Senate Spotlight Looms

The short list of potential Democratic presidential candidates in 2020 is not all that short. It ranges from the marquee to the marginal. From former VP Joe Biden, Massachusetts Sen. Elizabeth Warren and Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders to former Massachusetts Gov. Duval Patrick, former New Orleans Mayor Mitch Landrieu and former Virginia Gov. Terry McAuliffe. And more than a few in between who aren’t formers.

Speculation has notably been mounting about Biden, who’s reasserting himself as a party leader and now merits belittling tweets from President Donald Trump, and Elizabeth Warren, who’s been on the road raising money and the channeled fury of progressive women.

But as the mid-terms loom—so also does the confirmation hearing of Trump’s Supreme Court nominee, Judge Brett Kavanaugh. And among the senators on the Judiciary Committee are two Democrats who will be part of 2020 scenarios: Sen. Cory Booker, 49, of New Jersey and Sen. Kamala Harris, 53, of California. They will both have a high-profile, de facto platform to challenge Trump via Kavanaugh.

Trumpster Diving

  • Say this about Rep. Ron DeSantis, R-Fox: He can bring the heavy hitters. A couple of weeks ago, it was Sean Hannity who came to town to endorse DeSantis for governor. This week it was President Donald Trump on the stump locally. Who’s next? Vlad Putin?
  • “It’s his live version of a Twitter feed.”—That’s the spot-on take of Princeton political historian Julian Zelizer on a vintage “Lock her up”/“Build the Wall” Trump rally.
  • It was like rubbernecking as you drive by an intersection accident. You can’t help looking as you wince. So, I watched Secretary of State Mike Pompeo testifying in front of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee. Democratic Sen. Bob Menendez of New Jersey started off with probing, edgy questions aimed at eliciting yes or no answers about the fiasco in Finland. Pompeo wouldn’t–or couldn’t–tell him specifics from the Trump-Putin sit down. After all, he’s only the secretary of state and a former CIA director.

Pompeo spoke in bullet-point generalities as the adversarial mood ratcheted up.

Next up was Sen. Jim Risch of Idaho, perhaps the most conservative GOPster in the senate. He didn’t disappoint Trump Administration lackeys and loyalists. And on it went—punchline Democrats and counterpunching Republican committee members.

We expect conflict. It’s part of who we are as a contentious democracy. But there was a notably palpable, partisan disrespect—not just disagreement—here from the beginning. As in, “We know you’re defending the indefensible, and we know you’ve sold out to work for this guy, so how can we believe or respect anything you say? Please continue.”

Marco Rubio: More political performance art. His allotted Q&A time was devoted to reading from a staff-researched script that made him sound conversant on the issues.

  • So, Rudy “Collusion is not a crime” Giuliani, who could use a glib spokesman, has characterized Michael Cohen as a “pathological liar.” “He’s been lying for years.” Doesn’t that pathologically speak volumes? Imagine, Donald Trump’s personal-“fixer” attorney for 11 years is a liar? Maybe it was a condition for employment. Trump’s decades-long pathology of prevarication ranges from the NY tabs to Helsinki blabs.

But there’s no lying about this: Robert Mueller’s leverage keeps increasing. A Trump pardon for Cohen won’t be happening.

  • Speaking of Cohen, what a transition: From Trump’s fixer to state’s witness. How karmic.
  • In the age of Trump, political potshots are like nothing we’ve seen before, including the Watergate era of Richard Nixon. Here’s a recent Ron Reagan Jr. quote that I wish—as a concerned American—that I disagreed with. He was speaking to “Hard Ball” host-interrupter Chris Mathews. “Think about how extraordinary it is that we’re even having this conversation,” prefaced Reagan. “But we’re actually talking about the president’s very sanity here–and doing it in a serious way. Very sober people are worried that this man is simply unfit for office.”
  • For political context and sobriety, recall that a day earlier Tennessee Republican Sen. Bob Corker, who chairs the Foreign Relations Committee, had questioned Trump’s mental state and called for “radical change” at the White House. As if.
  • The ironic part of America’s position on exiting the Iran nuclear deal is what the U.S. is doing unilaterally. It includes recently announced efforts to try to undermine Iran’s government, including social media messaging and a round-the-clock Persian (Farsi) language broadcast channel. Some might call that, uh, meddling—no bots about it.
  • If Melania Trump’s spokeswoman had a media mulligan she might have said: “She can watch whatever she wants on Air Force One. Sometimes it’s CNN, because she takes great fake-news notes, even in English. But otherwise, it’s Fox and ‘Apprentice’ re-runs.”
  • This just in: The Mexicans still aren’t on board to pay for a wall.

