Moscow. BuzzFeed News’s Anthony Cormier and Jason Leopold report: “While fragments of the Trump Moscow venture have trickled out … this is the definitive story of the Moscow tower, told from a trove of emails, text messages, congressional testimony, architectural renderings, and other documents … as well as interviews with key players and investigators. The documents reveal a detailed and plausible plan, well-connected Russian counterparts, and an effort that extended from spearfishing with a Russian developer on a private island to planning for a mid-campaign trip to Moscow for the presidential candidate himself.
“Michael Cohen [and] Felix Sater, who helped negotiate deals around the world for Trump, led the effort. Whatever the significance of the negotiations to the election, the men took measures to keep the plans secret. Text messages often ended with a simple ‘call me.’ They communicated, at times, via Dust, a secure, encrypted messaging application. Sater once warned that they ‘gotta keep this quiet.'”
-- The Treasury Department’s inspector general is expanding a probe into leaked banking records related to Cohen following a New Yorker report alleging some records related to the president's longtime consigliere were mysteriously absent from a government database of suspicious transactions. Beth Reinhard and Emma Brown report: “Richard Delmar, counsel to the inspector general, said investigators will now explore questions raised by the New Yorker after receiving a request from Sen. Ron Wyden (Ore.) ... In a letter Thursday, Wyden sought more information about ‘reported alterations’ in the SAR database related to Cohen and Essential Consultants, including ‘possible removal or sequestration’ of SARs. He also asked that ‘policies and procedures related to access to and management of the database’ be reviewed. …
- “On Thursday, Treasury officials sought to tamp down concerns, saying in a statement that since 2009 FinCEN has had the ability to restrict access to sensitive SARS. ‘Under long-standing procedures, FinCEN will limit access to certain SARs when requested by law enforcement authorities in connection with an ongoing investigation,’ Treasury spokesman Steve Hudak said.
- “Five former government officials and experts on financial crime [said] access to reports on [Cohen] could have been restricted over concern they were particularly vulnerable to leaking. ... 'I would be cautious about reaching a conclusion that something nefarious was going on,' said Carlton Greene, a former chief counsel of FinCEN.”
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