Democrats in Congress have warned the Trump administration that they remain concerned with a number of aspects of the North American trade agreement. | Win McNamee/Getty Images

trade

The Trump administration has taken a step toward ratification of the new North American trade agreement, sending a draft statement to Congress that puts the legislative body on notice the pact could be coming soon.

The decision to send the draft of what’s called the “Statement of Administrative Action” on Thursday afternoon is creating fresh tension with House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and other Democrats who are still pressing the administration to address problems that they have raised with the U.S.-Mexico-Canada Agreement.

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The step comes after U.S. Trade Representative Robert Lighthizer and other Trump administration officials emphasized that they would not send the USMCA to Congress without a signal from Pelosi that she and her caucus were ready to hold a vote on it.

The move begins a 30-day window that must pass before the Trump administration is allowed to submit the full implementing legislation to Congress. It does not start a clock on any legislation to be taken up, but it paves the way for the next step in the process — sending the USMCA to Capitol Hill for a vote — to take place as soon as the end of next month.

But Democrats are continuing to press for changes in areas such as labor standards and enforcement. Pelosi has also indicated that she wants to see how Mexico implements its new labor laws before USMCA gets a vote in Congress.

The House speaker derided the decision to send the draft statement before Democrats were fully satisfied as “not a positive step.”

“It indicates a lack of knowledge on the part of the administration on the policy and process to pass a trade agreement,” she said in a lengthy statement. “A new trade agreement without enforcement is not progress for the American worker, just a press release for the president.“

House Ways and Means Chairman Richard Neal (D-Mass.) also said that the timeline for considering the deal will depend on when changes are made to address Democrats’ issues with the agreement. The “premature submission” of the draft statement will have “no impact” on continuing discussions, Neal added.

A Capitol Hill added that the draft statement was unlikely to bring the Trump administration “any closer to addressing concerns that members of Congress have voiced.”

“I think they’re trying to create the illusion of progress by checking a box,” the aide said.

Administration officials, for their part, sought to emphasize that the decision to move forward with the statement of administrative action was foremost a procedural step.

In a letter sent to key congressional leaders including Pelosi, Lighthizer said the draft statement “provides an outline for further discussions with Congress on these issues.”

“We believe that the USMCA can — and ultimately will — attract broad bipartisan support in both Houses of Congress,” Lighthizer wrote. “That certainly remains my goal.”

The timing of the move leaves open the possibility of the Trump administration seeing the deal passed this summer, depending on whether and when officials are able to reach a compromise with Democrats.

Vice President Mike Pence told reporters earlier Thursday during a trip to Ottawa that the administration is “working earnestly” to wrap the process up before the fall.

“I can assure you that the president and I are working with members of the United States Congress to pass the USMCA — and to pass the USMCA this summer,” Pence said during a news conference after a meeting with Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau.

The White House’s move also backs up actions that its North American trading partners have taken this week to move the deal toward approval in their respective countries. Mexico took the first steps to ratify the new North American pact in its Senate on Thursday, while Canada introduced a bill earlier this week to implement the deal.

Although the move represents the most significant step so far toward ratification in the U.S., it does not guarantee the trade deal will be voted on anytime soon.

Former President Barack Obama, for example, submitted his statement of administrative action for the proposed Trans-Pacific Partnership in August 2016, but he never ultimately sent the implementing bill for the deal.

That’s partly because Republican leaders refused to move on the legislation in the heat of the 2016 presidential election, and partly because even members of Congress who supported the TPP had a number of concerns about various provisions in the agreement.

Doug Palmer and Sabrina Rodriguez contributed to this report.

Source Article from https://www.politico.com/story/2019/05/30/trump-administration-nafta-congress-1348431

Source Article from https://www.nbcnews.com/politics/supreme-court/trump-administration-misled-courts-about-origin-plans-add-citizenship-question-n1012096

The only rare earth metals-producing mine in the U.S. is facing short-term refining challenges as the nation to looks to reduce its reliance on China for the materials due to the trade war.

China dominates the refining and mining of rare earth minerals, which are key to the making of everything from iPhones to rechargeable batteries to military weapons.

“We’re it,” James Litinsky, co-chairman of MP Materials, which owns the Mountain Pass mine, said Thursday on CNBC’s “Squawk Box. ” “If we can’t be economic, there’s no hope for the U.S. industry.”

Mountain Pass, located in California, ships nearly 50,000 tons of rare earth concentrate to China each year for processing, according to a Reuters report.

“There’s no refining capacity in the world outside of China,” said Litinsky.

China has imposed a 25% tariff on rare earth imports during the trade war, making the operator of the Mountain Pass mine the only U.S. company affected by this specific retaliation.

Meanwhile, China threatened this week to cut off rare earth mineral sales to the U.S., after President Donald Trump blacklisted Chinese telecom giant Huawei. Speculation about payback first surfaced when Chinese President Xi Jinping visited rare earth mining and processing facilities during a domestic tour last week.

The Pentagon, according to Reuters, recently presented a report to Congress on the rare earths market and how to find alternative sources from China.

