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Since the Dilly, Dally, Delay & Stall Law Firms are adding their billable hours, the Toyota U.S.A. and Route 44 Toyota posts have been separated here:

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Showing posts with label Robert S. Mueller. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Robert S. Mueller. Show all posts

Saturday, July 15, 2017

The latest evidence of Trump’s unfitness may be the most revolting




The latest evidence of Trump’s unfitness may be the most revolting



Donald Trump Jr., left, is interviewed by host Sean Hannity on his Fox News Channel television program Tuesday. (Richard Drew/Associated Press)


 Columnist 

Every week — nearly every day — brings fresh, stomach-churning evidence of President Trump’s unfitness for office. The latest may be the most revolting.
Confronted with incontrovertible proof that his son leapt at the prospect of meeting with a “Russian government attorney” offering to dish dirt on Hillary Clinton as “part of Russia and its government’s support” for his candidacy, the president took the position that this was political business as usual.
His first public reaction, in an interview with Reuters, was that “many people would have held that meeting.” The next day, Trump ratcheted up that astonishing assertion, from “many” to “most,” asserting, “I think from a practical standpoint, most people would have taken that meeting. . . . Politics isn’t the nicest business in the world, but it’s very standard.”
No. It. Isn’t.
Donald Trump Jr. at least had the decency to admit, in his interview with Fox News’s Sean Hannity, that, “in retrospect, I probably would’ve done things a little differently.” Not his father. I know being Trump means never having to say you’re sorry. I understand the fierce parental instinct to defend your erring child, even if that child is a 39-year-old father of five.



The Post’s Ruth Marcus explains why Donald Trump Jr. is in legal jeopardy. Hint: stupidity is not a legal defense. (Adriana Usero, Kate Woodsome/The Washington Post)

But this meeting was unacceptable. It was not even in the exurbs of appropriate. Hard to believe this really requires spelling out, but apparently it does, so here goes: A candidate for president of the United States and his campaign have no business, none, trucking with an emissary of a foreign government peddling incriminating information about their opponent.

That this meeting was explicitly described as an element of a Russian plot to influence the U.S. election is icing on an already repulsive cake. That the target of this feeler — the candidate’s son — embraced such meddling rather than recoiling from it only adds to the sordidness of the episode.
And that the intended beneficiary, now the sitting president of the United States, is unable and unwilling to accept that fact should be chilling to every patriotic American. Perhaps he is incapable of ever acknowledging wrongdoing. That only adds to the chill.
As does Trump’s staggering refusal to recognize the reality of Russian attempts to interfere in the election. What was Trump doing, at this late stage, asking Russian President Vladimir Putin ifhe meddled?
“I said, ‘Did you do it?’ And he said, ‘No, I did not. Absolutely not,’ Trump told Reuters. “I then asked him a second time in a totally different way. He said absolutely not.”
That isn’t the point. The intelligence community has told Trump that Russia interfered. The president shouldn’t be inquiring — he should be informing Putin about the consequences of this unacceptable behavior. But Trump continues to dispute reality. “Somebody did say if [Putin] did do it, you wouldn’t have found out about it,” Trump added.
We are at risk of suffering outrage overload here. So many troubling things have happened, and Trump continues to make so many beyond-the-pale statements, that we are losing our capacity to respond to all of it with appropriate concern.
Meanwhile, the alarm bells clang. Trump, we are told, didn’t know about the meeting with Russian lawyer Natalia Veselnitskaya until a few days before it became public. Except, maybe, he did. “In fact, maybe it was mentioned at some point,” Trump acknowledged in a conversation with pool reporters — part of an off-the-record, then on-the-record encounter not included in the official White House transcript.
Was he talking about Russian adoption or the meeting itself? Unclear — but at this point, the White House deserves little presumption of honesty or full disclosure. The latest evidence: NBC News’s report that the Trump Tower meeting was also attended by a former Soviet counterintelligence officer. So much for Trumpian back-patting about transparency.
I hear the what-aboutists stirring. But what about Democrats and Ukraine? According to a January report in Politico, a Ukrainian American consultant to the Democratic National Committee “met with top officials in the Ukrainian Embassy in Washington in an effort to expose ties between Trump, top campaign aide Paul Manafort and Russia.” Problematic? Perhaps. But Ukraine is not a U.S. adversary. The scope of its reported involvement is far different from a Putin-directed effort to illegally hack emails to help elect Trump.
If there is one silver lining to this staggering news, it is that it serves to strengthen special counsel Robert S. Mueller III. Trump continues to cry “witch hunt.” Yet there can no longer be any doubt that there is something for Mueller to investigate. And even this supine Republican Congress would not tolerate his summary firing. Would it?