Finland Fiasco And More

  • The “Fiasco in Finland.” Tough-guy negotiator Donald Trump backing down to Vladimir Putin as the geopolitical world watched.

Honest, patriotic Americans had to be as angry as they were embarrassed. Even by this president precedent. No guts with Putin, but plenty of chutzpah and bluster for everybody else. Trump dismissed and insulted his national security experts while treating Putin the way his sycophancy treats him.

But then Trump acknowledged that he had misspoken. He played the double-negative mulligan card. Then back home, he was still misspeaking on matters of Russian meddling to the media. What did he mean by “no”? Or did he say “go”?

This wouldn’t be credible for an “SNL” skit, let alone a “House of Cards” scenario.

Maine Republican Sen. Susan Collins summed it up. “There’s a walk-back of the walk-back of the walk-back of the walk-back?” she rhetorically asked. “This is dizzying.”

  • OK, it doesn’t qualify as collusion, but sometimes it seems that Donald Trump and Vladimir Putin share scripts. Here’s a post-summit take of Putin’s: “We can see forces in the United States, which would easily sacrifice Russian-American relationship for the sake of their (narrow group and party) ambitions in domestic political struggle in America.”
  • When Jon Huntsman, the former governor of Utah and U.S. ambassador to China, was named ambassador to Russia, it was reason to feel (somewhat) encouraged about key Trump Administration appointees. Recall Huntsman was a more than credible Republican presidential candidate in 2012. He was qualified. He speaks Mandarin better than Trump speaks English.

But with the “Fiasco in Finland”—and all that preceded and followed it—it’s time for Huntsman to step down and disassociate himself from this unhinged regime. Right now he is enabling an incompetent authoritarian who has been obviously compromised by Russia.

  • How ironic, at best, that the “fake news media” notably doesn’t include the National Enquirer. Hardly happenstance that the chairman of the tabloid’s parent company (American Media Inc.) is Trump ally-friend David J. Peker.
  • Some things do transcend political partisanship and divisiveness. To wit: Here’s a U.S. Senate vote we’re not likely to see repeated any time soon, if ever: 98-0. That tally resulted from the Senate’s vote on a resolution warning the president not to let the Russian government question American diplomats, such as former U.S. Ambassador to Russia Michael McFaul, or other U.S. officials.

Most Americans, if not the president, know that Kremlin critics frequently wind up dead.

  • Barack Obama, along with Michelle Obama, have signed a multiyear deal with Netflix to produce a “diverse mix of content.” Good for them. The Obama presence, in whatever capacity, is welcome.

But that doesn’t satisfy a pragmatic political need. Obama, whose presidency galvanized Trump and the birther brigades who needed a cult hero and scapegoat, could be a difference-maker this fall by helping to rally the Democratic base. He would also be reminding independents and establishment GOPsters that we once had a president with class and eloquence who wasn’t beholden to Vladimir Putin and wasn’t an existential threat.

  • Most everyone agrees that the Federal Reserve needs independence. Both actual and perceived. It has a lot to do with investor confidence and the fact that the Fed is charged by Congress to maximize employment and maintain stable prices.

Donald Trump seems oblivious to such subtlety and recently chided the Fed—as only he can chide–on interest rate hikes. “I am not happy about it,” said Trump in a CNBC interview. Then, in response to a question about those who didn’t think it appropriate for a president to publicly comment on interest rates or the dollar, he dismissed such concerns in familiar fashion. “I couldn’t care less what they say.” Or maybe he could care less?

  • Of all the supportive parts of the Trump base—from soy bean farmers to Harley Davidson workers—the Trump-acolyte group that still seems most incongruous is the Christian right and evangelicals. Does a politically expedient stand on abortion offset everything else?