A move by Beijing to follow through on its threat would be a “major escalation” of the trade war, Ray Dalio, co-founder of the world’s largest hedge fund, wrote in a LinkedIn post Wednesday. Bridgewater Associates’ Dalio also called the materials a “critical import that American companies don’t produce and need to get from China.”

Litinsky estimated that Mountain Pass should be self-sufficient from China by next year and produce its own separated rare earth products.

But for now, Litinsky said, China is it when it comes to processing. “We’re talking to the [U.S.] government and hoping they’ll help us, but we’re not counting on it.”

— Reuters contributed to this report.

Source Article from https://www.cnbc.com/2019/05/30/if-we-cannot-challenge-china-no-one-can-warns-only-us-rare-earths-mine.html

Protesters gather outside the U.S. Supreme Court in April as the justices hear oral arguments over the citizenship question the Trump administration wants to add to the 2020 census.

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Protesters gather outside the U.S. Supreme Court in April as the justices hear oral arguments over the citizenship question the Trump administration wants to add to the 2020 census.

Win McNamee/Getty Images

A major Republican redistricting strategist played a role in the Trump administration’s push to get a citizenship question on forms for the 2020 census.

Thomas Hofeller, who died last August, concluded in a 2015 report that adding the question would produce the data needed to redraw political maps that would be “advantageous to Republicans and Non-Hispanic Whites,” according to a court filing released Thursday.

Plaintiffs in one of the New York-based lawsuits over the question say that Hofeller later ghostwrote an early draft of the administration’s request for the question and helped form a reason for adding the question to forms for the national head count.

The Trump administration has maintained it wants census responses to the question — “Is this person a citizen of the United States?” — to better enforce Voting Rights Act protections for racial and language minorities.

But Hofeller’s documents uncovered through a separate lawsuit suggest administration officials were aware that including the question “would not benefit Latino voters, but rather would facilitate significantly reducing their political power,” argue attorneys with the law firm Arnold & Porter, the ACLU and the New York Civil Liberties Union in a letter to U.S. District Judge Jesse Furman.

The revelations come weeks before the Supreme Court is expected to issue a major ruling on whether the Trump administration can add the citizenship question to the 2020 census. A total of seven lawsuits have been filed around the country against the administration’s plans for the question, which are currently blocked by orders from three federal judges at lower courts.

If the question is included on the census, Census Bureau research shows it is highly likely to scare households with noncitizens, especially within the Latinx and immigrant communities, from taking part in the constitutionally mandated head count of every person living in the U.S.

In their letter to Furman, the plaintiffs’ attorneys also say that Hofeller’s role was kept hidden by Justice Department official John Gore and an adviser on census issues to Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross.

Ross oversees the Census Bureau and approved adding the question. Both Gore and the adviser, A. Mark Neuman, sat for questioning under oath last year for the citizenship question lawsuits. Gore, however, only recently disclosed as part of a congressional investigation by the House Committee on Oversight and Reform that Neuman provided an early draft of the Justice Department’s letter requesting the question.

That draft letter includes a paragraph about using the Voting Rights Act to justify the question. It matches word for word a paragraph found in a document among Hofeller’s files. The plaintiffs’ attorneys say that shows Hofeller ghostwrote a portion of the draft letter.

The attorneys argue that the newly revealed evidence contradicts Gore’s and Neuman’s sworn testimony for the lawsuits and have asked Furman to consider issuing sanctions or other penalties.

The Justice and Commerce departments did not immediately respond to NPR’s requests for comment.

Asked to respond to the attorneys’ claims, Neuman said, “I haven’t read the letter. I need to read it.”

Furman has scheduled a hearing on June 5 at the U.S. District Court in Manhattan to discuss the request by the plaintiffs’ attorneys.

Hofeller’s documents were initially obtained through his daughter, who provided them to Common Cause as part of the government watchdog group’s lawsuit in North Carolina state court. The group is challenging gerrymandered state legislative maps that Hofeller helped draw. Attorneys with Arnold & Porter — the law firm involved with one of the citizenship question lawsuits — are representing Common Cause.

Before his death, Hofeller appeared to predict the legal battle that ensued after Ross announced his decision to add the citizenship question. In his 2015 study commissioned by The Washington Free Beacon, a conservative news outlet, he wrote that using census responses to a citizenship question for redistricting “can be expected to provoke a high degree of resistance from Democrats and the major minority groups in the nation.”

“The chances of a U.S. Supreme Court’s mandate to add a citizenship question to the 2020 Decennial Census are not high,” he wrote.

Source Article from https://www.npr.org/2019/05/30/728232221/gop-redistricting-strategist-played-role-in-push-for-census-citizenship-question

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Source Article from https://www.cnn.com/2019/05/30/politics/fact-checking-trump-mueller-claims/index.html

Someone associated with the White House wanted the USS John McCain out of sight while President Trump visited Japan. This is not fake news.

Of course, the usual suspects are calling it so anyway.

But the original Wall Street Journal article which broke the story hasn’t fallen apart. In fact, other news outlet have independently corroborated most of the details.