Friday, May 19, 2017

MASSterList: Shoe droppings | Lowell's loser lawsuit | Horse raids




By Jay Fitzgerald and Keith Regan
05/19/2017

Shoe droppings | Lowell's loser lawsuit | Horse raids


Happening Today
Women in Law conference
Attorney General Maura Healey gives the keynote address at the annual Women in the Law Conference at Northeastern University School of Law. 240 Dockser Hall, Northeastern University, 65 Forsyth St., Boston, 9 a.m.
495/MetroWest Commission
Sen. Karen Spilka, Rep. Kate Hogan and Assistant Secretary for Communities and Programs Juan Vega co-chair a meeting of the 495/MetroWest Suburban Edge Community Commission, with Sens. James Eldridge and Richard Ross and Reps. Carolyn Dykema, David Muradian and Jeff Roy scheduled to attend, Dean College - Campus Center Atrium, 109 West Central St., Franklin, 9:30 a.m.
Cabinet meeting
Gov. Charlie Baker holds a cabinet meeting of his top department chiefs, Room 360, 10 a.m.
Warren’s Wheelock commencement address
U.S. Sen. Elizabeth Warren delivers the Wheelock College commencement address and receives an honorary degree, Temple Ohabei Shalom, Brookline, 10 a.m.
Forbes announcement
Gov. Baker joins Boston Mayor Marty Walsh and representatives from Forbes for an announcement tied to the return of the Forbes Under 30 Summit to Boston, Catalant, 25 Thomson Place, 3rd Floor, Boston, 1:20 p.m.
Dedham downtown grant
Gov. Baker tours Danvers businesses in recognition of the town's Downtown Initiative Grant, Kaffmandu Coffee House, 8 Maple Street, Danvers, 3:30 p.m.

Today's News
Caution: Falling shoes in Washington
The state’s political establishment, i.e. Democrats, are experiencing a wide variety of emotions these days regarding all things Trump: anger, agitation, impatience, frustration, fear, outrage, you name it, reports the Globe’s Joshua Miller. We particularly liked Rep. Katherine Clark’s quip about the “whiplash from trying to keep up with Trump’s chaos.” But there’s also more talk these days about dropping shoes in Washington, as in the “fear there will be many more shoes to drop in the not too distant future,” as Rep. Michael Capuano puts it. The Globe’s Indira A.R. Lakshmanan also ends her witch-hunt piece with references to more shoes to drop. So there you have it: Dropping shoes is the next political metaphor du jour, once we get all the "witch hunt" references out of the way.
Boston Globe
The greatest witch hunts ever
As for witch-hunt references, U.S. Rep. Seth Moulton, whose district includes Salem, is not impressed with President Trump’s claim that he’s the victim of the "greatest witch hunt of a politician in American history,” reports Dan Glaun at MassLive. Moulton’s tweet response to the president’s claim: “As the Representative of Salem, MA, I can confirm that this is false.”
The Globe’s James Pindell goes over some of the greatest witch hunts in political history, including, at the top of the list, McCarthyism, of course. We’re not too sure about his ‘birthersism’ and Julius Caesar examples, though. And, in New England, no mention of DeflateGate?
MassLive
Trump’s ultimate anti-impeachment shield: Hyper-partisan loyalty amid hyper-polarization
Democrats may sense another Watergate in the making. But Richard Parr and Steve Koczela write at CommonWealth magazine that all the Trump impeachment talk is just talk as long as Republicans control Congress and the Republican base remains loyal to Trump in the age of hyper-partisanship and hyper-polarization. But the Herald’s Howie Carr is already seeing cracks in that GOP base.
CommonWealth
First things first: Mueller to speak at Tabor Academy, then decide whether to bring down Trump presidency
Talk about timing. Tabor Academy has announced that former FBI Director Robert S. Mueller, who just earlier this week was appointed special counsel to investigate the White House’s Russian shenanigans, will be the commencement speaker at Marion’s Tabor Academy on May 29, according to a report at Wicked Local.
Wicked Local