“Hate the sin, love the sinner” is a familiar refrain. So is forgiveness. We get that. But why not a candidate with much less to, well, forgive? Why not a candidate whose life isn’t rife with ethical and moral abandonment? Why not a candidate who won’t require hypocrisy as a condition for support? Hate the sin, elect the sinner?

Back To School: 2018

Remember when “back to school” references were mainly about new teachers, new challenges, new classmates, old friends and back-to-school-supplies sales?

Now add this: The countdown to the new school year also includes active shooter training. It involves school resource officers, teachers and faculty members. And it also involves a county SWAT team, bomb squad and police dogs.

“Back to school”: the new normal.

Sign Of Change?

It was the student-led, anti-gun violence “March for our Lives” gathering in St. Petersburg. It was only a few hundred people, and it was only a few dozen signs. But one of those signs spoke volumes for what it will take politically to get beyond the dysfunction, divisiveness and sheer anger we are now living.

“We are diverse. We are truthful. We are compassionate. We are informed. We vote.”

If only that one sign were to truly resonate. Because that must be the realistic, idealistic and pragmatic message going forward for all those desperate to make a difference as they fear where this country is going under this Administration.

In short, remember that you still represent the majority in this country: from demographics to values. But that, as we lamentably saw in 2016, is not nearly enough, even though volume and vitriol don’t define majority. And it’s not nearly enough if caring, diverse people are not informed enough on the issues and not motivated enough to vote for America’s self-interest.

And that includes Democratic millennial socialists and Bernie die-hards who can’t muster enthusiasm for “establishment” Democratic candidates, including the ultimate, non-socialist Democrat at the top of the ballot in a presidential year. It also includes minorities, even if the presidential ticket is all white.

The focus has to be more than post-Pelosi and encouraging electoral signs from Queens to Little Havana. The focus must also prioritize Trump-Pence and all its dire implications. How can the possibility of that reprise not rally everyone who truly cares about America and truly fears its current caretakers?

The 2018 mid-terms are about political leverage, human values and societal priorities. The 2020 presidential election will be all of that plus where America fits in the world, what’s really in our national-security and economic self-interest and who we still are as a people.

Being angry is understandable and appropriate. In-your-face confrontation with the usual sell-out suspects shows attitude and can be a visceral rush. But ultimately this is about group therapy. This is about being collectively caring, informed and motivated to vote for all the right, not just righteous, reasons. It’s also about having the guts to be undaunted by vile and volume.

And this is about Making America Grateful that enough of its citizens are moving to reclaim the moral and ethical high ground of the Oval Office and remove a cult figure lionized by societal haters and political harlots.

Trumpster Diving

  • This has to be part of anyone’s takeaway from that sham summit between Donald Trump and Vladimir Putin: Something is compromising Trump’s behavior. Increasingly, it looks like it’s a lot more than “golden showers.”
  • Trump accepts the word of Putin that Russia didn’t meddle in our election. He dismisses the word of Director of National Intelligence Dan Coats—and demeans the entire intelligence communitywho say they certainly did meddle. How does Coats not quit? Or is he concerned that next up will just be a Trump sycophant who will make matters even worse?
  • Bottom line: Trump is good for Russia, not America. In an international forum, he stands forcefully against American media’s “witch hunt,” but he stands down to Putin.
  • Donald Trump, as we know, is the “enemy of the press.” But he looks almost tolerant when juxtaposed to Vladimir Putin. That’s because the bar is subterranean low. Trump demonizes, stigmatizes, threatens and scapegoats. Putin does mob hits.
  • Speaking of the media, this just in from Donald Tusk, president of the European Council: “America and the EU are best friends. Whoever says we are foes is spreading fake news.”
  • Amid all the back and forth regarding the Russian state’s obvious meddling in the U.S. elections, one quote continues to resonate more than any other. “Russia, if you’re listening, I hope you’re able to find the 30,000 emails that are missing.” It should still Make America Grate.
  • It says a lot about our virulent, divisive politics when Stormy Daniels and Michael Avenatti are cast as the “good guys.”
  • That Judiciary Committee exchange that featured FBI Deputy Assistant Director Peter Strzok, the F-bombing Trump disparager, was beyond contentious. It was an in-your-face exercise in mutual contempt that most American observers, including “Saturday Night Live” staffers, would find deplorably embarrassing.