On Wednesday night, the Journal reported that, per planning with the White House Military Office and the Seventh Fleet of the Navy, a U.S. Indo-Pacific Command official emailed instructions to Navy and Air Force officials to keep the USS John McCain out of sight. The Journal did not charge Trump with ordering the removal of the ship, but three U.S. officials confirmed the existence of the email to the Associated Press, and two Navy officials confirmed to CNN that the directive did originate from the White House Military Office. Two Navy sailors told the New York Times that, unlike sailors from other American warships at the Yokosuka Naval Base, sailors from the McCain were not invited to meet with Trump. The Pacific Fleet even confirmed to CBS the Journal’s assertion that the ship was covered by a tarp on Friday, although the plan was abandoned and the tarp removed by the time Trump arrived in Japan.

The only piece of the original Journal story not independently corroborated is the allegation that acting Defense Secretary Patrick Shanahan knew of the scheme. For what it’s worth, Shanahan categorically denies having known anything about it and has promised to get to the bottom of the scheme.

So save for the Shanahan allegation, what part of this story is fake? Trump denies ordering the plan, but the journalists who wrote these stories never accused him of doing so. The plan to obscure the ship clearly wasn’t executed by the time Trump arrived in Japan, let alone at Yokosuka, but the journalists who wrote these stories never said it was.

What we do know is that someone from the White House thought that Trump would be so triggered by the ship that he or she had the audacity to direct multiple groups of people to conceal a first class destroyer. And we now know that, on some level, that person’s instincts were correct.

Source Article from https://www.washingtonexaminer.com/opinion/sorry-but-that-uss-mccain-story-isnt-fake-news

Former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton slammed Facebook during her commencement speech at Hunter College in New York City on Wednesday over the social media giant’s failure to take down a doctored video of House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif.

Last week, a three-minute clip of Pelosi speaking at the Center for American Progress was uploaded on Facebook by a group called “Politics WatchDog.” Experts believe the video was slowed down, and Pelosi’s pitch manipulated, to make her sound as if she were drunk and slurring her words.

While copies of the clips were removed on YouTube, the original video remains on Facebook, where it has racked up millions of views.

Clinton blasted the social media giant’s inaction.

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“When Facebook refused to take down a fake video of Nancy Pelosi, it wasn’t even a close call,” Clinton told the graduates. “The video is sexist trash. And YouTube took it down but Facebook kept it up.”

The former presidential candidate then suggested that a message be sent to Facebook to show opposition to the tech giant’s decision, and she warned that the site would be “flooded” with “false and doctored videos” if nothing happens.

Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/politics/hillary-clinton-blasts-facebook-for-not-pulling-doctored-pelosi-video-she-dubbed-sexist-trash

Democratic presidential candidate Beto O’Rourke has introduced a sweeping new immigration plan as a centerpiece of his campaign, but his home state’s attorney general said the proposals would make the situation at the border “much, much worse.”

O’Rourke’s plan, introduced on Wednesday, outlines three main areas in which immigration can be improved: by abolishing family separation policies, working with Congress to reform the system, and investing money in Central America to stem the number of migrants coming from those countries.

Vowing to take executive action immediately if elected president, O’Rourke touted the plan as “the most sweeping rewrite of our nation’s immigration and naturalization laws in a generation.”

Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton told the “Fox & Friends” hosts on Thursday, however, that the proposals would only encourage illegal immigration.

“If you don’t address border security with a wall, with more technology, with more border agents, this is just going to create an incentive for more immigration,” Paxton said, adding that his state is seeing up to 10,000 immigrants approaching the border each month.

BETO O’ROURKE SOUNDS OFF ON TRUMP’S IMPEACHMENT: WE MUST ‘ACT NOW OR LOSE OUR DEMOCRACY FOREVER’

O’Rourke’s proposal also seeks to lower the number of migrants being criminally prosecuted in the United States, making exceptions for those with a criminal history. The 2020 hopeful said that he would instead move toward policies like “community-based programs and family case management.”

Paxton argued that the former Texas congressman’s plan overlooks the dangers posed by illegal immigration and fails to address the drug trade and human trafficking.

But action by Congress to address the nation’s immigration laws, however, is something that both agree needs to happen.

DEMS RAMP UP CALLS FOR TRUMP IMPEACHMENT AFTER MUELLER SPEAKS OUT ON RUSSIA PROBE

“We have to figure out this asylum policy,” Paxton added. “People figured out the loopholes. People come and claim asylum and we have them for a long time that system is not working.”

However, Paxton said, it’s crucial that Congress allow funding at the border in order to improve the lives of both border security agents and migrants.

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Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/politics/beto-orourke-immigration-plan-ken-paxton

President Trump lands in Colorado Springs ahead of a speech at the U.S. Air Force Academy graduation. #FoxNewsLive #FoxNews

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Rob Spencer prays as New Hampshire lawmakers debate prior to a death penalty vote at the State House in Concord, N.H., on Thursday. The legislature abolished capital punishment by overriding a veto by Gov. Chris Sununu.

