[Home] [Headlines] [Latest Articles] [Latest Comments] [Post] [Mail] [Sign-in] [Setup] [Help] [Register]
Status: Not Logged In; Sign In
LEFT WING LOONS Title: Investigations now entangle Donald Trump’s White House, campaign, transition, inauguration, charity and business. For Trump, the political, the personal and the deeply personal are all under examination. Less than two years into Trumps presidency, his business associates, political advisers and family members are being probed, along with the practices of his late father. On Saturday, Interior Secretary Ryan Zinke became the fourth Cabinet member to leave under an ethical cloud, having sparked 17 investigations into his actions on the job, by one watchdogs count. All of this with the first special counsel investigation against a president in 20 years hanging over Trumps head, spinning out charges and strong-arming guilty pleas from underlings while keeping in suspense whether the president Individual 1 in prosecutor Robert Muellers coded legalese will end up accused of criminal behavior himself. The scope of the scrutiny has shaped Trumps presidency, proving a steady distraction from his governing agenda. So far, much of it has been launched by federal prosecutors and government watchdogs that eschew partisanship. The intensity is certain to increase next year when Democrats assume control of the House and the subpoena power that comes with it. Although Trump dismisses the investigations as politically motivated witch hunts, his high-octane Twitter account frequently betrays just how consumed he is by the scrutiny. Hes also said to watch hours of television coverage on milestone days in the investigations. It saps your energy, diverts your attention and you simply cant lead because your opponents are up in arms against you, Cal Jillson, a Southern Methodist University political scientist and historian, said of the scrutiny. It weakens your friends and emboldens your enemies. Almost midway through his term, Trump is struggling to deliver on his central campaign promises. He may end the year without a Republican-led Congress giving him the $5 billion he wants for a border wall. And hes previewed few legislative priorities for 2019. Even if he had, its unlikely the new Democratic House majority would have much incentive to help a president weakened by investigations rack up wins as his own re-election campaign approaches. Perhaps not since Bill Clinton felt hounded by a vast right wing conspiracy, as Hillary Clinton put it, has a president been under such duress from investigation. This jeopardy has come with Trumps party in control of Congress and the Justice Department driving at least three separate criminal investigations. They are the Mueller probe looking into possible collusion, obstruction of justice or other wrongdoing in contacts between the Trump campaign and Russia; the New York campaign-finance case involving hush money paid to Trumps alleged lovers; and now a case from New York, first reported by The Wall Street Journal this past week, examining the finances and operations of Trumps inaugural committee and whether foreign interests made illegal payments to it. Behind those matters is a battery of lawsuits or inquiries from state attorneys general and other parties tied mainly to Trump businesses. Let me point out that there are a lot of unanswered ethical, legal and factual questions, Sen. Susan Collins, R-Maine, said Sunday on CNNs State of the Union. But, clearly, this was not a good week for President Trump nor for his campaign organization, she said, adding that it is critical for Mueller to be allowed to complete his work unimpeded, so that we can have the full picture. At best, the investigations are overshadowing what has been positive economic news. At worst, the probes are a threat to the presidency, Trumps family and his business interests. The deep diving will only grow in the new year when Democrats take over the House. They are expected to launch their own investigations and could pursue impeachment, though party leaders caution they could face a political backlash by taking that step. Even if Trump avoids impeachment, the Democratic investigations will create headaches. Administration officials will be called to testify before Congress and lawmakers will seek a trove of documents, probably including Trumps tax returns, which he has refused to make public. A bare-bones White House staff may struggle to keep up. A tally by the Brookings Institution finds more than 60 percent of Trumps top aides have left in the first two years, a turnover rate exceeding the previous five presidents. In addition, 10 Cabinet secretaries have departed, more than Barack Obama, George W. Bush and Clinton lost in two years. The shake-ups now have left Mick Mulvaney, Trumps budget chief, doing double duty indefinitely as the presidents chief of staff. That combination makes it hard to imagine a president effectively engaged in policy, even if as in the case of Clinton the drawn-out investigations lead to an impeachment that fails to remove the president. The modern presidency is extraordinarily complex and demanding so you need the presidents full attention, Jillson says. Where your attention should be, youre also thinking about meeting with your lawyers. As the investigations mount, few Republicans have dissociated themselves publicly from Trump. But privately, some lawmakers do worry that the investigations will damage his re-election prospects and their own chances in 2020 House and Senate races. The federal campaign finance probe has put GOP lawmakers in a particularly awkward position. Prosecutors, as well as Trumps longtime personal lawyer Michael Cohen and a tabloid company that has long been an ally, assert that Trump directed hush payments to keep women quiet about alleged affairs in the closing weeks of the 2016 campaign. Such a payment would violate campaign finance laws. Cohen was sentenced this past week to