Trumpster Diving: Putin To Pruitt

* “A republic, if you can keep it.”–That’s Ben Franklin’s famous take on what had resulted from the Constitutional Convention. It’s telling how that cautionary comment continues to resonate.

* Donald Trump and Vladimir Putin: It still seems like Trump is meeting up with his handler.  No one else in the room but translators. This will be prominent in somebody’s memoir.

* When Trump sat down with North Korean leader Kim Jong-un, he was doing what he should have been doing–talking to the other side. But no one of sound reasoning could have disagreed that the blatant lack of preparation downgraded the summit to an exercise in world-stage narcissism and geopolitical negligence.

After the summit, Trump rhetorically high-fived himself over having been the catalyst for North Korea “no longer (being) a nuclear threat.” Now the North Korean Foreign Ministry is telling that world that “The attitude and demands from the U.S. side during the high-level talks were nothing short of deeply regrettable.” And this just in: Satellite surveillance appears to show NK expanding its nuclear capabilities.

Bottom line: There isn’t even a common definition of “denuclearization,” let alone its “phases.”

It’s what happens when there are no extensive, low-level talks to build the framework for an agreement with substance that two leaders can ceremonially sign off on. It hardly helps that Trump is also under-briefed and largely unread. No, high-stakes international summitry isn’t the same as a handshake deal with a leverage-challenged, Queens sub-contractor.

* Trump, as we’ve been noting too often, has the sinister wherewithal to normalize–whether it’s authoritarians, such as Putin and Kim, or racists, such as American Nazis in Charlottesville.

* When it comes to states’ rights, some things are more appropriate than others. A state income tax or building codes, for example, are well within state purview. Alas, abortion and states’ rights are also contextually joined. But existential issues, such as women’s rights and abortion, shouldn’t be as discretionary as crossing state borders to play the lottery.

* So much of the focus on former EPA Administrator Scott Pruitt was over his chicanery. Understandable, but in the scheme of things  these were ethical blips in an Administration stocked with ethical blipsters. Pruitt’s legacy, alas, is that he was a true “enemy of the people” in his anti-environment, anti-science, anti Paris climate agreement agenda. That matters more than self-aggrandizement. So does leaving his right-hand man, former coal lobbyist Andrew Wheeler, as next up to continue the dismantling of the EPA.

* Trump’s nomination of federal appeals court Judge Brett  Kavanaugh to the Supreme Court has predictably prompted ideological speculation about abortion and gay rights.

But if he’s confirmed, Kavanaugh will likely be dealing with another high-profile, galvanizing issue first. It’s one that would highlight Kavanaugh’s (expansive) take on executive power and limits on presidential investigations. In short, how would Kavanaugh rule in Trump v. Mueller? Chances are, that matters a helluva lot more to Trump than Roe v. Wade.

* When the Senate confirmed Bill Clinton’s nomination of Ruth Bader Ginsburg to the Supreme Court in 1993, the vote was 96-3. That’s not a misprint. Nor is it a political era we’ll likely see again.

* Of all the ally push-back at Trump, none, ironically, has been as blunt as that of Emmanuel Macron, the French president. “We won’t talk at all with a country if it is with a gun to our heads,” said Macron. So much for that budding bromance.

* “I will do anything to protect Mr. Trump. I’m the guy who would take a bullet for the president.” That was Michael Cohen, Trump’s longtime personal lawyer, last year.

“I put family and country first. … I don’t agree with those who demonize or vilify the FBI.” That was Michael Cohen last month.

* American presidents have occasionally been received overseas with demonstrations of dissent by our trade-and-treaty partners. Happens in any relationship. They’re usually measured, and they come and go with the geopolitical dynamics of the times.

But this is different. Visiting Americans are advised to keep a low profile. And a high-profile part of London’s “reception” for Donald Trump will be a prominently-positioned, giant orange balloon of Trump depicted as a baby in a diaper. It’s part of massive “Stop Trump” protests organized by activist groups and trade unions. “This is a man who lacks the capacity for moral shame,” explained the Trump-balloon creator Leo Murray. “Liberal outrage just makes him smirk harder.”