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Rob Spencer prays as New Hampshire lawmakers debate prior to a death penalty vote at the State House in Concord, N.H., on Thursday. The legislature abolished capital punishment by overriding a veto by Gov. Chris Sununu.

Charles Krupa/AP

New Hampshire is now the 21st U.S. state to have abolished capital punishment, after its legislature voted to override a veto by Republican Gov. Chris Sununu. After a years-long effort to repeal the state’s death penalty, the state’s Senate voted 16-8 Thursday to finally make it official.

Calling capital punishment “archaic, costly, discriminatory and violent,” Democratic state Sen. Melanie Levesque said the time has come to end it, according to New Hampshire Public Radio.

“The death penalty has been an issue every New Hampshire legislator has grappled with over many years,” Senate President Donna Soucy, D-Manchester, said in a statement after the historic vote. “It was a privilege today to join my colleagues in voting to repeal capital punishment in the Granite State.”

The rejection of Sununu’s veto had been expected even before the governor took that step on May 3, as both the Senate and House overwhelmingly had approved a bill last month changing New Hampshire’s penalty for capital murder.

Where people found guilty of the crime once were exposed to a possible death sentence, the new law calls for life in prison without the possibility of parole.

“I am incredibly disappointed that the Senate chose to override my veto,” Sununu said after the Senate vote, which followed a successful House override vote.

Sununu said via Twitter that he has “consistently stood with law enforcement, families of crime victims, and advocates for justice in opposing a repeal of the death penalty because it is the right thing to do.”

The issue was not decidedly along strictly partisan lines. While Sununu said he opposed the repeal, another Republican, state Sen. Harold French, has backed the bill, saying last month that it would be a “misdeed” to keep the death penalty in effect.

“As I get older, I realized for a fact we’re actually all on death row and it’s just a matter of time before our names get called,” French said, explaining his support to abolish capital punishment.

French said he had been moved by the testimony of people who spoke out against the death penalty — a sentiment that was echoed Thursday by state Sen. Martha Hennessey, a Democrat from Hanover.

“I am grateful to the many survivors of murder victims who bravely shared their stories with the Legislature this session,” Hennessey said, “many of whom told us that the death penalty only prolongs the pain and trauma of their loss.”

The last time New Hampshire executed a convicted murderer was in 1939, but the state does currently have an inmate on death row: Michael Addison, who was convicted of the 2006 killing of Manchester police officer Michael Briggs.

The new law would not retroactively apply to Addison, though critics of the repeal effort have warned that they believe he won’t be executed if the measure is enacted.

In addition to social and philosophical objections, backers of the push to repeal the death penalty say it has cost the state millions of dollars to pursue death sentences, particularly when the state must pay to provide defense for indigent defendants in lengthy trials and penalty hearings. Lawmakers noted in the text of the bill that New Hampshire had spent some $2.5 million to prosecute the Addison case.

Source Article from https://www.npr.org/2019/05/30/728288240/new-hampshire-abolishes-death-penalty-as-lawmakers-override-governors-veto

President Donald Trump insisted on Thursday that he had nothing to do with keeping the USS John S. McCain hidden from the site of his weekend speech in Japan. He said whoever had done so was “well-meaning.”

“I wasn’t involved. I would not have done that. I was very angry with John McCain because he killed health care,” Trump said, referring to the late senator’s deciding vote that killed a Senate GOP bill to repeal the Affordable Care Act.

“I was not a big fan of John McCain in any way, shape or form,” Trump continued in comments to reporters on the South Lawn of the White House. “Now, somebody did it because they thought I didn’t like him, OK? And they were well-meaning. I will say, I didn’t know anything about it. I would never have done that.”

Trump’s second denial came after The Wall Street Journal reported Wednesday that the White House wanted the Navy to move the destroyer “out of sight,” citing an email between military officials. The ship is named for the late Arizona senator and his father and grandfather, who were admirals. Trump initially denied any knowledge of the effort in a tweet Wednesday night.

But an email to Navy and Air Force officials, obtained by CNBC, had a number of directives, including: “USS John McCain needs to be out of sight,” and asking officials to “please confirm” that directive “will be satisfied.” A source with knowledge of the matter confirmed to CNBC the existence of that email.

The Journal said a tarp was hung over the ship’s name ahead of Trump’s trip and that sailors were directed to remove coverings from the destroyer that bore the McCain name. The newspaper also said sailors assigned to the ship, who generally wear caps bearing its name, were given the day off during Trump’s visit to the nearby USS Wasp.

Defense Secretary Patrick Shanahan later told reporters, “I would never dishonor the memory of a great American patriot like Sen. John McCain” by asking that the ship be kept out of sight.

“I’d never disrespect the young men and women that crew that ship. I’ve asked my chief of staff to look into the matter … and as soon as I find out more about this I’ll let you know,” he added.

McCain, an Arizona Republican who survived nearly six years as a POW in North Vietnam and lost the 2008 presidential election to Democrat Barack Obama, was an outspoken critic of Trump. During the 2015 presidential campaign Trump said McCain was “not a war hero” because he had been captured by North Vietnam. McCain died of cancer in August at age 81.