Healey and other AGs file lawsuit to protect ObamaCare subsidies
Attorney General Maura Healey is joining other attorneys general across the country in filing a lawsuit to preserve ObamaCare subsidies that help people cover their copays and deductibles, writes the Globe’s Felice Freyer. Now if only the AGs could find a way to sue to preserve the billions of dollars in federal Medicaid subsidies flowing to states, including Massachusetts. SHNS’s Matt Murphy at the Berkshire Eagle has more on Healey’s action on the subsidies front.
Lowell hit with voting rights lawsuit over at-large council elections
Prediction: Lowell will probably lose the Voting Rights lawsuit recently filed against its at-large council voting system and may want to settle ASAP. Ted Siefer at CommonWealth has details on the Lawyers’ Committee for Civil Rights and Economic Justice’s allegation that the city’s at-large system violates the Voting Rights Act and other constitutional provisions, leading to a lack of minority representation on the council. We’re pretty sure they have a good case, based on along-ago Voting Rights lawsuit that a certain MassterList author covered in Springfield, Illinois (yes, Abe Lincoln’s hometown), which also had at-large council elections. The city ultimately lost, resoundingly, after a prolonged, bitter and costly legal fight.
CommonWealth
Here’s one person who won’t miss Roger Ailes: Mike Dukakis
Former Gov. Michael Dukakis tried not to say anything unkind about Roger Ailes, the GOP media guru and political strategist who died earlier this week. But Dukakis, who felt Ailes’s tank-ride sting during the 1988 presidential race, couldn’t resist, reports the Herald’s O’Ryan Johnson. “He practiced a brand of politics that I don’t believe in, I don’t like, and that was true whether I was involved or if it involved other candidates,” Dukakis said of Ailes. “But he’s passed away and so I extend my sympathies to his family, and the people who knew and liked him. But he wasn’t in my ballpark when it came to politics.” 
Btw: The Herald’s Joe Battenfeld writes that there’s no denying that Ailes changed the political and media landscape by building Fox News into a conservative-media juggernaut. The Globe’s Don Aucoin has a similar like-or-loathe-him piece on Ailes.
Boston Herald
Gonzalez tries to sweet-talk his way around soda-tax support
Goaded by Republicans, Democratic gubernatorial candidate Jay Gonzalez has acknowledged that, yes, he’s a supporter of a proposed tax on sodas, both for state revenue and public-health reasons, reports SHNS’s Matt Murphy at the BBJ. But Gonzalez made clear that his first priority is not the soda tax, but rather building support to get the proposed “millionaire’s tax” passed in Massachusetts, Murphy writes.
BBJ
Meanwhile, Gonzalez pans SouthCoast rail re-route
Give Jay Gonzalez credit: He knows how to keep his name in the headlines by swinging away at Gov. Baker. The latest example: The Democratic gubernatorial tells editors of the Taunton Gazette that he is “very concerned” about Baker administration plans to use the Middleboro route to extend commuter rail service to the state’s SouthCoast region, Rebecca Hyman reports. Hyman has the details.
Taunton Gazette