*According to the always blunt Republican pundit Pat Buchanan, “some painful truths” about the current state of the Republican Party need re-stating. To wit, the GOP of the Bushes and Bob Dole and John McCain is history. “Unlike the Bourbons after the Revolution and the Terror, after Napoleon and the Empire, no restoration is in the cards. It is over.” Sobering, if not nostalgic.

* Relationships in the age of Trump: They are impacted.  As in families, friends, neighbors and co-workers. When it comes to families, neighbors and co-workers, you take one for the familial team and one for sheer self-interest because of proximity and inherent awkwardness.

When it comes to “friends,” however, this is different. This is about values and respect. Without respect, there is no friendship. That’s where you draw the line: Good bye. Line-drawing can be as brutal as it is shocking. But these are the times that bring out the worst in too many of us, including those we thought we knew.

Self-Evident Cause

Much has been made–and rightly so–about the Texas-based Arnold Foundation pledging $20 million for research into gun violence. The aim is to draw the federal government into the effort as well. It is also collaborating with the Rand Corp. to collect and analyze empirical data needed to make a case that would prompt consensus on acceptable gun control legislation.

Well (intentioned) and good (luck). It’s just too bad that common cause, common sense and what’s self-evident about what needs to be done about our malignant gun culture aren’t enough to make the case.

Trumpster Diving

* For those hoping that Roe v. Wade won’t be the key criteria when it comes to Donald Trump’s (July 9) Supreme Court nominee, keep hoping–but stay grounded. There are subplots to play out.

This is–as is everything–about Trump’s legacy. It’s a lot more than following the recommendations of The Federalist Society. Midterms are coming and this pseudo-Republican president’s popularity with GOP politicians and voters keeps going up. Expect him to double down on Steve Bannon’s scapegoat-and-demonization playbook.

That notably means pandering to the base in opposing the Democrats on their “open borders” immigration policy that is “invader” friendly and keeping the campaign promise that prioritized the repeal of Roe v. Wade. That pledge was underscored with the selection of Indiana’s Mike Pence as Trump’s running mate. Pence did his deplorable part and delivered the outrageously hypocritical, evangelical vote. It was arguably determinative in a couple of key states. Now it’s payback time.

One consolation, of sorts, in this worst-case, Roe v. Wade scenario: If the Supreme Court ultimately overturns such seemingly settled law, the Administration could play up the “state’s rights” angle. But, no, that’s not consoling enough.

* Supreme Court Chief Justice John Roberts is now the, uh, “swing” vote on the Supreme Court.

* Looks like Trump’s chief-of-staff, Gen. John Kelly, is on his way out. Apparently he’s become redundant with a president who is, in effect, his own chief of staff. It also means that Trump never got over Kelly’s “idiot” reference that seemed to confirm Rex Tillerson’s “moron” characterization. And it also means that not even a four-star general could rein Trump in.

*When it comes to civil discourse in this country, there’s a lot to shout about. Unfortunately. So much for civility requiring mutual respect.

Anyone else miss old-fashioned, self-serving, disingenuous, political-agenda spin? That’s politics in an untidy, sometimes tumultuous democracy. But not narcissistic, cruel, pathological lying from the top and the invective of fear and divisiveness from the dupes, brigands and party careerists below. That can’t be politics as usual. That can’t be us. But it is right now.

* You know you’re in brutally controversial times when a relevant frame of reference for an immigration ruling is Korematsu v. United States. Never good to see Japanese-American internment camps back in the news cycle.

* All families should be kept together with rare exceptions–maybe the Mansons and the Trumps.

* Legally, that Virginia restaurant was within its rights not to want to serve Sarah Huckabee Sanders. It wasn’t an ugly confrontation, and the owner did it out of deference to gay employees who were uncomfortable. Sanders then ranted on her government Twitter account, and then Trump weighed in as only he can. He said The Red Hen “should focus more on cleaning its filthy canopies, doors and windows… .”  Imagine, Huckabee Sanders even opting for a meal in a filthy restaurant.

* In some nefarious, parallel-universe way, doesn’t the upcoming Trump-Vladimir Putin summit feel like a collusion update?