In a tweet on Wednesday, McCain’s daughter Meghan lashed out at Trump, calling him “a child” who “makes my grief unbearable.” 

Source Article from https://www.cnbc.com/2019/05/30/trump-whoever-kept-uss-john-mccain-out-of-sight-was-well-meaning.html

EDISON -

Dangerous weather is threatening the Garden State Wednesday.

New Jersey has the potential to see tornadoes, flooding and severe thunderstorms.

News 12 New Jersey meteorologists say that these storms will contain strong winds, heavy rain and lots of thunder and lightning.

New Jersey residents who are in areas with tornado warnings are advised to stay indoors and seek shelter. It is especially important to stay away from large windows due to the risk of debris and broken glass.

MORE: Weather Center | Traffic Center

Anyone in an area with a flash flood warning should try to get to an area of higher elevation. Anyone in their vehicles should be reminded to never drive through floodwaters because it may be difficult to determine the depth.

The bad weather is expected to last through Wednesday afternoon and evening and should clear out by daybreak on Thursday.

The severe weather comes one day after a confirmed EF1 tornado touched down in Sussex County, causing massive amounts of damage.

Thursday should start off mostly sunny, but there is still the chance of a thunderstorm. High temperatures will be in the low-80s.

Friday is expected to also see mostly cloudy skies with a high of around 78 degrees.

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Special Counsel Robert Mueller has peddled two different stories. Only one can be true. 

In his final act before resigning his position, Mueller told the gathered media on Wednesday that his non-decision decision on whether the president obstructed justice was “informed” by a long-standing opinion by the Office of Legal Counsel (OLC) at the Justice Department that a sitting president cannot be charged with a crime. But according to William Barr, that’s not what Mueller told the attorney general and others during a meeting on March 5, 2017. Here’s what Barr told Senators during his May 1st testimony:

“We were frankly surprised that they were not going to reach a decision on obstruction and we asked them a lot about the reasoning behind this. Mueller stated three times to us in that meeting, in response to our questioning, that he emphatically was not saying that but for the OLC opinion he would have found obstruction.”  

TOM DEL BECCARO: ROBERT MUELLER’S ABUSE OF OUR LEGAL SYSTEM CONTINUES – HE DIDN’T NEED TO SPEAK WEDNESDAY

Barr said there were others in the meeting who heard Mueller say the same thing – that the OLC opinion played no role in the special counsel’s decision-making or lack thereof. The attorney general repeated this in his news conference the day Mueller’s report was released to the public:

“We specifically asked him about the OLC opinion and whether or not he was taking a position that he would have found a crime but for the existence of the OLC opinion. And he made it very clear several times that was not his position.”

Yet, on Wednesday Mueller was telling a different tale. He seemed to argue that he could not have accused the president of obstruction because he was handcuffed by the OLC opinion.  Why, then, did Mueller allegedly inform Barr that a special counsel can abandon the opinion if the facts merit it?

“He (Mueller) said that in the future the facts of a case against a president might be such that a special counsel would recommend abandoning the OLC opinion, but this is not such a case.”   

Mueller did not abandon the OLC opinion in this case because he surely knew the facts and evidence did not support the law of obstruction. Instead, in his 448-page report, he implied presidential obstruction in a remarkable achievement in creative writing.

He set forth in luxurious detail “evidence on both sides of the question.” But this is not the job of any chief prosecutor, anywhere.

Mueller was not retained to compose a masterpiece worthy of Proust. He was hired to investigate potential crimes arising from Russian interference in a presidential election and make a reasoned decision on whether charges were merited. 

Mueller’s actions were not only noxious but patently unfair to Trump.  The special counsel publicly besmirched the president with tales of suspicious behavior instead of stated evidence that rose to the level of criminality. 

Mueller’s actions were not only noxious, but patently unfair to Trump.  The special counsel publicly besmirched the president with tales of suspicious behavior instead of stated evidence that rose to the level of criminality. 

This is what prosecutors are never permitted to do. Justice Department rules forbid its lawyers from annunciating negative narratives about any person, absent an indictment. 

How can that person properly defend himself without trial? This is why prosecutors like Mueller are prohibited from trying their cases in the court of public opinion.

If they have probable cause to levy charges, they should do so.  If not, they must refrain from openly disparaging someone that our justice system presumes is innocent.

In this regard, Mueller shrewdly and improperly turned the law on its head. Consider the most inflammatory statement that he leveled at the president in his report. It was guaranteed to ignite the impeachment fire:

“While this report does not conclude that the President committed a crime, it also does not exonerate him.”     

To reinforce the point, Mueller stated it twice in his report. He then reiterated the argument on Wednesday when he said: “if we had confidence that the president clearly did not commit a crime, we would have said so.”

Prosecutors are not, and have never been, in the business of exonerating people. That’s not their job. 

An experienced federal prosecutor, Mueller certainly knew this. It appears he had no intention of treating Trump equitably or applying the law in conformance with our criminal justice system.