three years in prison. Underscoring the balancing act for Republicans, outgoing Sen. Orrin Hatch, R- Utah, initially stated that he didnt much care about Trump being implicated in Cohens crime, then thought better of his words. I made comments about allegations against the president that were irresponsible and a poor reflection on my lengthy record of dedication to the rule of law, Hatch said in a statement Friday. Five people in Trumps orbit have pleaded guilty to charges in the continuing Mueller probe. Among them, Paul Manafort and Rick Gates were Nos. 1 and 2, respectively, for a time in Trumps presidential campaign. George Papadopoulos, a lower-level campaign adviser, was sentenced to 14 days in prison and is out. The others are Michael Flynn, who was Trumps first national security adviser in office and is to be sentenced Tuesday, and Cohen, who is expected to begin his sentence in March. In addition, the special counsels office says Flynn, in giving 19 interviews and turning over a mountain of documents, has assisted in a criminal investigation that has yet to be revealed. In other words, theres no end in sight. Trump is also exposed to legal peril beyond that from federal prosecutors. Among the lawsuits or investigations: Democratic attorneys general in Maryland and the District of Columbia and congressional Democrats are challenging the Trump Organizations business transactions with foreign and state government interests, such as those at his Washington hotel, citing the constitutional ban on presidents taking payments from such sources without congressional consent. Summer Zervos, once a contestant on Trumps TV show, has sued Trump for defamation for accusing her of lying. She alleged in 2016 that he made unwelcome physical contact with her. Hes failed several times to derail the case. New York tax officials are looking into whether Trump or his charitable foundation misrepresented tax liability. In addition, the New York tax department said it is vigorously pursuing all appropriate avenues of investigation after a New York Times report found Trump and his family, going back to transactions by his father, Fred Trump, cheated on taxes for decades. The report said Trump received the equivalent today of at least $413 million from his father, much of it through dubious tax maneuvers. Trump called the report a very old, boring and often told hit piece on me. New York authorities allege in a lawsuit that Trump illegally tapped his charitable Trump Foundation to settle legal disputes, help his campaign for president and cover personal and business expenses, including the purchase of a life-size portrait of himself for $10,000. Stanley Renshon, political scientist at the City University of New York and a psychoanalyst, says all of that adds up to a lot of people, not just the left, trying to make his presidency untenable. It is, perhaps, vaster than the right-wing conspiracy the Clintons endured, Renshon says. I call it the everybody conspiracy.
Poster Comment: If only a modicum of this effort had been in place when we were forced to suffer through eight years of rule by the Kenyan Flash! There wouldn't be any Obama presidency for a second term and there wouldn't be Hitlery Klinton any longer. The population has to rise en masse to the defence of our president!
Post Comment Private Reply Ignore Thread Top Page Up Full Thread Page Down Bottom/Latest Begin Trace Mode for Comment # 34.
#2. To: IbJensen (#0)
I give Trump 6 months - tops. He will resign or be impeached.
If they try to impeach Trump for illegitimate reasons. I hope he brings in the military and wipes the deep state, and you if you are the opposition.
You've been pushing that martial law scenario for some time now psycho. The thing is - it wouldn't surprise me if Trump did attempt to pull that shit - he's enough of a megalomaniac enough to try it. And his little sheep followers like you will cheer and kill their neighbors who are democrats.
Trying to frame the President is Treason. You don't get that. You should stick to your specialty. Making harmful drugs legal so children will think it is ok.
Eat a buffet of dicks you lying turd.
Why don't you eat a buffet of truth. You preach that the government is evil for harmful drugs being illegal. When they are legalized it sends a message to our children that it is ok. It is not ok it is detrimental to society. It makes losers of people. So no you are not doing it on purpose. But that doesn't matter if you do it on purpose or not. You still are in the camp to pretend moral is immoral and immoral is moral. So yes I told the truth.
Is it moral for armed agents of the state to kill someone for possessing a non-approved plant? How about stealing money from innocent citizens on the highways? Is it moral to let someone suffer because you don't like what they choose to use to treat their pain? Is it moral to allow a child to suffer from epileptic seizures because the government you apparently worship says so? Your sense of morality is skewed.
How is it that every state that legalized marijuana for recreational use first legalized it for medical use? Do you sense an underlying theme here? Isn't it possible that marijuana advocates couldn't care less about the sick and dying, other than using them as pawns in their quest for legalized dope? Spare me your sanctimonious shit about how much you care for the sick.
Check Colorado's statistics on traffic accidents where the driver had a marijuana stuck in his mouth. Marijuana produces two things: addiction and lung cancer.
I did. Since marijuana legalization, highway fatalities in Colorado are at near-historic lows
Oh, no. You again, Dickhead. This site needs more users.
He spells it... D I C K T A R D
#38. To: GrandIsland (#34)
Yet another juvenile comment from LF's 12-year-old child.
Top Page Up Full Thread Page Down Bottom/Latest |
[Home] [Headlines] [Latest Articles] [Latest Comments] [Post] [Mail] [Sign-in] [Setup] [Help] [Register]
|