The race is on to raid the state’s horse-racing fund
State Sen. Mark Montigny has yet another idea on how best to raid the $13 million state fund set aside to promote horse racing in Massachusetts: Use the money to fight sex trafficking, reports the Herald’s Matt Stout. But Montigny will have to get in line behind State Sen. Karen Spilka and the New England Horsemen’s Benevolent and Protective Association, both of whom have different ideas on how best to raid the fund, Stout writes.
Boston Herald
Forbes Under 30 Summit returns to Boston
The Forbes Under 30 Summit will be returning to Boston in October, bringing with it thousands of young entrepreneurs and hundreds of bigwig speakers, the Globe is reporting.
Boston Globe
Fate of higher tobacco age rests with House
With apparent support from Gov. Charlie Baker and a favorable Senate vote taken last year, the state’s House of Representatives is poised to decide whether the state will raise the minimum age for buying tobacco products to 21, Mike Deehan of WGBH reports. House supporters say they have widespread support among lawmakers, with 104 co-signers to the bill filed by Rep. Paul McMurty, which means the legislation’s fate may now rest squarely on the shoulders of House Speaker Robert DeLeo.
WGBH
Southie pols on full alert over convention-center study
The Massachusetts Convention Center Authority is quietly moving forward with plans to study how best to use 30 undeveloped acres surrounding the South Boston convention center, i.e. the authority may be angling to revive the  previously shelved center-expansion plan. But Rep. Nick Collins and Sen. Linda Dorcena Forry are signaling they’re not going to be so quiet on the issue, the Globe’s Jon Chesto reports.
Boston Globe
State’s jobless rate rises for fourth straight month
It’s not time to hit the panic button. But it is time to start worrying, a little, about what’s going on with the state economy, with the jobless rate last month rising from 3.6 percent to 3.9 percent. Yes, it’s still below the national average, but it’s also the fourth straight month that the unemployment rate has inched up in Massachusetts, as the BBJ’s Greg Ryan reports. Granted, the payroll numbers, derived from a separate survey of major employers, were up, but four months is still four months. 
BBJ
Critics getting mileage out of Mayor’s innocuous comments on bikers and pedestrians
Mayor Marty Walsh walked into it when he dared to mildly criticize (if you can even call it that) bikers and pedestrians in Boston. The Globe’s Nestor Ramos and Steve Annear have more on the ensuing brouhaha. 
Boston Globe
iBoss plans to ‘hire thousands’ after it settles in Boston
A day after Gov. Charlie Baker officially welcomed iBoss Inc.’s move from San Diego to Boston, the BBJ’s Kelly O’Brien is reporting that the cyber-security firm’s CEO is vowing iBoss will “hire thousands of people” here and cement the state’s status as the "number one cybersecurity hub in the world." O’Brien has more details.
BBJ
Tufts grad students vote to unionize, beating out NCAA athletes who should have done it long ago
Though they have no particular beef against school administrators, Tufts University’s graduate students have voted to join SEIU Local 509, as part of a growing trend across academia of low-paid and over-worked grad students joining unions, reports Max Larkin at WBUR. Now if only NCAA Division 1 football and basketball players, arguably the most abused students within academia when it comes to working their tails off to enrich others, would unionize.
WBUR
New Bedford plan trades nine holes for 1,000 jobs
The city of New Bedford released details of its plans to partner with the state to redevelop half of a city-owned golf course into a new business park, saying it would create 1,000 high-paying jobs and generate as much as $2 million annually in property taxes, Michael Bonner of the Standard-Times reports. The city still has to get state blessing for reducing the 18-hole course to just 9 holes.
SouthCoast Today
Martha's Vineyard gaming hall opponents to make plea to U.S. Supreme Court
The town of Aquinnah and other opponents of a plan to turn a tribal community center on Martha’s Vineyard into a gaming hall plan to ask the U.S. Supreme Court to overturn appeals court victories for the Wampanoag tribe of Gay Head, Bob McGovern of the Herald reports.
Boston Herald
Motel 6 won’t be leaving the lights on for at least 7 weeks
The Motel 6 in Braintree where a local police officer was shot while trying to serve an arrest warrant on May 5, will voluntarily close for at least 7 weeks to give managers time to work out issues with the town, Fred Hanson of the Patriot Ledger reports. Motel officials say they will raise the room rate, stop accepting cash payments and put more security in place at the trouble-plagued motel. The shutdown begins June 1.  
Patriot Ledger
Sunday public affairs TV
Keller at Large, WBZ-TV Channel 4, 8:30 a.m. This week’s guest: House Speaker Robert DeLeo, who speaks with host Jon Kellerr about the state budget shortfall, tax hikes, the differences between the House and Senate, and other issues.
This is New England, NBC Boston, 9:30 a.m. With host Latoyia Edwards, this week’s topics: Mental Health Awareness Month, Italian Home for Children, Red Nose Day.
This Week in Business, NECN, 10 a.m.  Jim Rooney, president of the Greater Boston Chamber of Commerce, discusses the WannaCry malware, the latest state employment figures and the state Senate budget; Tracelink CEO Shabbir Dahod discusses regulations to track and trace manufacturing in the drug supply chain; and Doug Banks, editor of the Boston Business Journal, reviews the week’s top business stories.  
CEO Corner, NECN, 10: 30 a.m. Jose and Zoraida de la Rosa, the co-founders of Guardian Healthcare, talk about their company and its mission to provide at home healthcare services for populations facing language or cultural barriers.
On the Record, WCVB-TV, Channel 5, 11 a.m. This week’s guest: Mayor Marty Walsh, who speaks with anchor Ed Harding and co-anchor Janet Wu.
CityLine, WCVB-TV Channel 5, 12 p.m. With host Karen Holmes Ward, this week’s focus: The Ride Hailing Economy. ******
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