In a singular sentence, Mueller managed to reverse the legal duty that prosecutors have rigidly followed in America for centuries.  Their legal obligation is not to exonerate someone or prove an individual’s innocence.  Nor is any accused person required to prove his or her own innocence.

Everyone is entitled to the presumption of innocence.  It is the bedrock on which justice is built. 

Prosecutors must prove guilt beyond a reasonable doubt. To bring charges they must have, at minimum, probable cause to believe that a crime was committed. 

The special counsel took this inviolate principle and cleverly inverted it. He argued that he could not prove the president did not commit a crime.

Think about what that rationale really means. It is a double negative. Mueller was contending that he can’t prove something didn’t happen.

What if this were the standard for all criminal investigations? Apply it to yourself.

Let’s say you deposited your paycheck at the bank on Monday, the same day it’s robbed.  A prosecutor then announces publicly that he cannot prove you didn’t rob the bank, so you are neither criminally accused nor “exonerated.” 

The burden of proof has now been shifted to you to disprove the negative. How would you feel? You’ve been maligned with the taint of criminality and no longer enjoy the presumption of innocence. 

This is the equivalent of what Mueller did to Trump. The special counsel created the impression that Trump might have engaged in wrongdoing because he could not prove otherwise. 

The consequential injustice and harm that inevitably follows is what happens when we reverse the burden of proof and abandon the innocence standard that are revered in a democracy as fundamental rights. 

Yet, this is what Mueller did. He improvised a new standard that applies only to Trump —presumption of guilt. Under this novel “guilty until proven innocent” paradigm, it is up to the president to prove the allegations are false. 

Attorney General Barr recognized that Mueller had mangled the legal process, describing his statement as “actually a very strange statement.”

Barr told Congress that he was forced to correct Mueller’s mistake. “I used the proper standard,” said Barr. “We are not in the business of proving someone did not violate the law –I found that whole passage very bizarre,” he added.       

Our system of justice in America is designed to protect the innocent. This is why there are laws that prevent disclosure of grand jury testimony and even more expansive rules at the Justice Department that prohibit prosecutors from disclosing derogatory information about uncharged individuals. It is, in a word, unfair to smear people who have not been charged with anything.

Mueller was well aware of this. In the “introduction” to Volume II on obstruction, he recited the duty of prosecutors to be fair by refraining from comment. In the case of a sitting president, wrote Mueller, “The stigma and opprobrium could imperil the President’s ability to govern.”

Ironically, the special counsel then proceeded to ignore his own warning.  He produced his own “dossier” on Trump that was filled with suspicions of wrongdoing. 

CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

He refused to make a decision to charge the president in a court of law but was more than willing to indict him in the court of public opinion. 

His report was a non-indictment indictment. It was calumny masquerading as a report. 

CLICK HERE TO READ MORE FROM GREGG JARRETT

Parts of this column are adapted from the author’s forthcoming book “Witch Hunt: The Plot to Destroy Trump and Undo His Election (Broadside Books, October 1, 2019).”

Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/opinion/gregg-jarrett-robert-mueller-trump-russia-investigation-report

Image copyright
AFP

Image caption

The USS John S McCain prepares to leave Yokosuka in Japan in 2018

The White House asked for a warship named after Donald Trump’s late rival, Senator John McCain, to be obscured during the president’s trip to Japan, several reports have claimed.

Plans to move the USS John S. McCain out of view are said to have later been scrapped by senior Navy officials.

Mr Trump denied making the request, tweeting that he “was not informed about anything” related to the ship.

The Navy Chief of Information also posted to say it “was not obscured”.

The tweet – its first in five years – added that “the Navy is proud of that ship, its crew, its namesake and its heritage”. However, the statement did not deny that an initial request was made.

The White House has made no official comment on the matter.

The ship, which is docked in the Japanese city of Yokosuka, has been named for the late Mr McCain – a military veteran and the Republican senator for Arizona with whom Mr Trump had a contentious relationship.

Quoting anonymous Navy officials, the Wall Street Journal, the New York Times and the Washington Post newspapers and Reuters news agency all reported that the White House asked for the ship to be obscured during the visit.

The Wall Street Journal, which first reported the claims, cited an email between US military officials which said that the ship “needs to be out of sight”.

The New York Times also reported that the warship’s crew members, who have “USS John S McCain” on their caps, were sent home for the long weekend, along with the crew from another ship.

When some of them turned up to watch the speech anyway, the paper added, they were turned away.

But Acting US Defence Secretary Patrick Shanahan told reporters that he had been unaware of the incident, adding: “When I read about it this morning, it was the first I heard about it.”

The Navy has said there was nothing untoward in giving the crew time off.

Meghan McCain, Mr McCain’s daughter, tweeted in response to the reports: “Trump is a child who will always be deeply threatened by the greatness of my dad’s incredible life.”

She added: “There is a lot of criticism of how much I speak about my dad, but nine months since he passed, Trump won’t let him RIP. So I have to stand up for him. It makes my grief unbearable.”

Trump’s bitter feud with McCain

This all goes back to President Trump’s hostile relationship with the warship’s namesake.

Senator McCain was a military veteran who, during the Vietnam war, was imprisoned and tortured for five-and-a-half years. He also unsuccessfully ran for president twice, most recently against Barack Obama in 2008.

But it was his outspoken criticism of Mr Trump, starting in 2015, that led to a bitter rivalry between them.

During the campaign for the 2016 presidential election, Mr McCain – a fellow Republican – publicly withdrew his support for Mr Trump, accusing him of “firing up the crazies” with his views on immigration.

Less than a month later, President Trump told a campaign event: “He’s a ‘war hero’ because he was captured. I like people that weren’t captured.”

The divide between them didn’t end with Mr Trump’s election victory, however.

Image copyright
Getty Images

Image caption

The late senator John McCain, pictured in 2017, had an ongoing feud with President Trump

A year into his presidency, in July 2017, Mr Trump introduced a bill to repeal his presidential predecessor’s landmark healthcare legislation, the Affordable Care Act (also known as Obamacare).

The Republicans almost succeeded but, as he battled brain cancer, Mr McCain voted no – scuppering the party’s bid to undo the act.

Even after Mr McCain’s death in August 2018, President Trump has spoken openly of his dislike of the late senator. In March this year, he said: “I was never a fan of John McCain and I never will be.”

Source Article from https://www.bbc.com/news/world-us-canada-48456742

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    Source Article from https://www.cnn.com/2019/05/30/asia/china-us-peoples-daily-trade-war-intl/index.html

    Special Counsel Robert Mueller has peddled two different stories. Only one can be true. 

    In his final act before resigning his position, Mueller told the gathered media on Wednesday that his non-decision decision on whether the president obstructed justice was “informed” by a long-standing opinion by the Office of Legal Counsel (OLC) at the Justice Department that a sitting president cannot be charged with a crime. But according to William Barr, that’s not what Mueller told the attorney general and others during a meeting on March 5, 2017. Here’s what Barr told Senators during his May 1st testimony:

    “We were frankly surprised that they were not going to reach a decision on obstruction and we asked them a lot about the reasoning behind this. Mueller stated three times to us in that meeting, in response to our questioning, that he emphatically was not saying that but for the OLC opinion he would have found obstruction.”  

    TOM DEL BECCARO: ROBERT MUELLER’S ABUSE OF OUR LEGAL SYSTEM CONTINUES – HE DIDN’T NEED TO SPEAK WEDNESDAY

    Barr said there were others in the meeting who heard Mueller say the same thing – that the OLC opinion played no role in the special counsel’s decision-making or lack thereof. The attorney general repeated this in his news conference the day Mueller’s report was released to the public:

    “We specifically asked him about the OLC opinion and whether or not he was taking a position that he would have found a crime but for the existence of the OLC opinion. And he made it very clear several times that was not his position.”

    Yet, on Wednesday Mueller was telling a different tale. He seemed to argue that he could not have accused the president of obstruction because he was handcuffed by the OLC opinion.  Why, then, did Mueller allegedly inform Barr that a special counsel can abandon the opinion if the facts merit it?

    “He (Mueller) said that in the future the facts of a case against a president might be such that a special counsel would recommend abandoning the OLC opinion, but this is not such a case.”   

    Mueller did not abandon the OLC opinion in this case because he surely knew the facts and evidence did not support the law of obstruction. Instead, in his 448-page report, he implied presidential obstruction in a remarkable achievement in creative writing.

    He set forth in luxurious detail “evidence on both sides of the question.” But this is not the job of any chief prosecutor, anywhere.

    Mueller was not retained to compose a masterpiece worthy of Proust. He was hired to investigate potential crimes arising from Russian interference in a presidential election and make a reasoned decision on whether charges were merited. 

    Mueller’s actions were not only noxious but patently unfair to Trump.  The special counsel publicly besmirched the president with tales of suspicious behavior instead of stated evidence that rose to the level of criminality. 

    Mueller’s actions were not only noxious, but patently unfair to Trump.  The special counsel publicly besmirched the president with tales of suspicious behavior instead of stated evidence that rose to the level of criminality. 

    This is what prosecutors are never permitted to do. Justice Department rules forbid its lawyers from annunciating negative narratives about any person, absent an indictment. 

    How can that person properly defend himself without trial? This is why prosecutors like Mueller are prohibited from trying their cases in the court of public opinion.

    If they have probable cause to levy charges, they should do so.  If not, they must refrain from openly disparaging someone that our justice system presumes is innocent.

    In this regard, Mueller shrewdly and improperly turned the law on its head. Consider the most inflammatory statement that he leveled at the president in his report. It was guaranteed to ignite the impeachment fire:

    “While this report does not conclude that the President committed a crime, it also does not exonerate him.”     

    To reinforce the point, Mueller stated it twice in his report. He then reiterated the argument on Wednesday when he said: “if we had confidence that the president clearly did not commit a crime, we would have said so.”

    Prosecutors are not, and have never been, in the business of exonerating people. That’s not their job. 

    An experienced federal prosecutor, Mueller certainly knew this. It appears he had no intention of treating Trump equitably or applying the law in conformance with our criminal justice system.

    In a singular sentence, Mueller managed to reverse the legal duty that prosecutors have rigidly followed in America for centuries.  Their legal obligation is not to exonerate someone or prove an individual’s innocence.  Nor is any accused person required to prove his or her own innocence.

    Everyone is entitled to the presumption of innocence.  It is the bedrock on which justice is built. 

    Prosecutors must prove guilt beyond a reasonable doubt. To bring charges they must have, at minimum, probable cause to believe that a crime was committed. 

    The special counsel took this inviolate principle and cleverly inverted it. He argued that he could not prove the president did not commit a crime.

    Think about what that rationale really means. It is a double negative. Mueller was contending that he can’t prove something didn’t happen.

    What if this were the standard for all criminal investigations? Apply it to yourself.

    Let’s say you deposited your paycheck at the bank on Monday, the same day it’s robbed.  A prosecutor then announces publicly that he cannot prove you didn’t rob the bank, so you are neither criminally accused nor “exonerated.” 

    The burden of proof has now been shifted to you to disprove the negative. How would you feel? You’ve been maligned with the taint of criminality and no longer enjoy the presumption of innocence. 

    This is the equivalent of what Mueller did to Trump. The special counsel created the impression that Trump might have engaged in wrongdoing because he could not prove otherwise. 

    The consequential injustice and harm that inevitably follows is what happens when we reverse the burden of proof and abandon the innocence standard that are revered in a democracy as fundamental rights. 

    Yet, this is what Mueller did. He improvised a new standard that applies only to Trump —presumption of guilt. Under this novel “guilty until proven innocent” paradigm, it is up to the president to prove the allegations are false. 

    Attorney General Barr recognized that Mueller had mangled the legal process, describing his statement as “actually a very strange statement.”

    Barr told Congress that he was forced to correct Mueller’s mistake. “I used the proper standard,” said Barr. “We are not in the business of proving someone did not violate the law –I found that whole passage very bizarre,” he added.       

    Our system of justice in America is designed to protect the innocent. This is why there are laws that prevent disclosure of grand jury testimony and even more expansive rules at the Justice Department that prohibit prosecutors from disclosing derogatory information about uncharged individuals. It is, in a word, unfair to smear people who have not been charged with anything.

    Mueller was well aware of this. In the “introduction” to Volume II on obstruction, he recited the duty of prosecutors to be fair by refraining from comment. In the case of a sitting president, wrote Mueller, “The stigma and opprobrium could imperil the President’s ability to govern.”

    Ironically, the special counsel then proceeded to ignore his own warning.  He produced his own “dossier” on Trump that was filled with suspicions of wrongdoing. 

    CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

    He refused to make a decision to charge the president in a court of law but was more than willing to indict him in the court of public opinion. 

    His report was a non-indictment indictment. It was calumny masquerading as a report. 

    CLICK HERE TO READ MORE FROM GREGG JARRETT

    Parts of this column are adapted from the author’s forthcoming book “Witch Hunt: The Plot to Destroy Trump and Undo His Election (Broadside Books, October 1, 2019).”

    Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/opinion/gregg-jarrett-robert-mueller-trump-russia-investigation-report

    Louisiana Gov. John Bel Edwards said he’s ready to sign legislation that would ban abortions as early as six weeks of pregnancy when the bill reaches his desk.

    Melinda Deslatte/AP


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    Melinda Deslatte/AP

    Louisiana Gov. John Bel Edwards said he’s ready to sign legislation that would ban abortions as early as six weeks of pregnancy when the bill reaches his desk.

    Melinda Deslatte/AP

    The Louisiana House approved a strict new abortion law barring the procedure once a heartbeat is detectable, a point before many women may realize they are pregnant.

    By a vote of 79-23, the lawmakers banned abortions as early as six weeks of pregnancy. Democratic Gov. John Bel Edwards said in a statement that he “ran for governor as a pro-life candidate,” and intended to sign the abortion ban.

    “As I prepare to sign this bill, I call on the overwhelming bipartisan majority of legislators who voted for it to join me in continuing to build a better Louisiana that cares for the least among us and provides more opportunity for everyone,” he said.

    More than a dozen Democratic lawmakers approved the bill, along with all of the Republicans.

    The Louisiana legislation does not include an exception for a pregnancy due to rape or incest. It does allow abortions to prevent a woman’s death or if the pregnancy presents “a serious risk of the substantial and irreversible impairment of a major bodily function.” It also allows an abortion if the pregnancy is “medically futile.”

    Six other states — Georgia, Kentucky, Mississippi, Ohio, Missouri and Alabama — have recently passed laws banning abortion. The Missouri law bars abortion after eight weeks of pregnancy. Alabama‘s law is considered the toughest in the nation, carrying a penalty of up to 99 years for doctors who would defy the ban.

    Source Article from https://www.npr.org/2019/05/29/728141835/louisiana-lawmakers-approve-strict-abortion-limit-dem-governor-says-he-will-sign